"Care! for whom?" returned Maude. "For J.C. De Vere? Every particle

of love for him has died out, and I am now inclined to think I never

entertained for him more than a girlish fancy, while he certainly

did not truly care for me."

This answer was very quieting to Nellie's conscience, and in

unusually good spirits she abandoned herself to the excitement which

usually precedes a wedding. Mrs. Kennedy, too, entered heart and

soul into the matter, and arming herself with the plea, that "it was

his only daughter, who would probably never be married again," she

coaxed her husband into all manner of extravagances, and by the 1st

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of March few would have recognized the interior of the house, so

changed was it by furniture and repairs. Handsome damask curtains

shaded the parlor windows, which were further improved by large

heavy panes of glass. Matty's piano had been removed to Maude's

chamber, and its place supplied by a new and costly instrument,

which the crafty woman made her husband believe was intended by Mrs.

Kelsey, who selected it, as a bridal present for her niece. The

furnace was in splendid order, keeping the whole house, as Hannah

said, "hotter than an oven," while the disturbed doctor lamented

daily over the amount of fuel it consumed, and nightly counted the

contents of his purse or reckoned up how much he was probably worth.

But neither his remonstrances nor yet his frequent groans had any

effect upon his wife. Although she had no love for Nellie, she was

determined upon a splendid wedding, one which would make folks talk

for months, and when her liege lord complained of the confusion, she

suggested to him a furnished room in the garret, where it would be

very quiet for him to reckon up the bill, which from time to time

she brought him.

"Might as well gin in at oncet," John said to him one day, when he

borrowed ten dollars for the payment of an oyster bill. "I tell you

she's got more besom in her than both them t'other ones."

The doctor probably thought so too, for he became comparatively

submissive, though he visited often the sunken graves, where he

found a mournful solace in reading, "Katy, wife of Dr. Kennedy, aged

twenty-nine,"--"Matty, second wife of Dr. Kennedy, aged thirty," and

once he was absolutely guilty of wondering how the words, "Maude,

third wife of Dr. Kennedy, aged forty-one," would look. But he

repented him of the wicked thought, and when on his return from his

"graveyard musings," Maude, aged forty-one, asked him for the twenty

dollars which she saw a man pay to him that morning, he gave it to

her without a word.




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