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+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 10438 ***
+
+UP THE HILL
+
+AND OVER
+
+BY
+
+ISABEL ECCLESTONE MACKAY
+Author of "The House of Windows," etc.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ _The road runs back and the road runs on,
+ But the air has a scent of clover_.
+ _And another day brings another dawn,
+ When we're up the hill and over_.
+
+
+
+TO MY MOTHER
+
+WHO MIGHT HAVE LIKED THIS BOOK HAD SHE LIVED TO READ IT
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+
+ "From Wimbleton to Wombleton is fifteen miles,
+ From Wombleton to Wimbleton is fifteen miles,
+ From Wombleton to Wimbleton,
+ From Wimbleton to Wombleton,
+ From Wombleton--to Wimbleton--is fif--teen miles!"
+
+The cheery singing ended abruptly with the collapse of the singer upon a
+particularly inviting slope of grass. He was very dusty. He was very
+hot. The way from Wimbleton to Wombleton seemed suddenly extraordinarily
+long and tiresome. The slope was green and cool. Just below it slept a
+cool, green pool, deep, delicious--a swimming pool such as dreams
+are made of.
+
+If there were no one about--but there was some one about. Further down
+the slope, and stretched at full length upon it, lay a small boy. Near
+the small boy lay a packet of school books.
+
+The wayfarer's lips relaxed in an appreciative smile.
+
+"Little boy," he called, somewhat hoarsely on account of the dust in his
+throat, "little boy, can you tell me how far it is from here to
+Wimbleton?"
+
+Apparently the little boy was deaf.
+
+The questioner raised his voice, "or if you can oblige me with the exact
+distance to Wombleton," he went on earnestly, "that will do quite
+as well."
+
+No answer, civil or otherwise, from the youth by the pool. Only a
+convulsive wiggle intended to cover the undefended position of the
+school books.
+
+The traveller's smile broadened but he made no further effort toward
+sociability. Neither did he go away. To the dismayed eyes, watching
+through the cover of some long grass, he was clearly a person devoid of
+all fine feeling. Or perhaps he had never been taught not to stay where
+he wasn't wanted. Mebby he didn't even know that he _wasn't_ wanted.
+
+In order to remove all doubt as to the latter point, the small boy's
+head shot up suddenly out of the covering grass.
+
+"What d'ye want?" he asked forbiddingly.
+
+"Little boy," said the stranger, "I thank you. I want for nothing."
+
+The head collapsed, but quickly came up again.
+
+"Ain't yeh goin' anywhere?" asked a despairing voice.
+
+"I was going, little boy, but I have stopped."
+
+This was so true that the small boy sat up and scowled.
+
+"I judge," went on the other, "that I am now midway between Arden,
+otherwise, Wimbleton, and Arcady, sometime known as Wombleton. The
+question is, which way and how? A simple sum in arithmetic will--little
+boy, do not frown like that! The wind may change. Smile nicely, and I'll
+tell you something."
+
+Urged by necessity, the badgered one attempted to look pleasant.
+
+"That's better! Now, my cheerful child, what I really want to know is
+'how many miles to Babylon?'"
+
+A reluctant grin showed that the small boy's early education had not
+been utterly neglected. "Aw, what yeh givin' us?" he protested
+sheepishly, "if it's Coombe you're lookin' for, it's 'bout a mile and a
+half down the next holler."
+
+"Holler?" the stranger's tone was faintly questioning. "Oh, I see. You
+mean 'hollow,' which being interpreted means 'valley,' which means, I
+fear, another hill. Little boy, do you want to carry a knapsack?"
+
+"Nope."
+
+"No? Strange that nobody seems to want to carry a knapsack. I least of
+all. Well," lifting the object with disfavour, "good-day to you. I
+perceive that you grow impatient for those aquatic pleasures for which
+you have temporarily abjured the more severe delights of scholarship.
+Little boy, I wish you a very good swim."
+
+"Gee," muttered the small boy, "gee, ain't he the word-slinger!"
+
+He returned to the pool but something of its charm was dissipated. Vague
+thoughts of school inspectors and retribution troubled its waters. Not
+that he was at all afraid of school inspectors, or that he really
+suspected the stranger of being one. Still, discretion is a wise thing
+and word-slinging is undoubtedly a form of art much used in high
+scholastic circles. Also there had been a remark about a simple sum in
+arithmetic which was, to say the least, disquieting. With a bursting
+sigh, the small sinner scrambled to his feet, reached for the hated
+books, and disappeared rapidly in the direction of the halls of
+learning.
+
+Meanwhile the stranger, unconscious of the moral awakening behind him,
+plodded wearily up the steep and sunny hill. As he is our hero we shall
+not describe him. There is no hurry, and there will be other occasions
+upon which he will appear to better advantage. At present let us be
+content with knowing that there was no reason for the hat and suit he
+wore save a mistaken idea of artistic suitability. "If I am going to be
+a tramp," he had said, "I want to look like a tramp." He didn't, but his
+hat and coat did.
+
+He felt like a tramp, though, if to feel like a tramp is to feel hot and
+sticky and hungry. Perhaps real tramps do not feel like this. Perhaps
+they enjoy walking. At any rate they do not carry knapsacks, but betray
+a touching faith in Providence in the matter of clean linen and
+tooth brushes.
+
+Before the top of the hill was reached, Dr. Callandar wished devoutly
+that in this last respect he had behaved like the real thing. In setting
+out to lead the simple life the ultimate is to be recommended--and
+knapsacks are not the ultimate. They are heavy things with the property
+of growing heavier, and prove of little use save to sit upon in damp
+places. The doctor's feelings in regard to his were intensified by an
+utter lack of dampness anywhere. The top of the hill was a sun-crowned
+eminence, blazingly, blisteringly, suffocatingly hot. The valley, spread
+out beneath him, was soaked in sunshine, a haze of heat quivered visibly
+above the roofs of the pretty town it cradled. There was a river and
+there were woods, but the trees hung motionless, and the river wound
+like a snake of brass among them.
+
+The doctor regarded both the knapsack and the prospect resentfully. He
+had hoped for a breeze upon the hill-top, and there was no breeze.
+Raising his hand to remove his hat, he noticed that the hand was
+trembling, and swore softly. The hand continued to tremble, and holding
+it out before him he watched it, interestedly, until a powerful will
+brought the quivering nerves into subjection.
+
+"Jove!" he muttered. "Not a moment too soon--this holiday!"
+
+Then, hat in hand, he started down the hill.
+
+It was a long hill, very long, much longer than it had any need or right
+to be. It had a twist in its nature which would not allow it to run
+straight. It meandered; it hesitated; it never knew its own mind, but
+twisted and turned and thought better of it a dozen times in half a
+mile. It was a hill with short cuts favourably known to small boys and
+to tramps with a distaste for highways; but this tramp, not being a real
+one, knew none of them, and was compelled to do exactly as the hill did.
+The result was, that when at last it slipped into the cool shade of a
+row of beeches at its base, its victim was as exhausted as itself.
+
+He was thirsty, too, and, worse still, he knew from a certain dizzy
+blindness that one of his bad headaches was coming on--and there still
+lay another mile between him and the town. Pressing his hand against his
+eyes to restore for the moment their normal clearness of vision, he saw,
+a short way down the road, a gate; and through the gate and behind some
+trees, the white gleam of a building. But better than all, he saw,
+between the gate and the building, a red pump! Then the blindness and
+pain descended again, and he stumbled on more by faith than by sight;
+blundering through the half-open gate, his precarious course directed
+wholly by the pump's exceeding redness, which shone like a beacon
+fire ahead.
+
+Fortunately, it was a real pump with real water and a sucker in good
+standing, warranted to need no priming. At the stroke of the red handle
+the good, cool water gurgled and arose with a delightful "plop!" It
+splashed from the spout freely upon the face and hands of the victim of
+the long hill--delicious, life-giving! The delight it brought seemed
+compensation almost for heat and pain and weariness. Callandar felt that
+if he could only let its sweetness stream indefinitely over his closed
+eyes it would wash away the blindness and the ache. Perhaps--
+
+"I am afraid I cannot allow you to use this pump!" said a crisp voice
+primly. "This is not," with capital letters, "a Public Pump!"
+
+Callandar wiped the surplus water from his face and looked up. There,
+beside him in the yellow haze of his semi-blindness, stood the owner of
+the voice. She appeared to be clothed in white, tall and commanding.
+Surrounded by the luminous mist, her appearance was not unlike that of a
+cool and capable avenging angel.
+
+"This pump," went on the angel with nice precision, "is not for the use
+of pedestrians."
+
+"Ah!" said the pedestrian.
+
+"If you will continue down the road," the voice went on, "you will find,
+when you reach the town, a public pump. You may use that."
+
+The pedestrian, feeling dizzier than ever, sat down upon the pump
+platform. It was wet and cool.
+
+"The objection to that," he said wisely, "is simple. I cannot continue
+down the road."
+
+"I should like you to go at once," patiently. "There is a pump--"
+
+The pedestrian raised a deprecating hand.
+
+"Let us admit the pump! Doubtless the pump is there, but there is a pump
+here also, and a pump in the hand is worth two pumps, an ice-box and a
+John Collins in town. You doubtless know the situation created by
+Mahomet and the mountain? This is the same, with a difference. In this
+case the pump will not come to me and I cannot go to the pump. Therefore
+we both remain _in statu quo_. Do I make myself plain?"
+
+Apparently he did, for there was no answer. Logic, he concluded, had
+achieved its usual triumph. The avenging angel had withdrawn. Blissfully
+he stooped again, closing his eyes to the cool drip of the water, but
+scarcely had they felt its chill relief when a sharp bark caused them to
+fly open with disconcerting suddenness--the avenging angel had returned,
+and with her was an avenging dog! Seen through the mist, the dog
+appeared to be a bull pup of ferocious aspect.
+
+"I am sorry," the cool voice had no ruth in it, "but it is my duty not
+to allow tramps upon these grounds. If you will not go, I must ask
+the dog--"
+
+"ASK the dog!" In spite of his aching head the tramp (now no longer
+pedestrian) laughed weakly.
+
+"Oh, please don't ask him!" he entreated. "He looks too awfully willing!
+Besides, I begin to perceive that my presence is not desired. Naturally
+I scorn to remain."
+
+Very slowly he raised himself from the damp pump platform by means of
+the red pump-handle. In this manner he achieved an upright position
+without much difficulty and all might have gone well had he behaved like
+a proper tramp. But forgetting himself, under the tyranny of training
+and instinct, he attempted, in deference to the sex of the angel, to
+raise his hat (which was not on his head anyway). In so doing he
+released the red pump-handle, lost his balance, struggled wildly to
+regain it, and then collapsed with a terrible sense of failure and
+ignominy, right into the open jaws, as it were, of the avenging dog!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+
+He had a fancy that something cool and kind was licking his hand....
+
+It felt like the tongue of a friendly dog. He seemed to have been
+dreaming about dogs. Something soft and cold lay on his head. It felt
+like a wet handkerchief ... the pain had dulled to a slow throbbing ...
+if he opened his eyes he would know who licked his hand and what it was
+that lay upon his head ... on the other hand, opening his eyes might
+bring back the pain. It seemed hardly worth the risk ... still, he would
+very much like to know--
+
+Without being able to decide the question, he fell asleep.
+
+When he awoke, his head was clear and the pain was gone. He felt no
+longer unbearably tired, but only comfortably weary, deliciously drowsy.
+Had he been at home in his own bed he would have turned over and gone
+cheerfully to sleep again. As it was, he opened his eyes with a zestful
+sense of curiosity.
+
+He was lying, very easily, upon soft grass. Above him spread the thick
+greenery of a giant maple; his head rested upon a cushion and close
+beside him, with comforting nose thrust into his open palm, lay a
+ferocious-looking bull pup. The pup grinned with delight at his
+tentative pat; barked fiercely, and then grinned again as if to say,
+"Don't mind me, it's only my fun!"
+
+There was a noise somewhere, a loud, cheerful noise--the noise of
+children playing. Not one child, nor two, but children--lots of them!
+This was perplexing; and another perplexing thing was the nearness of a
+white stoop which led up to the door of a white building; neither stoop
+nor building had he ever seen before. Again the dog barked, loudly, and
+as if in answer to the bark, the door above the stoop opened and a young
+girl came out. She cast a casual glance at him as he lay under the tree,
+and, settling herself daintily upon the white steps, opened a small
+basket and took from it a serviceable square of white damask and a
+lettuce sandwich. He could see the lettuce, crisp and green, peeping out
+at the edges.
+
+At the sight, he was conscious of a strange sensation; an almost
+forgotten feeling to which, for the moment, he could put no name.
+
+And then, as the girl bit into the sandwich, illumination came. He was
+_hungry_! But what an unkind, inconsiderate girl!--Another bite and the
+sandwich would be gone--
+
+"I am awake," he suggested meekly.
+
+"So Buster said." The girl smiled approvingly at the dog. "Good Buster!
+You may come off guard, sir. Run away and get your lunch."
+
+With a delighted bark for thanks the bull pup trotted away. Callandar's
+sense of injury deepened. The girl had begun upon a second sandwich.
+Perhaps there were only two!
+
+"Are you hungry, Mr. Tramp?" asked the girl innocently.
+
+"I think," he said, pausing in order to give his words full weight, "I
+am starving!" Then, as the blissful meaning of this first feeling of
+healthy hunger dawned upon him, he added solemnly: "Thank the Lord!"
+
+"Yes?" There was a cool edge of surprise in the girl's voice. She
+proceeded thoughtfully with the second sandwich.
+
+"Yes. Hunger is a beautiful thing, a priceless possession. Money cannot
+buy it, skill cannot command it. The price of hunger is far
+above rubies."
+
+The girl looked down upon him and smiled. It was such a dear little
+smile that for a moment its recipient forgot about the disappearing
+sandwich.
+
+"I am so glad," she said warmly, "that you feel like that!"
+
+There was a slight pause. "Because," she went on, finishing the last
+bite of the second sandwich, "until now I had always thought that hunger
+wasn't a bit nice. Unless, of course, one has the power to gratify it."
+
+"Fortunately," said Callandar a little stiffly, "I have that power."
+
+The girl raised her eyebrows. They were long and straight and black, and
+she raised them charmingly. But she was a most unkind and heartless
+girl, for all that. Never while he lived would he ask her for a
+sandwich. With a comfortable feeling of security his hand felt for his
+well-filled pocketbook. It was gone!
+
+"By Jove!"
+
+Stronger ejaculation seemed forbidden by the Presence on the steps. He
+tapped all his pockets carefully. The pocketbook was in none of
+them--and he had used the last cent of loose change for a glass of milk
+for breakfast.
+
+"I suppose," the girl had apparently not noticed his sudden
+discomfiture, "that you mean you have money? But the nearest place where
+money would be of use is Coombe, and Coombe is a full mile away. It is
+a pity that my principles, and the principles of the school-board,
+should be all against the feeding of tramps. Otherwise I might offer you
+a sandwich."
+
+"You might," bitterly, "but I doubt it!"
+
+"Even now, putting the school-board aside, I might offer you one if you
+were to ask prettily and to apologise to me for making rather a fool of
+me this morning over there by the pump!"
+
+The pump! Why, of course, the pump! It all came back to him now--the
+pump, the avenging angel! (Had this been the avenging angel?) The
+avenging dog!--Oh, heaven, was _that_ the avenging dog?
+
+He burst into a boyish shout of laughter.
+
+"There are only two sandwiches left," she warned him. The doctor stopped
+laughing.
+
+"Oh, please!" he said.
+
+There was something very pleasant about him when he used that tone; a
+persuasive charm, a trace of command. The girl liked it--and passed
+a sandwich.
+
+"Anyway it was you who took for granted that I was a tramp," he smiled
+at her. "If I remember rightly I was hardly in a condition to contradict
+you. Not but that it was a natural conclusion. I am curious to know why
+you changed your mind."
+
+"Oh! as soon as you fainted I knew. Tramps don't faint!"
+
+"Not ever?"
+
+"Well--hardly ever! And besides--look at your hands!"
+
+The doctor looked, and blushed.
+
+"Dirty?" he ventured.
+
+"Not half dirty enough! And it wasn't only your hands. I noticed--oh!
+lots of things!" For no perceptible reason a tiny blush fluttered
+across the whiteness of her face like a roseleaf chased by the wind. The
+pleasure of watching it made the doctor forget to answer, and the
+girl went on:
+
+"I know lots more about you than that you aren't a tramp. I know what
+you are. You are a doctor!" triumphantly.
+
+"A Daniel come to judgment!"
+
+"Yes, a Daniel! Only I wouldn't have been quite so sure if you hadn't
+dropped this out of your pocket." With a gleeful laugh she held up a
+clinical thermometer.
+
+The doctor laughed also. "Men have been hanged on less evidence than
+that," he admitted. "All the same I don't know where it came from. Some
+one must have judged me capable of wanting to take my own temperature.
+Anything else?"
+
+"Only general deductions. You are a doctor, you are going to
+Coombe--deduction, you are the doctor who is going to buy out Dr.
+Simmonds's practice."
+
+Callandar scrambled up from his pillow with a look of delighted surprise
+on his face.
+
+"Why--so I am!" he exclaimed.
+
+"You say that as if you had just found it out."
+
+"Well, er--you see I had forgotten it--temporarily. My head, you know."
+
+The suspicion in the girl's eyes melted into sympathy. "I suppose you
+know," she said with quite a motherly air, "that old Doc. Simmonds
+hasn't really any practice to sell?"
+
+"No? That's bad. Hasn't he even a little one? You see" (the sympathy had
+been so pleasant that he felt he could do with a little more of it), "I
+could hardly manage a big one just now. As you may have noticed, my
+health is rather rocky. Got to lay up and all that--so it's just as
+well that old Simpkins' practice is on the ragged edge."
+
+"The name is Simmonds, not Simpkins," coldly.
+
+"Well, I didn't buy the name with the practice. My own name is
+Callandar. Much nicer, don't you think?"
+
+"I don't know. A well-known name is rather a handicap."
+
+This time the doctor was genuinely surprised.
+
+"A handicap? What do you mean?"
+
+"People will be sure to compare you with your famous namesake, Dr.
+Callandar, of Montreal. Everyone you meet," with a mischievous smile,
+"will say, 'Callandar--ah! no relation to Dr. Henry Callandar of
+Montreal, I suppose?' And then they will look sympathetic and you will
+want to slap them."
+
+"Dear me! I never thought of that! I had no idea that the Montreal man
+would be known up here. In the cities, perhaps, but not here."
+
+The girl raised her straight black brows in a way which expressed
+displeasure at his slighting tone.
+
+"You are mistaken," she said briefly. "I must go now. It is time to ring
+the bell. The children are running wild."
+
+For the first time the doctor began to take an intelligent interest in
+his surroundings, and saw that the tree, the white stoop and the small
+white building were situated in a little, quiet oasis separated by a low
+fence from the desert of a large yard containing the red pump. On the
+other side of the fence was pandemonium!
+
+"Why, it's a school!" he exclaimed.
+
+The school-mistress arose, daintily flicking the crumbs from her white
+piqué skirt.
+
+"District No. 15. The largest attendance of any in the county. I really
+must ring the bell." She flicked another invisible crumb. "I hope," she
+added slowly, "that I haven't discouraged you."
+
+"Oh, no! not at all. Quite the contrary. It seems unfortunate about the
+name, but perhaps I can live it down. It isn't as if I were just out of
+college, you know.--In fact," as if the thought had just come to him,
+"do I not seem to you to be a little old for--to be making a
+fresh start?"
+
+The girl's eyes looked at him very kindly. It was quite evident that she
+thought she understood the situation perfectly. "I shouldn't worry about
+that, if I were you," she said. "Young doctors are often no use at all.
+A great many people _prefer_ doctors to be older! I know, you see, for
+my father was a doctor. He was Dr. Coombe; for many years he was the
+only doctor here, the only doctor that counted," with a pretty air of
+pride. "The town was named after his father-I am Esther Coombe."
+
+The doctor acknowledged the introduction with a bow and a quick smile of
+gratitude.
+
+"You are really very kind, Miss Coombe," he said. "If--if I should take
+Dr. Spifkin's practice, I hope I may see you sometimes. It is not far
+from here, is it, to the town--pump?"
+
+Esther laughed. "No, but I do not live out here. I only teach here. We
+live in town, or almost in. You will pass the house on the way to the
+hotel. But before you go--" with a gleeful smile she handed him his lost
+pocketbook--"this fell out of your coat when I pull--helped you under
+the tree. I should have given it to you before, but I wanted you to
+understand just how far the blessing of hunger depends upon one's power
+to gratify it."
+
+They laughed together with a splendid sense of comradeship; then with a
+startled "I really must ring the bell!" she turned and ran up the steps.
+
+Smilingly he watched her disappear, waiting musingly until a sudden
+furious ringing told him that school was called.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+
+Two sandwiches, an apple, and a glass of water may save a man from
+starvation, but they do not go far towards satisfying the reviving
+appetite of a convalescent. Walking with brisk step down the road,
+Callandar began to imagine the kind of meal he would order--a clear
+soup, broiled steak, crisp potatoes--a few little simple things like
+that! He fingered his pocketbook lovingly, glad that, for the first time
+in some months, he actually wanted something that money could buy.
