I
The Prawleys
ISOBEL was born in a flat, and that was no fault of her own;
but she was born in a flat, and reared in a flat, and married from a flat, and,
for two years after we were married, we lived in a flat; but I am not a born
flat-dweller myself, arid as soon as possible I proposed that we move to the
country. Isobel hesitated, but she hesitated so weakly that on the first of May
we had bought the place at Westcote and moved into it.
The very day I moved into my house Millington came over and
said he was glad some one had moved in, because the last man that had lived in
the house was afraid of automobiles, and would never take a spin with him. He
said he hoped I was not afraid; and when I said I was not, he immediately
proposed, that we take a little spin out to Port Lafayette as soon as I had my
furniture straightened around. I thought it was very nice and neighbourly and
unusual for a man with an automobile to begin an acquaintance that way; but I
did not know Millington's automobile so well then as I grew to know it
afterward.
I liked Millington. He was a short, Napoleon-looking man,
with bulldog jaws and not very much hair, and I was glad to have him for a
neighbour, particularly as my neighbour on the other side was a tall,
haughty-looking man. He leaned on the division fence and stared all the while
our furniture was being moved in. I spoke to Millington about him, and all
Millington said was: "Rolfs? Oh, he's no good! He won't ride in an
automobile."
At first, while we were really getting settled in our house,
Isobel was bright and cheerful and seemed to have forgotten flats entirely; but
on the tenth of May I saw a change coming over her, and when I spoke of it she
opened her heart to me.
"John," she said, "I am afraid I cannot stand
it. I shall try to, for your sake, but I do not think I can. I am so lonely! I
feel like an atom floating in space."
"Isobel!" I said kindly but reprovingly.
"With the Millingtons on one side and the Rolfs on the other?"
"I know," she admit ted contritely enough;
"but you can't understand. Always and always, since I was born, some one
has lived overhead, and some one has lived underneath. Sometimes only the
janitor lived underneath —
"Isobel," I said, "if you will try to explain
what you mean —"
"I mean flats," she said dolefully. "I always
lived in a flat, John, and there was always a family above and a family below,
and it frightens me to think I am in a house where there is no family above me,
and not below me. It makes me feel naked, or suspended in air, or as if there
was no ground under my feet. It makes me gasp!"
"That is nonsense!" I said. "That is the
beauty of having a house. We have it all to ourselves. Now, in a flat —"
"We had our flat all to ourselves, John," she
reminded me; "but a flat isn't so unbounded as a house. Just think; there
is nothing between us and the top of the sky! Not a single family! It makes me
nervous. And there is nothing beneath us!"
"Now, my dear," I said soothingly, "China is
beneath us, and no doubt a very respectable family is keeping house directly
below."
Isobel sighed contentedly.
"I am so glad you thought of that!" she cried.
"Now, when I feel lonely, I can imagine I feel the house jar as the
Chinese family move their piano, or I can imagine that I hear their
phonograph."
"Very good," I said; "and if you can imagine
all that, why cannot you imagine a family overhead, too? The whole attic is
there. Very well; I give up the entire attic to your imagination."
Then I kissed her and went into the back garden. My opinion
is that the man that laid out that back garden was over-sanguine. I am
passionately fond of gardening, and believe in back gardens; but at the present
price of seed and the present hardness of hoe handles, I think that back garden
is too large. This is not a mere flash opinion, either; it is a matter of
study. The first day I stuck spade into that garden I had given little thought
to its size, but by the time I had spaded all day I began to have a pretty well-defined
opinion of gardens and how large they should be, and by the end of the third
day of spading I believe I may say I was well equipped to testify as an expert
on garden sizes. That was the day the blisters on my hands became raw.