,- rf ' .Xr 1 ^ THE LIBRARY OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA LOS ANGELES " She seemed to be the obiect of general interest 1 AN ARMY WIFE BY Captain CHARLES KING U. S. Army, Aut her (ff "Fort Frayne," '' Trumpeter Fred," " Noble Blood and a West Point Parallel:' FULLY ILLUSTRATED. 3jfj C3 PUBLISHER G3Q; F. TENNYSON NEELY, Publisher, 114 Fifth Avenue, New York. 1896. . , . OTHER WORKS BY . . . GAPT. CHARLES KING TRUMPETER FRED. With full-page illustrations. In Neely's Prismatic Library. 75 cents. "TRUMPETER FRED" is a charming story and tastefully gotten up. I know of nothing in the book line that equals Neely's Prismatic Library for elegance and careful selection ; it sets a pace that others will not easily equal and none will pass. E. A. ROBINSON. FORT FRAYNE. Captain CHARLES KING. Seventh Edition. Cloth, $1.25 NOBLE BLOOD AND A WEST POINT PAR ALLEL. (In press.) For sale everywhere, or sent, postpaid, on receipt of price, by the publisher, F. TENNYSON NEELY, 114 Fifth Avenue, New York. Copyright, 1895. Copyright, 1896, by F. Tennyson Neely. ILLUSTRATIONS. "SHE SEEMED TO BE THE OBJECT OF GENERAL INTEREST," .... Frontispiece PAGE. " AND WHY NOT, PRAY ?" . . . . . 9 "'So?' SAYS PARRY," . . . . . 17 " THEN TURNED AWAY," . . . 29 McLANE, . . . . . 37 "CLEARING THEM LIKE A BIRD," . . . . 47 " IT LAY UNOPENED IN HER LAP," . . 55 " TOOK THE HINT AND SLOUCHED AWAY," . . 61 " BATHED His TEMPLES FROM THEIR CANTEENS," . 69 SHE LAID HER HAND ON His ARM, . 77 " His HAND SOUGHT OUT AND FOUND HERS," . . 85 "AND HER HOURS WERE MAINLY SPENT ON DECK,". 93 BILLY WHITTAKER, ...... 101 THE RIVALS. MRS. MERRIAM : " OH ! How GLAD I AM TO SEE You," . . . . 115 "STARING INTO VACANCY As SHE DID So," . . 123 "INTENTLY MERRIAM EYED THE CAPTAIN'S FACE," . 131 MERRIAM KNELT AT HER SIDE, . . . . 139 " CAN THERE BE ANY REASON WHY SHE SHOULD WISH TO SEE You ALONE?" . . . .152 " DAMN THOSE INFERNAL IDIOTS ! " . . 161 ILLUSTRATIONS. PAGE. "COME RIGHT ALONG," . . ... 177 THEN TURNED IN His SADDLE AND WAVED HIGH His HAT, . . . . . . 183 " THEN MRS. BUXTON VENTURED TO FIRE A SHOT," . 189 " You ALWAYS CALL WHEN I'M WASHING," . . 193 "ARE You FLO TREMAINE?" , . . . 197 "AM I To SCATTER MY MEDICAL STAFF TO THE FOUR WINDS?" ...... 213 " 'I DID TRY,' SHE FALTERED," . . 221 FANNY, ....... 229 HOP LING, . . . . . . . 235 "You HELD THEM THAT You MIGHT TRIUMPH OVER MY RUIN," . . . . . . 243 RANDY MERRIAM, . . . ... . . 240, HUNG REVERENTIALLY BACK AS THOUGH WAITING PER MISSION TO VENTURE INTO THE PRESENCE OF A QUEEN, 257 " FLORENCE, SWEETHEART," . ... 263 AN ARMY WIFE. CHAPTER I. THERE was more than one reason why Fanny McLane should not have accepted the Graf- tons' invitation to visit them at Fort Sedgwick. Perhaps that was why she never mentioned the matter to her sister, Mrs. Parry, until that lady surprised her in the midst of the packing. " Where are you going, Fan?" was the query, half -aggrieved, half-aggressive, the tone in which an elder often addresses a younger sister who has evidently presumed to contemplate some journey, without previous consultation and consent. " I ? Why, I thought you knew. Going to spend a week or two with the Graftons." "The Graftons! Fanny McLane! You don't mean you're going to Fort Sedgwick?" 5 6 AM ARMY WIFE. "That's their station," answered Mrs. Me- Lane, with slight access of color. Mrs. Parry had not yet seated herself. She was still standing at the open doorway, glanc ing quickly from trunk to trunk in the sun shiny but littered room. Now she took a step forward, hesitated one moment as she looked at the maid-servant bending busily over a great Saratoga, and in dumb show intimated to her sister that she wished that open-eyed, open- eared domestic elsewhere. But Mrs. McLane was blind to any signals. Indeed she seemed at the moment to find i*- necessary to supervise some of Annette's work, noting which symptom Mrs. Parry's scruples vanished. " Fanny, you know perfectly well that's the last place on earth you should go to now, and Mr. McLane not a year in his grave!" A redder spot burns in each fair cheek, as the young widow turns quickly and faces her acccuser. "And why not, pray? The Graftons are the oldest, dearest friends I have, at least she is." AN ARMY WIFE. 7 "And Randy Merriam isn't there, I sup pose nor his plain wife?" "Mr. Merriam 's whereabouts is a matter of entire indifference to me, as you ought to have the decency to know, Charlotte." " Ought to be matters of indifference, I con cede, but I have grave doubts as to whether they are, as you say." " Then keep your doubts and suspicions to yourself, Charlotte," said Mrs. McLane, with brimming eyes and burning cheeks. " This is no place to speak of such matters," and the brimming eyes which their owner tries hard to induce to blaze instead of brim turn significantly toward Annette, busily packing and assiduously feigning unconsciousness, and then almost defiantly turn back to her sister. " I know perfectly well what you mean, Frances," responds the elder, and when "Char lotte" and " Frances" were adopted instead of " Lot" and " Fan" it meant that the sororal re lations were more than strained. " I gave you every signal ingenuity could suggest, but you wouldn't see. You didn't want to see, because you thought that" and 8 AN ARMY WIFE. here Mrs. Parry indicates the kneeling Annette with a nod of her very stylishly coifed head "that would keep me from speaking. But this is a case where duty cannot be neglected. Fanny, are you in your right senses?" "In every one of the seven, Charlotte, and I don't mean to listen to abuse. You know perfectly well Dr. Mellon said I needed change." "Well, then, go to New Orleans, go to Ber muda, go to St. Augustine go to St. Peters burg, Fan anywhere on earth rather than Fort Sedgwick anywhere under heaven ex cept where. Randolph Merriam happens to be unless you would have me believe you lost to " But here, with solemn mien enters the male biped who officiates as butler, hall boy, and major domo at the Clarendon Flats a card upon the salver in his pudgy hand, and Mrs. Parry nearly chokes in the necessity for sudden stop. "Ask Mr. Swinburne up," says Mrs. Mc- Lane promptly, barely glancing at the black - borciered card and evi4ently glad of the inter- ' A tid why not, pray ? AN ARMY WIFE, 9 ruption. "Now, Charlotte, not another word unless you wish me to show how indignant I am to every visitor who comes in," and Mrs. McLane is busy bathing her flushed cheeks al ready. "How does my hair look?" she adds, turning inquiringly toward the defeated elder, sure that whatever cause of quarrel there may be, that, at least, is subject for truce. "Your hair is all right," responds her sister, with marked emphasis and as marked a sense of baffled purpose. " I wish the rest of your head were as well balanced. You don't ex pect me to see Mr. Swinburne, I suppose?" "Mr. Swinburne certainly doesn't expect to see you. He is coming mainly on business." " You might far better listen to his business, as you call it, even this soon, than go near Randy Merriam." " Charlotte, I will not listen to you. If you cannot stay here without insulting me with every other word, you would much better go home and stay home until you can speak sensibly." And with this Mrs. McLane darts past her sister into the passageway, and so on to the parlor front of her suite of apartments, 10 AK ARMY WIFE. just as the little electric indicator tells that the elevator has stopped and that some one is at the entrance door. It is Swinburne, a well- preserved, mutton-chop whiskered, carefully groomed fellow of forty-five, and Swinburne bows delightedly over the slender white hand of the pretty and youthful widow and dis appears with her within the cosy parlor. " How long has Mrs. McLane been pack ing?" asks Mrs. Parry, presently, of the maid. "How long, mum? Oh, two or three days only, though we got down the trunks, mum, on Wednesday last," is Annette's reply. "Four trunks and four days' packing to spend a week or so at a frontier post," says Mrs. Parry to herself, with increasing wrath. Then turning, she sweeps through the hall way with the mien of an offended queen, passes the parlor door with barely a glance at the bright, cheery interior, lets herself out with a snap and a slam, and stands angrily tapping her daintily booted foot on the rug in front of the cage until the elevator noiselessly answers her signal and then lowers her to the mosaic pavement of the ground floor. " To AN 1 ARMY WIFE. II Mr. Parry's office," she says to her coachman as she enters the waiting carriage, and is whirled rapidly away down the avenue, past the dancing waters of the lake. "Ned," she cries, twenty minutes later, as she precipitates herself into Mr. Parry's ground-glass citadel at the rear of the big office, "what am I to do? Fan is actually packed and ready to start for Fort Sedgwick where Mr. Merriam is stationed!" Ned turns slowly toward her, trying not to show in his deep-brown eyes how pleased he is at the sight of his handsome helpmeet. " The first thing you have to do, Mrs. Parry, when you come to this office for advice is to pay the customary retaining fee," he responds, as he takes her carefully gloved hand in his long fingers and bends forward for a kiss. She recoils, pleased, yet provoked. He should have been startled at her revelation, even though he did wish for her kiss. "Is that the customary retaining fee, sir?" she asks demurely, forgetful for the moment of the portentous news she brings. " I heard you had quite a number of feminine clients." 