nether half, ending
in a pair of carpet slippers dangling free from his balbriggan heels,
protruded from the barricade of newspaper.
"That's right, just get the old man started on me, ma, too. When a
fellow travels six months out of the year in every two-by-four burg in
the Middle West, nagging like this is just what he needs when he gets
home."
"You know, Izzy, I'm the last one to start something."
"Then don't always ask a fellow where he's going, ma, and get pa
started too."
"You know that not one thing that goes on does papa hear when he
reads his paper, Izzy. Never one word do I say to him how I feel when
you go, only I--I don't like you should run out nights so late, Izzy. Next
week again already you go out on your trip and--"
"Now, ma, just--just you begin if you want to make me sore."
"I tell you, Izzy, I worry enough that you should be on the road so
much. And ain't it natural, Izzy, when you ain't away I--I should like it
that you stay by home a lot? Sit down, anyway, awhile yet till the
Shapiro boy comes."
"Sure I will, ma."
"If I take a trip away from you this summer I worry, Izzy, and if I stay
home I worry. Anyway I fix it I worry."
"Now, ma."
"Only sometimes I feel if your papa feels like he wants to spend the
money--Well, anything is better as that girl should feel so bad that we
don't take her to Europe."
He jingled a handful of loose coins from his pocket to his palm. "Cheer
up, ma; if the old man will raise my salary I'll blow you to a
wheelbarrow trip through Europe myself."
"'Sh-h-h-h, Izzy! Here comes Miriam. I don't want you should tease her
one more word to make her mad. You hear?"
In the frame of the doorway, quiescent as an odalisque and with the
golden tinge of a sunflower lighting her darkness, Miriam Binswanger
held the picture for a moment, her brother greeting her with bow and
banter.
"Well, little red-eyes!"
"Izzy, what did I just tell you!"
His sister flashed him a dark glance, reflexly her hand darting upward
to her face. "You!"
"Now, now, children! Why don't you and Miriam go in the parlor, Izzy,
and sing songs?"
"What you all so cooped up in here for, mamma? Open the window,
Ray; it's as hot as summer outside."
"Say, who was your maid this time last year, Miriam?"
"Mamma, you going to let her talk that way to me?"
"Ray, will it hurt you to put up the window like your sister asks?"
"Well, I'm doing it, ain't I?"
"Now, Miriam, you and Izzy go in the parlor and sing for mamma a
little."
Miriam's small teeth met in a small click, her voice lay under careful
control and as if each nerve was twanging like a plucked violin string.
"Please, mamma, please! I just can't sing to-night!"
She was like a Jacque rose, dark and swaying, her little bosom beneath
the sheer blouse rising higher than its wont.
"Please, mamma!"
"Ach, now, Miriam!"
"Where's those steamship pamphlets, mamma, I left laying here on the
table?"
"Right here where you left them, Miriam."
Mr. Isadore Binswanger executed a two-stride dash for the couch,
plunging into a nest of pillows and piling them high about his head and
ears.
"Go-od night! The subject of Europe is again on the table for the
seventh evening this week. Nix for mine! Good night! Good night!"
And he fell to burrowing his head deeper among the pillows.
"You don't need to listen, Izzy Binswanger. I wasn't talking to you,
anyways."
"No, to your mother you was talking--always to me. I got to hear it."
A sudden vibration darted through Mrs. Binswanger's body,
straightening it. "Always me! I tell you, Simon, with your family you
'ain't got no troubles. I got 'em all. How he sits there behind his
newspaper just like a boarder and not in the family! I tell you more as
once in my life I have wished there was never a newspaper printed.
Right under his nose he sits with one glued every evening."
"Na, na, old lady!"
"That sweet talk don't make no neverminds with me. 'Na, na,' he says. I
tell you even when my children was babies how they could cry every
night right under his nose and never a hand would that man raise to
help me. I tell you my husband's a grand help to me. 'Such a grand
husband,' the ladies always say to me I got. I wish they should know
what I know!"
Mr. Binswanger tossed aside his newspaper and raised his spectacles to
his

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