EVERYBODY'S LONESOME ***
Produced by Al Haines
[Frontispiece: "Both wanted to toast, and they took turns."]
Everybody's Lonesome
A True Fairy Story
By
CLARA E. LAUGHLIN
Author of "Evolution of a Girl's Ideal," "The Lady in Gray," etc.
Illustrated by
A. I. KELLER.
New York Chicago Toronto
Fleming H. Revell Company
London and Edinburgh
Copyright, 1910, by
FLEMING H. REVELL COMPANY
To
Mabel Tallaferro,
The Faery Child
CONTENTS
I. DISAPPOINTED IN LIFE II. YOUR OWN IS WAITING III. FINDING THE FIRST FAIRY IV. BEING KIND TO A TIRED MAN V. GOING TO THE PARTY VI. THE "LION" OF THE EVENING VII. AT CANDLE-LIGHTIN' TIME VIII. LEARNING TO BE BRAVE AND SWEET IX. TELLING THE SECRET TO MOTHER X. THE OLD WORLD AND THE KING XI. A MEETING AND A PARTING XII. AT OCEAN'S EDGE
ILLUSTRATIONS
"BOTH WANTED TO TOAST, AND THEY TOOK TURNS" . . . . . . _Title_
". . . . FOUND HERSELF LOOKING INTO EYES THAT SMILED AS WITH AN OLD FRIENDLINESS"
Everybody's Lonesome
I
DISAPPOINTED IN LIFE
Mary Alice came home quietly from the party. Most of the doors in the house were closed, because it was cold, and the halls were hard to heat. Mary Alice knew exactly what she should see and hear if she opened that door at her right as she entered the house, and went into the sitting-room. There was a soft-coal fire in the small, old-fashioned grate under the old, old-fashioned white marble mantel. Dozing--always dozing--on the hearth-rug, at a comfortable distance from the fire, was Herod, the big yellow cat. In the centre of the room, under the chandelier, was a table, with a cover of her mother's fancy working, and a drop-light with a green shade. By the unbecoming light of this, her mother was sewing. What day was this? Tuesday! She was mending stockings. Mary Alice could see it all. She had been seeing it for twenty years during which nothing--it seemed to her--had changed, except herself. If she went in there now, her mother would ask her the same questions she always asked: "Did you have a nice time?" "Who was there?" "Anybody have on anything new?" "What refreshments did they serve?"
Mary Alice was tired of it all--heartsick with weariness of it--and she stole softly past that closed sitting-room door and up, through the chilly halls where she could see her own breath, to her room.
She did not light the gas, but took off in the dark her "good" hat and her "best" gloves and her long black cloth coat of an ugly "store-bought" cut, which was her best and worst. Then, in an abandon of grief which bespoke real desperation in a careful girl like Mary Alice, she threw herself on her bed--without taking off her "good" dress--and buried her head in a pillow, and _hated everything_.
It is hard to be disappointed in love, but after all it is a rather splendid misery in which one may have a sense of kinship with earth's greatest and best; and it has its hopes, its consolations. There is often the hope that this love may return; and, though we never admit it, there is always--deep down--the consolation of believing that another and a better may come.