+
+Now that noon was past, the intense heat of the morning was tempered by
+a breeze. It was still hot and his footsteps raised little cyclones of
+dust which flew along the road before him, but the oppression in the air
+was gone, and walking had ceased to be a weariness. The mile which
+separated him from Coombe appeared no longer endless, yet so insistent
+were the demands of his inner man that when a town-going farmer hailed
+him with the usual offer of a "lift," he accepted the invitation
+with alacrity.
+
+"Better," he murmured to himself, "the delights of rustic conversation
+with a good meal at the end thereof than lordly solitude and
+emptiness withal."
+
+But contrary to expectation the rustic declined to converse. He was a
+melancholy-looking man with a long jaw and eyes so deep-set that the
+observer took them on faith, and a nose which alone would have been
+sufficient to identify him. Beyond the first request to "step up," he
+vouchsafed no word and, save for an inarticulate gurgle to his horse,
+seemed lost in an ageless calm. His gaze was fixed upon some indefinite
+portion of the horse's back and he drove leaning forward in an attitude
+of complete bodily and mental relaxation. If his guest wished
+conversation it was apparent that he must set it going himself.
+
+"Very warm day!" said Callandar tentatively.
+
+"So-so." The farmer slapped the reins over the horse's flank, jerked
+them abruptly and murmured a hoarse "Giddap!" It was his method of
+encouraging the onward motion of the animal.
+
+"Is it always as warm as this hereabouts?"
+
+"No. Sometimes we get it a little cooler 'bout Christmas."
+
+The doctor flushed with annoyance and then laughed.
+
+"You see," he explained, "I'm new to this part of the country. But I
+always thought you had it cooler up here."
+
+The manner of the rustic grew more genial.
+
+"Mostly we do," he admitted; "but this here is a hot spell." Another
+long pause and then he volunteered suddenly: "You can mostly tell by
+Alviry. When she gets a sunstroke it's purty hot. I'm going for the
+doctor now."
+
+"Going for the doctor?" Callandar's gaze swept the peaceful figure with
+incredulous amusement. "Great Scott, man! Why don't you hurry? Can't the
+horse go any faster?"
+
+"Maybe," resignedly, "but he won't."
+
+"Make him, then! A sunstroke may be a very serious business. Your wife
+may be dead before you get back."
+
+The deep-set eyes turned to him slowly. There seemed something like a
+distant sparkle in their depths.
+
+"Don't get to worrying, stranger. It'll take more 'an a sunstroke to
+polish off Alviry."
+
+"Was she unconscious?"
+
+"Not so as you could notice."
+
+"But if it were a sunstroke--look here, I'll go with you myself. I am a
+doctor."
+
+"Kind of thought you might be," he responded genially. "Thinking of
+taking on old Doc. Simmonds's practice?"
+
+"I don't know. But if your wife--"
+
+The rustic shook his head. "No. You wouldn't do for Alviry. She said to
+get Doc. Parker, and a sunstroke ain't going to change her none. But if
+she likes your looks she'll probably try you next time. Tumble fond of
+experiments is Alviry--hi! giddap!" He slapped his horse more forcibly
+with the loose reins and settled into, mournful silence.
+
+"Going to put up at the Imperial?" he asked after a long and peaceful
+pause.
+
+"I want to put up somewhere where I can get a good meal and get it
+quickly."
+
+The mournful Jehu shook his head gloomily.
+
+"You won't get that at the Imperial."
+
+"Where had I better go?"
+
+"There ain't any other place to go--not to speak of."
+
+The doctor let fall a fiery exclamation.
+
+"What say?"
+
+"I said that it must be a queer town."
+
+"I'm a little hard of hearing, now and agin. But I gather you're not a
+church-going man. It's a great church-going place, is Coombe. Old Doc.
+Simmonds was a Methody. We were kind of hoping the next one might be a
+change. There's two churches of Presbyterians and they're tumble folk
+for hanging together."
+
+The doctor laughed. "Thanks for the tip. I'll remember. Coombe is
+considered a healthy place, isn't it?"
+
+"Danged healthy."
+
+The commiseration in the other's tone lent to the simple question such
+an obvious meaning that the doctor hardly knew whether to be amused
+or annoyed.
+
+"Heavens, man! I'm not an undertaker. I asked because I'm rather rocky
+myself. That is, partly, why I'm here."
+
+The mournful one nodded. "Good a reason as any," he assented sadly.
+
+"By the way--er--there used to be a Dr. Coombe here, didn't there?
+Didn't he live somewhere hereabouts?"
+
+The sad one turned his meditative eyes from their focus upon the horse's
+back and rested them upon the open and guileleas face by his side. Then
+from deep down in his brawny throat came a sudden sound. It was
+unmistakably a chuckle. Without the slightest trace of an accompanying
+smile, the sound was startling.
+
+"What's the matter?" asked the doctor irritably.
+
+"Nothing. Only when anybody's seen Esther, they always start asking
+about old Doc. Coombe. It gives them a kind of opening. Yes, that's the
+old Coombe place--over there. The one with the fir trees and the big elm
+by the gate."
+
+"A pleasant house," said Callandar in a detached voice.
+
+"So-so. The old Doc. uster putter around considerable. But they say his
+widow isn't doing much to keep it up. Tumble flighty woman, so they say.
+Young, you know, just about young enough to be the old Doc.'s
+daughter--"
+
+"But--"
+
+"Oh! Esther ain't her child. Esther's ma died when she was a baby. There
+is a child, though, Jane they call her, a pindling little thing. But
+p'r'aps you've met Jane too?"
+
+"I did not say--"
+
+"No, but I thought likely if you'd met one, you'd have met the other.
+Jane's nearly always hanging around Esther 'cept in school hours. Awful
+fond of Esther she is. Folks say that Esther's more of a mother to Jane
+than her own ma. But I dunno. Alviry says it's a shame the way Esther's
+put upon; all the cares of the house when she had ought to be playing
+with her dolls. Stepmother with 'bout as much sense as a fly. Old Aunt
+Amy, nice sort of soul but--" he touched his head significantly and
+heaved the heaviest sigh yet.
+
+"Do you mean to say that there is an aunt who isn't quite sane?" asked
+Callandar, surprised.
+
+"_I_ don't say so. Some folks does. Alviry says she's a whole lot wiser
+than some of the rest of us."
+
+From the tone of this remark it was evident that Alviry's observation
+had been intended personally. Callandar choked back a laugh.
+
+"What say?" asked the other suspiciously.
+
+"I said, rather hard luck for a young girl."
+
+The mournful one nodded and relapsed into melancholy. The doctor
+turned his attention to the house which a flicker of the whip had
+pointed out. It was long and low, with wide verandas and a somewhat
+neglected-looking lawn. At one side an avenue of lilacs curved, and on
+the other stood a stiff line of fir trees. The front of the house was
+well shaded by maples and near the gate stood a giant elm-tree, around
+the trunk of which ran a circular seat. It all looked cool, green and
+inviting. As the old horse walked sedately past, a woman's figure came
+out of one of the long windows and flung itself lightly, yet, even at
+that distance, with a certain suggestion of impatience, into one of the
+veranda chairs.
+
+"That'll be Mrs. Coombe now," volunteered his informant. "Tumble saucy
+way she has of flinging herself around--jes' like a young girl! Mebby
+you can see what sort of dress she's got on. Alviry'll be int'rested
+to know."
+
+"It's too far off," said Callandar, amused. "All I can see is that the
+lady is wearing something white."
+
+"Went out of weeds right on the dot, she did! It's not much over a year
+since the old Doc. died. Esther's still wearing some of her black, but
+jes' to wear them out, not as symbols. Mrs. Coombe's got a whole new
+outfit, Alviry says. Turrible extravagant! Folks says it takes Esther
+all her time paying for them with her school money. But I dunno.
+What say?"
+
+"I didn't say anything. But, since you ask, do you think all this is any
+of my business?"
+
+"Well, since you ask, it ain't. 'Tisn't my business either; but it kind
+of passes the time. Giddap!"
+
+Perhaps the old horse knew he was getting near the end of his journey
+for, contrary to expectation, he did "giddap" with a jerk which nearly
+unseated the doctor and caused a flicker of mild surprise to flit across
+the sad one's face.
+
+"Turrible fast horse, this," he confided, "all you got to do is to get
+him going."
+
+"Don't let me take you out of your way. If you'll tell me the
+direction--"
+
+"Sit still, stranger. I'm going right past the Imperial. Hardly any
+place in Coombe you can go without going past the Imperial. It's what
+you call a kind of newclus."
+
+As he spoke, the horse, now going at a fairly respectable rate, turned
+into the main street of the town; a main street, thriftily prosperous
+but now somewhat a-doze in the sun. Half-way down, the intelligent
+animal stopped with another jerk for which the doctor was equally
+ill-prepared. Before them stood a modest red brick building, three
+stories in height, with a narrow veranda running across the lowest story
+just one step up from the pavement. On the veranda were green chairs and
+in the chairs reclined such portion of the male Coombers as could do so
+without fear and without reproach. Along the top of the veranda was a
+large sign displaying the words, "HOTEL IMPERIAL."
+
+Callandar alighted nimbly from the democrat, that being the name of the
+light spring wagon in which he had travelled, and shook his good
+Samaritan by the hand. "Thank you very much," he said, "and I sincerely
+hope that the sunstroke will not have terminated fatally by the time you
+reach home."
+
+The deep-set eyes turned to him slowly and again he fancied a twinkle in
+their mournfulness. "If it does," said the sad one tranquilly, "it will
+be the first time it ever has--giddap!"
+
+As no one came forth to take his knapsack, Callandar slung it over his
+shoulder and entered the hotel. The parting remark of his conductor had
+left a smile upon his lips, which smile still lingered as he asked the
+sleepy-looking clerk for a room, and intimated that he would like lunch
+immediately.
+
+"Dining room closed," said that individual shortly.
+
+"What do you mean?"
+
+"Dining room closes at two; supper at six."
+
+"Do you mean to say that you serve nothing between the hours of two and
+six?"
+
+"Serve you a drink, if you like," with an understanding grin at his
+questioner's dusty knapsack.
+
+Forgetting that he had become a Presbyterian, the doctor made a few
+remarks, and from his manner of making them the clerk awoke to the fact
+that knapsacks do not a hobo make nor dusty coats a tramp. Now in Canada
+no one is the superior of any one else, but that did not make a bit of
+difference in the startling change of demeanour which overtook the
+clerk. He straightened up. He removed his toothpick. He arranged the
+register in his best manner and chose another nib for his pen. When
+Callandar had registered, the clerk was very sorry indeed that the hotel
+arrangements were rather arbitrary in the matter of meal hours. He was
+afraid that the kitchen fires were down and everything cold. Still if
+the gentleman would go to his room, he would see what could be done--
+
+The gentleman went to his room; but in no enviable frame of mind. So
+wretched was his plight that he was not above valuing the covert
+sympathy of the small bell-boy who preceded him up the oilclothed
+stairs. He was a very round boy: round legs, round cheeks, round head
+and eyes so round that they must have been special eyes made on purpose.
+There was also a haunting resemblance to some other boy! Callandar
+taxed his memory, and there stole into it a vision of a pool with
+willows. He chuckled.
+
+"Boy," he said, "have you a little brother who is very fond of going to
+school?"
+
+"Nope," said the boy. (It seemed to be a family word.) "I've got a
+brother, but he don't sound like that."
+
+"You ought to be in school yourself, boy. What's your name?"
+
+"Zerubbabel Burk."
+
+"Is that all?"
+
+"Yep. Bubble for short."
+
+"Have you ever known what it is to be hungry?"
+
+"Three times a day, before meals!"
+
+"Well, I'm starving. Do you belong to the Boy Scouts?"
+
+"Betyerlife."
+
+"Well, look here. I am an army in distress. Commissariat cut off,
+extinction imminent! Now you go and bring in the provisions. And, as we
+believe in honourable warfare, pay for everything you get, but take no
+refusals--see?" He pressed a bill into the boy's ready hand and watched
+the light of understanding leap into the round eyes with pleasurable
+anticipation.
+
+"I get you, Mister! Here's your room, number fourteen."
+
+The boy disappeared while still the key with its long tin label was
+jingling in the lock. The doctor opened the door of room number fourteen
+and went in.
+
+Rooms, we contend, like people, should be considered in relation to that
+state in which it has pleased Providence to place them. To consider
+number fourteen in any environment save its own would be manifestly
+unfair since, in relation to all the other rooms at the Imperial,
+number fourteen was a good room, perhaps the very best. A description
+tempts us, but perhaps its best description is to be found in its effect
+upon Dr. Callandar. That effect was an immediate determination to depart
+by the next train, provided the next train did not leave before he had
+had something to eat.
+
+He was aroused from gloomy musings by a discreet tap announcing the
+return of the scouting party. The scouting party was piled with parcels
+up to its round eyes and from the parcels issued an odour so delicious
+that the doctor's depression vanished.
+
+"Good hunting, eh?"
+
+"Prime, sir. 'Tisn't store stuff, either! As soon as I see that look in
+your eye I remembered 'bout the tea-fight over at Knox's Church last
+night and how they'd be sure to be selling off what's left, for the
+benefit of the heathen." The boy gave the roundest wink Callandar had
+ever seen and deposited his parcels upon the bed. "They always have
+'bout forty times as much's they can use. Course I didn't get you any
+_broken_ vittles," he added, noticing the alarm upon the doctor's face.
+"It's all as good as the best. Wait till you see!"
+
+He began to clear the wash-stand in a businesslike manner, talking all
+the time. "This here towel will do for a cloth. It's bran' clean--cross
+my heart! I borrowed a dish or two offen the church. They know me....
+We'll put the chicken in the middle and the ham along at this end and
+the pie over there where it can't slip off--"
+
+"I don't like pie, boy."
+
+"I do. Pie's good for you. We'll put the beet salad by the chicken and
+the cabbage salad by the ham and the chow-chow betwixt 'em. Then the
+choc'late cake can go by the pie--"
+
+"Boy, I don't like chocolate cake."
+
+"Honest? Ah, you're kiddin' me! Really? Choc'late cake's awful good for
+you. I love chocolate cake. This here cake was made by Esther Coombe's
+Aunt Amy--it's a sure winner! Say, Mister, what do you like anyway?"
+
+"Ever so many more things than I did yesterday. By Jove, that chicken
+looks good!"
+
+"Yep. That's Mrs. Hallard's chicken. I thought you'd want the best. She
+ris' it herself. And made the stuffin' too."
+
+"Did she 'ris' the ham also?"
+
+"Nope. It's Miss Taylor's ham. Home cured. The minister thinks a whole
+lot of Miss Taylor's curin'. Ma thinks that if Miss Taylor wasn't quite
+so hombly, minister might ask her jest on account of the ham. You try
+it--wait a jiffy till I sneak some knives!"
+
+Callandar looked at the decorated wash-stand and felt better. He had
+forgotten all about the room, and when the knives came, in even less
+than the promised jiffy, he forgot everything but the varied excellences
+of the food before him. The chicken was a chicken such as one dreams of.
+The salads were delicious, the homemade bread and butter fresh and
+sweet; the ham might well cause feelings of a tender nature towards its
+curer! The chocolate cake? He thought he might try a small piece and,
+having tried, was willing to make the attempt on a larger scale. The boy
+was a most efficient waiter, discerning one's desires before they were
+expressed. But when they got to the pie, the doctor drew up another
+chair at the pie side of the table and waved the waiter into it.
+
+There was no false modesty about the boy; neither did he hold malice. If
+he had felt slightly aggrieved at not having been invited earlier, he
+forgot it after the first mouthful and for a time there was no further
+conversation in number fourteen. The doctor had temporarily discarded
+his theory that it is better to rise from the table feeling slightly
+hungry. The boy had never had so foolish a theory to discard. The
+chicken, the ham, the pie, disappeared as if conjured away. The boy
+grew rounder.
+
+"Boy," said the doctor at last, "hadn't you better stop? You are
+'swelling wisibly afore my werry eyes!'"
+
+The boy shook his head, but presently he began to have intervals when he
+was able to speak.
+
+"Better plant all you can," he advised. "Ma says the grub here would
+kill a cat. I eat at home. Ma wouldn't risk my stomach here.
+It's fierce."
+
+"But I'll have to eat, boy. Isn't there another hotel?"
+
+"Yep; two. But you couldn't go to them. This here's the only decent one.
+Gave you a nice room anyway." He looked around admiringly. "Going to
+stay long?"
+
+"No--that is, yes--I don't know! How can I stay if I can't eat?"
+
+The boy picked his round white teeth thoughtfully with a pin.
+
+"You might get board somewheres."
+
+This was a new idea.
+
+"Why--so I might! Does Mrs. Hallard who raises chickens or Miss
+What's-her-name who cures ham, keep boarders?"
+
+"Nope. But they're not the only oysters in the soup--There's the bell!
+They never give a man a minute's peace. Say, if you don't really like
+that pie, don't waste it--see? Tell you about boarding-houses later."
+
+Callandar had to clear the table himself. This he did by the simple
+expedient of putting everything on top of everything else. But he did
+not waste anything, a precaution whose value he realised that night upon
+returning from the dining room where he had spent some time in looking
+at that repast known to the Imperial as supper. Bubble, the bell boy,
+found him with his mind made up.
+
+"Boy," he said, "you have saved my life. But I fear I can sojourn no
+longer in your delightful town. Find me the first train out in the
+morning.".
+
+The boy's face fell.
+
+"Ain't you going to stay? Why, it's all over town that you're the new
+doctor come to take old Doc. Simmonds's practice. Mournful Mark, that
+you drove up with, told it. He said he shouldn't wonder if you're real
+clever. Says he suspects you're an old friend of Doc. Coombe's
+folks--went to college with the doctor, mebby. Says that likely Alviry
+will have you next time she gets a stroke."
+
+"Tempting as the prospect is, boy, I fear ..."
+
+"Oh, dang it! There's the bell again."
+
+He darted out, bumped down the sounding stairs and, while the doctor was
+still considering the words of his ultimatum, appeared again at the
+door, this time decorously on duty.
+
+"A call for you, sir," said Bubble primly.
+
+"A--what?"
+
+"A call, sir. Mrs. Sykes wants to know if the new doctor will call
+'round first thing in the morning to see Mrs. Sykes's Ann. She dunno,
+but she thinks it's smallpox."
+
+"Quit your fooling, boy."
+
+"Cross my heart, doctor!"
+
+"Smallpox?"
+
+"Oh!" cheerfully, "I don't cross my heart to that. Mrs. Sykes always
+thinks things is smallpox. Ann's had smallpox several times now. But the
+rest is on the level. What message, sir?"
+
+Callandar hesitated. (And while he hesitated the Fateful Sisters
+manipulated a great many threads very swiftly.) "What train ..." he
+began. (The Fateful Sisters slipped a bobbin through and tied a cunning
+knot.) Without knowing why, Callandar decided to stay. He laughed.
+Bubble stood eagerly expectant.
+
+"Tell Mrs. Sykes I'll come, and ..." but Bubble did not wait for the
+end of the message.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+
+Coombe is a pretty place. It has broad streets, quiet and tree-lined. It
+has sunny, empty lots where children play. No one is crowded or shut in.
+The houses stand in their own green lawns, and are comfortable and even
+picturesque. The Swiss chalet style has not yet come to Coombe, so the
+architecture, though plain, is not productive of nightmare. The roads
+are like country roads, soft and yellowish; green grass grows along the
+sides of many of them, and board sidewalks are still to be found,
+springy and easy to the tread. There is a main street with macadamised
+roadway and stone pavements, real flat stone, for they were laid before
+the appearance of the all-conquering cement. There is a postoffice with
+a tower and a clock, a courthouse with a fountain and a cannon, a park
+with a bandstand and a baseball diamond, a townhall with a belfry and no
+bell, an exhaustive array of churches, the Imperial Hotel, and the
+market. We mention the market last (as we were taught at school) because
+on account of its importance it ought to come first.
+
+When Dr. Callandar, having been efficiently valeted by Bubble, set out
+to pay his first professional call, he drew in deep breaths of the
+pleasant air with a feeling of well-being to which he had long been a
+stranger. He had slept. In spite of the room, in spite of the chocolate
+cake, in spite of the pie, he had slept. And that alone was enough to
+make the whole world over. It was still hot but with a heat different
+from the heat of yesterday. A little shower had fallen during the night.
+There was a sense of the north in the air, a light freshness, very
+invigorating. He liked the quiet shaded streets; the cannon by the
+courthouse amused him; the number of church steeples left him amazed. He
+felt as if he had stumbled into a dream-town and must walk carefully
+lest he stumble out.
+
+Bubble had given him very complete directions, indeed so minute were
+they that we will omit them lest some day you find the way yourself and
+drop in on Mrs. Sykes when she is not expecting company. But Dr.
