To withhold for his own start in life only one ten-dollar bill from

fifteen hundred dollars was spectacular enough to soothe even so bruised

an ego as Bud Moore carried into the judge's office. There is an

anger which carries a person to the extreme of self-sacrifice, in the

subconscious hope of exciting pity for one so hardly used. Bud was

boiling with such an anger, and it demanded that he should all but give

Marie the shirt off his back, since she had demanded so much--and for so

slight a cause.

Bud could not see for the life of him why Marie should have quit for

that little ruction. It was not their first quarrel, nor their worst;

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certainly he had not expected it to be their last. Why, he asked the

high heavens, had she told him to bring home a roll of cotton, if she

was going to leave him? Why had she turned her back on that little home,

that had seemed to mean as much to her as it had to him?

Being kin to primitive man, Bud could only bellow rage when he should

have analyzed calmly the situation. He should have seen that Marie too

had cabin fever, induced by changing too suddenly from carefree girlhood

to the ills and irks of wifehood and motherhood. He should have known

that she had been for two months wholly dedicated to the small physical

wants of their baby, and that if his nerves were fraying with watching

that incessant servitude, her own must be close to the snapping point;

had snapped, when dusk did not bring him home repentant.

But he did not know, and so he blamed Marie bitterly for the wreck of

their home, and he flung down all his worldly goods before her, and

marched off feeling self-consciously proud of his martyrdom. It soothed

him paradoxically to tell himself that he was "cleaned"; that Marie had

ruined him absolutely, and that he was just ten dollars and a decent

suit or two of clothes better off than a tramp. He was tempted to go

back and send the ten dollars after the rest of the fifteen hundred, but

good sense prevailed. He would have to borrow money for his next meal,

if he did that, and Bud was touchy about such things.

He kept the ten dollars therefore, and went down to the garage where he

felt most at home, and stood there with his hands in his pockets and the

corners of his mouth tipped downward--normally they had a way of tipping

upward, as though he was secretly amused at something--and his eyes

sullen, though they carried tiny lines at the corners to show how they

used to twinkle. He took the ten-dollar bank note from his pocket,

straightened out the wrinkles and looked at it disdainfully. As plainly

as though he spoke, his face told what he was thinking about it: that

this was what a woman had brought him to! He crumpled it up and made a

gesture as though he would throw it into the street, and a man behind

him laughed abruptly. Bud scowled and turned toward him a belligerent

glance, and the man stopped laughing as suddenly as he had begun.




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