Marie wrote at the top of her page, “Two hundred pounds.”
“Forty pounds rent,” she wrote next.
“And my odd expenses, lunch and clothes, and so on,” said Osborn, “have never been less than sixty or seventy pounds, you know.”
She wrote slowly. “Sixty to seventy pounds, expenses,” when he stopped her.
“I’ll have to curtail that!” he exclaimed.
In the ensuing silence both man and wife thought along the same track. It suddenly gave him a nasty jar, to hit up against the necessity of stopping those pleasant little spendings, those odd drinks, those superior smokes, the last word in colourings for shirts and ties. Of course, such stoppage was well worth while. Oh, immensely so!
And she had a lump in her throat. She thought: “He’ll find all this a burden. He’s had all he wants; and so’ve I. I wish we were rich.”
“Look here, darling,” said Osborn. “How much’ll food cost us? I don’t know a great deal about these things, but if it’s any standard to take—well, my old landlady used to give me rooms and breakfasts and dinners for thirty bob a week. Jolly good breakfasts and dinners they were, too!”
Marie murmured very slowly: “I’m not your old landlady.” She imaged her, a working drab, saving, pinching, and making the best of all things. Compare Marie with Osborn’s old landlady! “Besides,” she murmured on, “there’s me, too, now.”
Osborn nodded. “Well,” he said, “how much do you think?”
“Thirty shillings for both of us per week,” said Marie, inclined to cry. “That’s better than your old landlady.”
Osborn hastened to soothe her. “Look here,” he protested, “don’t fuss over it, there’s a love. Very well, I’ll give you thirty bob a week, but that’s seventy-eight pounds a year. My hat! I say, can’t you squeeze the gas out of it?”
“I will get the gas out of it!” said Marie, with tightened lips.
“Great business!” said Osborn cheering; “put it down, darling.”
So under the “Rent, forty pounds,” she wrote, “Housekeeping, including gas, seventy-eight pounds.”
“That’s one hundred and eighteen pounds out of my two hundred,” said Osborn, knitting his brows and staring into the fire.
“Coal?” whispered Marie, her pencil poised.
Osborn’s stare at the fire took on a belligerent nature.
“I say!” he exclaimed, “we can’t have two fires every day. It’s simply not to be thought of.”
“We’ll sit in the dining-room in the evenings.”
“Put down ‘Coal, ten pounds,’” said Osborn grudgingly.
When Marie had put it down, she cast a sorrowing look round her dear little room. She would hardly ever use it, except in summer.
“That’s close on a hundred and thirty pounds,” said Osborn. “We’ll make allowance for that, but you’ll try to do on less, won’t you, darling?”
“I’ll try.”
“That leaves seventy pounds for my life insurance, and for my expenses and yours, Marie. A man ought to insure his life when he’s married; it’ll cost me fifteen pounds a year.”