+Callandar in his amused absorption had forgotten that he was going to
+Mrs. Sykes at all, when he was recalled to a sense of duty by a sharp
+hail from the corner house of a street he had just passed. Looking back,
+he saw, half-way down the road, a tall, red woman leaning over a gate,
+who, upon attracting his attention, began waving her arms frantically,
+after the manner of an old-fashioned signalman inviting a train to "Come
+on." Callandar's step quickened in spite of himself and he forgot his
+idle musings.
+
+"Land sakes! I thought you'd never get here!" exclaimed the red woman
+fervently. "I suppose that imp of a boy didn't direct you right. Lucky I
+knew you as soon as you passed the corner. Mark Morrison may be as
+useless as they make 'em, but he's got a fine gift for description. Come
+right in. I'm dreadful anxious about Ann. It don't seem like measles,
+and she's had chicken-pox twice, and if she's sickening for anything
+worse I want to know it. I ain't one of them optimists that won't
+believe they're sick till they're dead. Callandar's your name, Mark
+says--any chance of your being a cousin to Dr. Callandar of Montreal
+that cured Mrs. Sowerby?"
+
+"No, I am not that Dr. Callandar's cousin."
+
+"I told Mark 'twasn't likely--or you wouldn't be here. Not if he'd any
+family feeling. I'm a great believer in a man making his own
+stepping-stones anyway," she went on with a friendly smile; "we ought to
+rise up on ourselves, like the poet says, and not on our cousins."
+
+"A noble sentiment," said Callandar gravely, as he followed her up the
+walk, across a veranda so clean that one hesitated to step on it, and
+into a small hall, bare and spotless, where he was invited to hang
+up his hat.
+
+"You're younger than I expected," went on Mrs. Sykes kindly. "I hope you
+ain't entirely dependent on your practice in Coombe?"
+
+The amazed doctor was understood to murmur something about "private
+means."
+
+"That's good. You'd starve if you hadn't. Coombe's a terrible healthy
+place and poor Doc. Simmonds didn't pay a call a week. I just felt like
+some one ought to warn you. I despise folks who hold back from telling
+things because they ain't quite pleasant. Know the worst, I always say;
+it's better in the end. Of course, as Mark says, your being a
+Presbyterian will make considerable diff'rence. Some folks thought Doc.
+Simmonds was pretty nigh an infiddle!"
+
+Too overcome by his feelings to answer, Callandar followed her up the
+narrow stair and into a clean bright room with green-tinted walls and
+yellow matting on the floor.
+
+Mrs. Sykes waved a deprecatory hand, at once exhibiting and apologising
+for so much splendour.
+
+"This is the spare-room," she explained. "And there," pointing to the
+high, old-fashioned bed, "is Ann."
+
+Callandar crossed the immaculate matting gingerly, taking Ann on faith,
+as it were, for, from the door, no; Ann was visible, only a very small
+dent in the big whiteness of the bed.
+
+"Ann! Here's the doctor!"
+
+A small black head and a pair of frightened black eyes appeared for a
+moment as if by conjuration, and instantly vanished.
+
+"Ann!" said Mrs. Sykes more sternly.
+
+There was a squirming somewhere under the bedclothes, but nothing
+happened.
+
+"Great Scott!" exclaimed the doctor, "you've got the child in a
+feather-bed!"
+
+Mrs. Sykes beamed complacently.
+
+"Yes, I have. It may seem like taking a lot of trouble for nothing, but
+you never can tell. I ain't one of them that never prepares for
+anything. Jest as soon as Ann gets sick I move her right into the
+spare-room and put her into the best feathers. Then if she should be
+took sudden I wouldn't have anything to regret. The minister and the
+doctor can come in here any hour and find things as I could wish....
+Ann! what do you mean by wiggling down like that? Ann--come up at once!
+The doctor wants to see your tongue."
+
+This time the note of command was effective. The black head came to the
+surface, again followed by the frightened eyes and plump little cheeks
+stained with feverish red.
+
+"Some cool water, if you please," ordered the doctor in his best
+professional manner. Mrs. Sykes opened her lips to ask why, but
+something caused her to shut them without asking.
+
+When she had left the room, Callandar leaned suddenly over and lifted
+Ann bodily out of the dent and placed her firmly upon a pillow. It was a
+very plump pillow, evidently filled with the "best feathers," but
+compared with the bed it was as a rock in an ocean.
+
+"Now," he said gravely, "you are safe, for the present. You are on an
+island; but be very careful not to slide off for if you do I may never
+be able to look at your tongue."
+
+The child's hands grasped the island convulsively.
+
+"Don't hold on like that," he warned. "You might tip." He leaned close
+so that she might see the smile in his eyes, "And if you tipped ..."
+
+The child gave a sudden delighted giggle. "I'd go right in over my head,
+wouldn't I?"
+
+"Yes. And next time you were rescued you might feel more inclined to
+tell your aunt what you had been eating before you became ill."
+
+Ann stopped giggling.
+
+"You don't need to tell _me_," went on the doctor, "because I know!"
+
+"How d'ye know?"
+
+"Magic. Be careful--you were nearly off that time! Does your aunt know
+anything about those things you ate?"
+
+"No."
+
+"Very well. But you must promise not to eat those particular things
+again. Not even when you get the chance." Then as he saw the woe upon
+her face, "At least, not in quantities!"
+
+"Cross my heart!" said Ann, relieved.
+
+"Here's the water," said Mrs. Sykes, returning. "Ann, get right back
+into bed. Do you want to get your death? Haven't I told you till I'm
+tired to keep your hands in? Is it measles, Doctor? She's subject to
+measles. Perhaps it's the beginning of scarlet fever. But if it's
+smallpox I want to know. No good ever comes of smoothing things over."
+
+The doctor smiled at Ann.
+
+"It isn't smallpox this time, Mrs. Sykes."
+
+"Did you look at them spots on the back of her neck?"
+
+"Yes. A little rash caused by indigestion. I wouldn't worry."
+
+"Don't mind me. I'm used to worrying. I don't dodge my troubles like
+some I know. Indigestion? It looks more like eczema. Eczema is a
+terrible trying thing. But if the child's got it I don't want it called
+indigestion to spare my feelings."
+
+"But it's not eczema! It's indigestion--and prickly heat. I'm afraid
+Ann's stomach has been giving trouble. It has been hotter than is usual
+here, I understand. Heat often upsets children. While I write out a
+prescription, you might bathe her face and hands."
+
+Mrs. Sykes gazed doubtfully at the water. "She was done once last night
+and once this morning just before you came in," she remarked in an
+injured tone. "But if you think she needs it again, this sort of water's
+no good. Nothing's ever any good for Ann except hot water and soap."
+
+The doctor looked up from his writing in surprise. Then as the meaning
+of the thing dawned upon him, he laughed heartily.
+
+"Oh, Ann's as clean as the veranda floor!" he explained. "This is just
+to cool her off. Let me show you--doesn't that feel nice, Ann?"
+
+"Lovely!" blissfully.
+
+Mrs. Sykes sniffed.
+
+"I suppose that's some new-fangled notion? I never heard before of
+cooling people off when they've got a fever. In my time, the hotter you
+were, the hotter you were made to be, till you got cool naturally. I
+suppose," with half-interested sarcasm, "that you'd give her cold water
+to drink if she asked for it?"
+
+"Certainly."
+
+"Well, I expect she knows better than to ask for it!"
+
+Feeling Ann's imploring gaze, Callandar resorted to diplomacy.
+
+"The fact is, Mrs. Sykes," he said pleasantly, "there really isn't very
+much wrong with Ann. You have been letting your forethought and your
+natural anxiety run away with you. There is not the slightest occasion
+for alarm. If there were, I should not dream of hiding it from one so
+well-prepared as yourself. As it is, you have taken a lot of needless
+trouble--this beautiful feather-bed, for example! I feel sure that Ann
+would do very well in her own bed."
+
+The victim of the feathers gave a relieved gasp which her aunt mistook
+for a sigh of regret.
+
+"Her own bed's well enough for anything ordinary," she admitted in a
+mollified tone. "Even if it is a store mattress."
+
+"Quite good enough. Many a little girl would be glad of it." The
+doctor's tone was virtuous. "If you will allow me, I shall carry her in
+now. You see, she is cooler already. By to-morrow, if she takes her
+medicine, she ought to be as well as ever."
+
+Ann's own room turned out to be on the shady side, and though not so
+grand as the spare-room, it was pleasantly cool. The little bed with the
+hard mattress and the snowy counterpane was infinitely to be preferred
+to the ocean of feathers, and the rescued maiden lay back on her smaller
+pillows with a sigh of gratitude.
+
+"Sure you won't tell?" she whispered as he laid her down.
+
+"Honour bright. Cross my heart! But you must take the medicine. It's
+nasty, but not too nasty, and you mustn't squeal--or it will be the
+spare-room again. Red cheeks and prickly heat are consequences, but
+feather-beds and medicine are retribution."
+
+"That's right, Doctor," said Mrs. Sykes, who had heard the last words.
+"There's nothing like a word about retribution when a person's sick. It
+helps 'em to realise their state. I don't hold with the light-minded
+that want to get away from retribution. Depend upon it, they're the very
+folks that's got it coming to them. Yes. No one needs to go around
+denying that there's a hell, if their feet are planted upon a rock and
+they know they're never going there. It's years now since I've looked
+hell in the face and turned my feet the other way. But I do say that if
+I'd decided to go straight ahead in the broad and easy path, I wouldn't
+try to shut my eyes to the end of it, like some folks! Are you putting
+up at the Imperial, Doctor?"
+
+"'Putting up' exactly expresses my condition."
+
+"Well, you may as well know at once that a doctor in a hotel will never
+get any forwarder in Coombe. You'll have to get boarding somewhere. Have
+you looked around yet?"
+
+"No. I--"
+
+"Then I don't mind telling you that the spare-room is to let and the
+little room down below that has a door of its own and seems made exactly
+for a doctor's office. I shouldn't mind letting you have them if you
+feel sure that the smells wouldn't get loose all through the house and
+in the cooking. There's a barn where you could keep your horse."
+
+"I haven't got a horse," protested Callandar feebly.
+
+"But of course you'll be getting one. A doctor has to have a horse. If
+you can't pay for it down, Mark knows some one who'd let you have a good
+one on time. You can trust Mark, if he _is_ mournful. Of course I don't
+say that these rooms are the only rooms to let in Coombe, but I do think
+they're about as good as you can get--being so near to Dr. Coombe's old
+house. People get used to coming for a doctor down this street."
+
+"But that was, over a year ago."
+
+"It takes more 'an a year for Coombe folks to change their ways. Only
+this day week I saw Bill Brooks tearing down this way on account of Mrs.
+Brooks' being took kind of unexpected, and Bill losing his head and
+forgetting all about Dr. Coombe being dead and Dr. Parker living on the
+other side of the town."
+
+"And you think that if I'd been here he would have 'tore' in here?"
+
+"If he hadn't I'd just have called out to him as he went by. He was that
+wild he'd have taken anybody."
+
+"I see," with humility. "I lost a good chance there!"
+
+"Well, if you live here you'll get others. Why, from the spare-room
+windows you can see the corner window down at the Coombe place. I could
+make out to let you have your meals, too. Only I'd expect you to be as
+reg'lar as Providence permitted. I know a doctor is bound to be more
+aggravating in that way than other folks, but if you'd be as regular as
+lay in you, I'd put up with it. 'Tisn't as if I wasn't always prepared.
+When will you want to move in?"
+
+"Really, I--I don't know--" The bewildered Callandar glanced for help to
+Ann, but met only clasped hands and an imploring stare. "I'll--I'll let
+you know," he faltered.
+
+Thinking it over afterwards, he could never understand why he did not
+promptly refuse to be coerced, but at the time surrender seemed the only
+natural thing. Besides, he couldn't stay another day at the Imperial. He
+had to go somewhere. Perhaps it was his destiny to secure Ann against
+further feather-beds. Anyway, he accepted it.
+
+"Oh, goody!" cried Ann, clapping her hands.
+
+"Ann! put your hands under those clothes. How often must I tell you that
+you'll get your death? If you like, Doctor, there's nothing to prevent
+your moving in to-morrow. I'll need a day to air the feather-tick and
+make some pie."
+
+The doctor was at last roused to action.
+
+"There are conditions," he said hastily. "If I come here, there is to be
+no feather-tick and no pie!"
+
+"No feather-bed?" in amazement.
+
+"No pie?" Ann's voice was a sorrowful whisper.
+
+"You see," Callandar explained, "I am here partly for my health. My
+health cannot lie on feather-beds nor eat pie--well, perhaps," with a
+glance at Ann, "an occasional pie may do no harm. But I shall send down
+some springs and a mattress. I have to use a special kind," hastily.
+
+"Oh! it's spinal trouble, is it?" Mrs. Sykes surveyed him
+commiseratingly. "You look straight enough. But land! You never can
+tell. Them spinal troubles are most deceiving. Terrible things they are,
+but they don't shorten life as quickly as some others. Not that that's a
+blessing! Mostly, folks as has them would be glad to go long before they
+are took. Still, it gives them some time to be prepared. I remember--"
+
+"I must go now, Mrs. Sykes. Give Ann some of the medicine as soon as it
+comes. It isn't exactly spinal trouble that is the matter with me, you
+know, but--er--I'll send down the kind of mattress I like. In fact, I
+shall probably wish to furnish my rooms myself. You won't mind,
+I'm sure."
+
+"Land sakes, no, I don't mind! Most doctors are finicky. Don't worry
+about the medicine. I'll see that Ann takes it."
+
+She watched him go with a glance in which satisfaction and foreboding
+mingled. "Poor young feller!" she mused. "He didn't like what I said
+about his spine a mite. Back troubles makes folks terrible touchy."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+
+Two days after the installation of what Mrs. Sykes persisted in calling
+the "spinal mattress," Esther Coombe was late in getting home from
+school. As was usually the case when this happened, Jane, designated by
+mournful Mark as "the Pindling One," was sitting on the gatepost gazing
+disconsolately down the road. There were traces of tears upon her thin
+little face and the warmth of the hug which returned her sister's
+greeting was evidence of an unusually disturbed mind.
+
+"Why aren't you playing with the other children, Jane?"
+
+"I don't want to play, Esther. Timothy's dead."
+
+"Yes, I know, dear. But Fred has promised you a new puppy--"
+
+"I don't want a new puppy. I want Timothy."
+
+"But Timothy is so much happier, Jane. He was old, you know. In the
+Happy Hunting Grounds, he will be able to frisk about just like other
+dogs. Wouldn't you like an apple?"
+
+Jane considered this a moment and decided favourably. But her tale of
+woe was not yet complete. "Mother's ill again," she announced gloomily.
+"I mustn't play band or nail the slats on the rabbits' hutch. Aunt Amy
+gave me my dinner on the back porch. I liked that. I wouldn't go in the
+house, not till you came, Esther."
+
+The straight brows of the elder sister came together in a worried frown.
+
+"You know that is being silly, Jane."
+
+"I don't care."
+
+"You must learn to care. Run now and get the apple and ask Aunt Amy to
+wash your face."
+
+Jane tripped away obediently, her griefs assuaged by the mere telling of
+them, and Esther passed into the house by way of the veranda. It was a
+charming veranda, long and low, opening through French windows directly
+into the living room which, like itself, was long and low, and charming.
+There is a charm in rooms which can be felt but not described. It exists
+apart from the furnishings and even the occupants; it is an essence,
+haunting, intangible--the soul of the room! only there are many rooms
+which have no soul.
+
+Through the living room at the Elms vagrant breezes entered, loitered,
+and drifted out again, leaving behind them scents of sun-warmed flowers.
+The light there was soft and green. The comfortable chairs invited rest;
+the polished rosewood table, the bright piano shining in the brightest
+corner, the smooth old floor in whose rug the colours had long ceased to
+trouble, the general air of much used comfort, satisfied and refreshed.
+
+Esther loved the room. Her first childish memory was of the rosewood
+table shining like a pool in the lamplight and of her own wondering face
+reflected in it, with her father's laughing eyes behind. In every way it
+was associated with the beginnings of things. The magic of all music
+began for her in the sweet, thin notes of the old square piano; the key
+to fairy land lay hidden somewhere in that shelf of well-worn books.
+
+Yet to-night she entered with a hesitating step. It was obvious that she
+felt no pleasure in the cool greenness. The room was the same room but
+it was as if the expression on a well-known face had unaccountably
+changed and become forbidding. The girl sighed as she flung her hat
+upon a chair.
+
+"Esther," Jane's voice, somewhat obscured by the eating of the promised
+apple, came through the open window, "are you sure about Timothy being
+in the Happy Hunting Grounds?"
+
+"Of course, dear."
+
+"But he wasn't what you would call a Christian, Esther?"
+
+"He was a good dog."
+
+"Can Timothy chase chickens there?"
+
+"Probably."
+
+"And cats?"
+
+"Certainly cats."
+
+"Is that what happens to bad cats when they die?"
+
+Esther viewed this logical picture of everlastingly pursued cats with
+some dismay.
+
+"N-o. I don't suppose it would be real cats."
+
+"But Tim wouldn't chase anything but real cats."
+
+"Jane, I wish you wouldn't talk with your mouth full."
+
+Being thus reduced to giving up the argument or the apple, Jane
+abandoned the former. It was clear that Esther was not in the mood for
+argument. The child's quick observation had not failed to note the
+lagging step, nor the quick sigh. She nodded her head as if in answer to
+some spoken word.
+
+"Yes, I know. I feel like that, too. That's why I didn't come in before;
+that's why I'm not really in yet. It catches you by the throat and makes
+you breathe funny. What is it, Esther?"
+
+"Why--I don't know, Jane. It's loneliness I think--missing Dad."
+
+The child shook her head. But whatever her objection might have been it
+was beyond her power of expression. She slid off the veranda step and
+wandered back into the garden. There was another apple in the pocket of
+her apron, and apples are great comforters.
+
+Left alone, Esther with a resolutely cheerful air took down a blue bowl
+and proceeded to arrange therein the day's floral offerings. A sweet and
+crushed mixture they were, pansies, clove-pinks, mignonette, bleeding
+hearts, bachelors' buttons, all short stemmed and minus any saving touch
+of green, but true love offerings for all that. Wordless gifts most of
+them, prim little bunches, hot from tight clasping in chubby hands,
+shyly and swiftly deposited on "Teacher's desk" when the back of that
+divinity was turned. The blue bowl took kindly to them all, and as the
+girl's clever fingers settled and arranged the glowing chaos it seemed
+that with their crushed fragrance something of the lost spirit of the
+room came back. Just so had she arranged hundreds of times the sweet
+smelling miscellanies which had been her father's constant tribute from
+grateful patients.
+
+She had almost finished when the door opened to admit a little, grey
+wisp of a woman with a mild white face and large faded eyes which might
+once have been beautiful. She was dressed entirely in lavender, a
+fondness for this colour being one of the many harmless fancies born of
+a brain not quite normal. The rather expressionless face brightened at
+sight of the girl by the table.
+
+"Why, Esther--I didn't hear you come in. Have you put a mat under the
+bowl? See now! You have marked the table."
+
+Esther good humouredly reached for a table-mat, for the polish of this
+particular article of furniture was the pride of Aunt Amy's life. "It's
+all right, Auntie. It's not really a mark. Look, aren't they sweet? It
+is like one of father's posies. Is mother any better?"
+
+"The children must think a lot of you, Esther!"
+
+"Yes, although I think they would bring flowers to any one, bless 'em!
+Is mother--"
+
+"Your mother hasn't been down all day. I went up with her dinner but she
+didn't take any. She wouldn't answer."
+
+"Auntie, don't you think she ought to do something about these
+headaches?"
+
+"I don't know, Esther. She'll be all right to-morrow. She always is."
+
+"Yes. But they are getting more frequent, and you know--she is so
+different. She can't be well. Haven't you noticed it?"
+
+"No," vaguely.
+
+"Well, Jane has. So it can't just be imagination. She ought to consult a
+doctor."
+
+"She won't."
+
+"But it's absurd! What shall we do if she goes on like this? If there
+were only some one who would talk to her! She won't listen to me because
+she is older and married and--all that. All the same she doesn't seem
+older when she acts like this--like a child!"
+
+"Well, you know, Esther, there isn't any doctor here that your mother
+just fancies."
+
+The girl stooped lower over the blue bowl, perhaps to hide the little
+smile which crinkled up the corner of her mouth. The faint colour on her
+cheek may have been a reflection from the flowers.
+
+"Yes, but haven't you heard? There is a new doctor. He seems quite
+different--I mean they say he is awfully nice. Mrs. Sykes' Ann was
+telling me all about him. He is going to board with Mrs. Sykes. The
+child just worships him already. Perhaps mother might see him."
+
+"I shouldn't worry," said Aunt Amy placidly. "This pepper-grass will be
+very nice for tea. Did you tell Jane she might have two apples, Esther?"
+
+"No. I told her she might have one. But I don't suppose two will hurt
+her." Esther was used to Aunt Amy's inconsequences which made impossible
+the discussion of any subjects save the most trivial. But she sighed a
+little as she realised anew that there was no help here.
+
+"Jane is feeling badly about Timothy," she explained. "Don't you think
+we might have tea in here, Auntie? It is so cool."
