The Turn of the Tide. Eleanor H. Porter

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The Turn of the Tide - Eleanor H. Porter

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he drew from his pocket a large, somewhat legal-looking document.

      “I hardly know whether to share this with you or not,” he began; “still, it is too good to keep to myself, and it concerns you intimately; moreover, you may be able to assist me with some advice in the matter, or at least with some possible explanation.” And he held out the paper.

      Mrs. Kendall turned in her chair so that the light from the open hall-door would fall upon the round, cramped handwriting.

      “‘To whom it may concern,’” she read aloud. “‘Whereas, I, the Undersigned, being in my sane Mind do intend to commit Matremony.’ Why, Harry, what in the world is this?” she demanded.

      “Go on,—read,” returned the doctor, with a nonchalant wave of his hand; and Mrs. Kendall dropped her eyes again to the paper.

      “Harry, what in the world does this mean?” she gasped a minute later as she finished reading, half laughing, half crying, and wholly amazed.

      “But that is exactly what I was going to ask you,” parried the doctor.

      “You don’t mean that Margaret wrote—but she couldn’t; besides, it isn’t her writing.”

      “No, Margaret didn’t write it. For that part I think I detect the earmarks of young McGinnis. At all events, it came from him.”

      “Bobby?”

      “Yes.”

      “But who——” Mrs. Kendall stopped abruptly. A dawning comprehension came into her eyes. “You mean—Harry, she was at the bottom of it! I remember now. It was only a week or two ago that she used those same words to me. She insisted that you would beat me and—and bang me ’round. Oh, Margaret, Margaret, my poor little girl!”

      The doctor smiled; then he shook his head gravely.

      “Poor child! She hasn’t seen much of conjugal felicity; has she?” he murmured; then, softly: “It is left for us, sweetheart, to teach her—that.”

      The color deepened in Mrs. Kendall’s cheeks. Her eyes softened, then danced merrily.

      “But you haven’t signed—this, sir, yet!” she challenged laughingly, as she held out the paper.

      He caught both paper and hands in a warm clasp.

      “But I will,” he declared. “Wait and see!”

      Not twenty hours later Bobby McGinnis halted at the great gate of the driveway at Five Oaks and gave a peculiar whistle. Almost instantly Margaret flew across the lawn to meet him.

      “Oh, it’s jest a little matter of business,” greeted Bobby, with careless ease. “I’ve got that ’ere document here all signed. I reckoned the doctor wouldn’t lose no time makin’ sure ter do his part.”

      “Bobby, not the contract—so soon!” exulted Margaret.

      “Sure! Why not? I told him ter please sign to once an’ return. An’ he did, ‘course. I reckoned he meant business in this little matter, an’ he reckoned I did, too. There wa’n’t nothin’ for him ter do but sign, ’course.”

      Margaret drew her brows together in a thoughtful frown.

      “But he might have—refused,” she suggested.

      Bobby gave her a scornful glance.

      “Refused—an’ lost the chance of marryin’ at all? Not much!” he asserted with emphasis.

      “Well, anyhow, I’m glad he didn’t,” sighed Margaret, as she clutched the precious paper close to her heart. “I should ‘a’ hated to have refused outright to let him marry her when mother—Bobby, mother actually seems to want to have him!”

       Table of Contents

      Margaret had been at home four weeks when the invitation for Patty, Arabella, Clarabella, and three of the Whalens to visit her, finally left her mother’s hands. There had not been a day of all those four weeks that Margaret had not talked of the coming visit. At first, to be sure, she had not called it a visit; she had referred to it as the time when “Patty and the Whalens come here to live.” Gradually, however, her mother had persuaded her to let them “try it and see how they liked it”; and to this compromise Margaret finally gave a somewhat reluctant consent.

      Mrs. Kendall herself was distinctly uneasy over the whole affair; and on one pretext and another had put off sending for the proposed guests until Margaret’s importunities left her no choice in the matter. Not but that she was grateful to the two families that had been so good to Margaret in her hour of need, but she would have preferred to show that gratitude in some way not quite so intimate as taking them into her house and home for an indefinite period. Margaret, however, was still intent on “divvying up,” and Mrs. Kendall could not look into her daughter’s clear blue eyes, and explain why Patty, Arabella, Clarabella, and the Whalens might not be the most desirable guests in the world.

      It had been Margaret’s intention to invite all of the Whalen family. She had hesitated a little, it is true, over Mike Whalen, the father.

      “You see he drinks, and when he ain’t asleep he’s cross, mostly,” she explained to her mother; “but we can’t leave just him behind, so we’ll have to ask him, ‘course. Besides, if he’s goin’ to live here, why, he might as well come right now at the first.”

      “No, certainly we couldn’t leave Mr. Whalen behind alone,” Mrs. Kendall had returned with dry lips. “So suppose we don’t take any of the Whalens this time—just devote ourselves to Patty and the twins.”

      To this, however, Margaret refused to give her consent. What, not take any of the Whalens—the Whalens who had been so good as to give them one whole corner of their kitchen, rent free? Certainly not! She agreed, however, after considerable discussion, to take only Tom, Mary, and Peter of the Whalen family, leaving the rest of the children and Mrs. Whalen to keep old Mike Whalen company.

      “For, after all,” as she said to her mother, “if Tom and Mary and Peter like it here, the rest will. They always like what Tom does—he makes ’em.”

      Mrs. Kendall never thought of that speech afterward without a shudder. She even dreamed once of this all-powerful Tom—he stood over her with clinched fists and flashing eyes, demanding that she “divvy up” to the last cent. Clearly as she understood that this was only a dream, yet the vision haunted her; and it was not without some apprehension that she went with Margaret to the station to meet her guests, on the day appointed.

      A letter from Margaret had gone to Patty, and one from Mrs. Kendall to Miss Murdock, the city missionary who had been so good to Margaret. Houghtonsville was on a main line to New York, and but a few hours’ ride from the city. Mrs. Kendall had given full instructions as to trains, and had sent the money for the six tickets. She had also asked Miss Murdock to place the children in care of the conductor, saying that she would meet them herself at the Houghtonsville station.

      Promptly in return had come Miss Murdock’s

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