<h2>CHAPTER IV<br/><br/> <small>AUNT CRETE TRANSFORMED</small></h2>
<p><span class="smcap">They</span> locked the house early one morning when
even the dusty bricks had a smell of freshness to
them before the hot sun baked them for another
day. The closed blinds seemed sullen like a conquered
tyrant, and the front door looked reproachfully
at Aunt Crete as she turned the key carefully
and tried it twice to be sure it was locked. The
lonesome look of the house gave the poor old lady
a pang as she turned the corner in her softly rustling
silk coat and skirt. She felt it had hardly
been right to put on a new black silk in the morning,
and go off from all the cares of the world,
just leave them, boldly ignore them, like any giddy
girl, and take a vacation. She regarded herself
with awe and a rising self-respect in every window
she passed. Somehow the look of dumpiness
had passed away mysteriously. It was not her
old self that was passing along the street to the
station bearing a cut-steel hand-bag, while Donald
carried her new satchel, and her new trunk<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[62]</SPAN></span>
bumped on a square ahead in the expressman’s
wagon.</p>
<p>It was a hot morning, and the great city station
seemed close and stuffy; but Aunt Crete mingled
with the steaming crowd blissfully. To be one
with the world, attired irreproachably; to be on
her way to a great hotel by the sea, with new
clothes, and escorted devotedly by some one that
was her very own, this indeed was happiness.
Could any one desire more upon the earth?</p>
<p>Donald put her into a cab at the station, and she
beamed happily out at the frightful streets that
always made her heart come into her mouth on
the rare occasions when she had to cross them.
The ride across the city seemed a brief and distinguished
experience. It was as if everybody else
was walking and they only had the grandeur of a
carriage. Then the ferry-boat was delightful to
the new traveller, with its long, white-ceiled passages,
and its smell of wet timbers and tarred
ropes. They had a seat close to the front, where
they could look out and watch their own progress
and see the many puffing monsters laboriously
plying back and forth, and the horizon-line of
many masts, like fine brown lines against the sky.
Aunt Crete felt that at last she was out in the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[63]</SPAN></span>
world. She could not have felt it more if she had
been starting for Europe.</p>
<div class="figright"> <ANTIMG src="images/i-070.jpg" width-obs="400" height-obs="500" alt="Aunt Crete, well-dressed and smiling at other passengers" /> <div class="caption">“SHE BEAMED UPON THE WHOLE TRAINFUL OF PEOPLE”</div>
</div>
<p>The seashore train, with its bamboo seats and
its excited groups of children bearing tin pails and
shovels and tennis-rackets, filled her with a fine
exhilaration. At last, at last, her soul had escaped
the bounds of red brick walls that she had expected
would surround her as long as she lived.
She drew deep breaths, and beamed upon the
whole trainful of people, yelling baby and all. She
gazed and gazed at the fast-flying Jersey scenery,
grown so monotonous to some of the travellers,
and admired every little white and green town at
which they paused.</p>
<p>Donald put her into a carriage when they
reached the shore. Half an hour off they had
begun to smell the sea, and to catch glimpses of
low-lying marshes and a misty blueness against
the sky. Now every friendly hackman at the
station seemed a part of the great day to Aunt
Crete. So pretty a carriage, with low steps and
gray cushions and a fringe all around the canopy,
and a white speckled horse, with long, gentle,
white eyelashes. Aunt Crete leaned back self-consciously
on the gray cushions, and enjoyed the
creak of her silk jacket as she settled into place.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[64]</SPAN></span>
She felt as if this was a play that would soon be
over; but she would enjoy it to the very end, and
then go back to her dish-washing and cellar-cleaning,
and being blamed, and bear them all in
happy remembrance of what she had had for one
blissful vacation.</p>
<p>She did not know that Donald had telephoned
ahead for the best apartments in the hotel. She