+
+Aunt Amy, who had been anxiously rubbing an imaginary spot on the table,
+looked up with a startled air. "Oh, Esther!" she said, in the voice of a
+frightened child. Then with a child's obvious effort to control rising
+tears, "Of course, if you say so, Esther. But--but do you feel like
+risking the round table? Couldn't we have it on the little table in
+the corner?"
+
+The girl settled the last of her flowers and pushed back her hair with a
+worried gesture. A pang of mingled irritation and anxiety lent an edge
+of sharpness to her soft voice.
+
+"Auntie dear! I thought you had quite forgotten that fancy. You know it
+is only a fancy. Round tables are just like other tables. And you
+promised me--"
+
+"Yes, I know, but--"
+
+"Well, then, be sensible, dear. We shall have tea in here." Then seeing
+the real distress on the timid old face, the girl's mood softened. "No,
+we shan't," she declared gaily. "We'll have it as usual in the dining
+room. You will fix the pepper-grass and I shall set the table."
+
+But the end of Aunt Amy's vagaries was not yet. She hesitated, flushed
+and more timidly, yet as one who is compelled, begged for the task of
+setting the table herself. "For you know, Esther, the sprigged tea-set
+is so hurt if any one but me arranges it. Yes, of course, it is only a
+fancy, I know that. But the sprigged tea-set does feel so badly if I
+neglect it. All the pink in it fades quite out. You must have noticed
+it, Esther?"
+
+The girl sighed and gave in. Usually Aunt Amy's vagaries troubled her
+little. Disconcerting at first, they had quickly become a commonplace,
+for the coming of Aunt Amy to the doctor's household had been too great
+a blessing to invite criticism. Esther had soon learned to express no
+surprise when told that the sprigged china had a heart of extreme
+sensitiveness, and that the third step on the front stair disliked to be
+trodden upon, and that it was dangerous to sit with one's back to a
+window facing the east. All these and numberless other strange facts
+were part of Aunt Amy's twilight world. To her they were immensely
+important, but to the family the really important thing seemed that,
+with trifling exceptions, the new inmate of the household was gentle and
+kind; her housekeeping a miracle and her cooking a dream. In the years
+she had lived with them there had been but one serious thrill of
+anxiety, and that came when Dr. Coombe had discovered her endeavouring
+to infect Jane with her delusions. This had been strictly forbidden and
+the child's mind, duly warned, was soon safeguarded by her own growing
+comprehension. Jane quickly understood that it was foolish to shut the
+garden gate three times every time she came through it, and that no one
+save Aunt Amy thought it necessary to count all the boards in the
+sidewalk or to touch all the little posts under the balustrade as one
+came down stairs. Some of the prettier, more elusive fancies she may
+have retained, but, if so, they did her no harm.
+
+As for Aunt Amy herself, she lived her shadow-haunted life not
+unhappily. Dr. Coombe she had worshipped, yet his death had not affected
+her as much as might have been feared. Perhaps it was one of her
+compensations that death to her was not quite what it is to the more
+normal consciousness. It was noticeable that she always spoke of the
+doctor as if he were in the next room. Her devotion to him had been
+caused by his success in partially relieving her of the most distressing
+burden of her disordered brain--the delusion of persecution. Aunt Amy
+knew that somewhere there existed a mysterious power known vaguely as
+"They" who sought unceasingly to injure her. Of course it was only once
+in a while that "They" got a chance, for Aunt Amy was very clever in
+providing no opportunities. More than once had she outwitted "Them."
+Still, one must be always upon one's guard! From this harrowing delusion
+the doctor had done much to deliver her, indeed she had become more
+normal in every way under his care. It was only now, a year after his
+death, that Esther imagined sometimes that there was a slipping back--
+
+The ill effects of sitting at a round table, for instance? It was a long
+time since this particular fancy had been spoken of and Esther had
+considered it gone altogether. Yet here it was, cropping out again and
+just at a time when other problems threatened. Things seemed determined
+to be difficult to-day.
+
+The fact was that Esther was suffering from the need of a confidant.
+Really worried as she felt about her step-mother's health, the burden of
+taking any determined action against the wishes of the patient herself
+was a serious one for a young girl. Yet in whom could she confide? Girl
+friends she had in plenty but not one whose judgment she could trust
+before her own. Had the minister been an older man or a man of different
+calibre she might have gone to him, but the idea of appealing to Mr.
+Macnair was distasteful. Neither among her father's friends was there
+one to whom she cared to go for advice concerning her father's widow.
+They had one and all disapproved, she knew, of the sudden second
+marriage and Dr. Coombe had never quite forgiven their disapproval.
+
+Often she felt like refusing the responsibility altogether. After all,
+her step-mother was a woman quite old enough to manage her own affairs.
+If she wished to foolishly imperil her health why need Esther care? Why
+indeed? But this train of reasoning never lasted long. Always there came
+a counter-question, "If you do not care, who will?" And the dearth of
+any answer settled the burden more firmly upon her rebellious shoulders.
+For one thing there was always the inner knowledge that Mary Coombe was
+weak and that she, Esther, was strong. She had always known this. Even
+when her father had brought home his pretty bride and Esther, a shy,
+silent child of eleven, had welcomed her, she had known that the
+newcomer was the weaker spirit. The bride had known it too. She had
+never attempted to control Esther, leaving the child entirely to her
+father--a bit of unwitting wisdom which did much to smooth daily life
+at the Elms. If the doctor saw his wife's weakness of character it is
+probable that it did not interfere with his love for her. Why need she
+be strong while he was strong enough for two? But he had forgotten one
+thing--the day when she would have to be strong alone!
+
+The realisation came to him upon his death-bed. Esther was sure of this.
+He could not speak, but she had read the message of his eyes, the appeal
+to the strength in her to help the other's weakness. No getting away
+from the solemn charge of that entreating look!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Esther was thinking of that look now, as she sat alone in the dusk of
+the veranda. Tea was over and Aunt Amy was putting Jane to bed. From her
+mother she had had no word. Blank silence had met her when she had taken
+the tea tray upstairs and called softly through the closed door. Mrs.
+Coombe was probably asleep. She would be better to-morrow; but before
+long she would be ill again, and the interval between the attacks was
+becoming shorter.
+
+There was anger as well as anxiety in the girl's mind. Her healthy and
+straightforward youth had little patience with her step-mother's
+unreasonable caprices. For her illness she had every sympathy, but for
+the morbid nervousness which seemed to accompany it, none at all. These
+constant headaches, the increasing nervous irritability from which Mrs.
+Coombe suffered lay like a shadow over the house. Yet the sufferer
+refused to take the obvious way of relief and persisted in her refusal
+with a stubbornness of which no one would have dreamed her light nature
+capable. Still, willing or unwilling, something must be done. Aunt Amy,
+too, was becoming more of an anxiety. Once or twice lately she had
+spoken of "Them," a sign of mental distress which Dr. Coombe had always
+treated with the utmost seriousness. Perhaps if a doctor were called in
+for Aunt Amy, Mrs. Coombe would lose her foolish dread of doctors and
+allow him to prescribe for her also. And if the new doctor were half as
+clever as Mrs. Sykes said he was--Esther's heart began to warm a little
+as her fancy pictured such a pleasant solution of all her problems. The
+little smile curved her lips again as she thought of the maple by the
+schoolhouse steps, and the lettuce sandwiches and--and everything. She
+closed her eyes and tried to recall his face as he had looked up at her.
+Instinctively she knew it for a good face, strong, humorous, kindly, but
+strong above all. And it was strength that Esther needed. When she went
+to bed that night her burden seemed a little lighter.
+
+I believe he can help me, she thought, and it isn't as if he were quite
+a stranger. After all, we had lunch together once!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+
+Undoubtedly Esther slept better that night for the thought of the new
+doctor. It cannot be said that the doctor slept better because of her.
+In fact he lay awake thinking of her. He did not want to think of her;
+he wanted to go to sleep. Twice only had he seen her. Once upon the
+occasion of the red pump and once when casually passing her on the main
+street. There was no reason why her white-rose face with its strange
+blue eyes and its smile-curved lips should float about in the darkness
+of Mrs. Sykes' best room. Yet there it was. It was the eyes, perhaps.
+The doctor admitted that they were peculiar eyes, startlingly blue. Dark
+blue in the shade of the lashes, flashing out light blue fire when the
+lashes lifted. But Mrs. Sykes' boarder did not want to think about eyes.
+He wanted to go to sleep. He did not want to think about hair either.
+Although Miss Coombe had very nice hair--cloudy hair, with little ways
+of growing about the temple and at the curve of the neck which a blind
+man could not help noticing. In the peaceful shadows of the room it
+seemed a still softer shadow framing the vivid girlish face.
+
+Still, on the whole, sleep would have been better company and when at
+last he did drop off he did not relish being wakened by the voice of Ann
+at his door.
+
+"Doc-ter, doc-ter! Are you awake? Can I come in?"
+
+"I am not awake. Go away."
+
+Ann's giggle came clearly through the keyhole.
+
+"You've got a visitor," she whispered piercingly through the same
+medium. "A man. A well man, not a sick one. He came on the train. He
+came on the milk train--"
+
+"You may come in, Ann." The doctor slipped on his dressing gown with a
+resigned sigh. "What man and why milk?"
+
+"I don't know. Aunt Sykes kept him on the veranda till she was sure he
+wasn't an agent. Now he's in the parlour. Aunt hopes you'll hurry, for
+you never can tell. He may be different from what he looks."
+
+"What does he look?"
+
+Ann's small hands made an expressive gesture which seemed to envisage
+something long and lean.
+
+"Queer--like that. He's not old, but he's bald. His eyes screw into you.
+His nose," another formative gesture, "is like that. A nawful big nose.
+He didn't tell his name."
+
+"If he looks like that, perhaps he hasn't any name. Perhaps he is a
+button-moulder. In fact I'm almost certain he is--other name Willits.
+Occupation, professor."
+
+"But if he is a button-maker, he can't be a professor," said Ann
+shrewdly.
+
+"Oh, yes he can. Button-moulding is what he professes. His line is a
+specialty in spoiled buttons. He makes them over."
+
+"Second-hand?"
+
+"Better than new."
+
+Ann fidgeted idly with the doctor's cuff-links and then with a flash of
+her odd childish comprehension, "You love him a lot, don't you?" she
+said jealously.
+
+The doctor adjusted a collar button.
+
+"England expects that every man shall deny the charge of loving
+another," he said, "but between you and me, I do rather like old
+Willits. You see I was rather a worn-out button once and he made me
+over. Where did you say he was?"
+
+"In the parlour--there's Aunt! She said I wasn't to stay. I'll get it."
+
+Indeed the voice of Mrs. Sykes could be heard on the stairs.
+
+"Ann! Where's that child? Doctor, you'd think that child had never been
+taught no manners. You'll have to take a firm stand with Ann, Doctor.
+Land Sakes, I don't want to make her out worse'n she is, but you might
+as well know that your life won't be worth living if you don't set
+on Ann."
+
+"All right, Mrs. Sykes. Painful as it may be, I shall do it. Are you
+sure it's safe to leave a stranger in the parlour?"
+
+Mrs. Sykes looked worried. "I hope to goodness it's all right, Doctor.
+He's been in the parlour half an hour. I don't think he's an agent,
+hasn't got a case or a book anywhere. But agents are getting cuter every
+day. Naturally I didn't like to go so far as to ask his name. And I'm
+not asking it now. Curiosity was never a fault of mine though I do say
+it. Still a woman does like to know who's setting in her front parlour."
+
+"And you shall," declared Callandar kindly. "Just hang on a few moments
+longer, dear Mrs. Sykes, and your non-existent but very justifiable
+curiosity shall be satisfied."
+
+The parlour at Mrs. Sykes opened to the right of the narrow hall. Its
+two windows, distinguished by eternally half-drawn blinds of yellow,
+looked out upon the veranda, permitting a decorous gloom to envelop the
+sacred precincts. Mrs. Sykes was too careful a housekeeper to take risks
+with her carpet and too proud of her possessions to care to hide their
+glories altogether; hence the blinds were never wholly drawn and never
+raised more than half way. In the yellow gloom, one might feast one's
+eyes at leisure upon the centre table, draped in red damask, mystic,
+wonderful, and on its wealth of mathematically arranged books, the
+Bible, the "Indian Mutiny" and "Water Babies" in blue and gold. This
+last had been a gift to Ann and was considered by Mrs. Sykes to be the
+height of foolishness. Still, a book is a book, especially when bound in
+blue and gold.
+
+Upon the gaily papered walls hung a framed silver name-plate and two
+pictures. One a gorgeously coloured print of the lamented Queen Victoria
+in a deep gold frame, and the other a representation of an entrancing
+allegorical theme entitled "The Two Paths," illustrating the ascent of
+the saint into heaven and the descent of the sinner into hell. At the
+top of this picture was the legend, "Which will you choose?"--implying a
+possible but regrettable lack of taste on the part of the chooser.
+
+Into this abode of the arts and muses came Callandar, alert and smiling.
+It was hardly his fault that he stumbled over the visitor who, whether
+in awe or fear of these unveiled splendours, had retreated as far as
+possible toward the door.
+
+"Don't mind me!" said the visitor meekly.
+
+"Willits! by Jove, I thought it would be you! Say, would you mind not
+sitting on that chair? It's just glued!"
+
+The visitor arose with conspicuous alacrity. He was a tall man with a
+domelike head, piercing eyes and formidable nose. Ann's description had
+been terribly accurate. He observed the tail of his coat carefully and
+finding no damage, seemed relieved.
+
+"Sit here," said Callandar affably. "And don't expect me to make you
+welcome, because you aren't. What misfortunate chance has brought you
+to Coombe?"
+
+"Neither fortune nor chance had anything at all to do with it," declared
+the visitor. "I followed your luggage. I wanted to see you."
+
+"Well, take a good look."
+
+"I think you can guess why."
+
+"Yes," with a sigh. "I was always a good guesser. And, frankly, Willits,
+I wish you hadn't."
+
+"I do not doubt it. But, first, is there any other place where we can
+talk?"
+
+"Don't you like this?" innocently.
+
+The Button-Moulder's look of surprised anguish was sufficient answer.
+Callandar laughed.
+
+"You always were a bit narrow in your views, Willits. How often have I
+impressed upon you that beauty depends upon understanding? I don't
+suppose you have even tried to understand this room? No? Will it help
+any if I tell you that Mrs. Sykes went without a spring bonnet that she
+might purchase the deep gold frame which enshrines Victoria the Good, or
+if I explain that Joseph Sykes, deceased, whose name you see yonder upon
+that engraved plate, was the most worthless rogue unhung. Yet the silver
+which displays--"
+
+"Not in the least," interrupted the other hastily. "The place is a
+nightmare. Nothing can excuse it! And you--how you stand it I
+cannot see."
+
+"My dear man, I don't stand it. I am not allowed to. It's only upon
+special occasions that any one is allowed to stand this room. You are a
+special occasion. But as you seem so unappreciative we can adjourn to my
+office if you wish."
+
+"You have an office?"
+
+"Certainly. A doctor has to have an office. This way."
+
+Callandar strode across the room and opened a door in the opposite wall.
+It led into another room, smaller, with no veranda in front of it, yet
+with a window looking toward the road and two side windows through which
+the after flush of sunrise streamed. Its door opened upon a small stone
+stoop set in the grass of the front lawn. The furniture of the room was
+plain, not to say severe. Cool matting covered the painted floor,
+hemstitched curtains of linen scrim hung at the windows. There was a
+businesslike desk, a couch, a reclining chair, a stool by the door;
+another chair, straight and uncompromising, behind the desk. That
+was all.
+
+Willits looked around him in a kind of dazed surprise. "Office!" he kept
+murmuring. "_Office_!"
+
+"All rather plain, you see," said Callandar regretfully. "But for a
+beginner with his way to make, not so bad. My patients, three up to
+date, quite understand and conceal their commiseration with perfect good
+breeding. Also, the room has natural advantages, it is in the nature of
+an annex, you see, with a door of its own. Quite cut off from the rest
+of the house save-for the door by which we entered, the parlour door,
+which Mrs. Sykes informs me I may lock if I choose although she feels
+sure that I know her too well to imagine any undue liberties
+being taken!"
+
+The Button-Moulder with a gesture of despair made as if to sit down upon
+the nearest chair, but was prevented with kindly firmness by his host.
+
+"Not that chair, please. It may not be quite dry. I glued--"
+
+The voice of the visitor suddenly returned. It was a very dry voice;
+threadlike, but determined.
+
+"Then if you will kindly find me a chair which you have not glued I
+shall sit down and dispose of a few burning thoughts. Callandar, as soon
+as you have finished playing the fool--"
+
+"Consider it finished, old man."
+
+"Then what does this, all this"--with a sweeping hand wave--"mean? You
+cannot seriously intend to stay here?"
+
+"Why not?"
+
+"Your question is absurd."
+
+"No, it isn't. Let it sink in. Why should I not stay here? Examine the
+facts. I am ordered change, rest, interest, good air--a year at least
+must elapse before I take up my life again. I must spend that year
+somewhere. Why not here? It is healthy, high, piney, quiet. I had become
+utterly tired of my tramping tour. All the good I can get from it I have
+got. Chance, or whatever you like to call it, leads me to this place. A
+place which needs a doctor and which this particular doctor needs. There
+is nothing absurd about it."
+
+The tall man observed his friend in interested silence. Apparently he
+required time to adjust his mind to the fact that Callandar was in
+earnest. The badinage he brushed aside.
+
+"Then you really intend--but how about this office? If it is not a
+torn-fool office, where does the necessary rest come in?"
+
+"Rest doesn't mean idleness. I should die of loafing. As a matter of
+fact since coming here I have rested as I have not rested for a year.
+Look at me! Can't you see it? Or is the renovation not yet visible to
+the naked eye? Great Scott! I don't need to vegetate in order to
+rest, do I?"
+
+"No." Another pause ensued during which the gimlet eyes of the professor
+were busy. Then he seemed suddenly to leap to the heart of the matter.
+
+"And--Lorna?" He asked crisply.
+
+It was the other's turn to be silent. He flushed, looked embarrassed,
+and drummed with his fingers upon the table.
+
+"Of course I have no right to ask," added Willits primly.
+
+"Yes, you have, old man. Every right. But I knew you had come to ask
+that question and I didn't like it. The answer is not a flattering
+one--to me. Nor is it what you expected. To be brief, Lorna won't have
+me. Refused me--flat!"
+
+Blank surprise portrayed itself upon the professor's face.
+
+"The devil she did!"
+
+"Confess now!" said Callandar, smiling. "You thought I was the one to
+blame? There was retributive justice in your eye, don't deny it!"
+
+"But, I don't understand! I thought--I was sure--"
+
+"I know. But she doesn't! Not in that way. As a sister--"
+
+"That's enough! I--Accept my apology. I feel very sorry, Henry."
+
+Again that look of embarrassment and guilt upon the doctor's face.
+
+"No. Don't feel sorry! See here, let's be frank about the whole thing.
+It was a mistake, from the very beginning, a mistake. Miss Sinnet,
+Lorna, is a girl in a thousand. But--I did not care for her as a man
+should care for the woman he makes his wife. Nor did she care for
+me--wait, I'm not denying that there was a chance. We were very
+congenial. She might have cared if--if I had cared more greatly."
+
+"Henry Callandar! Are you a cad?"
+
+"No. Merely a man speaking the exact truth. I thought I might risk it,
+with you. Lorna Sinnet is not a woman to give her love and take a
+half-love in return. She was more clear-sighted than you or I. We should
+both have been very miserable."
+
+Elliott Willits sighed. He was a very sensible man. He prided himself
+upon being devoid of sentiment, but even the most sensible of men,
+entirely devoid of sentiment, do not like to see their well laid
+plans go wrong.
+
+"Well," he said, "I was mistaken. Let us say no more about it."
+
+Callandar's eyes softened, melted into misty grey. He laid his arm
+affectionately over the other's thin shoulders. "Only this," he said.
+"That no man ever had a better friend! I know you, old Button-Moulder. I
+know your ambition to make of me a 'shining button on the vest of the
+world!' You thought that Lorna might help. But I failed you there. I'm
+sorry. That was really the bitterness of the whole thing---to fail you!"
+
+"You owe me nothing," gruffly.
+
+"Only my life--my sanity."
+
+"I shall doubt the latter if you stay here."
+
+"No, you will see it triumphantly vindicated. I tell you I am better
+already. Look at my hand! Do you remember how it shook the last time I
+held it out for you. A few more months of this and it will be steady as
+a rock. Ah! it's good to be feeling fit again! And it isn't only a
+physical improvement." His smile faded and rising he began to pace the
+room. "I doubt if even you fully understand the mental depression that
+was dragging me down. No wonder Lorna would have none of me! Strange,
+that I cannot understand my own case as I understand the cases of
+others. Do what I would, I could not heal myself, the soul of the matter
+persistently escaped me. I was beginning to be as much the victim of an
+obsession as any of the poor creatures whom I tried to cure."
+
+"You never told me of that."
+
+"No, I was afraid to speak of it. It would have made it seem more real.
+But I can tell you now, if you are sure you will not be bored."
