<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_82'></SPAN>82</span>CHAPTER X</h2>
<p>It was the day before Christmas. For eight
weeks Margaret had been at Elmhurst, Miss
Dole’s school in the Berkshires. School—Miss
Dole’s school—had been something of a surprise
to Margaret; and Margaret had been decidedly
a surprise to the school. Margaret was
not used to young misses who fared sumptuously
every day, and who yet complained because a
favorite ice cream or a pet kind of cake was not
always forthcoming; and Miss Dole’s pupils were
not used to a little girl who questioned their right
to be well-fed and well-clothed, and who supplemented
this questioning with distressing stories of
other little girls who had little to wear and less to
eat day after day, and week after week.</p>
<p>Margaret had not gone to Elmhurst without a
struggle on the part of her mother. To Mrs. Kendall
it seemed cruel to be separated so soon from
the little daughter who had but just been restored
to her hungry arms after four long years of almost
hopeless waiting. On the other hand, there were
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_83'></SPAN>83</span>
Margaret’s own interests to be thought of. School,
certainly, was a necessity, unless there should be
a governess at home; and of this last Mrs. Kendall
did not approve. She particularly wished
Margaret to have the companionship of happy,
well-bred girls of her own age. The Houghtonsville
public school was hardly the place, in Mrs.
Kendall’s opinion, for a little maid with Margaret’s
somewhat peculiar ideas as to matters and things.
There was Bobby, too—Bobby, the constant reminder
in word and deed of the city streets and
misery that Mrs. Kendall particularly wished forgotten.
Yes, there certainly was Bobby to be
thought of—and to be avoided. It was because
of all this, therefore, that Margaret had been sent
to Elmhurst. She had gone there straight from the
great hotel in the mountains, where she and her
mother had been spending a few weeks; so she
had not seen Houghtonsville since September. It
was the Christmas vacation now, and she was going
back—back to the house with the stone lions
and the big play room where had lain for so long
the little woolly dog of her babyhood.</p>
<p>It was not of the stone lions, nor the play room
that Margaret was thinking, however; it was of
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_84'></SPAN>84</span>
something much more important and more—delightful,
the girls said. At all events, it was wonderfully
exciting, and promised all sorts of charming
possibilities in the way of music, pretty clothes,
and good things to eat—again according to the
girls.</p>
<p>It was a wedding.</p>
<p>Margaret’s idea of marriage had undergone a
decided change in the last few weeks. The envious
delight of the girls over the fact that she was
to be so intimately connected with a wedding,
together with their absorbing interest in every
detail, had been far more convincing than all of
Mrs. Kendall’s anxious teachings: marriage might
not be such a calamity, after all.</p>
<p>It had come as somewhat of a shock to Margaret—this
envious delight of her companions.
She had looked upon her mother’s marriage as
something to be deplored; something to be tolerated,
to be sure, since for some unaccountable
reason her mother wanted it; but, still nevertheless
an evil. There was the contract, to be sure,
and the doctor had signed it without a murmur;
but Margaret doubted the efficacy of even that at
times—it would take something more than a contract,
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_85'></SPAN>85</span>
certainly, if the doctor should prove to be
anything like Mike Whalen for a husband.</p>
<p>The doctor would not be like Mike Whalen,
however—so the girls said. They had never seen
any husbands that were like him, for that matter.
They knew nothing whatever about husbands that
shook and beat their wives and banged them
around. All this they declared unhesitatingly,
and with no little indignation in response to
Margaret’s somewhat doubting questions. There
were the story-books, too. The girls all had them,
and each book was full of fair ladies and brave
knights, and of beautiful princesses who married
the king—and who wanted to marry him, too,
and who would have felt very badly if they could
not have married him!</p>
<p>In the face of so overwhelming an array of evidence,
Margaret almost lost her fears—marriage
might be very desirable, after all. And so it was
a very happy little girl that left Elmhurst on the
day before Christmas and, in care of one of the
teachers, journeyed toward Houghtonsville, where
were waiting the play room, the great stone lions,
and the wonderful wedding, to say nothing of the
dear loving mother herself.
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_86'></SPAN>86</span></p>
<p>It was not quite the same Margaret that had
left Houghtonsville a few months before. Even
those short weeks had not been without their influence.</p>
<p>Margaret, in accordance with Mrs. Kendall’s
urgent request, had been the special charge of
every teacher at Elmhurst; and every teacher
knew the story of the little girl’s life, as well as
just what they all had now to battle against.
Everything that was good and beautiful was kept
constantly before her eyes, and so far as was
possible, everything that was the reverse of all
this was kept from her sight, and from being discussed
in her presence. She learned of wonderful
countries across the sea, and of the people
who lived in them. She studied about high
mountains and great rivers, and she was shown
pictures of kings and queens and palaces. Systematically
and persistently she was led along a
way that did not know the Alley, and that did
not recognize that there was in the world any
human creature who was poor, or sick, or
hungry.</p>
<p>It is little wonder, then, that she came to question
less and less the luxury all about her; that
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_87'></SPAN>87</span>
she wore the pretty dresses and dainty shoes, and
ate the food provided, with a resignation that was
strangely like content; and that she talked less
and less of Patty, the twins, and the Alley.</p>
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