was engaged in watching for the first blue line
of the great mysterious ocean; and, when it came
into sight, billowing suddenly above the line of
board walk as they turned a corner, her heart
stood still for one moment, and then bounded onward
set to the time of wonder.</p>
<p>Two obsequious porters jumped to assist Aunt
Crete from the carriage. The hand-baggage
drifted up the steps as if by magic, and awaited
them in the apartments to which they arose in a
luxurious elevator. Aunt Crete noticed several
old ladies with pink and blue wool knitting, sitting
in a row of large rocking-chairs, as she glided up
to the second floor. It gave her rest on one point,
for they all wore white dresses. She had been a
little dubious about those white dresses that
Donald had insisted upon. But now she might
enjoy them unashamed. O, what would Luella say?</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[65]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>She glanced around the room, half-fearfully
expecting to find Luella waiting there. Somehow,
now she was here, she wanted to get used to it
and enjoy it all before Luella came. For Luella
was an uncertain quantity. Luella might not like
it, after all! Dreadful thought! And after Donald
had taken so much trouble and spent so much
money all to surprise them!</p>
<p>The smiling porter absorbed the goodly tip that
Donald handed him, and went his way. Aunt
Crete and Donald were left alone. They looked
at each other and smiled.</p>
<p>“Let’s look around and see where they’ve put
us,” said Donald, pushing the swaying curtains
aside; and there before them rolled the blue tide
of the ocean. Aunt Crete sank into a chair, and
was silent for a while; and then she said: “It’s
just as big as I thought it would be. I was so
afraid it wouldn’t be. Some folks next door went
down to the shore last year, and they said it didn’t
look big enough to what they’d expected; and I’ve
been afraid ever since.”</p>
<p>Donald’s eyes filled with a tender light that was
beautiful to see. He was enjoying the spending
of his money, and it was yielding him a rich reward
already.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[66]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>The apartments that had been assigned to them
consisted of a parlor and two large bedrooms with
private baths. Donald discovered a few moments
later, when he went down to the office to investigate,
that Luella and his aunt occupied a single
room on the fourth floor back, overlooking the
kitchen court. It was not where he would have
placed them, had they chosen to await his coming
and be taken down to the shore in style. But now
that they had run away from him, and were too
evidently ashamed of him, perhaps it was as well
to let them remain where they were, he reflected.</p>
<p>“Aunt Carrie and Luella have gone out with a
party in a carriage for an all-day drive to Pleasure
Bay,” announced Donald when he came up.
“Aunt Carrie’s ankle must be better.”</p>
<p>“Well, that’s real nice!” exclaimed Aunt Crete
with a smile, turning from her view of the sea,
where she had been ever since he left her. “I’m
glad Luella is having a good time, and we sha’n’t
miss her a mite. You and I’ll have the ocean all
to ourselves to-day.”</p>
<p>Donald smiled approvingly. He was not altogether
sure he cared to meet that other aunt and
cousin at all. He was not sure but he would like<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[67]</SPAN></span>
to run away from them, and carry Aunt Crete
with him.</p>
<p>“Very well,” he said, “I’m glad you’re not disappointed.
We’ll do just whatever we want to.
Would you like to go in bathing?”</p>
<p>“O, my! Could I? I’ve always thought I’d like
to see how it would feel, but I guess I’m too old.
Besides, there’s my figger. It wouldn’t look nice
in a bathing-suit. Luella wouldn’t like it a bit,
and I don’t want to disgrace her, now I’m here.
She always makes a lot of fun of old people going
in and sitting right on the edge of the water. I
guess it won’t do.”</p>
<p>“Yes, it will do, if you want to. Didn’t I tell
you this was my party, and Luella isn’t in it?
That’s ridiculous. I’ll take you in myself, Aunt
Crete, and we’ll have the best time out; and you
sha’n’t be scared, either. I can swim like a fish.