+
+"I shall not be bored," said Willits quietly.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+
+"In order to make you understand, I'll have to go back," said the doctor
+musingly, "a long way back. Some of the story you already know, but now
+I want you to know it all. But first--when you found me in that
+hospital, a useless bit of human wreckage, and forced me back into life
+with your scorn of a coward and your cutting words, what did you think?
+What did I tell you? It is all hazy to me."
+
+"You told me very little. It was plain enough. You had come a bad
+cropper. Some girl, I gathered. You had lost her, you blamed yourself.
+You talked a great deal of nonsense. I inferred--the usual thing!"
+
+"You were mistaken. It was at once better and worse than that. But let's
+begin at the beginning. My father was a fairly wealthy man--but a
+dreamer. He made his money by a clever invention and lost it by an
+investment little short of idiotic. Like many unpractical men he had
+rather fancied himself as a man of business and the disillusion killed
+him. He--shot himself. My mother, my sister and myself were left, with
+nothing save a small sum in the bank and the deed of the modest house we
+lived in. Adela was twenty-one and I was nineteen. We sold the house,
+moved into rooms; Adela learned shorthand and went into an office. I
+wanted to do the same. But mother was adamant. I must finish my college
+course and take my degree; she and Adela could manage until I could make
+it up to them later. It was hard, but it seemed the only sensible
+thing to do--
+
+"I faced the task of working my way through college with a thankful
+heart, for though I pretended that I did not care, it would have been a
+terrible thing to have given up my life's ambition. The thought of Adela
+trudging to the office hurt--it was the touch of the spur. I needn't
+tell you, you can guess how I worked! People were kind. One summer, old
+Doctor Inglis, whose amiable hobby it was to help young medical
+students, engaged me for the holidays as his chauffeur and general
+helper at a wage which would see me through my next term. It seemed an
+unusual piece of luck, for he lived only twenty miles from my mother's
+home and an electric tram connected the towns. One night I went with
+Adela to a Church Social--of all places--and that is where the story
+really begins, for it was at the Social that I met Molly Weston. It
+seemed the most casual of all accidents, for you can imagine that I did
+not frequent churches in those days, and Molly, too, had come there by
+chance. She was dressed in pink, her cheeks were pink, she wore a pink
+rose in her hair. She was the prettiest little fairy that ever smiled
+and pouted her way into a boy's heart. Before I left her I was madly in
+love--a boy's first headlong passion. Adela was amazed, teased me in her
+elderly sister way but never for a moment took it seriously. Molly was a
+mere bird of passage, an American girl staying with friends for a brief
+time, therefore my infatuation was a humorous thing. But it was not so
+simple as that. Molly stayed on, Dr. Inglis was indulgent, we met
+continually. If her friends knew of it they did not care. It was just a
+flirtation of their pretty guest's. As a serious factor I was quite
+beneath the horizon, a young fellow working his way through college, and
+with, later on, a mother and sister to support.
+
+"Molly understood the situation. At least she knew all the facts. I
+doubt if she ever understood them. She was one of those helpless,
+clinging girls who never seem to understand anything clearly. I remember
+well how I used to agonise in explanation, trying to make her see our
+difficulties and to face them with me. But when I had talked myself into
+helpless silence she would ruffle my hair and say, 'But you really do
+love me, don't you, Harry?' or 'I don't care what we have to do, so long
+as mother doesn't know.'
+
+"I soon found out that her one strong emotion was fear of her mother.
+She was fond of her but she feared her as weak natures fear the strong,
+especially when bound to them by ties of blood. I was allowed to see her
+photograph--the picture of a grim hard face instinct with an almost
+terrible strength. No wonder my pretty Molly was her slave. One would
+have deemed it impossible that they were mother and daughter. Molly, it
+appears, was like her father, and he, poor man, had been long dead.
+Molly would do anything, promise anything, if only her mother might not
+know. She had not the faintest scruple in deceiving her, but this I
+laid, and still lay, to the strength of her love for me.
+
+"She did love me. She must have loved me--else how could her timid
+nature have taken the risk it did?
+
+"Summer fled by like a flash. Molly stayed with her friends as long as
+she could find an excuse and then went on for a brief week in Toronto.
+It was the week, of course, that I returned to college. We hoped that
+she could extend her stay, but her mother wrote 'Come home,' and there
+was no appeal from that. Then I did a desperate thing. Without Molly's
+knowledge I wrote to her mother telling her that I loved her daughter
+and begging, as a man begs for his life, to be allowed to ask her to
+wait for me. The letter was a lie in that it concealed the fact that my
+love was already confessed but I felt it necessary to shield Molly. I
+received no answer to the letter, but Molly received a telegram, 'Come
+home at once.'
+
+"I can leave you to imagine the scene--my despair, Molly's tears! Never
+for an instant did she dream of disobeying and I--I felt that if she
+went I should lose her forever.
+
+"Willits, there is something in me, devil or angel, which will not give
+up. Nothing has ever conquered it yet and Molly was like wax in my
+hands--so long as 'Mother' need not know. I do not attempt to excuse
+myself; what I did was dastardly, but it did not seem so then. The night
+before she left, she stole away from home. I had a license and we were
+married by a Methodist minister. He knew neither of us and probably
+forgot the whole incident immediately. It was a marriage only in name
+for we said good-bye at Molly's door. She left next morning. I never saw
+her again."
+
+Into the silence which followed, the professor's words dropped dryly.
+
+"What was your idea in forcing a meaningless marriage?"
+
+"I loved her. I knew that it was the only way. Madly as I loved her, I
+knew that Molly was weak as water. I could not, would not, run the risk
+of letting her leave me without the legal tie. But I justified it to
+myself--I could have justified anything, I fear! I vowed a vow that she
+would be repaid for the waiting as never woman yet was paid. She wept on
+my shoulder and said, 'And you really do love me, Harry--and you'll
+swear mother need never know?'
+
+"I swore it. There were to be no letters. Molly was too terrified to
+write and still more terrified of receiving a letter. She would live in
+constant dread, she said, if there were a possibility of such a thing.
+Weak in everything else she was adamant in this.
+
+"I went back to work. I worked with the strength of ten. Health,
+comfort, pleasure, all were subordinated to the fever of work. I hoped
+that I might steal a glimpse of her sometimes. She promised to try to
+return to Toronto. But my letter must have alarmed the mother. I found
+out, indirectly, that shortly after her return, Mrs. Weston whisked her
+off to Europe. They were gone a year. When they returned I was in the
+far west with a government surveying party, earning something to help me
+with my last year's college expenses. When I was again in Toronto she
+had vanished. Gone, as I afterward learned, to stay with an aunt in
+California. Her mother, alive to danger, was not going to risk a
+meeting, and my vow to Molly left me helpless. But how I worked!
+
+"That last year things began to come my way. Adela married a fine young
+fellow, wealthy and generous. My mother went to live with them in their
+western home, Calgary, where they still are. Then Thomas Callandar, my
+mother's brother, who had never bothered about any of us living, died,
+and left me a handsome property, adding, as you already know, the
+condition that I take the family name. You remember that my father's
+name, the name under which I married Molly, was Chedridge.
+
+"Nothing now held me from Molly--in another month I would have my
+degree, and free and rich I could go to claim her. It seemed like a
+fairy tale! In my great happiness I broke my promise and wrote to her,
+to the California address, hoping to catch her there. In three weeks'
+time the letter came back from the dead letter office. I wrote again,
+this time to the Cleveland address, a short note only, telling her I was
+free at last. Then, next day, I followed the letter to Cleveland, wealth
+in one hand, the assurance of an honourable degree in the other.
+
+"I had no trouble in finding the house. It was one of a row of houses,
+nondescript but comfortable, in a pleasant street. It seemed familiar--I
+had seen Molly's snapshots of it often. I cannot tell you what it felt
+like to be really there--to walk down the street, up the path, up the
+steps to the veranda. I was trembling as with ague, I was chalk-white I
+knew--was I not in another moment to see my wife!
+
+"I could hear the electric bell tingle somewhere inside. Then an awful
+pause. What if they were not at home? What if they lived there no
+longer? I knew with a pang of fear that I could not bear another
+disappointment.
+
+"There was a sound in the hall, the door knob moved--the door opened. I
+gasped in the greatness of my relief for the face in the opening was
+undoubtedly the face of Molly's mother. They were at home. They must
+have had my letter--they must be expecting me--
+
+"Something in the woman's face daunted me. It was deathly and strained.
+Surely she did not intend to continue her opposition? Yet it confused
+me. I forgot all that I had intended to say, I stammered:
+
+"'I am Henry Chedridge. I want to see Molly. I am rich, I have my
+degree--'
+
+"'You cannot see her!' she said. Just that! The door began to close. But
+I had myself in hand now. I laid hold of the door and spoke in a
+different tone. The tone of a master.
+
+"'This is foolish, Mrs. Weston. I thought you understood. I can and I
+will see your daughter. Molly is my wife!'
+
+"She gave way at that. The door opened wide, showing a long empty hall.
+The woman stood aside, made no effort to stop me, but looking me in the
+eyes she said: 'You come too late. Your wife is not here. Molly
+is dead!'
+
+"Then, in one second, it seemed that all the years of overwork, of
+mental strain and bodily deprivation rose up and took their due. I tried
+to speak, stuttered foolishly, and fell like dead over the door-sill of
+the house I was never to enter.
+
+"You know the rest, for you saved me. When I struggled back to life,
+without the will to live, you shamed and stung me into effort. You
+brought the new master-influence into my life, taught me that the old
+ambition, the old work-ardour was not dead. Those months with you in
+Paris, in Germany, in London at the feet of great men saw a veritable
+new birth. I ceased to be Henry Chedridge, lover, and became Henry
+Callandar, scientist. All this I owe to you."
+
+The other raised his hand.
+
+"No, not that. Some impulse I may have given you, but you have made
+yourself what you are. But--you have not told me all yet?"
+
+"No." Again the doctor began his uneasy pacing of the room. "The rest is
+harder to tell. It is not so clear. It has nothing to do with facts at
+all. It is just that when I first began to show signs of overwork this
+last time I became troubled with an idea, an obsession. It had no
+foundation. It persisted without reason. It was fast becoming
+unbearable!"
+
+He paused in his restless pacing and Willits' keen eyes noticed the look
+of strain which had aroused his alarm some months ago. Nevertheless he
+asked in his most matter-of-fact tone, "And the idea was--?"
+
+Callandar hesitated. "I can hardly speak of it yet in the past tense.
+The idea is--that Molly is not dead!"
+
+"Good Heavens!" ejaculated the professor, startled out of his calm. "But
+have you any reason to doubt? To--to base--"
+
+"None whatever. No enquiries which I have made cast doubt upon the
+mother's words. But on the other hand I have been unable to confirm
+them. I cannot find where my wife died--except that there is no record
+of her death in the Cleveland registries. She did not die in Cleveland."
+
+"But you have told me that they were seldom at home. That the mother was
+a great traveller."
+
+"Yes. The want of evidence in Cleveland proves nothing."
+
+"Did you feel any doubt at first?"
+
+"Absolutely none. The gloomy house, the empty hall, the white face and
+black dress of the woman in the door, the look of horror and anger in
+her eyes--yes, and a kind of grim triumph too--all served to drive the
+fatal message home. Dead!--There was death in the air of that house,
+death in the ghastly face--in the cruel, toneless words!--After my
+tedious recovery I made an effort to see Mrs. Weston, although I had
+conceived a horror of the woman, but she was gone. The house had been
+sold. I tried to trace her without result. She seemed to have vanished
+off the face of the earth."
+
+"And how long ago did the whole thing happen?"
+
+"Twelve years. I was twenty-three when I went to claim my bride. I am
+thirty-five now."
+
+"Dear me!" said the little man sincerely, "I have always thought you
+older than that! But twelve years is--twelve years! And you say this
+doubt is a very recent thing?"
+
+"Yes. I have told you the thing is absurd. But I can't help it."
+
+"Have you made any further enquiries?"
+
+"Yes, uselessly. There is a rumour that Mrs. Weston, too, is dead. A
+lady who used to know them tells me that she is certain she heard of her
+death--in England, she thinks, but upon being questioned was quite at
+sea as to where or when or even as to the original source of her
+information. She remembers 'hearing it' and that's all. Then I sought
+for the aunts, the maiden ladies whom Molly visited in California. They
+too are gone, the older died during the time I lay ill in the hospital.
+The younger one was not quite bright, I believe, and was taken away to
+live with some relatives in the East. It was not Molly's mother who
+fetched her. It was a man, a very kind man whom the old lady, my
+informant, had never seen before. She said he had a queer name. She
+could not remember it, but thought he was a physician. I imagine that
+the kind friend was an asylum doctor."
+
+"Very likely. And could your informant tell you nothing of the niece--if
+Molly had visited there?"
+
+"She remembered her last visit very well but her memories were of no
+value. She was a sweet, pretty child, she said, and she often wondered
+how she came to have such a homely mother. She evidently disliked Mrs.
+Weston very much, and when I asked her if she had ever heard of Molly's
+death she said no, but that she was not a bit surprised as she had
+always predicted that the pretty, little, white thing would be worried
+into an early grave. I noticed the word 'white' and asked her about it,
+for the Molly I knew had a lovely colour. Her memory became confused
+when I pressed her, but she seemed quite sure that the girl who came
+that winter with her mother was a very pale girl--looked as if she might
+have come south for her health."
+
+"All of which goes to prove--"
+
+"Yes--I know. Poor Molly! Poor little girl! I believe in my heart that
+our mad marriage killed her. Without me constantly with her, the fear of
+her mother, perhaps the doubt of me, the burden of the whole disastrous
+secret was too much. And it was my fault, Willits--all my fault!" He
+turned to the window to hide his working face. "Do you wonder," he added
+softly, "that her poor little wraith comes back to trouble me?"
+
+"Come, come, no need to be morbid! You made a mistake, but you have
+paid. As for the doubt which troubles you--it is but the figment of a
+tired brain. The mother could have had no possible reason for deceiving
+you. You were no longer an ineligible student--and the girl loved you.
+Besides, there was the legal tie. Would any woman condemn her daughter
+to a false position for life? And without reason? The idea is
+preposterous. Come now, admit it!"
+
+"Oh, I admit it! My reasoning powers are still unimpaired. But reason
+has nothing to do with that kind of mental torture. It is my soul that
+has been sick; it is my soul that must be cured. And to come back to the
+very point from which we started, I believe I shall find that cure
+here--in Coombe."
+
+"With Mrs. Sykes?" dryly.
+
+"Certainly. Mrs. Sykes is part of the cure."
+
+"And the other part?"
+
+"Oh--just everything. I hardly know why I like the place. But I do. Why
+analyse? I can sleep here. I wake in the morning like a man with the
+right to live, and for the first time in a year, Willits, a long
+torturing year, I am beginning to feel free of that oppression, that
+haunting sense that somewhere Molly is alive, that she needs me and that
+I cannot get to her. I had begun to fear that it would drive me mad.
+But, here, it is going. Yesterday I was walking down a country road and
+suddenly I felt free--exquisitely, gloriously free--the past wiped out!
+That--that was why I almost feared to see you, Elliott, you bring the
+past so close."
+
+The hands of the friends met in a firm handclasp.
+
+"Have it your own way," said the professor, smiling his grim smile.
+"Consider me silenced."
+
+The doctor's answer was cut off by the jingling entrance of Mrs. Sykes
+bearing before her a large tray upon which stood tall glasses, a beaded
+pitcher of ice cold lemonade and some cake with white frosting.
+
+"Seeing as it's so hot," said she amiably, "I thought a cold drink might
+cool you off some. Especially as breakfast will be five minutes late
+owing to the chicken. I thought maybe as you had a friend, doctor, a
+chicken--"
+
+"A chicken will be delicious," said the doctor, answering the question
+in her voice. "Mrs. Sykes, let me present Professor Willits; Willits,
+Mrs. Sykes! Let me take the tray."
+
+Mrs. Sykes shook hands cordially. "Land sakes!" she said. "I thought you
+were a priest! Not that I really suspicioned that the doctor, good
+Presbyterian as he is, would know any such. But priests is terrible
+wily. They deceive the very elect--and it's best to be prepared. As it
+is, any friend of the doctor's is a friend of mine. You're kindly
+welcome, I'm sure."
+
+"Thank you," said the professor limply.
+
+The doctor handed them each a glass and raised his own.
+
+"Let us drink," he said, "to Coombe. 'Coombe and the Soul cure!'"
+
+"Amen!" said Willits.
+
+"Land sakes!" said Mrs. Sykes. "I thought it was his spine!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+
+Zerubbabel Burk sat upon his stool of office in the doctor's consulting
+room, swinging his legs. Would-be discoverers of perpetual motion might
+have received many hints from Bubble, though he himself would have
+scorned to consider the swinging of legs as motion. He was under the
+delusion that he was sitting perfectly still. For the doctor was asleep.
+
+Asleep, at four o'clock on a glorious summer day! No wonder his friend
+and partner wore a tragic face.
+
+"Doesn't seem to care a hang if he never gets any patients!" mused
+Bubble, resentfully, stealing a half fond, half angry glance at the
+placid face of the sleeper. "Only two folks in all day and one a kid
+with a pin in its throat. And all he says is, 'Don't worry, son, we're
+getting on fine!' We'll go smash one of these days, that's what we'll
+do--just smash!"
+
+"Tap-tap" sounded the blinds which were drawn over the western windows.
+A pleasant little breeze was trying to come in. "Buzz" sounded a fly on
+the wall. Bubble arose noisily and killed it with a resounding "thwack."
+
+"Wake the doctor, would you?" he said. "Take that!"
+
+But even the pistol-like report which accompanied the fly's demise
+failed to ruffle the sleeper. Bubble returned disconsolate to
+his stool.
+
+"Smash," he repeated, "smash is the word. I see our finish."
+
+The pronoun which Bubble used nowadays was always "we." He belonged to
+the doctor body and soul, but it was no servile giving. The doctor also
+belonged to him, and it was with this privilege of ownership that he now
+found fault with his idol. Had any one else objected to the doctor's
+afternoon rest he would have found reason and excuse enough; but in his
+own heart he was puzzled. Such indifference to the appearances, such
+wilful disregard of "business" could hardly, he thought, be real; yet,
+for an imitation, it was remarkably well done. Bubble admired even while
+he deprecated.
+
+Why, he did not even go to church so that the minister might introduce
+him around as "Dr. Callandar, the new brother who has come amongst us."
+Neither did he walk down Main Street, nor show himself in public places.
+When he went walking he went early in the morning and directed his steps
+toward the country. About all the usual means of harmless and necessary
+advertising he did not seem to know Beans! Bubble looked disconsolately
+out of the window. There was Ann, now, coming across the yard. School
+must be out, and still the doctor slept.
+
+"Anybody in?" asked Ann in a stage whisper.
+
+"Not just now. Been very busy though. Doctor's resting. Stop that
+noise."
+
+"I'm not making any noise! He's part my doctor anyway. I'll make a noise
+if I like--"
+
+"No you won't, miss!"
+
+"But I don't _like_," added Ann with her impish smile. "If he's asleep
+what are you staying here for? Come on out."
+
+Bubble regarded the tempter with scornful amazement.
+
+"That's it!" he exclaimed, "jest like I always said, women haven't any
+sense of honour. What d'ye suppose I'm here for?"
+
+"Not just to swing your legs," placidly. "He doesn't need you when he's
+asleep, does he? Come on and let's get some water-cress. He'd like some
+for his tea--dinner I mean. Say, Bubble, why does he call it dinner?"
+
+"Because he comes from the city, Silly! They don't have any tea in the
+city. They have breakfast when they get up and lunch at noon and dinner
+about seven or eight or nine at night. Then if they get hungry before
+bed-time they have supper. The doctor says he never gets hungry after
+dinner so he don't have that."
+
+Ann considered this a moment.
+
+"They do so have tea!" she declared. "I heard Mrs. Andrew West telling
+about it. She said her sister in Toronto had a tea specially for her."
+
+"Oh," with superb disdain, "that's just for women. If they can't wait
+for dinner they get bread and butter and tea in the afternoon. But they
+have to eat it walking around and they only get it when they go out
+to call."
+
+Ann sighed. "I'd like to live in the city," she murmured. "Say, don't
+you feel as if you'd like a cookie right now?"
+
+Bubble squirmed. But his Spartan fortitude held.
+
+"In business hours? No, thank you. 'Tisn't professional. Look silly,
+wouldn't I, if one of our patients caught me eating?"
+
+"How many to-day?"
+
+"That'd be telling. 'Tisn't professional to tell. Doctor says if a man
+wants to succeed, he's got to be as dumb as a noyster in business!"
+
+"Pshaw!" said Ann, "Aunty'll tell. She always counts. Then you don't
+want a cookie?"
+
+"Well--later on--Cricky! here's some one coming! You scoot--pike it!"
+
+"I won't!" Ann stood her ground, peering eagerly around the rose bush.
+"It's only Esther Coombe. She'll be coming to see Aunt--no--she's coming
+here! Hi, Bubble, wake him up--quick!"
+
+"Hum, Hum!" said Bubble in a loud voice, rattling a chair. The sleeper
+made no movement.
