When a Man Marries - Page 110/121

"It is unfortunate that our acquaintance has begun so unfavorably," I

remarked, preparing to pass him. "Under other circumstances we might

have been friends."

"There is only one solace," he said. "When we do not have friends, we

can not lose them."

He opened the door to let me pass out, and as our eyes met, all the

coldness died out of his. He held out his hand, but I was hurt. I

refused to see it.

"Kit!" he said unsteadily. "I--I'm an obstinate, pig-headed brute. I am

sorry. Can't we be friends, after all?"

"'When we do not have friends we can not lose them,'" I replied with

cool malice. And the next instant the door closed behind me.

It was that night that the really serious event of the quarantine

occurred.

We were gathered in the library, and everybody was deadly dull. Aunt

Selina said she had been reared to a strict observance of the Sabbath,

and she refused to go to bed early. The cards and card tables were put

away and every one sat around and quarreled and was generally nasty,

except Bella and Jim, who had gone into the den just after dinner and

firmly closed the door.

I think it was just after Max proposed to me. Yes, he proposed to me

again that night. He said that Jim's illness had decided him; that any

of us might take sick and die, shut in that contaminated atmosphere, and

that if he did he wanted it all settled. And whether I took him or not

he wanted me to remember him kindly if anything happened. I really

hated to refuse him--he was in such deadly earnest. But it was quite

unnecessary for him to have blamed his refusal, as he did, on Mr.

Harbison. I am sure I had refused him plenty of times before I had

ever heard of the man. Yes, it was just after he proposed to me that

Flannigan came to the door and called Mr. Harbison out into the hall.

Flannigan--like most of the people in the house--always went to Mr.

Harbison when there was anything to be done. He openly adored him,

and--what was more--he did what Mr. Harbison ordered without a word,

while the rest of us had to get down on our knees and beg.

Mr. Harbison went out, muttering something about a storm coming up, and

seeing that the tent was secure. Betty Mercer went with him. She had

been at his heels all evening, and called him "Tom" on every possible

occasion. Indeed, she made no secret of it; she said that she was mad

about him, and that she would love to live in South America, and have

an Indian squaw for a lady's maid, and sit out on the veranda in the

evenings and watch the Southern Cross shooting across the sky, and eat

tropical food from the quaint Indian pottery. She was not even daunted

when Dal told her the Southern Cross did not shoot, and that the food

was probably canned corn on tin dishes.