You shall go in every day. Would you like to begin
at once?”</p>
<p>“I should,” said Aunt Crete, rising with a look
of resolution in her face. She felt that Luella
would condemn the amusement for her; so, if she
was to dare it, it must be done before her niece
appeared.</p>
<p>They went down to the beach, and for a few<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[68]</SPAN></span>
minutes surveyed the bathers as they came out
to the water. Then with joy and daring in her
face Aunt Crete went into the little bath-house
with wildly beating heart, arrayed herself in the
gay blue flannel garb provided for her use, and
came timidly out to meet Donald, tall and smiling
in his blue jerseys.</p>
<p>They had a wonderful time. It was almost
better than shopping. Donald led her down to
the water, and very gently accustomed her to it
until he had led her out beyond the roughness,
where his strong arms lifted her well above the
swells until she felt as if she was a bird. It was
marvellous that she was not afraid, but she was
not. It was as if she had that morning been
transferred back over forty years to her youth
again, and was having the good times that she had
longed for, such as other girls had—the swings,
and the rides, and the skatings, and bicyclings.
How many such things she had watched through
the years, with her heart palpitating with daring
to do it all herself! Her petulant sister and the
logy Luella never dreamed that Aunt Crete desired
such un-auntly indulgences. If they had,
they would have taken it out of her, scorched it
out with scorn.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[69]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>The white hair with its natural waves fluffed
out beautifully, like a canary’s feathers, after the
bath, and Aunt Crete was smiling and charming
at lunch in one of her fine new white dresses. She
had hurried to put it on before Luella appeared,
lest they might all be spirited away from her if
Luella discovered them. She reflected with a sigh
that they would likely fit Luella beautifully, and
that that would probably be their final destination,
just as Luella’s discarded garments came to her.</p>
<p>But there was nothing to mar the lunch-time
and the beautiful afternoon, wherein, after a delicious
nap to the accompaniment of the music of
the waves, she was taken to drive in the fringed
carriage again, while a bunch of handsome ladies,
old and young, sat on the hotel piazza in more of
those abundant rockers, and watched her approvingly.
She felt that she was of some importance
in their eyes. She had suddenly blossomed out of
her insignificance, and was worth looking at. It
warmed her heart with humble pleasure. She
felt that she had won approval, not through any
merit of her own, but through Donald’s loving-kindness.
It was wonderful what a charm clothes
could work.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[70]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“Put on your gray silk for dinner,” said Donald
with malice aforethought in his heart.</p>
<p>“O,” gasped Aunt Crete, “I think I ought to
keep that for parties, don’t you?”</p>
<p>“If ever there was a party, it’s going to be to-night,”
said Donald. “It’s going to be a surprise-party.
You want to see if Aunt Carrie and Luella
will know you, you know.”</p>
<p>So with trembling fingers Aunt Crete arrayed
herself in her purple and fine linen, very materially
assisted by a quiet maid, whom Donald had
ordered sent to the room, and who persuaded Aunt
Crete to let her arrange the pretty white hair.</p>
<p>It was surprising to see, when the coiffure was
complete, that she looked quite like the other old
ladies, who were not old at all, only playing old.</p>
<p>“I don’t believe they will know me,” whispered
Aunt Crete to herself as she stood before the full-length
mirror and surveyed the effect. “And I
didn’t think I could ever look like that!” she murmured
after a more prolonged gaze, during which
she made the acquaintance of her new self. Then
she added half wistfully: “I wish I had known it
before. I think perhaps they’d have—liked me—more
if I’d looked that way all the time.” She
sighed half regretfully, as if she were bidding<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[71]</SPAN></span>
good-by to this new vision, and went out to Donald,
who awaited her. She felt that the picnic part of
her vacation was almost over now, for Carrie and
Luella would be sure to manage to spoil it someway.</p>
<p>Donald looked up from his paper with a welcome
in his eyes. It was the first time she had
seen him in evening dress, and she thought him
handsome as a king.</p>
<p>“You’re a very beautiful woman, Aunt Crete;
do you know it?” said Donald with satisfaction.
He had felt that the French maid would know how
to put just the right touch to Aunt Crete’s pretty
hair to take away her odd, “unused” appearance.