+
+Ann, brave through anxiety, flew across the room and shook him with all
+the strength of her small hands. The heavy lids lifted and still
+Ann shook.
+
+"Is it an earthquake?" asked the victim politely.
+
+"No--it's a patient! Oh, do get up. Oh, goodness gracious, look at your
+hair!"
+
+The doctor passed his hand absently over a disordered head. "Yes," he
+said, "I have always thought that shaking is not good for hair. Dear me!
+I believe I have been asleep!"
+
+Ann threw him a glance of mingled admiration and reproach and vanished
+through the parlour door just as the step of the patient sounded upon
+the stone steps.
+
+"Why, Bubble Burk!" said a voice. "What are you doing here?"
+
+At the sound of the voice, sleep fled from the doctor's eyes. He arose
+precipitately.
+
+"I'm workin'," Bubble's voice was not as confident as usual. "This here
+is Dr. Callandar's office. Mrs. Sykes' visitors go round to the
+front door."
+
+"Oh! But it's the doctor I wish to see. Is he in?"
+
+Bubble was now plainly agitated.
+
+"If you'll just wait a moment, I'll--I'll see."
+
+Leaving Esther smiling upon the steps he disappeared into the shaded
+office and pulled up the blinds. The couch had been decorously
+straightened. The office was empty! Bubble gave a sigh of relief and his
+professional manner returned.
+
+"He isn't just what you might call in," he explained affably to Esther.
+"But he'll be down directly. Walk in."
+
+Esther walked in and took the seat which Bubble indicated.
+
+"Somebody sick over at your house?" with ill-concealed hope.
+
+Esther dimpled. "Not dangerously, thank you."
+
+"Then it's just tickets for the choir concert. I might have known. But
+you're too late. Doctor's got half a dozen already. He--"
+
+Further revelations were cut short by the entrance of the doctor
+himself. A doctor with sleep-cleared eyes, fresh collar, and newly
+brushed hair. A doctor who shook hands with his caller in a manner which
+even the professional Bubble felt to be irreproachable.
+
+"Bubble, you may go."
+
+With a grin of satisfied pride the junior partner departed, but once
+outside the gloomy expression returned.
+
+"It's only choir-tickets!" he told Ann, who was waiting around the
+corner of the house. "Come on--let's go fishin'."
+
+Inside the office Esther and the doctor looked at each other and smiled.
+He, because he felt like smiling; she, because she felt nervous. Yet it
+was not going to be as awkward as she had feared. With a decided sense
+of relief she realised that Dr. Callandar looked exactly like a doctor
+after all! Convention, even in clothes, has a calming effect. There was
+little of the weary tramp who had quenched his throat at the school
+pump in the well groomed and quietly capable looking doctor. With a
+notable decrease of tension Esther saw that the man before her was a
+stranger, a pleasant, professional stranger, with whom no embarrassment
+was possible.
+
+As for him he realised nothing except that Coombe was really a
+delightful place. He felt glad that he had stayed.
+
+"No one ill, I hope, Miss Coombe?" His tone, even, seemed to have lost
+the whimsical inflection of the tramp.
+
+"No, Doctor. Not ill exactly. It is Aunt Amy. We cannot understand just
+what is the matter. You see, Aunty imagines things. She is not quite
+like other people. Perhaps," with a quick smile as she thought of Mrs.
+Sykes, "perhaps you may have heard of her--of her fantastic ideas? They
+are really quite harmless and apart from them she is the most sensible
+person I know. But lately, just the other day, something happened--"
+
+He checked her with an almost imperceptible gesture. "Could you tell me
+about it from the beginning?"
+
+Esther looked troubled. "I do not know much about the beginning. You
+see, Aunt Amy is my step-mother's aunt, and I have only known her since
+she came to live with us shortly after my father's second marriage. But
+I know that she has been subject to delusions since she was a young
+girl. She was to have been married and on the wedding day her lover
+became ill with scarlet fever, a most malignant type. She also sickened
+with it a little later; it killed him and left her mentally twisted--as
+she is now. Her health is good and the--strangeness--is not very
+noticeable. It has usually to do with unimportant things. She is
+really," with a little burst of enthusiasm, "a Perfect Dear!"
+
+The doctor smiled. "And the new development?"
+
+"It is not exactly new. She has always had one delusion more serious
+than the others. She believes that she has enemies somewhere who would
+do her harm if they got the chance. She is quite vague as to who or what
+they are. She refers to them as 'They.' Once, when she came to us first,
+she was frightened of poison and, although my father, who had great
+influence over her, seemed to cure her of any active fear, for years she
+has persisted in a curious habit of drinking her coffee without setting
+down the cup. The idea seemed to be that if she let it out of her hands
+'They,' the mysterious persecutors, might avail themselves of the
+opportunity to drug it. Does it sound too fantastic?"
+
+"No. It is not unusual--a fairly common delusion, in fact. There is a
+distinct type of brain trouble, one of whose symptoms is a conviction of
+persecution. The results are fantastic to a degree."
+
+Well, the day before yesterday Aunt Amy was drinking her coffee as
+usual, when she heard Jane scream in the garden. She is very fond of
+Jane, and it startled her so that she jumped up at once, forgetting all
+about the coffee, and ran out to see what was the matter. Jane had cut
+her finger and the tiniest scratch upsets poor Auntie terribly. She is
+terrified of blood. When she came back she felt faint and at once picked
+up the cup and drank the remaining coffee. I hoped she had not noticed
+the slip but she must have done so, subconsciously, for when I was
+helping her with the dishes she turned suddenly white--ghastly. She had
+just remembered!
+
+'They've got me at last, Esther!' she said with a kind of proud
+despair. 'I've been pretty smart, but not quite smart enough.'
+
+I pretended not to understand and she explained quite seriously that
+while she had been absent in the garden 'They' had seen her half-filled
+cup and seized their opportunity. It was quite useless to point out that
+there was no one in the house but ourselves. She only said, 'Oh, "They"
+would not let me see them "They" are too smart for that.' Overwhelming
+smartness is one of the attributes of the mysterious 'They.'
+
+"I hoped that the idea would wear away but it didn't; it strengthened.
+In vain I pointed out that she was perfectly well, with no symptom of
+poisoning. She merely answered that naturally 'They' would be too smart
+to use ordinary poisons with symptoms. 'I shall just grow weaker and
+weaker,' she said, 'and in a week or a month I shall die!' I tried to
+laugh but I was frightened. Mother advised taking no notice at all and I
+have tried not to, but I can't keep it up. She is certainly weaker and
+so strange and hopeless. I am terrified. Can mind really affect matter,
+Doctor Callandar?"
+
+"No. As a scientific fact, it cannot. But it is true that certain states
+of mind and certain conditions of matter always correspond. Why this is
+so, no one knows, when we do know we shall hold the key to many
+mysteries. The understanding, even partial, of this correspondence will
+be a long step in a long new road. Meanwhile we speak loosely of mind
+influencing matter, ignoring the impossibility. And, however it happens,
+it is undoubtedly true that if we can, by mental suggestion, influence
+your Aunt's mind into a more healthy attitude the corresponding change
+will take place physically."
+
+"But I have tried to reason with her."
+
+"You can't reason with her. She is beyond mere reason. I might as well
+try to reason you out of your conviction that the sun is shining. A
+delusion like hers has all the stability of a perfectly sane belief."
+
+"Then what can we do?"
+
+"Since that delusion is a fact for her we must treat it as if it were a
+fact for us."
+
+"You mean we must pretend to believe that the danger is real?"
+
+"It is real. People have died before now of nothing save a fixed idea of
+death."
+
+"Oh!"
+
+"But don't worry. Aunt Amy is not going to die. When may I see her? If I
+come over in a half an hour will that be convenient?"
+
+Esther rose with relief. How kind he had been! How completely he had
+understood! She had been right, perfectly right, in coming to him. In
+spite of Mrs. Coombe's ridicule, Aunt Amy's need had been no fancy. And
+there was another thing; he was coming to the house. Her mother would
+see him--and presto! her prejudice against doctors would vanish--he
+would cure the headaches, and everything would be happy again.
+
+The doctor, watching keenly, thought that she must have been troubled
+greatly to show such evident relief.
+
+"One thing more," he said. "Was there, do you know, any history of
+insanity in your aunt's family?"
+
+The girl paled. The idea was a disturbing one.
+
+"Why--no--I think not. I never heard. You see, she is not my Aunt,
+really, but my step-mother's aunt. There was a brother, I think, who
+died in--in an institution. He was not quite responsible, but in his
+case it was drink. That is different, isn't it? Does it make any
+difference?"
+
+"No--only it may help me to understand the case. Good-afternoon."
+
+He watched her go, through a peep-hole made by Bubble in the blind.
+
+"Pretty, isn't she?" said a reflective voice below him.
+
+The doctor started. But it was only Mrs. Sykes who had stepped around
+the house corner to pluck some flowers from the bed beneath the window.
+As he did not answer, the voice continued, "That boy Burk has gone
+fishing. I told you you'd regret putting that new suit on to him, brass
+buttons and all! Not that I want to say anything against the lad and his
+mother a widow, but when a person's dealing with a limb of mischief a
+person ought to know what to expect. Anybody sick over at
+Esther's house?"
+
+The doctor, leaning against the door in deep reverie, did not seem to
+hear. Mrs. Sykes, after a suspicious glance, decided that perhaps he
+really had not heard, and proceeded.
+
+"Not that I'm asking out of curiosity, Land sakes! But I've got some
+black currant jelly that sick folks fancy. I could spare a jar as
+well as not."
+
+A pause.
+
+The flower picker bunched her flowers into a tight round knot which she
+surveyed with pride. "That step-mother of Esther's now," she said. "I
+don't hold much with her. Flighty, I call her. Delicate, too, if looks
+don't lie. Men are queer. The only thing queerer is women. What d'ye
+suppose a sensible middle-aged man like Doctor Coombe ever saw in that
+pretty doll? And what did she see in him--old enough to be her father? A
+queer match, I call it. But they do say that her side of it is easy
+explained. Anyway it must have been a trying thing when the doctor's
+gold mine didn't--"
+
+Mrs. Sykes' flow of words ceased abruptly, for rising from a last
+descent upon the rose bush she saw that her audience had vanished.
+
+"Dear me! I hope he didn't think I was trying to be curious," said Mrs.
+Sykes.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+
+It required some persuasion to induce Aunt Amy to consent to see the
+doctor. Doctors, she had found (with the single exception of Dr.
+Coombe), were terribly unreasonable. They asked all kinds of questions,
+and never believed a word of the answers.
+
+"And if I have a doctor," she declared tearfully, "I shall have to go to
+bed. And if I go to bed who will get supper? The sprigged tea-set--"
+
+"But you won't need to go to bed, Auntie. You aren't ill, you know; just
+a little bit upset. If you feel like lying down why not use the sofa in
+my room? And even if you do not wish to see the doctor for yourself,"
+Esther's tone was reproachful, "think what a good opportunity it is for
+us to get an opinion about mother. Don't you remember saying just the
+other day that you thought mother was foolish to be so nervous
+about doctors?"
+
+"Yes, but she needn't stay in the room, need she, Esther? I don't want
+her in the room. She laughs. But I would like to lie on your sofa and if
+I must see him I had better wear my lavender cap."
+
+"Yes, dear, and you will not mind mother staying--"
+
+"But I do mind, Esther. And anyway she can't," triumphantly, "because
+she has gone out."
+
+"Gone out? Mother? But she knew the doctor was coming and she
+promised--"
+
+"Yes, I know. She said to tell you she had fully intended staying in
+until the doctor had been, but she had forgotten about the Ladies' Aid
+Meeting. She simply had to go to that. She said you could attend to the
+doctor quite as well as she could and that it was all nonsense anyway,
+because there was nothing whatever the matter with me." The faded eyes
+filled with tears again and Esther had much ado to prevent their
+imminent overflow.
+
+She settled Aunt Amy upon the couch and adjusted the lavender cap
+without further betrayal of her own feelings, but in her heart she was
+both angry and hurt. Her mother had known of the doctor's intended visit
+and had distinctly promised to remain in to receive him. What would Dr.
+Callandar think? It was most humiliating.
+
+The Ladies' Aid Meeting was plainly an excuse for a deliberate shirking
+of responsibility. Or, worse still, Mrs. Coombe, divining Esther's
+double motive, may have left the house purposely to escape seeing the
+doctor on her own account. Esther well knew the stubbornness of which
+she was capable upon this one question, and the cunningness of it was
+like her. She had made no objections; she had not troubled to refuse or
+to argue--she had simply gone out.
+
+Well, it was something to feel that she, Esther, had done what she
+could. At any rate, there was no time to worry, for the doctor was
+already coming up the walk.
+
+Esther hurried to the door. It relieved her to find that he seemed to
+expect her, and showed no offence on realising that the patient's
+nearest relative was not at home to receive him. Indeed, he seemed to
+think of no one save the patient herself. His manner, Esther thought,
+was perfect. Had she been a little older she might have suspected such
+perfection, deducing from it that Callandar, like herself, was
+subconsciously aware of an interest in the situation not altogether
+professional. But the girl made no deductions and certainly there was no
+trace of any embarrassment in the doctor's way with his patient. It took
+only a moment for Esther to decide that here, at least, she had done the
+right thing. She waited only long enough to see the frightened look in
+Aunt Amy's eyes replaced by one of timid confidence and then, murmuring
+an excuse, slipped away, leaving them together.
+
+Callandar also waited while the startled eyes grew quiet and then lifted
+the fluttering hand into his own firm one.
+
+"Creatures of habit, we doctors, aren't we?" he said, smiling. "Always
+taking people's temperatures."
+
+Aunt Amy ventured upon a vague answering smile.
+
+"I understand," continued the doctor, "that you have reason to fear that
+you have been poisoned?"
+
+The hand began to flutter again, but quieted as the pleasant, confident
+voice went on:
+
+"Your niece has told me something of the case but no details. Perhaps
+you can supply them for me. When exactly did it happen and what kind of
+poison was it?"
+
+The fluttering hand became quite still and the eyes of Aunt Amy slowly
+filled with a great amazement. Here was an unbelievable thing--a doctor
+who did not argue or deny or playfully scold her for "fancies." A doctor
+who took her seriously and showed every intention of believing what she
+said. No one, save Dr. Coombe, had ever done that--
+
+"It is always best in these cases to get the details from the patient
+herself," went on the doctor, encouragingly.
+
+No, he was not laughing! Aunt Amy could detect nothing save the gravest
+of interest in his kindly eyes. An immense relief stole over her. A
+relief so great that Callandar, watching, felt his heart grow hot
+with pity.
+
+"Oh, doctor!" she cried feebly, "I--" a rush of easy tears drowned the
+rest of the sentence.
+
+Callandar let her cry. He knew the value of those tears. Presently when
+she grew more quiet he exchanged her soaking bit of cambric for his own
+more serviceable square. Aunt Amy dried her eyes on it and handed it
+back as simply as a child.
+
+"Pray excuse me," she begged, "but--the relief! I might have died if you
+had not come." She went on brokenly. "You see," dropping her voice, "my
+relatives are _queer_. They have strange ideas. When I know things quite
+well they tell me I am mistaken. Mary, my niece, laughs. Even Esther,
+who tries to help me, thinks I do not know what I am talking about. They
+all argue in the most absurd manner. If I do not pretend always that I
+agree with them I have no peace. Sometimes when I tell some of the
+things I know, Esther looks frightened and says I am not to tell Jane.
+So I try to keep everything to myself. I don't want the children to be
+frightened. They are young and ought to be happy. I was happy when I was
+young--at least, I think it was I. Sometimes I'm not sure whether it
+wasn't some other girl--I get confused--"
+
+"Don't worry about it," said the doctor calmly. "Or about Miss Esther
+either. I want to hear all about the poison."
+
+Aunt Amy remembered her precarious condition with a start. Her eyes grew
+vague.
+
+"I don't know how They put it in," she said. "I didn't see Them, you
+know. I left my cup of coffee standing while I went to find Jane. I
+heard her crying. She had cut her finger and when I had bound it up I
+felt faint, so I foolishly forgot and picked up the coffee and drank it.
+I wasn't quite myself or I should never have been so careless."
+
+The doctor seemed to appreciate this point. "Did you taste anything in
+the coffee?" he asked.
+
+"No. Of course They would be too clever for that!"
+
+"And when did you begin to feel ill?"
+
+"Just as soon as I remembered that I had forgotten to pour out a fresh
+cup." The naïveté of this statement was quite lost upon the
+eager speaker.
+
+Esther, who had re-entered the room, opened her lips to improve this
+opportunity for argument but, meeting the doctor's eye, refrained.
+Callandar took no notice of the significant admission.
+
+"Where do you feel the pain now?" he asked.
+
+Aunt Amy appeared disturbed.
+
+"Mostly in my head--I--I think." She moved restlessly.
+
+Callandar appeared to consider this.
+
+"But I suppose," he said thoughtfully, "that you really feel very little
+actual pain. None at all perhaps?"
+
+Aunt Amy admitted that she could not locate any particular pain.
+
+"Weakness is the predominating symptom," went on the doctor. "It is, in
+fact, a very simple case. All the more serious, of course, for being so
+simple, _if_ we did not understand it. But now that we know exactly what
+is wrong we need have no fear."
+
+Aunt Amy's vague eyes began to shine.
+
+"Shall we get the better of them again?" she asked eagerly.
+
+"We certainly shall," kindly. "Miss Esther, I am going to leave some
+medicine for your aunt; these little pink tablets. She must have one
+every two hours and two at bedtime. When she has taken them for two days
+I shall send something else. You will notice an improvement almost at
+once. Even in an hour or two, perhaps. By the end of the week all
+medicine may be discontinued."
+
+He crushed a little pink tablet in a spoon, mixed it with water, and
+watched the old lady while she eagerly swallowed it.
+
+"There!" he exclaimed. "That is the beginning! All we need now is a
+little rest and quiet. Nothing to excite the patient and a tablet
+regularly every two hours." He arose, affecting not to see Aunt Amy's
+grateful tears. "And of course," he added as if by an afterthought,
+"_They_ won't know anything about this. They will think that, having
+taken the coffee, the result is certain. They will take for granted that
+They have finished you, in fact! So cheer up, it is worth a little
+illness to be rid of the fear of Them forever."
+
+A lightning flash of hope lit up the worn face upon the pillow. "Oh,
+Doctor! Do you really think I am free?"
+
+"Sure of it."
+
+Aunt Amy sank back with a long sigh; her lined face grew suddenly
+peaceful. Esther, who had observed the little scene with wonder, said
+nothing, but taking the tablets, kissed her Aunt, and led the way out
+in silence.
+
+"Well?"
+
+As they stood together in the hall she could see the amused twinkle in
+the doctor's eye.
+
+"I don't like it! You lied to her!"
+
+"So I did," cheerfully.
+
+"These tablets," holding up the glass vial, "what are they?"
+
+"Tonic."
+
+"And the medicine which you are going to send later?"
+
+"More tonic."
+
+"But she thinks--you gave her to understand that they are the antidote
+for the poison which you know does not exist."
+
+"No. They are the antidote for a poison which does exist--medicine for a
+mind diseased."
+
+"It's--it's like taking advantage of a child."
+
+"So it is, exactly. I suppose you have never taken advantage of a child,
+for the child's good?"
+
+"Certainly not."
+
+"Never told one, gave one to understand, so to speak, that a kiss will
+cure a bumped head?"
+
+"That's different!"
+
+"Never told your school class during a thunderstorm that lightning never
+hurts good children?"
+
+"That's very different."
+
+"And yet all the time you know that lightning falls upon the just and
+unjust equally."
+
+Esther was silent. The doctor laughed.
+
+"I fear we are both sad story-tellers," he said gaily. "But in Aunt
+Amy's case the fibbing will all be charged to my account, you are merely
+the nurse. A nurse's duty is to obey orders and not frown (as you are
+doing now) upon the doctor. You will find that I shall effect a cure.
+Seriously, I do not believe that you have any idea of what that poor
+woman has been suffering. If the delusion of living in continual danger
+can be lifted in any way even for a time, it will make life over for
+her. You would not really allow a scruple to prevent some alleviation of
+your Aunt's condition, would you?"
+
+The girl's downcast eyes flashed up to his, startlingly blue.
+
+"No. I would not. I love her. I would tell all the fibs in the world to
+help her. But all the time I should have a queer idea that _I_ was doing
+wrong. It would be common sense against instinct."
+
+"Against prejudice," he corrected. "The prejudice which always insists
+that truth consists in a form of words."
+
+They were now in the cool green light of the living room. Esther stood
+with her back to the table, leaning slightly backward, supporting
+herself by one hand. She looked tired. There were shadows under her
+eyes. The doctor felt an impulse of irritation against the absent mother
+who let the girl outwear her strength.
+
+"My advice to you is not to worry," he said abruptly. "You are tired.
+More tired than a young girl of your age ought to be. You cannot teach
+those imps of Satan--I mean those charming children--all day and come
+back to home cares at night. Will it be possible for me to speak to Mrs.
+Coombe before I go?"
+
+Watching her keenly he saw that now he had touched the real cause of the
+trouble.
