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    Chapter 27

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    CONCERNING A QUARREL.

    It was late in September that this particular quarrel occurred. Almost
    all the roseate tints seemed gone by this time, for the Lewishams had
    been married six months. Their financial affairs had changed from the
    catastrophic to the sordid; Lewisham had found work. An army crammer
    named Captain Vigours wanted someone energetic for his mathematical
    duffers and to teach geometrical drawing and what he was pleased to
    call "Sandhurst Science." He paid no less than two shillings an hour
    for his uncertain demands on Lewisham's time. Moreover, there was a
    class in lower mathematics beginning at Walham Green where Lewisham
    was to show his quality. Fifty shillings a week or more seemed
    credible--more might be hoped for. It was now merely a case of tiding
    over the interval until Vigours paid. And meanwhile the freshness of
    Ethel's blouses departed, and Lewisham refrained from the repair of
    his boot which had cracked across the toe.

    The beginning of the quarrel was trivial enough. But by the end they
    got to generalities. Lewisham had begun the day in a bad temper and
    under the cloud of an overnight passage of arms--and a little incident
    that had nothing to do with their ostensible difference lent it a
    warmth of emotion quite beyond its merits. As he emerged through the
    folding doors he saw a letter lying among the sketchily laid breakfast
    things, and Ethel's attitude suggested the recoil of a quick movement;
    the letter suddenly dropped. Her eyes met his and she flushed. He sat
    down and took the letter--a trifle awkwardly perhaps. It was from Miss
    Heydinger. He hesitated with it halfway to his pocket, then decided to
    open it. It displayed an ample amount of reading, and he read. On the
    whole he thought it rather a dull sort of letter, but he did not allow
    this to appear. When it was read he put it carefully in his pocket.

    That formally had nothing to do with the quarrel. The breakfast was
    already over when the quarrel began. Lewisham's morning was vacant,
    and be proposed to occupy it in the revision of certain notes bearing
    upon "Sandhurst Science." Unhappily the search for his note-book
    brought him into collision with the accumulation of Ethel's
    novelettes.

    "These things are everywhere," he said after a gust of vehement
    handling, "I _wish_ you'd tidy them up sometimes."


    "They were tidy enough till you began to throw them about," Ethel
    pointed out.

    "Confounded muck! it's only fit to be burnt," Lewisham remarked to the
    universe, and pitched one viciously into the corner.

    "Well, you tried to write one, anyhow," said Ethel, recalling a
    certain "Mammoth" packet of note-paper that had
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