Page:From the West to the West.djvu/240

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"If an engaged couple should tire of their bargain, and their change of sentiment should fail to fit the agreement,—what then?"

"It would be a blessing for them to discover their mistake in time to forestall the divorce court,'* was the ready reply.

"Mr. Burns is right,*' said. Mrs. McAlpin. "Twothirds of the unhappy marriages we hear about are the result of haste and lack of understanding. A couple will marry, and when it is too late to recede from the bargain they want to break it. I don't mind telling you. Captain Ranger, that Mr. Burns and I expect to marry each other some day, and our claims were chosen accordingly; but we'll wait until the law frees me from a bargain which I repudiated in spirit before it was consummated. And we'll not marry then if we conclude we are making a mistake."

"I am glad to hear you make so open and frank a statement in the presence of so competent a witness," exclaimed Mrs. Benson, who still carried an important note in her pocket, frayed and travel-soiled, but none the less precious from being scarcely legible.

"I think it is a shame to make a commercial bargain of a matrimonial agreement," exclaimed Mary Ranger.

"And so do I!" echoed Jean.

Nevertheless, when the boundaries of the several donation claims were established, and the different allotments were assigned to the proper claimants, it was noticed that, in addition to the Captain's own quota of virgin acres, an extra claim was reserved adjacent to that of each of his daughters, Mary and Jean, and one next to that of Sally O'Dowd.

"Equality before the law is a fundamental idea in the government of the United States of America," the Captain explained at the Land Office; "and I am glad to see it practically applied to the property rights of the pioneer