+
+"I am sorry," began Esther, but meeting his look, the prim words of
+conventional excuse halted. A little smile curled the end of her lips
+and she added, "Since she went out purposely to escape you, it is
+not likely."
+
+"Your mother went out to escape me?" in surprise.
+
+"In your capacity of doctor only. You see," with a certain childish
+naïveté, "she hasn't seen you yet. And mother dislikes doctors very
+much. Oh!" with a hot blush, "you will think we are a queer family,
+all of us!"
+
+"It is not at all queer to dislike doctors," he answered her cheerfully.
+"I dislike them myself. At the very best they are necessary evils."
+
+"Indeed no! And when one is ill it seems so foolish--"
+
+"Is Mrs. Coombe ill?"
+
+"I don't know. I think so. She has headaches. She is not at all like
+herself. I hoped so much that you would meet her this afternoon, and
+then she--she went out!"
+
+"And this is really what is troubling you, and not Aunt Amy?"
+
+"Yes. You see, Aunt Amy has been quite all right until the last two
+days. But mother--that has been troubling us a long time."
+
+"How long?"
+
+"Almost since father died--a year ago."
+
+"But--don't you think that if Mrs. Coombe were really ill her prejudice
+would disappear? People do not suffer from choice, usually."
+
+"No. That is just what puzzles me!" She did indeed look puzzled, very
+puzzled and very young.
+
+"If I could help you in any way?" suggested Callandar. "You may be
+worrying quite needlessly."
+
+"Do people ever consult you about their mothers behind their mother's
+back?"
+
+"Often. Why not?"
+
+"Only that it doesn't seem natural. Grown-up people--"
+
+"Are often just as foolish as anybody else!"
+
+"Besides, I doubt if I can make you understand." Now that the ice was
+broken Esther's voice was eager. "I know very little of the real trouble
+myself. It seems to be just a general state of health. But it varies so.
+Sometimes she seems quite well, bright, cheerful, ready for anything!
+Then again she is depressed, nervous, irritable. She has desperate
+headaches which come on at intervals. They are nervous headaches, she
+says, and are so bad that she shuts herself up in her room and will not
+let any of us in. She will not eat. I--I don't know very much about
+it, you see."
+
+"You know a little more than that, I think, perhaps when you know me
+better?--It is, after all, a matter of trusting one's doctor."
+
+"I do trust you. But feelings are so difficult to put into words. And
+the greatest dread I have about mother's illness is only a feeling, a
+feeling as if I knew, without quite knowing, that the trouble is deeper
+than appears. Jane feels it too, so it can't be all imagination. It is
+caused, I think, by a change in mother herself. She seems to be growing
+into another person--don't laugh!"
+
+"I am not laughing. Please go on."
+
+"Well, one thing more tangible is that the headaches, which seem to mark
+a kind of nervous crisis, are becoming more frequent. And the
+medicine--"
+
+"But you told me that she took no medicine!"
+
+"Did I? Then I am telling my story very badly. She has some medicine
+which she always takes. It is a prescription which my father gave her a
+few months before he died. She had a bad attack of some nervous trouble
+then which seems to have been the beginning of everything. But that time
+she recovered and it was not until after father's death that the
+headaches began again. Father's prescription must, long ago, have lost
+all effect, or why should the trouble get worse rather than better? But
+mother will not hear a word on the subject. She will take that medicine
+and nothing else."
+
+"Do you know what the medicine is?"
+
+"No. Father used to fill it for her himself. She says it is a very
+difficult prescription and she never has it filled in town, always in
+the city."
+
+"But why? Taylor, here, is quite capable of filling any prescription. He
+is a most capable dispenser."
+
+"Yes--I know. But mother will not believe it."
+
+"And you say it does her no good whatever?"
+
+"She thinks that it does. She has a wonderful belief in it. But she gets
+no better."
+
+The doctor looked very thoughtful.
+
+"She will not allow you to try any kind of compress for her head?"
+
+"No. She locks her door. And I am sure she suffers, for sometimes when I
+have gone up hoping to help I have heard such strange sounds, as if she
+were delirious. It frightens me!"
+
+"Does she talk of her illness?"
+
+"Never, and she is furious if I do. She says she is quite well and
+indeed no one would think that anything serious was wrong unless they
+lived in the house. Any one outside would be sure that I am worrying
+needlessly. Am I, do you think?"
+
+"I can't think until I know more. But from what you tell me, it looks as
+if this medicine she is taking might have something to do with it. If it
+does no good, it probably does harm. Perhaps it was never intended to
+be used as she is using it. Otherwise, as you say, the attacks would
+diminish. At the same time a blind faith in a certain medicine is not at
+all uncommon. One meets it constantly. Also the prejudice against
+consulting a physician. It is probable that Mrs. Coombe does not realise
+that she is steadily growing worse. Could you let me examine the
+medicine?"
+
+Esther hesitated.
+
+"It is kept locked up. But, I might manage it. If I asked her for it she
+would certainly refuse. I--I should hate to steal it," miserably.
+
+"I see. Well, try asking first. It is just a question of how far one has
+the right to interfere with another's deliberately chosen course of
+action. The medicine is probably injurious, even dangerous. I should
+warn her, at least. If she will do nothing and you still feel
+responsible I should say that you have a moral right to have your own
+mind reassured upon the matter."
+
+Esther smiled. "I believe I feel reassured already. Perhaps I have been
+foolishly apprehensive and it never occurred to me that the medicine
+might be at fault; at the worst I thought it might be useless, not
+harmful. If I could only manage to have you see it without _taking_ it!
+There must be a way. I'll think of something and let you know."
+
+"Do." The doctor picked up his hat for the second time. He was genuinely
+interested. He had not expected to find a problem of any complexity in
+sleepy Coombe. The cases of Aunt Amy and the peculiar Mrs. Coombe seemed
+to justify his staying on. It was pleasant also to help this charming
+young girl--although that, naturally, was a secondary consideration!
+
+Esther ran upstairs with a lightened heart.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+
+"I really could not help being late, Esther! I tried to hurry them but
+Mrs. Lewis was there. You know what _she_ is!"
+
+Mrs. Coombe sank gracefully into a veranda chair. Out of the corners of
+her eyes she cast a swift glance at the face of her step-daughter and,
+as the girl was not looking, permitted herself a tiny smile of malicious
+amusement. She was a small woman but one in whom smallness was charm and
+not defect. Once she had been exceedingly pretty; she was moderately
+pretty still. The narrow oval of her face remained unspoiled but the
+small features, once delicately clear, appeared in some strange way to
+be blurred and coarsened. The fine grained skin which should have been
+delicate and firm had coarsened also and upon close inspection showed
+multitudes of tiny lines. Her fluffy hair was very fair, ashy fair
+almost, and would have been startlingly lovely only that it, too, was
+spoiled by a dryness and lack of gloss which spoke of careless treatment
+or ill health, or both. Still, at a little distance, Mary Coombe
+appeared a young and attractive woman. The surprise came when one looked
+into her eyes. Her eyes did not fit the face at all; they were old eyes,
+tired yet restless, and clouded with a peculiar film which robbed them
+of all depth. Curiously disturbing eyes they were, like windows with
+the blinds down!
+
+If her eyes were restless, her hands were restless too and she kept
+snapping the catch of her hand-bag with an irritating click as
+she spoke.
+
+"I know I ought to have been here when the doctor called to see Amy,"
+she went on, "but I could not get away. Mrs. Lewis talked and talked.
+That woman is worse than Tennyson's brook. She makes me want to scream!
+I wonder," musingly, "what would happen if I should jump up some day and
+scream and scream? I think I'll try it."
+
+"Do!"
+
+"What did Doctor Paragon-what's-his-name say about Amy?"
+
+"He thinks we have been treating Aunt Amy wrongly. He thinks she should
+be humoured more. His name is Callandar."
+
+"Callandar? What an odd name! It sounds half-familiar. I must have heard
+it somewhere. There is a Dr. Callandar in Montreal, isn't there? A
+specialist or something."
+
+"I think this is the same man. But if it is he, doesn't want it known.
+He is here for his health, and he has never taken the trouble to correct
+the impression that he is a beginner working up a practice. I thought so
+myself at first."
+
+"At first?"
+
+"When I first saw him. I have met him several times."
+
+Mrs. Coombe was evidently not sufficiently interested to pursue the
+subject. "Whoever he is," she said fretfully, "I hope he is not going to
+allow Amy to fancy herself an invalid."
+
+"He is going to cure the fancy."
+
+"Oh!" dubiously. "Well, I hope he does! I find I must run over to
+Detroit for a few days."
+
+"What?"
+
+"It would be provoking to have her ill while I'm away. No one else can
+manage Jane properly while you're at school. Where is Jane?"
+
+"I don't know. You are not speaking seriously, are you?"
+
+"I certainly am. At a pinch I suppose I could take Jane with me. She
+needs new clothes. But I'd rather not bother with her. Her measure will
+do quite as well. I wish you would call her. I've got some butterscotch
+somewhere. Here it is." The restless hands fumbled in the hand-bag. "No,
+it isn't here, how odd! I promised Jane--"
+
+"Mother, when did you decide to go away?"
+
+"Some time ago. It doesn't matter, does it? I had a letter from Jessica
+Bremner to-day. She asks me to come at once. It's in this bag somewhere.
+I declare I never can find anything! Anyway, she wants me to come."
+
+"When did you get the letter?"
+
+"On the noon mail, of course."
+
+Esther turned away. She knew very well that there had been no letter
+from Detroit on the noon mail. But there seemed no use in saying so.
+These little "inaccuracies" were becoming common enough. At first Esther
+had exposed and laughed at them as merely humorous mistakes; but that
+attitude had long been replaced by a cold disgust which did not scruple
+to call things by their right names. She knew very well that Mary Coombe
+had developed the habit of lying.
+
+"You see," went on the prevaricator cheerfully, "it would be necessary
+to run down to Toronto soon anyway. I haven't a rag fit to wear and
+neither has Jane. But Detroit is better. Things are much cheaper across
+the line. And easy as anything to smuggle. All you need to do is to wear
+them once and swear they're old."
+
+"An oath is nothing? But where is the money coming from?"
+
+Mrs. Coombe shrugged her shoulders. "One can't get along without
+clothes! And even if I could, there is another reason for the trip. My
+medicine is almost finished. I can't risk being without that."
+
+It was the opportunity for which Esther had waited. She spoke eagerly.
+
+"Why not try getting it filled here? I'm sure they are as careful as
+possible at Taylor's."
+
+The hand-bag shut with a particularly emphatic click. Mrs. Coombe rose.
+
+"We have discussed that before," she said coldly. "It is a very
+particular prescription and hard to fill. As it means so much to me in
+my wretched health to have it exactly right, I am surprised at
+you, Esther!"
+
+Esther put the surprise aside.
+
+"You could get it by mail, couldn't you?"
+
+"I shall not try to get it by mail."
+
+"But Taylor's are absolutely reliable. Why not give them a chance? If it
+is not satisfactory I shall never say another word. It seems so
+senseless going to Detroit for a few drugs which may be had around the
+corner. Perhaps it is not as difficult to fill as you think. Let me show
+the prescription to Dr. Callandar--" She stopped suddenly for Mrs.
+Coombe had grown white, a pasty white, and she broke in upon the girl's
+suggestion with a little inarticulate cry of rage, so uncalled for, so
+utterly unexpected, that Esther was frightened. For a moment the film
+seemed brushed from the hazel eyes--the blinds were raised and angry
+fear peeped out.
+
+"You wouldn't dare!" The words were a mere breath. Then meeting the
+girl's look of blank amazement she caught herself from the brink of
+hysteria and added more calmly, "What an impossible suggestion! I need
+no second opinion upon the remedy which your father prescribed for me
+and I shall take none. As for the journey, I shall ask your advice when
+I wish it. At present I am capable of managing my own affairs. I shall
+come and go as I like."
+
+The would-be firm voice wavered wrathed badly toward the end of this
+defiance, but the widely opened eyes were still shining and as she
+turned to enter the house, Esther caught a look in them, a gleam of
+something very like hate.
+
+"So that is what comes of asking," said Esther sombrely.
+
+She did not follow her step-mother into the house but remained for a
+while on the veranda, thinking. It was clearly useless to reopen the
+subject of the prescription. For some reason Mrs. Coombe regarded it as
+a fetish. She would not trust it to Taylor's. She would not allow a
+doctor to see it; there remained only the suggestion of Dr. Callandar
+that it be inspected without her consent. Esther knew where the
+prescription was kept, but--
+
+Women are supposed, by men, to have a defective sense of loyalty and it
+is a belief fairly well established, also among men, that there is a
+fundamental difference in the attitude of the sexes to that high thing
+called honour. Esther was both loyal and honourable. To deceive her
+step-mother, however good the motive, could not but be horrible to her
+and just now, being angry with a very young and healthy anger, she was
+less willing than ever to lose her own self-respect in the service of
+Mary Coombe.
+
+"I won't!" said Esther firmly, and went in to prepare Aunt Amy's supper.
+
+"I don't feel like I ought to be eating upstairs this way," fussed the
+invalid as Esther came in with the tray. "I am so much better. That
+medicine the doctor gave me helped me right away. He must be a very
+smart man, Esther."
+
+"It looks like it, Auntie."
+
+"I don't doubt I'll be around to-morrow just like he said. So I don't
+want you staying home from school. That girl you get to take your place
+is kind of cross with the children, isn't she?"
+
+"She is strict."
+
+"Well, don't get her. I don't like to think about the children being
+scared out of their lives on my account. So I'll just get up as usual. I
+could get up now if necessary. And my mind feels better."
+
+"Your _mind_?" Never before had Esther heard Aunt Amy refer to "her"
+mind as being in any way troublesome.
+
+"Yes. I suppose you never knew, but sometimes I have felt a little
+worried about my mind."
+
+"Whatever for?" The surprise which still lingered on the girl's voice
+was balm to Aunt Amy's soul. She laughed nervously.
+
+"Of course it was foolish," she said, "but really there have been times
+when I have felt--felt, I can hardly express it, but as if there were a
+little something _wrong_, you know. Did you ever guess that I felt like
+that, Esther?"
+
+"No, Auntie."
+
+Aunt Amy shivered. For a moment her faded eyes grew large and dark. "I'm
+glad you did not guess it. It is a dreadful feeling, like night and
+thunder and no place to go. A black feeling! I used to be afraid I might
+get caught in the blackness and never find a way out and then--"
+
+"And then what, dear?"
+
+"Why, then--I'd be mad, Esther!"
+
+"Oh, darling, how awful!" Esther's warm young arms clasped the trembling
+old creature close. "You must never, never be afraid again! Why didn't
+you tell me and let me help?"
+
+"I couldn't. You would not have believed me. And it would have
+frightened you. And you might have told Mary. If Mary knew of it she
+would be certain to be frightened and if she was frightened she would
+send me away. Then the darkness would get me."
+
+"It never shall, Auntie. No one shall ever send you away! And you won't
+be afraid any more, will you?"
+
+"No, not if you don't keep telling me that things I know aren't true. I
+know they are true, you see, but when you say they aren't it makes my
+head go round."
+
+"We'll be more careful, dear! And here is your medicine before you have
+your supper."
+
+Aunt Amy turned cheerfully to the supper tray.
+
+"Your mother need not be told about it," she observed. "She wouldn't
+understand. She was in a while ago to say she hoped I'd be better in the
+morning. She is going to the city. What she came for was to ask me to
+lend her my ruby ring. She never understands why I can't lend it to her.
+I told her she might have the string of pearls and the pearl brooch and
+the ring with the little diamonds and anything else except the ruby.
+You see, I might die before she got back, and I couldn't die without the
+ruby ring on my finger. I promised somebody--I can't remember whom--"
+
+"I know, dear, don't try to remember."
+
+"Mary says it is shameful waste to leave it lying shut up in the box in
+my drawer. But it has to lie there. If I took it out now it would stop
+shining immediately. And it must be all red and bright when I die, like
+a shining star in the dark. Then, afterwards, you can have it, Esther.
+You don't mind waiting, do you?"
+
+"Gracious! I hope I'll be an old woman before then! So old that I shan't
+care for ruby rings at all."
+
+Aunt Amy looked at the girl's pretty hand wistfully. "I'd like to give
+it to you right now, Esther. But you know how it is. I can't. If the red
+star did not shine I might lose my way. Some one told me--"
+
+"I know, Auntie. I quite understand. And you have given me so many
+pretty things that I don't need the ruby."
+
+"You may have anything else you want. But of course the ruby is the
+loveliest of all. If I could only remember who gave it to me--"
+
+"Perhaps you always had it," suggested Esther, hastily, for she knew
+quite well the tragic history of the ruby.
+
+"Perhaps. But I don't think so. I love it but I never dare to look at
+it. It makes the blackness come so near. Does it make you feel
+that way?"
+
+"No--I don't know--large jewels often give people strange feelings they
+say."
+
+"Do they?" hopefully. "Go and look at it now. Don't lift it out of the
+box. Just open the lid and look in. Perhaps you will feel something."
+
+Esther went obediently to the drawer where the beautiful jewel had lain
+ever since Aunt Amy's arrival. As no one outside knew of its existence
+it was considered quite safe to keep it in the house. The box lay in a
+corner under a spotless pile of sweet smelling handkerchiefs. Esther
+snapped open the lid of the case and looked in. She looked close, closer
+still, bending over the open drawer--
+
+"Do you feel anything, Esther?"
+
+The girl's answer came, after a second's pause, in a strained voice.
+"The drawer is so dark, I can't tell!"
+
+"Take it to the window," said Aunt Amy.
+
+Esther lifted the case from the drawer and carried it into a better
+light. Her eyes were panic-stricken. For her indecision had been only a
+ruse to give herself time to think. She had known the moment she opened
+the case that the ruby was gone!
+
+"It does make me feel queer," she said, closing the case. "I'll put it
+away."
+
+"Is it a black feeling?" with interest.
+
+"I think it is."
+
+"Then you are kin to it," said Aunt Amy sagely. "Your mother never has
+any feeling about it at all. Except that she would like to wear it. She
+was looking at it when she was in. She was as cross as possible when I
+told her she could not take it with her."
+
+Esther gathered up the tea things without a word. Her curved mouth was
+set in a hard red line. At the door she paused and turning back as if
+upon impulse, said: "If it makes you feel like that, I would advise you
+not to look at it, Auntie. It will be quite safe. I'll see to that. I'll
+appoint myself 'Guardian of the Ring.'"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+
+Esther carried the tea-tray into the kitchen and stood for a moment
+beside the open window letting the sweet air from the garden cool the
+colour in her cheeks. Through the doorway into the hall she could see
+into the living room where Jane sat at the table in a little yellow pool
+of lamplight, busy with her school home work. Farther back, near the
+dusk of one of the veranda windows, Mrs. Coombe reclined in an easy
+chair. Her eyes were closed; in the half light she looked very pretty,
+very fragile; her relaxed pose suggested helplessness. Unconsciously
+Esther's innate strength answered to the call; her hard gaze softened.
+To apply the terms liar and thief to that dainty figure in the chair
+seemed little short of brutality. Mary was weak, that was
+all--just weak!
+
+At the sound of the girl's step in the doorway Mrs. Coombe opened her
+eyes. They were very filmy to-night, blank, contented. Her nervousness
+seemed to have left her. Perhaps she was half asleep, for she yawned, an
+open, ugly yawn, which she did not trouble to raise her hand to hide.
+
+"I have decided to take Jane with me, Esther."
+
+"I don't want to go," said Jane.
+
+"Well, you are going--that's enough."
+
+"If you have really decided to go," began Esther slowly, "I think you
+are wise to take Jane. We cannot tell yet just how Aunt Amy may be."
+
+The child returned to her book with a discontented sigh. Esther came
+nearer and spoke in a lower tone. "But before you go," she said, "please
+don't forget to replace Aunt Amy's ring. If she were to find it gone it
+would be no joke but a serious shock, as I suppose you know."
+
+Mrs. Coombe laughed. And Esther realised that a laugh was the last thing
+she had expected. For anger, evasion, denial, she had been prepared.
+Mary would probably storm and bluster in her ineffective way--and return
+the ring. Instead--
+
+"How did you know I had it?" she asked good humouredly.
+
+"I saw that it was gone."
+
+"And the deduction was obvious? Well, this time you are right. I did
+take it. I expect I have a right to borrow my own Aunt's things if she
+is too mean to lend them. It's a shame of her to want to keep the only
+decent jewel we have shut up. Amy gets more selfish every day."
+
+"But you will put it back before she misses it?"
+
+Mrs. Coombe could see her step-daughter's face quite plainly and its
+expression made her wince, but she was reckless to-night. After all, why
+pretend? If Esther intended to eternally interfere with her affairs the
+sooner an open break came, the better.
+
+"Perhaps, perhaps not. Certainly not until I return from my visit."
+
+Esther fought down her rising dismay.
+
+"Mother, don't you understand what you are doing? The ring is Aunt Amy's
+You have no right to take it!"
+
+"I've a right if I choose to make one."
+
+"If Auntie finds out it is not in its box, we cannot tell what the
+effect may be!"
