PAGE 7
Akin To Love
by
“Well, I think that Mary Bell will be able to attend to the work after today, David. I guess I’ll go home tonight.”
David’s face clouded over.
“Well, I s’pose we oughtn’t to keep you any longer, Josephine. I’m sure it’s been awful good of you to stay this long. I don’t know what we’d have done without you.”
“You’re welcome,” said Josephine shortly.
“Don’t go for to walk home,” said David; “the snow is too deep. I’ll drive you over when you want to go.”
“I’ll not go before the evening,” said Josephine slowly.
David went out to his work gloomily. For three weeks he had been living in comfort. His wants were carefully attended to; his meals were well cooked and served, and everything was bright and clean. And more than all, Josephine had been there, with her cheerful smile and companionable ways. Well, it was all ended now.
Josephine sat at the breakfast table long after David had gone out. She scowled at the sugar-bowl and shook her head savagely at the tea-pot.
“I’ll have to do it,” she said at last.
“I’m so sorry for him that I can’t do anything else.”
She got up and went to the window, looking across the snowy field to her own home, nestled between the grove of firs and the orchard.
“It’s awful snug and comfortable,” she said regretfully, “and I’ve always felt set on being free and independent. But it’s no use. I’d never have a minute’s peace of mind again, thinking of David living here in dirt and disorder, and him so particular and tidy by nature. No, it’s my duty, plain and clear, to come here and make things pleasant for him–the pointing of Providence, as you might say. The worst of it is, I’ll have to tell him so myself. He’ll never dare to mention the subject again, after what I said to him that night he proposed last. I wish I hadn’t been so dreadful emphatic. Now I’ve got to say it myself if it is ever said. But I’ll not begin by quoting poetry, that’s one thing sure!”
Josephine threw back her head, crowned with its shining braids of jet-black hair, and laughed heartily. She bustled back to the stove and poked up the fire.
“I’ll have a bit of corned beef and cabbage for dinner,” she said, “and I’ll make David that pudding he’s so fond of. After all, it’s kind of nice to have someone to plan and think for. It always did seem like a waste of energy to fuss over cooking things when there was nobody but myself to eat them.”
Josephine sang over her work all day, and David went about his with the face of a man who is going to the gallows without benefit of clergy. When he came in to supper at sunset his expression was so woe-begone that Josephine had to dodge into the pantry to keep from laughing outright. She relieved her feelings by pounding the dresser with the potato masher, and then went primly out and took her place at the table.
The meal was not a success from a social point of view. Josephine was nervous and David glum. Mary Bell gobbled down her food with her usual haste, and then went away to carry Zillah hers. Then David said reluctantly:
“If you want to go home now, Josephine, I’ll hitch up Red Rob and drive you over.”
Josephine began to plait the tablecloth. She wished again that she had not been so emphatic on the occasion of his last proposal. Without replying to David’s suggestion she said crossly (Josephine always spoke crossly when she was especially in earnest):
“I want to tell you what I think about Zillah. She’s getting better, but she’s had a terrible shaking up, and it’s my opinion that she won’t be good for much all winter. She won’t be able to do any hard work, that’s certain. If you want my advice, I tell you fair and square that I think she’d better go off for a visit as soon as she’s fit. She thinks so herself. Clementine wants her to go and stay a spell with her in town. ‘Twould be just the thing for her.”
“She can go if she wants to, of course,” said David dully. “I can get along by myself for a spell.”
“There’s no need of your getting along by yourself,” said Josephine, more crossly than ever. “I’ll–I’ll come here and keep house for you if you like.”
David looked at her uncomprehendingly.
“Wouldn’t people kind of gossip?” he asked hesitatingly. “Not but what–“
“I don’t see what they’d have to gossip about,” broke in Josephine, “if we were–married.”
David sprang to his feet with such haste that he almost upset the table.
“Josephine, do you mean that?” he exclaimed.
“Of course I mean it,” she said, in a perfectly savage tone. “Now, for pity’s sake, don’t say another word about it just now. I can’t discuss it for a spell. Go out to your work. I want to be alone for awhile.”
For the first and last time David disobeyed her. Instead of going out, he strode around the table, caught Josephine masterfully in his arms, and kissed her. And Josephine, after a second’s hesitation, kissed him in return.