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CHAPTER IX
 On a morning, a week after this collapse1 of festal hopes, Mrs. Adams and her daughter were concluding a three-days' disturbance2, the “Spring house-cleaning”—postponed until now by Adams's long illness—and Alice, on her knees before a chest of drawers, in her mother's room, paused thoughtfully after dusting a packet of letters wrapped in worn muslin. She called to her mother, who was scrubbing the floor of the hallway just beyond the open door,  
“These old letters you had in the bottom drawer, weren't they some papa wrote you before you were married?”
 
Mrs. Adams laughed and said, “Yes. Just put 'em back where they were—or else up in the attic—anywhere you want to.”
 
“Do you mind if I read one, mama?”
 
Mrs. Adams laughed again. “Oh, I guess you can if you want to. I expect they're pretty funny!”
 
Alice laughed in response, and chose the topmost letter of the packet. “My dear, beautiful girl,” it began; and she stared at these singular words. They gave her a shock like that caused by overhearing some bewildering impropriety; and, having read them over to herself several times, she went on to experience other shocks.
 
MY DEAR, BEAUTIFUL GIRL:
 
This time yesterday I had a mighty3 bad case of blues4 because I had not had a word from you in two whole long days and when I do not hear from you every day things look mighty down in the mouth to me. Now it is all so different because your letter has arrived and besides I have got a piece of news I believe you will think as fine as I do. Darling, you will be surprised, so get ready to hear about a big effect on our future. It is this way. I had sort of a suspicion the head of the firm kind of took a fancy to me from the first when I went in there, and liked the way I attended to my work and so when he took me on this business trip with him I felt pretty sure of it and now it turns out I was about right. In return I guess I have got about the best boss in this world and I believe you will think so too. Yes, sweetheart, after the talk I have just had with him if J. A. Lamb asked me to cut my hand off for him I guess I would come pretty near doing it because what he says means the end of our waiting to be together. From New Years on he is going to put me in entire charge of the sundries dept. and what do you think is going to be my salary? Eleven hundred cool dollars a year ($1,100.00). That's all! Just only a cool eleven hundred per annum! Well, I guess that will show your mother whether I can take care of you or not. And oh how I would like to see your dear, beautiful, loving face when you get this news.
 
I would like to go out on the public streets and just dance and shout and it is all I can do to help doing it, especially when I know we will be talking it all over together this time next week, and oh my darling, now that your folks have no excuse for putting it off any longer we might be in our own little home before Xmas.
 
Would you be glad?
 
Well, darling, this settles everything and makes our future just about as smooth for us as anybody could ask. I can hardly realize after all this waiting life's troubles are over for you and me and we have nothing to do but to enjoy the happiness granted us by this wonderful, beautiful thing we call life. I know I am not any poet and the one I tried to write about you the day of the picnic was fearful but the way I THINK about you is a poem.
 
Write me what you think of the news. I know but write me anyhow.
 
I'll get it before we start home and I can be reading it over all the time on the tram.
 
Your always loving
 
VIRGIL.
 
The sound of her mother's diligent5 scrubbing in the hall came back slowly to Alice's hearing, as she restored the letter to the packet, wrapped the packet in its muslin covering, and returned it to the drawer. She had remained upon her knees while she read the letter; now she sank backward, sitting upon the floor with her hands behind her, an unconscious relaxing for better ease to think. Upon her face there had fallen a look of wonder.
 
For the first time she was vaguely6 perceiving that life is everlasting7 movement. Youth really believes what is running water to be a permanent crystallization and sees time fixed8 to a point: some people have dark hair, some people have blond hair, some people have gray hair. Until this moment, Alice had no conviction that there was a universe before she came into it. She had always thought of it as the background of herself: the moon was something to make her prettier on a summer night.
 
