“Yes, it is,” returned Nancy; “the shape of face and type of feature is the same in both, and as for expression, each might be a mirror for the other.”
“It would be interesting to know which had most influenced the other,” said Steve; “whether she has conformed to his type or he to hers.”
“Old Nat and Tildy certainly furnish a good opportunity for study of that problem,” said Nancy, “for there has been little except the influence of each upon the other to leave its impress.”
“The subject is an interesting field for the aspiring 178 investigator,” Steve went on. “I wonder that some fine-spun, scientific theory has not already been advanced,––but it only remains another formidable matrimonial hazard,” he ended with his sudden smile.
“It does indeed,” laughed Nancy. “Wouldn’t it be dreadful to think of growing daily more and more like some people?”
“And on the other hand,” promptly returned Steve, “how delightful to think of growing more and more like certain other people,” turning to her with a light in his eye.
“But then there is the uncertainty,––which is most likely to influence the other,” said Nancy, switching dexterously away from hinted personal application, and then with a dash of daring gaiety, adding, “When you marry a girl with a crooked nose, will yours begin to crook likewise, or will hers take on your symmetrical lines?”
“But I am not going to take one with a crooked nose,” said Steve, smiling significantly in spite of himself.
“Perhaps not, but the question remains,––which is most likely to conform, a husband or a wife,” said Nancy, shying back to the abstract again, with pretty positiveness. And then she called gaily, as she touched Gyp with her whip and started both horses 179 off on a brisk canter, leaving the wood for the road, “Please let me know if you solve the problem, so I may be relieved in mind or forewarned.”
As she dashed on slightly ahead of him, spirit and beauty in every line of pony and rider, Steve said to himself with a quizzical smile: