Mary Marie eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 277 pages of information about Mary Marie.

Mary Marie eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 277 pages of information about Mary Marie.

As if anybody who was reading the story cared for that part!  The story’s the thing.

I love stories.  I’ve written lots of them for the girls, too—­little short ones, I mean; not a long one like this is going to be, of course.  And it’ll be so exciting to be living a story instead of reading it—­only when you’re living a story you can’t peek over to the back to see how it’s all coming out.  I shan’t like that part.  Still, it may be all the more exciting, after all, not to know what’s coming.

I like love stories the best.  Father’s got—­oh, lots of books in the library, and I’ve read stacks of them, even some of the stupid old histories and biographies.  I had to read them when there wasn’t anything else to read.  But there weren’t many love stories.  Mother’s got a few, though—­lovely ones—­and some books of poetry, on the little shelf in her room.  But I read all those ages ago.

That’s why I’m so thrilled over this new one—­the one I’m living, I mean.  For of course this will be a love story.  There’ll be my love story in two or three years, when I grow up, and while I’m waiting there’s Father’s and Mother’s.

Nurse Sarah says that when you’re divorced you’re free, just like you were before you were married, and that sometimes they marry again.  That made me think right away:  what if Father or Mother, or both of them, married again?  And I should be there to see it, and the courting, and all!  Wouldn’t that be some love story?  Well, I just guess!

And only think how all the girls would envy me—­and they just living along their humdrum, everyday existence with fathers and mothers already married and living together, and nothing exciting to look forward to.  For really, you know, when you come right down to it, there aren’t many girls that have got the chance I’ve got.

And so that’s why I’ve decided to write it into a book.  Oh, yes, I know I’m young—­only thirteen.  But I feel really awfully old; and you know a woman is as old as she feels.  Besides, Nurse Sarah says I am old for my age, and that it’s no wonder, the kind of a life I’ve lived.

And maybe that is so.  For of course it has been different, living with a father and mother that are getting ready to be divorced from what it would have been living with the loving, happy-ever-after kind.  Nurse Sarah says it’s a shame and a pity, and that it’s the children that always suffer.  But I’m not suffering—­not a mite.  I’m just enjoying it.  It’s so exciting.

Of course if I was going to lose either one, it would be different.  But I’m not, for I am to live with Mother six months, then with Father.

So I still have them both.  And, really, when you come right down to it, I’d rather take them separate that way.  Why, separate they’re just perfectly all right, like that—­that—­what-do-you-call-it powder?—­sedlitzer, or something like that.  Anyhow, it’s that white powder that you mix in two glasses, and that looks just like water till you put them together.  And then, oh, my! such a fuss and fizz and splutter!  Well, it’s that way with Father and Mother.  It’ll be lots easier to take them separate, I know.  For now I can be Mary six months, then Marie six months, and not try to be them both all at once, with maybe only five minutes between them.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Mary Marie from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.