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<h2> VII </h2>
<p>Marie's father, Albert Tovesky, was one of the more intelligent Bohemians
who came West in the early seventies. He settled in Omaha and became a
leader and adviser among his people there. Marie was his youngest child,
by a second wife, and was the apple of his eye. She was barely sixteen,
and was in the graduating class of the Omaha High School, when Frank
Shabata arrived from the old country and set all the Bohemian girls in a
flutter. He was easily the buck of the beer-gardens, and on Sunday he was
a sight to see, with his silk hat and tucked shirt and blue frock-coat,
wearing gloves and carrying a little wisp of a yellow cane. He was tall
and fair, with splendid teeth and close-cropped yellow curls, and he wore
a slightly disdainful expression, proper for a young man with high
connections, whose mother had a big farm in the Elbe valley. There was
often an interesting discontent in his blue eyes, and every Bohemian girl
he met imagined herself the cause of that unsatisfied expression. He had a
way of drawing out his cambric handkerchief slowly, by one corner, from
his breast-pocket, that was melancholy and romantic in the extreme. He
took a little flight with each of the more eligible Bohemian girls, but it
was when he was with little Marie Tovesky that he drew his handkerchief
out most slowly, and, after he had lit a fresh cigar, dropped the match
most despairingly. Any one could see, with half an eye, that his proud
heart was bleeding for somebody.</p>
<p>One Sunday, late in the summer after Marie's graduation, she met Frank at
a Bohemian picnic down the river and went rowing with him all the
afternoon. When she got home that evening she went straight to her
father's room and told him that she was engaged to Shabata. Old Tovesky
was having a comfortable pipe before he went to bed. When he heard his
daughter's announcement, he first prudently corked his beer bottle and
then leaped to his feet and had a turn of temper. He characterized Frank
Shabata by a Bohemian expression which is the equivalent of stuffed shirt.</p>
<p>"Why don't he go to work like the rest of us did? His farm in the Elbe
valley, indeed! Ain't he got plenty brothers and sisters? It's his
mother's farm, and why don't he stay at home and help her? Haven't I seen
his mother out in the morning at five o'clock with her ladle and her big
bucket on wheels, putting liquid manure on the cabbages? Don't I know the
look of old Eva Shabata's hands? Like an old horse's hoofs they are—and
this fellow wearing gloves and rings! Engaged, indeed! You aren't fit to
be out of school, and that's what's the matter with you. I will send you
off to the Sisters of the Sacred Heart in St. Louis, and they will teach
you some sense, <i>I</i> guess!"</p>
<p>Accordingly, the very next week, Albert Tovesky took his daughter, pale
and tearful, down the river to the convent. But the way to make Frank want
anything was to tell him he couldn't have it. He managed to have an
interview with Marie before she went away, and whereas he had been only
half in love with her before, he now persuaded himself that he would not
stop at anything. Marie took with her to the convent, under the canvas
lining of her trunk, the results of a laborious and satisfying morning on
Frank's part; no less than a dozen photographs of himself, taken in a
dozen different love-lorn attitudes. There was a little round photograph
for her watch-case, photographs for her wall and dresser, and even long
narrow ones to be used as bookmarks. More than once the handsome gentleman
was torn to pieces before the French class by an indignant nun.</p>
<p>Marie pined in the convent for a year, until her eighteenth birthday was
passed. Then she met Frank Shabata in the Union Station in St. Louis and
ran away with him. Old Tovesky forgave his daughter because there was
nothing else to do, and bought her a farm in the country that she had
loved so well as a child. Since then her story had been a part of the
history of the Divide. She and Frank had been living there for five years
when Carl Linstrum came back to pay his long deferred visit to Alexandra.
Frank had, on the whole, done better than one might have expected. He had
flung himself at the soil with savage energy. Once a year he went to
Hastings or to Omaha, on a spree. He stayed away for a week or two, and
then came home and worked like a demon. He did work; if he felt sorry for
himself, that was his own affair.</p>
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