Now she was completely in the fashion, and she
looked every inch a lady. She somehow seemed
to have natural intuition for gentle manners. Perhaps
her kindly heart dictated them, for surely
there can be no better manners than come
wrapped up with the Golden Rule, and Aunt Crete
had lived by that all her life.</p>
<p>They entered the great dining-hall, and made
their way among the palms in a blaze of electric
light, with the head waiter bowing obsequiously
before them. They had a table to themselves, and
Aunt Crete rejoiced in the tiny shaded candles and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[72]</SPAN></span>
the hothouse roses in the centre, and lifted the
handsome napkins and silver forks with awe.
Sometimes it seemed as if she were still dreaming.</p>
<p>The party from Pleasure Bay had reached home
rather late in the afternoon, after a tedious time
in the hot sun at a place full of peanut-stands and
merry-go-rounds and moving-picture shows.
Luella had not had a good time. She had been disappointed
that none of the young men in the party
had paid her special attention. In fact, the special
young man for whose sake she had prodded her
mother into going had not accompanied them at
all. Luella was thoroughly cross.</p>
<p>“Mercy, how you’ve burned your nose, Luella!”
said her mother sharply. “It’s so unbecoming.
The skin is all peeling off. I do wish you’d wear a
veil. You can’t afford to lose your complexion,
with such a figure as you have.”</p>
<p>“O, fiddlesticks! I wish you’d let up on that,
ma,” snapped Luella. “Didn’t you get a letter
from Aunt Crete? I wonder what she’s thinking
about not to send that lavender organdie. I
wanted to wear it to-night. There’s to be a hop
in the ballroom, and that would be just the thing.
She ought to have got it done; she’s had time
enough since I telephoned. I suppose she’s gone<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[73]</SPAN></span>
to reading again. I do wish I’d remembered to
lock up the bookcase. She’s crazy for novels.”</p>
<p>All this time Luella was being buttoned into a
pink silk muslin heavily decorated with cheap lace.
There were twenty-six tiny elusive buttons, and
Luella’s mother was tired.</p>
<p>“What on earth makes you so long, ma?” snarled
Luella, twisting her neck to try to see her back.
“We’ll be so late we won’t get served, and I’m hungry
as a bear.”</p>
<p>They hurried down, arriving at the door just as
Aunt Crete and Donald were being settled into
their chairs by the smiling head waiter.</p>
<p>“For goodness’ sake! those must be swells,” said
Luella in a low tone. “Did you see how that waiter
bowed and smiled? He never does that to us. I
expect he got a big tip. See, they’re sitting right
next our table. Goodness, ma, your hair is all
slipped to one side. Put it up quick. No, the
other side. Say, he’s an awfully handsome young
man. I wonder if we can get introduced. I just
know he dances gracefully. Say, mother, I’d like
to get him for a partner to-night. I guess those
stuck-up Grandons would open their eyes then.”</p>
<p>“Hush, Luella; he’ll hear you.”</p>
<p>They settled into their places unassisted by the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[74]</SPAN></span>
dilatory waiter, who came languidly up a moment
later to take their order.</p>
<p>Aunt Crete’s back was happily toward her relatives,
and so she ate her dinner in comfort. The
palms were all about, and the gentle clink of silver
and glass, and refined voices. The soft strains
of an orchestra hidden in a balcony of ferns and
palms drowned Luella’s strident voice when it was
raised in discontented strain, and so Aunt Crete
failed to recognize the sound. But Donald had
been on the alert. In the first place, he had asked
a question or two, and knew about where his relatives
usually sat, and had purposely asked to be
placed near them. He studied Luella when she
came in, and felt pretty sure she was the girl he
had seen on the platform of the train the morning
he arrived in Midvale; and finally in a break in the
music he distinctly caught the name “Luella” from
the lips of the sour woman in the purple satin with
white question-marks all over it and plasters of
white lace.</p>
<p>Aunt Carrie was tall and thin, with a discontented
droop to her lips, and premature wrinkles.
She wore an affected air of abnormal politeness
and disapproval of everything. She was studying
the silver-gray silk back in front of her and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[75]</SPAN></span>
wondering what there was about that elegant-looking
woman with the lovely white waved pompadour
and puffs, and that exquisite real lace collar,
to remind her of poor sister Lucretia. She
always coupled the adjective “poor” with her sister’s
name when she thought of all her shortcomings.</p>
<p>Luella’s discontent was somewhat enlivened by
the sight of the young man that had not gone on
the drive to Pleasure Bay. He stood in the doorway,
searching the room with keen, interested
eyes. Could it be that he was looking for her?
