As Henry and his wife went down the steps, they exchanged glances and smiled faintly. “First time I’ve been in that house for seven months,” said Henry, half to himself. “It’s a bully old shack, too. I lived in it ever since I was six.”
“Still, we’re pretty comfortable right where we are, dear.”
Henry lagged a little. “That does hurt my feelings. Of course, I’m so busy I could live in a dog-kennel and hardly notice it, but when you have to camp day in and day out in that measly little joint, and smell everybody else’s corned beef and cabbage, and dig like a general-housework girl and cook, and manicure the stove, and peel the potatoes and dust off the what-not and so on––not that you haven’t made it a mighty pretty place, because you have––without one day’s vacation since last August––”
“But I’ve told you so often, dear, I’m glad to do it if it helps you.”
“It helped a lot. If you hadn’t done it in the first place, I wouldn’t have had the cash on hand to tie up the rest of the picture houses. But that time’s gone by. I don’t see why in thunder you won’t hire some servants. And at least you could pike up into the country for a week. Why don’t you?”
She hesitated, for temptation was strong, and she was really very tired. “Maybe it’s just because I want to play the game out, too. It’s only two months more.”
“And after that,” he said firmly, “we’re going to move. I’ll have enough to buy a young bungle-house up on the hill, even if I don’t get anything from Archer. And then I’m going to make up to you for this year––see if I don’t.”
“Would you sell the Orpheum?”
“Sell it!” he echoed. “I’d sell it so quick you’d think it was a fake oil-well! I could, too. Bob Standish sends me a proposition from somebody about once a week.”