Richard was not happy in his new home; it did not fit him like the old.

He missed his mother's petting; he missed the society of his plain,

outspoken brothers; he missed his freedom from restraint, and he missed

the deference so universally paid to him in Olney, where he was the only

lion. In Camden there were many to divide the honors with him; and

though he was perhaps unconscious of it, he had been first so long that

to be one of many firsts was not altogether agreeable. With the new home

and new associates more like those to which she had been accustomed,

Ethelyn had resumed her training process, which was not now borne as

patiently as in the halcyon days of the honeymoon, when most things wore

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the couleur de rose and were right because they came from the pretty

young bride. Richard chafed under the criticisms to which he was so

frequently subjected, and if he improved on them in the least it was not

perceptible to Ethlyn, who had just cause to blush for the careless

habits of her husband--habits which even Melinda observed, when in

August she spent a week with Ethelyn, and then formed one of a party

which went for a pleasure trip to St. Paul and Minnehaha. From this

excursion, which lasted for two weeks, Richard returned to Camden in

anything but an amiable frame of mind. Ethelyn had not pleased him at

all, notwithstanding that she had been unquestionably the reigning belle

of the party--the one whose hand was claimed in every dance, and whose

company was sought in every ride and picnic. Marcia Fenton and Ella

Backus faded into nothingness when she was near, and they laughingly

complained to Richard that his wife had stolen all their beaux away, and

they wished he would make her do better.

"I wish I could," was his reply, spoken not playfully, but moodily, just

as he felt at the time.

He was not an adept in concealing his feelings, which generally showed

themselves upon his face, or were betrayed in the tones of his voice,

and when he spoke as he did of his wife the two young girls glanced

curiously at each other, wondering if it where possible that the grave

Judge was jealous. If charged with jealousy Richard would have denied

it, though he did not care to have Ethelyn so much in Harry Clifford's

society. Richard knew nothing definite against Harry, except that he

would occasionally drink more than was wholly in accordance with a

steady and safe locomotion of his body; and once since they had been at

the Stafford House, where he also boarded, the young lawyer had been

invisible for three entire days. "Sick with a cold" was his excuse when

he appeared again at the table, with haggard face and bloodshot eyes;

but in the parlor, and halls, and private rooms, there where whispers of

soiled clothes and jammed hats, and the servants bribed to keep the

secret that young lawyer Clifford's boots were carried dangling up to

No. 94 at a very late hour of the night on which he professed to have

taken his cold. After this, pretty Marcia Fenton, who, before Ethelyn

came to town, had ridden oftenest after the black horses owned by Harry,

tossed her curls when he came near, and arched her eyebrows in a manner

rather distasteful to the young man; while Ella Backus turned her back

upon him, and in his hearing gave frequent lectures on intemperance and

its loathsomeness. Ethelyn, on the contrary, made no difference in her

demeanor toward him. She cared nothing for him either way, except that

his polite attentions and delicate deference to her tastes and opinions

were complimentary and flattering, and so she saw no reason why she

should shun him because he had fallen once. It might make him worse, and

she should stand by him as an act of philanthropy, she said to Richard

when he asked her what she saw to admire in that drunken Clifford.




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