Richard's trunk was ready for Washington. His twelve shirts, which

Eunice had ironed so nicely, were packed away with his collars and new

yarn socks, and his wedding suit, which he was carrying as a mere matter

of form, for he knew he should not need it during his three months'

absence. He should not go into society, he thought, or even attend

levees, with his heart as sore and heavy as it was on this, his last day

at home. Ethelyn was not going with him. She knew it now, and never did

the face of a six-months wife look harder or stonier than hers as she

stayed all day in her room, paying no heed whatever to Richard, and

leaving entirely to Eunice and her mother-in-law those little things

which most wives would have been delighted to do for their husbands'

comfort. Ethelyn was very unhappy, very angry, and very bitterly

disappointed. The fact that she was not going to Washington had fallen

upon her like a thunderbolt, paralyzing her, as it were, so that after

the first great shock was over she seemed like some benumbed creature

bereft of care, or feeling, or interest in anything.

She had remained in Camden the most of the day following Mrs. Judge

Miller's party, and had done a little shopping with Marcia Fenton and

Ella Backus, to whom she spoke of her winter in Washington as a matter

of course, saying what she had to say in Richard's presence, and never

dreaming that he was only waiting for a fitting opportunity to demolish

her castles entirely. Perhaps if Ethelyn had talked Washington openly to

her husband when she was first married, and before his mother had gained

his ear, her chances for a winter at the capital would have been far

greater than they were now. But she had only taken it for granted that

she was going, and supposed that Richard understood it just as she did.

She had asked him several times where he intended to board and why he

did not secure rooms at Willard's, but Richard's non-committal replies

had given her no cue to her impending fate. On the night of her return

from Camden, as she stood by her dressing bureau, folding away her

point-lace handkerchief, she had casually remarked, "I shall not use

that again till I use it in Washington. Will it be very gay there

this winter?"

Richard was leaning his elbow upon the mantel, looking thoughtfully into

the fire, and for a moment he did not answer. He hated to demolish

Ethie's castles, but it could not be helped. Once it had seemed very

possible that she would go with him to Washington, but that was before

his mother had talked to him upon the subject. Since then the fiat had

gone forth, and thinking this the time to declare it, Richard said at

last, "Put down your finery, Ethelyn, and come stand by me while I say

something to you."




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