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PAGE 5

A Christmas-eve Suit
by [?]

This proposition promised so well that she hesitated, and he lifted her in instantly before she could change her mind, then helped Carrie in with a quiet pressure of the hand, as much as to say, “I shall depend on you.”

“But, Mr. Marstern, you’ll get your feet wet,” protested Carrie.

“That doesn’t matter,” he replied good-naturedly. “I shall be no worse off than Miss Lottie, and I’m determined to convince her of safety. Now go straight ahead as I direct.”

Once the horse stumbled, and Lottie thought he was going down head first. “Oh, lift me out, quick, quick!” she cried.

“Yes, indeed I will, Miss Lottie, as soon as we are opposite that grate fire of yours.”

They were soon safely over, and within a half-hour reached Lottie’s home. It was evident she was a little ashamed of her behavior, and she made some effort to retrieve herself. But she was cold and miserable, vexed with herself and still more vexed with Marstern. That a latent sense of justice forbade the latter feeling only irritated her the more. Individuals as well as communities must have scapegoats; and it is not an unusual impulse on the part of some to blame and dislike those before whom they have humiliated themselves.

She gave her companions a rather formal invitation to come in and get warm before proceeding further; but Marstern said very politely that he thought it was too late, unless Miss Carrie was cold. Carrie protested that she was not so cold but that she could easily wait till she reached her own fireside.

“Well, good-night, then,” and the door was shut a trifle emphatically.

“Mr. Marstern,” said Carrie, sympathetically, “your feet must be very cold and wet after splashing through all that ice-water.”

“They are,” he replied; “but I don’t mind it. Well, if I had tried for years I could not have found such a test of character as we had to-night.”

“What do you mean?”

“Oh, well, you two girls did not behave exactly alike. I liked the way you behaved. You helped me out of a confounded scrape.”

“Would you have tried for years to find a test?” she asked, concealing the keenness of her query under a laugh.

“I should have been well rewarded if I had, by such a fine contrast,” he replied.

Carrie’s faculties had not so congealed but that his words set her thinking. She had entertained at times the impression that she and Lottie were his favorites. Had he taken them out that night together in the hope of contrasts, of finding tests that would help his halting decision? He had ventured where the intuitions of a girl like Carrie Mitchell were almost equal to second-sight; and she was alert for what would come next.

He accepted her invitation to come in and warm his feet at the glowing fire in the grate, which Carrie’s father had made before retiring. Mrs. Mitchell, feeling that her daughter was with an old friend and playmate, did not think the presence of a chaperon essential, and left the young people alone. Carrie bustled about, brought cake, and made hot lemonade, while Marstern stretched his feet to the grate with a luxurious sense of comfort and complacency, thinking how homelike it all was and how paradisiacal life would become if such a charming little Hebe presided over his home. His lemonade became nectar offered by such hands.

She saw the different expression in his eyes. It was now homage, decided preference for one and not mere gallantry to two. Outwardly she was demurely oblivious and maintained simply her wonted friendliness. Marstern, however, was thawing in more senses than one, and he was possessed by a strong impulse to begin an open siege at once.

“I haven’t had a single suit of any kind yet, Carrie,” he said, dropping the prefix of “Miss,” which had gradually been adopted as they had grown up.

“Oh, well, that was the position of all the great lawyers once,” she replied, laughing. Marstern’s father was wealthy, and all knew that he could afford to be briefless for a time.