Only one memory in the ten days that followed before her school

began ever stood out clearly and distinctly with Kate. That was

the morning of the day after she married George Holt. She saw

Nancy Ellen and Robert at the gate so she went out to speak with

them. Nancy Ellen was driving, she held the lines and the whip in

her hands. Kate in dull apathy wondered why they seemed so deeply

agitated. Both of them stared at her as if she might be a maniac.

"Is this thing in the morning paper true?" cried Nancy Ellen in a

high, shrill voice that made Kate start in wonder. She did not

take the trouble to evade by asking "what thing?" she merely made

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assent with her head.

"You are married to that -- that --" Nancy Ellen choked until she

could not say what.

"It's TIME to stop, since I am married to him," said Kate,

gravely.

"You rushed in and married him without giving Robert time to find

out and tell you what everybody knows about him?" demanded Nancy

Ellen.

"I married him for what I knew about him myself," said Kate. "We

shall do very well."

"Do well!" cried Nancy. "Do well! You'll be hungry and in rags

the rest of your life!"

"Don't, Nancy Ellen, don't!" plead Robert. "This is Kate's

affair, wait until you hear what she has to say before you go

further."

"I don't care what she has to say!" cried Nancy Ellen. "I'm

saying my say right now. This is a disgrace to the whole Bates

family. We may not be much, but there isn't a lazy, gambling,

drunken loafer among us, and there won't be so far as I'm

concerned."

She glared at Kate who gazed at her in wonder.

"You really married this lout?" she demanded.

"I told you I was married," said Kate, patiently, for she saw that

Nancy Ellen was irresponsible with anger.

"You're going to live with him, you're going to stay in Walden to

live?" she cried.

"That is my plan at present," said Kate.

"Well, see that YOU STAY THERE," said Nancy Ellen. "You can't

bring that -- that creature to my house, and if you're going to be

his wife, you needn't come yourself. That's all I've got to say

to you, you shameless, crazy --"

"Nancy Ellen, you shall not!" cried Robert Gray, deftly slipping

the lines from her fingers, and starting the horse full speed.

Kate saw Nancy Ellen's head fall forward, and her hands lifted to

cover her face. She heard the deep, tearing sob that shook her,

and then they were gone. She did not know what to do, so she

stood still in the hot sunshine, trying to think; but her brain

refused to act at her will. When the heat became oppressive, she

turned back to the shade of a tree, sat down, and leaned against

it. There she got two things clear after a time. She had married

George Holt, there was nothing to do but make the best of it. But

Nancy Ellen had said that if she lived with him she should not

come to her home. Very well. She had to live with him, since she

had consented to marry him, so she was cut off from Robert and

Nancy Ellen. She was now a prodigal, indeed. And those things

Nancy Ellen had said -- she was wild with anger. She had been

misinformed. Those things could not be true.




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