K
them no less tender. Some such patient detachment must be that of the angels who keep the Great Record.     

       On her first Sunday half-holiday she was free in the morning, and went to church with her mother, going back to the hospital after the service. So it was two weeks before she saw Le Moyne again. Even then, it was only for a short time. Christine and Palmer Howe came in to see her, and to inspect the balcony, now finished.     

       But Sidney and Le Moyne had a few words together first.     

       There was a change in Sidney. Le Moyne was quick to see it. She was a trifle subdued, with a puzzled look in her blue eyes. Her mouth was tender, as always, but he thought it drooped. There was a new atmosphere of wistfulness about the girl that made his heart ache.     

       They were alone in the little parlor with its brown lamp and blue silk shade, and its small nude Eve—which Anna kept because it had been a gift from her husband, but retired behind a photograph of the minister, so that only the head and a bare arm holding the apple appeared above the reverend gentleman.     

       K. never smoked in the parlor, but by sheer force of habit he held the pipe in his teeth.     

       “And how have things been going?” asked Sidney practically.     

       “Your steward has little to report. Aunt Harriet, who left you her love, has had the complete order for the Lorenz trousseau. She and I have picked out a stunning design for the wedding dress. I thought I'd ask you about the veil. We're rather in a quandary. Do you like this new fashion of draping the veil from behind the coiffure in the back—”      

       Sidney had been sitting on the edge of her chair, staring.     

       “There,” she said—“I knew it! This house is fatal! They're making an old woman of you already.” Her tone was tragic.     

       “Miss Lorenz likes the new method, but my personal preference is for the old way, with the bride's face covered.”      

       He sucked calmly at his dead pipe.     

       “Katie has a new prescription—recipe—for bread. It has more bread and fewer air-holes. One cake of yeast—”    
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