Silence.

"Clarence!" she began imperatively.

Clarence withdrew his attention from the paper with an obvious

effort, and spoke in a laboriously polite tone.

"I don't care to discuss it, Rachael."

"But--" Rachael stopped short on the word. Silence reigned in the

big, bright room except for the occasional rustle of Clarence's

newspaper. His wife sat idle, her eyes roving indifferently from

the gayly papered walls to the gayly flowered hangings, the great

bowl of daffodils on the bookcase, the portrait of Carol that,

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youthful and self-conscious, looked down from the mantel. On the

desk a later photograph of Carol, in a silver frame, was duly

flanked by one of Rachael, the girl in the gown she had worn for

her first big dance, the woman looking out from under the narrow

brim of a snug winter hat, great furs framing her beautiful face,

and her slender figure wrapped in furs. Here also was a picture of

Florence Haviland, her handsome face self-satisfied, her trio of

homely, distinguished-looking girls about her, and a small picture

of Gardner, and two of Clarence's dead mother: one, as they all

remembered her, a prim-looking woman with gray hair and

magnificent lace on her unfashionable gown, the other, taken

thirty years before, showing her as cheerful and youthful, a

cascade of ringlets falling over her shoulder, the arm that

coquettishly supported her head resting upon an upholstered

pedestal, a voluminous striped silk gown sweeping away from her in

rich folds. There was even a picture of Clarence and Florence when

they were respectively eight and twelve, Clarence in a buttoned

serge kilt and plaid stockings, his fat, gentle little face framed

in damp careful curls, Florence also with plaid stockings and a

scalloped frock. Clarence sat in a swing; Florence, just behind

him, leaned on an open gate, her legs crossed carelessly as she

rested on her elbows. And there was a picture of their father, a

simple-faced man in an ample beard, taken at that period when

photographs were highly glazed, and raised in bas relief. Least

conspicuous of all was a snapshot framed in a circle of battered

blue-enamel daisies, the picture of a baby girl laughing against a

background of dandelions and meadow grass. And Rachael knew that

this was Clarence's greatest treasure, that it went wherever he

went, and that it was worn shabby and tarnished from his hands and

his lips.

Sometimes she looked at it and wondered. What a bright-faced, gay

little thing Billy had been! Who had set her down in that field,

and quieted the rioting eyes and curls and dimples, and anchored

the restless little feet, while Baby watched Dad and the black box

with the birdie in it? Paula? Once, idly interested in those old

days before she had known him, she had asked about the picture.

But Clarence, glad to talk of it, had not mentioned his wife.




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