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PAGE 3

Joint Owners In Spain
by [?]

Miss Dyer put aside her knitting with ostentatious abnegation, and began rocking herself back and forth in her chair, which seemed not of itself to sway fast enough, and Mrs. Blair’s voice rose again, ever higher and more metallic:–

“I dunno what you’ve got to complain of more’n the rest of us. Look at that dress you’ve got on,–a good thick thibet, an’ mine’s a cheap, sleazy alpaca they palmed off on me because they knew my eyesight ain’t what it was once. An’ you’re settin’ right there in the sun, gittin’ het through, an’ it’s cold as a barn over here by the door. My land! if it don’t make me mad to see anybody without no more sperit than a wet rag! If you’ve lost anybody, why don’t ye say so? An’ if it’s a mad fit, speak out an’ say that! Give me anybody that’s got a tongue in their head, I say!”

But Miss Dyer, with an unnecessary display of effort, was hitching her chair into the darkest corner of the room, the rockers hopelessly snarling her yarn at every move.

“I’m sure I wouldn’t keep the sun off’n anybody,” she said, tearfully. “It never come into my head to take it up, an’ I don’t claim no share of anything. I guess, if the truth was known, ‘twould be seen I’d been used to a house lookin’ south, an’ the fore-room winders all of a glare o’ light, day in an’ day out, an’ Madeira vines climbin’ over ’em, an’ a trellis by the front door; but that’s all past an’ gone, past an’ gone! I never was one to take more ‘n belonged to me; an’ I don’t care who says it, I never shall be. An’ I’d hold to that, if ’twas the last word I had to speak!”

This negative sort of retort had an enfeebling effect upon Mrs. Blair.

“My land!” she exclaimed, helplessly. “Talk about my tongue! Vinegar’s nothin’ to cold molasses, if you’ve got to plough through it.”

The other sighed, and leaned her head upon her hand in an attitude of extreme dejection. Mrs. Blair eyed her with the exasperation of one whose just challenge has been refused; she marched back and forth through the room, now smoothing a fold of the counterpane, with vicious care, and again pulling the braided rug to one side or the other, the while she sought new fuel for her rage. Without, the sun was lighting snowy knoll and hollow, and printing the fine-etched tracery of the trees against a crystal sky. The road was not usually much frequented in winter time, but just now it had been worn by the week’s sledding into a shining track, and several sleighs went jingling up and down.

Tiverton was seizing the opportunity of a perfect day and the best of “going,” and was taking its way to market. The trivial happenings of this far-away world had thus far elicited no more than a passing glance from Mrs. Blair; she was too absorbed in domestic warfare even to peer down through the leafless lilac-boughs, in futile wonderment as to whose bells they might be, ringing merrily past. On one journey about the room, however, some chance arrested her gaze. She stopped, transfixed.

“Forever!” she cried. Her nervous, blue-veined hands clutched at her apron and held it; she was motionless for a moment. Yet the picture without would have been quite devoid of interest to the casual eye; it could have borne little significance save to one who knew the inner life history of the Tiverton Home, and thus might guess what slight events wrought all its joy and pain. A young man had set up his camera at the end of the walk, and thrown the cloth over his head, preparatory to taking the usual view of the house. Mrs. Blair recovered from her temporary inaction. She rushed to the window, and threw up the sash. Her husky voice broke strenuously upon the stillness:–