"Peachy won't mind," said Ralph. "She told me the other night to go to

the Clubhouse as often as I wanted and stay as late."

"Clara says practically the same." Pete wrinkled his forehead in

perplexity. "It took my breath away. How do you account for it?"

"Oh, that's all right," Honey answered. stopping to dash the sweat from

his forehead, "I should say it was just a matter of their getting over

their foolishness. I suppose all young married women have it - that

instinct to monopolize their husbands. And when you think it over, we do

sort of give them the impression while we're courting them that they are

the whole cheese. But that isn't all. They've come to their senses on

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some other matters. I think, for instance, they're beginning to get our

point of view on this flying proposition. Lulu hasn't hinted that she'd

like to fly for three months. She's never been so contented since, we

captured them. To do her justice, though, she always saw, when I pointed

it out to her, that flying was foolish, besides being dangerous."

"Well," Ralph said, "what between holding them down from the clouds and

keeping them away from the, New Camp, managing them has been some job.

But I guess you're right, Honey. I think they're reconciled now to their

lot. If I do say it as shouldn't, Peachy seems like a regular woman

nowadays. She's braced up in fine style in the last two months. Her

color is much better; her spirits are high. When I get home at night,

she doesn't want to go out at all. If I say that I'm going to the

Clubhouse, she never raises a yip. In fact, she seems too tired to care.

She's always ready now to turn in when I do. For months and months, you

know, she sat up reading until all hours of the night and morning. But

now she falls asleep like a child."

"Then she's gotten over that insomnia?" Pete asked this casually and he

did not look at Ralph.

"Entirely," Ralph replied briefly, and in his turn he did not look at

Pete. "She's a perfectly healthy woman now. She gets her three squares

every day and her twelve hours every night - regular. I never saw such

an improvement in a woman."

"Well, when it comes to sleeping," Pete said, "I don't believe she's got

anything on Clara. I often find her dead to the world when I get home at

night. I jolly her about that - for she has always thought going to bed

early indicated lack of temperament. And as for teasing to be allowed to

fly, or to be taken out swimming, or to call on any of you, or to let

her tag me here - why, that's all stopped short. She keeps dozing off

all the evening. Sometimes in the midst of a sentence, she'll begin to

nod. Never saw her looking so well, though."




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