Murder in Any Degree - LightNovelsOnl.com
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"Fourteen atrocities, imitation Louis Seize, bogus Oriental, feathered, laced and ta.s.seled. So much for useful presents. Now for decoration. We have three Sistine Madonnas (my particular abomination). Two, thank heaven, we can inflict on the next victims, one we have got to live with and why?--so that each of our three intimate friends will believe it his own. We have water colors and etchings which we don't want, and a photograph copy of every picture that every one sees in every one's house. Some original friend has even sent us a life-size, marble reproduction of the Venus de Milo. These things will be our artistic home. Then there are vases--"
"Now you are losing your temper."
"On the contrary, I'm reserving it. I shan't characterize the bric-a-brac, that was to be expected."
"Don't!"
"At least that is not marked. I come at last to the silver. Give me the list."
Clara sighed and extended it.
"Four solid silver terrapin dishes."
"Marked."
"Marked--Terrapin--ha! ha! Two ma.s.sive, expensive, solid silver champagne coolers."
"Marked."
"Marked, my dear--for each end of the table when we give our beefsteak dinners. Almond dishes."
"Don't!"
"Forty-two individual, solid or filigree almond dishes; forty-two, Clara."
"Marked."
"Right again, dear. One dozen bonbon dishes, five nouveau riche sugar shakers (we never use them), three m.u.f.fineers--in heaven's name, what's that? Solid silver bread dishes, solid silver candlesticks by the dozen, solid silver vegetable dishes, and we expect one servant and an intermittent laundress to do the cooking, was.h.i.+ng, make the beds and clean the house besides."
"All marked," said Clara dolefully.
"Every one, my dear. Then the china and the plates, we can't even eat out of the plates we want or drink from the gla.s.ses we wish; everything in this house, from top to bottom has been picked out and inflicted upon us against our wants and in defiance of our own taste and we--we have got to go on living with them and trying not to quarrel!"
"You have forgotten the worst of all," said Clara.
"No, my darling, I have not forgotten it. I have thought of nothing else, but I wanted you to mention it."
"The flat silver, George."
"The flat silver, my darling. Twelve dozen, solid silver and teaset to match, bought without consulting us, by your two rich bachelor uncles in collusion. We wanted Queen Anne or Louis Seize, simple, dignified, something to live with and grow fond of, and what did we get?"
"Oh, dear, they might have asked me!"
"But they don't, they never do, that is the theory of wedding presents, my dear. We got Pond Lily pattern, repousse until it scratches your fingers. Pond Lily pattern, my dear, which I loathe, detest, and abominate!"
"I too, George."
"And that, my dear, we shall never get rid of; we not only must adopt and a.s.sume the responsibility, but must pa.s.s it down to our children and our children's children."
"Oh, George, it is terrible--terrible! What are we going to do?"
"My darling Clara, we are going to put a piece of bric-a-brac a day on the newel post, buy a litter of puppies to chew up the rugs, select a b.u.t.ter-fingered, china-breaking waitress, pay storage on the silver and try occasionally to set fire to the furniture."
"But the flat silver, George, what of that?"
"Oh, the flat silver," I said gloomily, "each one has his cross to bear, that shall be ours."
III
We were, as has been suggested, a relatively rich couple. That's a pun!
At the end of five years a relative on either side left us a graceful reminder. The problem of living became merely one of degree. At the end of this period we had made considerable progress in the building up of a home which should be in fact and desire entirely ours. That is, we had been extensively fortunate in the preservation of our wedding presents.
Our twenty-second housemaid broke a bottle of ink over the parlor rug, her twenty-one predecessors (whom I had particularly selected) had already made the most gratifying progress among the bric-a-brac, two intelligent Airdale puppies had chewed satisfactory holes in the Art Nouveau furniture, even the Sistine Madonna had wrenched loose from its supports and considerately annihilated the jewel-studded Oriental lamp in the general smashup.
Our little home began at last to really reflect something of the artistic taste on which I pride myself. There remained at length only the flat silver and a few thousand dollars' worth of solid silver receptacles for which we had now paid four hundred dollars storage. But these remained, secure, fixed beyond the a.s.saults of the imagination.
One morning at the breakfast table I laid down my cup with a crash.
Clara gave an exclamation of alarm.
"George dear, what is it?"
For all reply I seized a handful of the Pond Lily pattern silver and gazed at it with a savage joy.
"George, George, what has happened?"
"My dear, I have an idea--a wonderful idea."
"What idea?"
"We will spend the summer in Lone Tree, New Jersey."
Clara screamed.
"Are you in your senses, George?"
"Never more so."
"But it's broiling hot!"
"Hotter than that."
"It is simply deluged with mosquitoes."
"There _are_ several mosquitoes there."