Luella’s heart leaped in a moment’s triumph. Yes,
he seemed to be looking that way as if he had
found the object of his search, and he was surely
coming down toward them with a real smile on his
face. Luella’s face broke into preparatory smiles.
She would be very coy, and pretend not to see him;
so she began a voluble and animated conversation
with her mother about the charming time they had
had that day, which might have surprised the
worthy woman if she had not been accustomed to
her daughter’s wiles. She knew it to be a warning
of the proximity of some one that Luella
wished to charm.</p>
<p>The young man came on straight by the solicitous<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[76]</SPAN></span>
waiters, who waved him frantically to various
tables. Luella cast a rapid side glance, and talked
on gayly with drooping head and averted gaze.
Her mother looked up, wondering, to see what was
the cause of Luella’s animation. He was quite
near now, and in a moment more he would speak.
The girl felt excited thrills creeping up her back,
and the color rushed into her cheeks, which were
already red enough from the wind and sun of the
day.</p>
<p>“Well, well,” said the young man’s voice in a
hearty eagerness Luella had never hoped to hear
addressed to herself, “this is too good to be true.
Don, old man, where did you drop from? I saw
your name in the register, and rushed right into
the dining-room——”</p>
<p>“Clarence Grandon, as true as I live!” said a
pleasant voice behind Luella. “I thought you were
in Europe, bless your heart. This is the best thing
that could have happened. Let me introduce my
aunt——”</p>
<p>Some seconds before this Luella’s thrills had
changed to chills. Mortification stole over her
face and up to the roots of her hair. Even the
back of her neck, where her bathing-suit was cut
low and square, turned angry-looking. The pink<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[77]</SPAN></span>
muslin had a round neck, and showed a half-circle
of whiter neck below the bathing-suit square. But
Luella had the presence of mind to smile on to her
mother in mild pretence that she had but just
noticed the advent of the young man behind. An
obsequious waiter was bringing an extra chair for
Mr. Grandon, and he was to be seated so that he
could look toward their table. Perhaps he would
recognize her yet, and there might be a chance of
introduction to the handsome stranger. Luella
dallied with her dinner in fond hope, and her
mother aided and abetted her.</p>
<p>The lovely old lady with the silver-gray silk and
the real lace collar and beautiful hair had her back
squarely toward the table where Luella and her
mother sat. They could not see her face. They
could only notice how interested both the young
men were in her, and how courteous they were to
her; and they decided she must be some very great
personage indeed. They watched her half enviously,
and began to plan some way to scrape an
acquaintance with her. One glimpse they had of
her face as the head waiter rushed to draw back
her chair when she had finished her dinner. It
was a fine, handsome face, younger than they had
expected to see, with beautiful sparkling eyes full<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[78]</SPAN></span>
of mirth and contentment. What was there in the
face that reminded them of something? Had they
ever met that old lady before?</p>
<p>Luella and her mother brought their dallied dessert
to a sudden ending, and followed hard upon
the footsteps of the three down the length of the
dining-hall; but the lady in gray and her two attendants
had disappeared already, and disconsolately
they lingered about, looking up and down
the length of piazzas in vain hope to see them sitting
in one of the great rows of rockers, watching
the many-tinted waves in the dying evening light;
but there was no sign of them anywhere.</p>
<p>As they stood thus leaning over the balcony, a
large automobile, gray, with white cushions, like
a great gliding dove, slipped silently up to the entrance
below them in the well-bred silence that an
expensive machine knows how to assume under
dignified owners.</p>
<p>Luella twitched her mother’s sleeve. “That’s
Grandon’s car,” she whispered. “P’raps I’ll get
asked to go. Let’s sit down here and wait.”</p>
<p>The mother obediently sat down.</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[79]</SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />