8 The Pen child with a shiny new toy. If she felt that she had made a rash deci sion in consenting to bo my wife, she was too ladylike to display it in any way—at first. Need I tell of my supreme happiness? I could have conquered the world had that been my assigned task and I swore by all things holy that I would keep my little wife as content as she now seemed. But this was not to be. Marcia soon plunged into a whirl wind campaign of renewing old friendships, joining exclusive clubs, and definitely setting up the Thomp sons in East Newton’s society. I tolerated all this because it made Marcia happy, but I detested the endless rounds of parties, the per sistent young matrons who were al ways dropping in for tea, and the gossipy old neighbors who had known Marcia ever since she was THAT big and who scolded and pitied her for having married that “homely drawling Southerner” when so many of her childhood playmates had been simply “dyin’ to marry her.” I know our neigh bors said things like that for I heard one of them telling the other that Mrs. Hughes had certainly wasted her money sending Marcia off to college if she.couldn’t find a better-looking husband than that! I wanted to tell them to “go to hell” among other things, but be cause I realized how I might hurt Marcia, I restrained myself. It was these muttering old fools who plant ed the seed of discontent in Marcia’s mind and they watered and nour ished it until it had assumed mas sive proportions. My wife began to find fault with me and complained of many of my “countrified” habits. I had never learned the art of eating in a dig nified manner; I thought that good food should be devoured with gusto and a loud smacking of lips in or der to exhibit sheer, enjoyment and happiness. My little Marcia, how ever, was definitely not of my “school of thought” and our meals soon were characterized by such monologues as “Jeff, must you drink your coffee so loudly?” and “weren’t you ever told that you don’t eat mashed potatoes with your knife?” or more often, “I wish you wouldn’t gulp your food down like a starved cannibal, Jeffrey Thompson!” This latter vehement reproof always meant that tears were not far be hind, I learned, and it never failed to arouse me to a cognizance of my bad table manners. I’d always look up apologetically and murmur, “I’m sorry, darling. You know I wouldn’t do anything in the world to make my Sugar unhappy, don’t you?” and I’d get up and attempt sometimes unsuccessfully to take her into my arms and avow my eternal love for her. This effort toward reconciliation proved repulsive, be cause I had a slight case of hay fever, which caused me to breathe heavily, especially when I was emo- (Cmtinued on Page Eiahteen)