I want you to marry me."
The girl still stared at him without moving. "I want you to
marry me," he repeated, clearing his throat. "The minister'll be up
here next Sunday and we can fix it up then. Or I'll drive you down
to Hepburn to the Justice, and get it done there. I'll do whatever
you say." His eyes fell under the merciless stare she continued to
fix on him, and he shifted his weight uneasily from one foot to the
other. As he stood there before her, unwieldy, shabby, disordered,
the purple veins distorting the hands he pressed against the desk,
and his long orator's jaw trembling with the effort of his avowal,
he seemed like a hideous parody of the fatherly old man she had
always known.
"Marry you? Me?" she burst out with a scornful laugh. "Was that
what you came to ask me the other night? What's come over you, I
wonder? How long is it since you've looked at yourself in the
glass?" She straightened herself, insolently conscious of her youth
and strength. "I suppose you think it would be cheaper to marry me
than to keep a hired girl. Everybody knows you're the closest man
in Eagle County; but I guess you're not going to get your mending
done for you that way twice."
Mr. Royall did not move while she spoke. His face was
ash-coloured and his black eyebrows quivered as though the blaze of
her scorn had blinded him. When she ceased he held up his hand.
"That'll do—that'll about do," he said. He turned to the door
and took his hat from the hat-peg. On the threshold he paused.
"People ain't been fair to me—from the first they ain't been fair
to me," he said. Then he went out.
A few days later North Dormer learned with surprise that Charity
had been appointed librarian of the Hatchard Memorial at a salary
of eight dollars a month, and that old Verena Marsh, from the
Creston Almshouse, was coming to live at lawyer Royall's and do the
cooking.
III
It was not in the room known at the red house as Mr. Royall's
"office" that he received his infrequent clients. Professional
dignity and masculine independence made it necessary that he should
have a real office, under a different roof; and his standing as the
only lawyer of North Dormer required that the roof should be the
same as that which sheltered the Town Hall and the post-office.
It was his habit to walk to this office twice a day, morning and
afternoon. It was on the ground floor of the building, with a
separate entrance, and a weathered name-plate on the door. Before
going in he stepped in to the post-office for his mail—usually an
empty ceremony—said a word or two to the town-clerk, who sat across
the passage in idle state, and then went over to the store on the
opposite corner, where Carrick Fry, the storekeeper, always kept a
chair for him, and where he was sure to find one or two selectmen
leaning on the long counter, in an atmosphere of rope, leather, tar
and coffee-beans. Mr. Royall, though monosyllabic at home, was not
averse, in certain moods, to imparting his views to his
fellow-townsmen; perhaps, also, he was unwilling that his rare
clients should surprise him sitting, clerkless and unoccupied, in
his dusty office. At any rate, his hours there were not much longer
or more regular than Charity's at the library; the rest of the time
he spent either at the store or in driving about the country on
business connected with the insurance companies that he
represented, or in sitting at home reading Bancroft's History of
the United States and the speeches of Daniel Webster.
Since the day when Charity had told him that she wished to
succeed to Eudora Skeff's post their relations had undefinably but
definitely changed. Lawyer Royall had kept his word. He had
obtained the place for her at the cost of considerable maneuvering,
as she guessed from the number of rival candidates, and from the
acerbity with which two of them, Orma Fry and the eldest Targatt
girl, treated her for nearly a year afterward. And he had engaged
Verena Marsh to come up from Creston and do the cooking. Verena was
a poor old widow, doddering and shiftless: Charity suspected that
she came for her keep. Mr. Royall was too close a man to give a
dollar a day to a smart girl when he could get a deaf pauper for
nothing. But at any rate, Verena was there, in the attic just over
Charity, and the fact that she was deaf did not greatly trouble the
young girl.
Charity knew that what had happened on that hateful night would
not happen again. She understood that, profoundly as she had
despised Mr.
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