Mrs. Markham had fully expected that Eunice would go home within a few

days after Ethelyn's arrival; but when the days passed on, Ethelyn

showed no inclination for a nearer acquaintance with the kitchen--"never

even offering to wipe the teacups on washing days," as Mrs. Markham

complained to James, and John, and Andy--the good woman began to

manifest some anxiety on the subject, and finally went to Richard to

know if "he expected to keep a hired girl all winter or was Ethelyn

going to do some light chores."

Richard really did not know; but after a visit to his room, where Ethie

sat reading in her handsome crimson wrapper, with the velvet trimmings,

he decided that she could "not do chores," and Eunice must remain. It

was on this occasion that Washington was broached, Mrs. Markham

repeating what she heard Ethelyn saying to Melinda, and asking Richard

if he contemplated such a piece of extravagance as taking his wife to

Washington would be. In Richard's estimation there were other and

weightier reasons why Ethelyn should remain quietly at home that winter.

He did not especially mind the expense she might be to him, and he owned

to a weak desire to see her queen it over all the reigning belles, as he

was certain she would. Unbiased by his mother, and urged by Ethelyn, he

would probably have yielded in her favor; but the mother was first in

the field, and so she won the day, and Ethie's disappointment was a

settled thing. But Ethie did not know it, as Richard wisely refrained

from being the first to speak of the matter. That she was going to

Washington Ethelyn had no doubt, and this made her intercourse with the

Olneyites far more endurable. Some of them she found pleasant,

cultivated people--especially Mr. Townsend, the clergyman, who, after

the Sunday on which she appeared at the Village Hall in her blue silk

and elegant basquine, came to see her, and seemed so much like an old

friend when she found that he had met at Clifton, in New York, some of

her acquaintances. It was easy to be polite to him, and to the people

from Camden, who hearing much of Judge Markham's pretty bride, came to

call upon her--Judge Miller and his wife, with Marcia Fenton and Miss

Ella Backus, both belles and blondes, and both some-bodies, according to

Ethelyn's definition of that word. She liked these people, and Richard

found no trouble in getting her to return their calls. She would gladly

have stayed in Camden altogether, and once laughingly pointed out to

Richard a large, vacant lot, adjoining Mr. Fenton's, where she would

like to have her new house built.

There was a decided improvement in Ethelyn; nor did her old perversity

of temper manifest itself very strongly until one morning, three weeks

after her arrival in Olney, when Richard suggested to her the propriety

of his mother's giving them a party, or infair, as he called it. The

people expected it, he said; they would be disappointed without it, and,

indeed, he felt it was something he owed them for all their kindness to

him. Then Ethelyn rebelled--stoutly, stubbornly rebelled--but Richard

carried the point, and two days after the farmhouse was in a state of

dire confusion, wholly unlike the quiet which reigned there usually.

Melinda Jones was there all the time, while Mrs. Jones was back and

forth, and a few of the Olney ladies dropped in with suggestions and

offers of assistance. It was to be a grand affair--so far, at least, as

numbers were concerned--for everybody was invited, from Mr. Townsend and

the other clergy, down to Cecy Doane, who did dressmaking and tailoring

from house to house. The Markhams were very democratic in their

feelings, and it showed itself in the guests bidden to the party. They

were invited from Camden as well--Mr. and Mrs. Miller, with Marcia

Fenton and Ella Backus; and after the two young ladies had come over to

ascertain how large an affair it was to be, so as to know what to wear,

Ethelyn began to take some little interest in it herself and to give the

benefit of her own experience in such matters. But having a party in

Mrs. Dr. Van Buren's handsome house, where the servants were all so well

trained, and everything necessary was so easy of access, or even having

a party at Aunt Barbara's, was a very different thing from having one

here under the supervision of Mrs. Markham, whose ideas were so many

years back, and who objected to nearly everything which Ethelyn

suggested. But by dint of perseverance on Melinda's part her scruples

were finally overcome; so that when the night of the party arrived the

house presented a very respectable appearance, with its lamps of

kerosene, and the sperm candles flaming on the mantels in the parlor,

and the tallow candles smoking in the kitchen.




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