12 AN ARMY WIFE. "So many that my partners find it as diffi cult to straighten out their accounts as I do their stories. Pardon me, Mrs. Parry, did you say I was retained? If so," and the jun ior member of the distinguished firm of Graeme, Ray burn & Parry again bends down ward toward the glowing face. "You're absurd, Ned, if that's what you mean," replies Mrs. Parry, secretly delighted at the lover-like ways of her lord. "I've a mind not to pay anything. You shouldn't charge members of the family." "I don't," he answers reflectively, "in all cases. There's Aunt Mildred, for instance, and Aunt Charlotte and grandma, but you and Fan now " "Fan! Why should she k consult you?" "Why, do you know, Lot, I've never once asked her. She might select some other fel low in the firm and k consult him." " Ned, you're simply horrid now. I never did like you when you tried to be funny. You know I never interrupt you here unless I'm troubled about something, and you're just laughing at me instead of sympathizing," and AN ARMY WIFE. 13 Mrs. Ned pretends to pull away her hands, but conspicuously fails. " One of the first principles of my large and successful practice, Mrs. Parry, is to secure prepayment of the retaining fee in all cases where I have reason to believe the client will subsequently act contrary to my advice. When you have Ah, that will have to do, I presume, though it came with a bad grace. And now you say Fan is going to Sedgwick?" "Yes, and Randy Merriam's hardly been married a month longer than Mr. McLane's been dead." "Astounding coincidence! But Brandy is married, isn't he?" " Randy, Ned, not Brandy how your mind runs to such things!" "Well, toward five P.M. the firm does feel like running to such things, my best beloved, and is only deterred from doing so by the fact that a touch of the button makes it do the run ning. What shall I order for you?" And Mr. Parry transfers her left hand to its mate reposing in his left, and stretches forth the right toward his desk. 14 AN ARMY WIFE. "I want nothing," she answered, "but ad vice, and no more nonsense. Ned," appeal- ingly, "what ought I to do? What can I do?" " Are you sure you can do just what I tell you, Lot?" he asks, a fond light playing in his eyes, despite the half -teasing smile. "Of course I can. Don't I always?" "Well ahem I have known instances But you will do just what I say?" "Yes, Ned, I will." "Then, your ladyship, let her go and don't worry, /don't, I haven't, a bit." " Why, then you have known she was go ing she has told you?" " She hasn't. I learned it from Swinburne." "When?" "Three days ago." "And you never told me, Ned!" reproach fully. " Fact!" says Ned, sagely and sententiously. "You would have protested. She would have been the more obstinately determined. There would have been a row, and all to no purpose. Fan has had her own way since she cut her first baby tooth, and there's nothing on earth AN ARMY WIFE. 15 so independent as a well-to-do young widow. Swinburne's found that out." "Ned, I can't bear Swinburne, but I'd rather she'd marry him as soon as it's decent to marry anybody than go out there and fling herself in Randy Merriam's way again. Everybody knows the story." " Yes. It was rather a public exhibition of mitten-giving, I'll admit," says Parry reflect ively, "and not two years ago either," he added. Then suddenly " Lot, what sort of fellow is Captain Graf ton?" "A very dignified, majestic personage a good deal older than she is, you know, but she's devoted to him and he to her. There's a woman who doesn't do as she pleases, let me tell you ! Captain Grafton will have no non sense going on under his nose, and I'll tell Fan that if she thinks to resume her old flirta tion with Merriam, she'll have to blind Graf- ton first." " My love, you forget the compact. You're not to tell Fan anything except good-by. Yes you may send our regards to Merriam by her. He's a particularly nice fello.w, if she 1 6 AN ARMY WIFE. did throw him over for old McLane and his fortune. And, Mrs. Parry, I shouldn't be surprised if our particularly pert and pretty sister were taught a very valuable lesson. Therefore do I say, let her go Gal I mean let her go. And, talking of going, suppose you drive me home with you. We'll stop and see Fan a minute and Swinburne." And stop they do, finding the broker-mag nate still there, though in evident straits. Is it possible for a man in love to look pleased at the coming of visitors in the midst of even a prolonged tt'te-a-t$te ? Swinburne doesn't. He looks infinitely distressed, and Parry doesn't fail to remark it. "Hullo, Swinburne! Who'd 'a' thought of seeing you here at this hour? I supposed you never missed a day like this for a drive, yet your team isn't at the door." " No er I had business to discuss with Mrs. McLane before her start for the West a jour ney which I had much hoped to hear Mrs. Parry had dissuaded her from taking." "Oh, bless you, no!" responds Parry, cheer fully. "The doctor advises change of scene " ' So ? ' fays Parry A