But this old letter, through which she saw still flickering9 an ancient starlight of young love, astounded10 her. Faintly before her it revealed the whole lives of her father and mother, who had been young, after all—they REALLY had—and their youth was now so utterly11 passed from them that the picture of it, in the letter, was like a burlesque12 of them. And so she, herself, must pass to such changes, too, and all that now seemed vital to her would be nothing.
 
When her work was finished, that afternoon, she went into her father's room. His recovery had progressed well enough to permit the departure of Miss Perry; and Adams, wearing one of Mrs. Adams's wrappers over his night-gown, sat in a high-backed chair by a closed window. The weather was warm, but the closed window and the flannel13 wrapper had not sufficed him: round his shoulders he had an old crocheted14 scarf of Alice's; his legs were wrapped in a heavy comfort; and, with these swathings about him, and his eyes closed, his thin and grizzled head making but a slight indentation in the pillow supporting it, he looked old and little and queer.
 
Alice would have gone out softly, but without opening his eyes, he spoke15 to her: “Don't go, dearie. Come sit with the old man a little while.”
 
She brought a chair near his. “I thought you were napping.”
 
“No. I don't hardly ever do that. I just drift a little sometimes.”
 
“How do you mean you drift, papa?”
 
He looked at her vaguely. “Oh, I don't know. Kind of pictures. They get a little mixed up—old times with times still ahead, like planning what to do, you know. That's as near a nap as I get—when the pictures mix up some. I suppose it's sort of drowsing.”
 
She took one of his hands and stroked it. “What do you mean when you say you have pictures like 'planning what to do'?” she asked.
 
“I mean planning what to do when I get out and able to go to work again.”
 
“But that doesn't need any planning,” Alice said, quickly. “You're going back to your old place at Lamb's, of course.”
 
Adams closed his eyes again, sighing heavily, but made no other response.
 
“Why, of COURSE you are!” she cried. “What are you talking about?”
 
His head turned slowly toward her, revealing the eyes, open in a haggard stare. “I heard you the other night when you came from the party,” he said. “I know what was the matter.”
 
“Indeed, you don't,” she assured him. “You don't know anything about it, because there wasn't anything the matter at all.”
 
“Don't you suppose I heard you crying? What'd you cry for if there wasn't anything the matter?”
 
“Just nerves, papa. It wasn't anything else in the world.”
 
“Never mind,” he said. “Your mother told me.”
 
“She promised me not to!”
 
At that Adams laughed mournfully. “It wouldn't be very likely I'd hear you so upset and not ask about it, even if she didn't come and tell me on her own hook. You needn't try to fool me; I tell you I know what was the matter.”
 
“The only matter was I had a silly fit,” Alice protested. “It did me good, too.”
 
“How's that?”
 
“Because I've decided16 to do something about it, papa.”
 
“That isn't the way your mother looks at it,” Adams said, ruefully. “She thinks it's our place to do something about it. Well, I don't know—I don't know; everything seems so changed these days. You've always been a good daughter, Alice, and you ought to have as much as any of these girls you go with; she's convinced me she's right about THAT. The trouble is——” He faltered17, apologetically, then went on, “I mean the question is—how to get it for you.”
 
“No!” she cried. “I had no business to make such a fuss just because a lot of idiots didn't break their necks to get dances with me and because I got mortified18 about Walter—Walter WAS pretty terrible——”
 
“Oh, me, my!” Adams lamented19. “I guess that's something we just have to leave work out itself. What you going to do with a boy nineteen or twenty years old that makes his own living? Can't whip him. Can't keep him locked up in the house. Just got to hope he'll learn better, I suppose.”
 
“Of course he didn't want to go to the Palmers',” Alice explained, tolerantly—“and as mama and I made him take me, and he thought that was pretty selfish in me, why, he felt he had a right to amuse himself any way he could. Of course it was awful that this—that this Mr. Russell should——” In spite of her, the recollection choked her.
 
“Yes, it was awful,” Adams agreed. “Just awful. Oh, me, my!”
 
But Alice recovered herself at once, and showed him a cheerful face. “Well, just a few years from now I pr............
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