+
+"She needn't find out. What she doesn't know won't hurt her!"
+
+"But--it is stealing!"
+
+Mrs. Coombe laughed. "What a baby you are, Esther, for all your solemn
+eyes and grown-up airs. Stealing--the idea! Anyway you need not worry
+since you are not the thief." She yawned again, rose, and declared that
+she felt quite tired enough to go to bed.
+
+When she had gone, Jane left her lessons and came to her sister's side.
+
+"Esther, do I really have to go away with Mother?"
+
+"It looks like it, Janie. But you'll like it. Mrs. Bremner has a little
+girl."
+
+"I don't like little girls."
+
+"Then you ought to! The change will probably do you good."
+
+Jane looked dubious. "Things that I don't want never do me any good.
+Will you help me with my 'rithmetic?"
+
+"I will when I come back."
+
+"Where're you going?"
+
+"Out. I'll not be long. Answer Aunt Amy's bell if it rings, like a dear
+child."
+
+Esther's decision had been made, as many important decisions are,
+suddenly, and without conscious thought. All the puzzling over what was
+right and wrong seemed no longer necessary. Without knowing why, she
+knew that it had become imperative to get some good advice and get it at
+once. If she had been disturbed and uneasy before, she was frightened
+now. Something must be done, if not for Mary's sake at least for the
+sake of the honoured name she bore, and for Jane's sake!
+
+"Mother doesn't seem to _know_ when a thing is wrong any more!" was the
+burden of the girl's thought as she hurried upstairs.
+
+She knew where the prescription was kept--in a little drawer of her
+father's old desk, a drawer supposed to be secret. To-morrow Mary would
+take it away with her. Esther opened the drawer without allowing herself
+a moment for thought or regret. The paper was there, folded, in its
+usual place.
+
+With a sigh of relief she seized it, hurried to her own room for her hat
+and then out into the summer night. A brisk five minute walk brought her
+to Mrs. Sykes' gate, and there, for the first time, she hesitated.
+
+"Evening, Esther!" called Mrs. Sykes cheerfully from the veranda. "Come
+right along in. Mrs. Coombe told Ann you might be over to borrow the
+telescope valise if she decided to take Jane. Rather sudden, her going
+away, isn't it? Hadn't heard a word about it until the Ladies' Aid--come
+up and sit on the veranda and I'll get it."
+
+"I didn't come for the telescope," said Esther. "I came to see Dr.
+Callandar."
+
+"Oh," with renewed interest. "Well, he's in. At least he's in unless he
+went out while I was upstairs putting Ann to bed. That's his consulting
+room where the light is. It's got a door of its own so folks won't be
+tramping up the hall--but of course you know. You were here this
+afternoon. Funny, Mrs. Coombe going away with your poor Auntie sick and
+all! I suppose it _is_ your Auntie, since it can't be Jane or
+Mrs. Coombe?"
+
+"Yes, it is Aunt Amy. She has not been very well."
+
+"The heat, likely. Heat is hard on folks with weak heads. Not that your
+Auntie's head ever seems weaker than lots of other folks. Won't you come
+up and sit awhile?--Well, ring the bell."
+
+Mrs. Sykes voice trailed off indistinctly as Esther rounded the veranda
+corner and stood by the rose bush before the doctor's door. She pushed
+the new electric bell timidly.
+
+"You'll have to push harder than that!" called Mrs. Sykes. "It sticks
+some!"
+
+But the door had opened at once, letting out a flood of yellow light.
+
+"Miss Coombe--you?"
+
+"It's Esther Coombe come about her Aunt Amy," called the voice from the
+veranda.
+
+Hastily the doctor drew her in and closed the door with an emphatic
+bang. Then for the second time that day they looked into each other's
+eyes and laughed.
+
+"Do you think my patients will stand that?" he asked her ruefully.
+
+"Oh, we are used to Mrs. Sykes, we don't mind."
+
+"That's good! Ah, I see you have the mysterious prescription. It wasn't
+so hard after all, was it? Probably your mother was quite as anxious
+as you."
+
+"No, she refused to let me show it you. I took it. To-night was the only
+chance, for she is going away to-morrow and will take it with her."
+
+"And how about your Presbyterian conscience?" Still with a twinkle.
+
+"Silenced, for the present. But look at it quickly for the silence may
+not last. It seemed that I simply had to help mother, in spite of
+herself. And there was no other way. All the same I shall despise myself
+when I get time to think."
+
+The doctor took the paper with a smile. "When that time comes I shall
+argue with you, though argument rarely affects feeling. To my mind you
+are doing an eminently sensible thing."
+
+He opened the paper and peered at it under the lamp; looked quickly up
+at the girl's eager face and then from her to the paper again.
+
+"What is it?" she asked anxiously.
+
+"Why--I don't know. Where did you get this?"
+
+"In the secret drawer of father's desk."
+
+"Was the prescription always kept there?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+The doctor folded the paper again and handed it to her. "Does this look
+like the prescription?"
+
+"Yes, of course. It is the prescription."
+
+"I'm afraid not. Come and look."
+
+Esther seized the paper eagerly and saw--a neatly written recipe for
+salad dressing!
+
+Hot and cold with mortification, she stared at it blankly. "I have been
+nicely fooled," she said in a low voice.
+
+"Am I permitted to smile, or would it hurt your feelings?"
+
+"It is not at all funny! Of course the real prescription has been
+removed. She must have suspected. You see, I asked her to let me have
+it. Oh!" with sudden shame and anger. "She guessed that I might take it,
+don't you see?"
+
+"I am afraid you are right. But now at least I should think that you
+have done your whole duty. It would look as if Mrs. Coombe was herself
+aware of the inadvisability of continuing this prescription. Why else
+should she be so careful to prevent you showing it to me? At the same
+time she is determined to go on using it. We cannot prevent her."
+
+"Can we do nothing?"
+
+"When I see her I shall be better able to judge."
+
+"But she is going away."
+
+"Then we must wait. If it is, as I suspect, a case of disordered nerves
+aggravated by improper treatment, the instinct is strongly for
+concealment. Do you find, for instance, that Mrs. Coombe is not as frank
+in other matters as she used to be?"
+
+A shamed blush crimsoned the girl's cheek, but the doctor's tone was
+compelling and she answered in a low voice: "Yes, I think so."
+
+"Don't look like that. It is only a symptom of something rotten in the
+nervous system."
+
+"Isn't there such a thing as character?" bluntly.
+
+"As distinct from the nervous system? Some say not. But we do not need
+to venture such a devastating belief to know, well, that a dyspeptic is
+usually disagreeable. In potential character he may be equal to the
+cheeriest man who ever ate a hearty dinner. Think of Carlyle."
+
+"I don't like Carlyle."
+
+"But don't you admire him?"
+
+"No. Do you remember the story of the beggar who picked up his hat one
+day and instead of giving him sixpence, Carlyle said, 'Mon, ye may say
+ye hae picked up the hat of Thomas Carlyle.'"
+
+The doctor laughed. "Oh he had a guid conceit o' himself--must you go?"
+For Esther had risen.
+
+"Yes, thank you. Oh, please do not come with me. It is only a step. I'd
+much rather not. Mrs. Sykes would conclude that the whole family were in
+danger of immediate extinction."
+
+She was so evidently perturbed that the doctor laid down his hat, but
+for the first time it occurred to him that Mrs. Sykes was not an
+unmixed blessing.
+
+Esther was holding out her hand.
+
+"Then you think we can safely leave it until mother returns?"
+
+"I think we shall have to, and if things have been going on as long as
+you think, a week more or less will make no very material difference. In
+any case we cannot examine a lady by force or prevent her from getting a
+prescription until one knows it to be dangerous."
+
+"No, of course not. Good-night, and--thank you, Doctor!"
+
+"And I am not to be allowed to walk home with you?"
+
+"Truly, I would rather not."
+
+"Then good-night, and don't worry."
+
+He watched her flit down the dusky path, heard the click of the gate
+latch, and turned back into the office to wonder why it seemed suddenly
+bare and empty!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+
+Mrs. Coombe had been in the city a week when one morning Ann, who was
+feeling lonely without Jane, sat swinging upon the five-barred gate and
+whistling intermittently for Bubble. She had become very tired of
+waiting. She knew that Bubble could hear. The five-barred gate was
+within easy hearing distance of the house, and both doors and windows of
+the office were open. Therefore it became each moment more evident that
+the whistles were being deliberately ignored.
+
+"Horrid, nasty boy!" exclaimed Ann, climbing to a precarious seat on the
+highest of the five bars. "Well, if he waits until I come to get him,
+he'll--just wait!"
+
+It was very hot on the gate. The vacant field on the other side, where
+the Widow Peel pastured her cow, was hot, too, but if one cut across the
+field and circled the back of the Widow Peel's cottage one substantially
+lessened the distance between oneself and the cool deliciousness of the
+river. The Widow Peel was near-sighted and hardly ever noticed one
+rushing over her beds of lettuce and carrots and onions, or if she did,
+she could not "fit a name to 'em."
+
+Ann sighed and swung her brown legs. Should she or should she not go in
+search of Bubble? Going would mean a distasteful swallowing of proper
+pride; not going would mean--no Bubble. It would be a case of cutting
+off one's nose--Ann's small white teeth came together with a
+little click.
+
+"I'll go. But I'll pay him out afterwards."
+
+With this thoroughly feminine decision she tumbled off the gate, raced
+across the orchard and, having paused a moment to regain breath and
+poise, appeared casually at the office door. The office looked cool and
+empty; Bubble was not upon his official stool. Perhaps, after all, he
+had not heard the whistles! Perhaps--
+
+"What d'ye want?" asked a gruff voice from behind the desk.
+
+Ann jumped, and then tried to look as if she hadn't.
+
+"I knew you were there!" she said. "But just you wait till the doctor
+catches you at it!" Mounting the step she frowned across at Bubble who,
+in the doctor's favourite attitude, was reclining in the doctor's chair.
+"I suppose you think you look like him, but you don't, nor act like him
+either. If he was sitting there and a lady came in, he'd be up too quick
+for anything. And if the lady was polite and stayed on the doorstep
+(just like I am) he would say, 'Pray come in, madam,' and then he'd set
+a chair and--"
+
+"Oh, cut it out!" Bubble's dignity collapsed with his attitude. The
+tilted chair came down with a bang and its occupant settled himself more
+naturally upon a corner of the desk. "Don't bother me! I can't come out.
+Doctor's away. Some one's got to attend to business. See those
+medicines? Well, don't you go handling them! This here is for Lizzie
+Stephens (measles), and that there is for Mrs. Nixon (twins). If they
+got mixed I'd be responsible. Run away!"
+
+"Where's the doctor?" asked Ann, ignoring.
+
+"The doctor is out. You needn't wait. He won't be back all day."
+
+"Where'd he go?"
+
+"Little girls mustn't ask questions!"
+
+Ann's small face wrinkled into an elfish grin. "I know where he's gone,"
+she said slyly.
+
+"Yes, you do!" This sarcastic comment was Bubble's most emphatic
+negative.
+
+"Very well, then, I don't."
+
+Not to be outdone, Ann volunteered no further information. She sat down
+on the step and waited.
+
+Bubble busied himself with tying up the bottles. Presently he stepped
+out from behind the desk.
+
+"Think you can mind the office while I run around with these medicines?"
+he asked sternly.
+
+"Sure!" Ann's assent was placid.
+
+"What'll you say if any one comes and asks for the doctor--or me?"
+
+"You're out delivering medicines and the doctor's been called away very
+sudden."
+
+"What'll you tell them if they ask you what he's been called away to?"
+
+"Oh, I'll just say they needn't worry, 'tisn't anything catching."
+
+Bubble allowed his face to relax. He even displayed a grudging
+admiration for this feminine diplomacy.
+
+"And you wouldn't be telling lies, either," he remarked approvingly.
+"All the same," with a return to gloom, "we can't keep it a secret.
+Folks are bound to find out. You can bet your eyes on that!"
+
+Ann nodded. "I expect most of them know by now. Any one that wanted to
+could see them. _He_ didn't seem to care. They drove right down the main
+street and you could see the picnic basket sticking out at the side!"
+
+"O cricky! Isn't that just like him? You'd think he wanted the whole
+town to know he'd gone off picnicking with a girl. But I'd have thought
+Esther Coombe would have better sense!"
+
+"It wasn't Esther's fault. She couldn't act as if she was ashamed of
+him, could she? When a gentleman asks a lady to go out in his automobile
+she can't ask him to drive down the back streets."
+
+"If he had only taken her at night!" groaned the harassed junior
+partner. "But no, he must take a whole day off and him with two patients
+on his hands. Look at me! Have I ever asked off to go on any picnics?
+Not on your tintype. Business is business. Doctors can't fool round like
+other folks."
+
+Ann nodded agreement. Things were coming her way very nicely. She
+glanced at the wrathy Bubble out of the corners of her eyes. "I didn't
+think he'd be mean like that," she remarked craftily.
+
+"Like what? He isn't mean!"
+
+"To make you stay in all day."
+
+"He didn't. Not him! He gave me fifty cents and told me to take a day
+off. 'Just run around with the medicine, Bubble,' says he, 'and then you
+can hike it. I have a feeling in my bones,' he says, 'that nobody's
+going to die to-day.'"
+
+"Well, then--"
+
+"A man has a sense of duty for all that."
+
+"Well," rising with a dejected air, "if you're not coming, good-bye. It
+will be lovely paddling! Aunt's given me some lettuce sandwiches and two
+apple turnovers. One was for you, but I suppose I can eat them both. The
+sugar's leaked all round the edge--lovely!"
+
+The stern disciple of business watched her tie on her sun-bonnet with
+mingled feelings. It began to look as if she was really going!
+
+"Good-bye," said Ann.
+
+Bubble's red face grew a shade redder.
+
+"Just like a girl!" he said bitterly. "Because a man's got to deliver
+two medicine bottles, off she goes and won't wait for him. And the
+farthest I've got to go is over to Mrs. Nixon's. The whole thing won't
+take five minutes."
+
+Sun-bonnets are splendid things for hiding the face! Had Bubble seen
+that slow smile of victory there is no telling what might have happened.
+But he did not see it. And Ann was too good a general to exult openly.
+Her answer was carefully careless. "I'll wait--if you'll hurry up!"
+
+But the look which she threw after his hastily retreating figure was as
+old as Eve.
+
+Meanwhile the doctor and Esther, who had been so criminally careless of
+professional appearances as to drive down Main Street with a picnic
+basket protruding, were enjoying themselves with an enjoyment peculiar
+to careless people. Esther had forgotten about the pile of uncorrected
+school exercises which were supposed to form her Saturday's work; the
+doctor had forgotten about the measles and the twins. Rain had fallen in
+the night and the dust was laid, the trees were intensely green.
+
+Neither of them knew exactly how this pleasant thing had come about,
+although, as a matter of crude fact, Mrs. Sykes had played the part of
+the god from the machine. This energetic lady had made the doctor's
+professional career her peculiar care and it had occurred to her that,
+as a resident physician, he was disgracefully ignorant of the
+surrounding country. At the same moment she had remembered that
+to-morrow was Saturday, and that for trapesing the country and
+meandering around in outlandish places there was no one in town equal to
+Esther Coombe.
+
+"But," objected the doctor, "I hardly know Miss Coombe well enough to
+ask a favour of her."
+
+Mrs. Sykes opined that that didn't matter. "Land sakes," she declared,
+"it would be a nice state of affairs if one huming-being couldn't do a
+kindness to another without being acquainted a year or two." Besides,
+Esther, as the old doctor's daughter, might almost be said to have a
+duty toward the newcomer. Mrs. Sykes felt sure that Dr. Coombe would
+have insisted upon proper attentions being shown, since he was always
+"the politest man you ever saw, and terrible nice to strangers."
+
+Mrs. Sykes also, with the assistance of Aunt Amy, had provided the large
+basket. They might not need it all, but then again they might. It was
+best to be prepared. And, anyway, no one should ever say that she, Mrs.
+Sykes, "skimped" her boarders' meals. As for the big shawl, once
+belonging to a venerated ancestress, it is always safe to take a big
+shawl on a country trip even in June heat with the thermometer going up.
+
+The doctor agreed to everything, even the shawl. Whether one is taking a
+rest cure or not, it is distinctly pleasant to look forward to a day in
+the country with a lovely girl. Esther had taken his request quite
+simply. It seemed only natural to her that he should wish to explore,
+while the invitation to act as guide was frankly welcomed. Indeed her
+girlish gaiety in the prospect had shown very plainly that such holidays
+had been rare of late. School did not "keep" on Saturday, Jane was away,
+and Aunt Amy was so much better that she could leave her without
+misgiving. Bubble alone prophesied disaster, and at him they
+all laughed.
+
+There is a little folder published by the Town Council which gives a
+very good idea of the country around Coombe. We might quote this, but it
+will be much better for you to go some time and see things for yourself.
+Dr. Callandar saw a great deal that day, but was never very clear
+afterwards in his descriptions. It was rocky in spots, he knew, and wild
+and sweet and piney. And there were little lakes. He remembered the
+lakes particularly because--well, because of what came later.
+
+They had their lunch on the shores of a jewel-like bay, sitting upon the
+shawl of Mrs. Sykes' grandmother. Esther had many memories of the place.
+She had often camped there with her father. But it had been wilder then.
+Once a bear had come right up to the door of her tent.
+
+"By Jove!" said the doctor enviously, "what did you do?"
+
+"I said 'shoo'!"
+
+"And did he?"
+
+"Yes, he did. He was a nice bear, very obedient. Some days later father
+and I saw Mrs. Bear trot across the clearing with two baby bears behind.
+They were moving. I think Mr. Bear was looking for a house when he
+called on me."
+
+Altogether it was a magic day. There is an erroneous belief that magic
+has died out of the world. But in our hearts we all know better. Which
+of us has not lived through the magic hours of a magic day? Which of us
+does not know that land, unmapped, unnamed, a land whose sun is
+brighter, whose grass is greener, whose sky is bluer, and whose every
+road runs into a golden mist? Magic land it must be, for much seeking
+cannot find it. No one, not the wisest nor the best, may enter it at
+will; but for every one at some time the unseen gate swings open, birds
+sing, flowers bloom, the glory and the dream descend! Poor indeed,
+unutterably poor and cheated of his heritage is he who has not
+passed that way.
+
+They were not in love, of course. They were too happy for that. Love is
+the greatest thing in the world, but it is seldom quite happy. Esther
+and the doctor were not lovers but lingered in that deliciously
+unconscious state of "going-to-be-in-love-presently" which is nothing
+less than heavenly. Therefore they ate their lunch with appetite and
+laughed about the story of the bear. Both were surprised when the
+doctor's watch told them it was time to think of home.
+
+They came back very slowly along the shaded trail to where the car stood
+waiting in the brilliant light of the declining sun.
+
+"Just a moment," said the doctor, and cranked vigorously. A confusion of
+odd noises ensued, from which, somehow, the right noise did not emerge.
+
+"Just a moment," he repeated. "There appears to be something loose--or
+tight--or something. If you'll just sit out on the grass a moment, Miss
+Esther, I'll see what it is."
+
+Esther descended. The grass was just as pleasant to sit upon as the car
+seat and she knew nothing whatever about the tricky ways of motors.
+
+"Just a moment," said Callandar for the third time, and disappeared
+behind the bonnet. Fifteen minutes after, he reappeared with a very hot
+face decorated fantastically with black.
+
+"She's sulking," he announced gloomily.
+
+"Is she?" Esther's tone held nothing save placid amusement.
+
+"Just a moment." The doctor banged down the bonnet and effaced himself
+once more. This time under the body of the car.
+
+Motors are mysterious things. Why a well-treated, not to say pampered,
+car which some hours before had been left in perfect condition and
+excellent temper should abruptly turn stubborn and refuse to fulfil its
+chief end is a problem which we shall not attempt to solve. Every one
+who has ever owned a motor knows that these things be.
+
+The doctor, a modest man, considered himself a fair mechanician. In
+expansive moments he, who made nothing of his undoubted excellence in
+his own profession, was wont to boast that you couldn't teach him much
+about motors! He had laughed to scorn the remark of his Scotch chauffeur
+that "they things need a deal o' humourin'!" Humour a thing of cogs and
+screws? Absurd! One must master a motor, not humour her.
+
+Half an hour later he emerged from the car's eclipse and sank, a
+pitiable figure, upon the grass beside Esther.
+
+"Won't it go?" asked Esther dreamily. It had been very pleasant sitting
+there watching the sun set.
+
+The master of motors made a tragic gesture. "No," he said, "she won't."
+
+"Shake her," said Esther.
+
+Dr. Callandar pushed back his sweat-bedewed hair with fingers which left
+a fearsome streak above his left eyebrow. The girl laughed. But the
+doctor's decorated face was rueful.
+
+"Do you know, Miss Esther, I'm afraid it isn't a bit funny." His tone,
+too, was sober; and Esther, suddenly more fully alive to the situation,
+noticed that the hands clasped recklessly about the knees of once
+spotless trousers were shaking, just a little. He must be awfully tired!
+
+"That's because you can't see yourself. Give the motor a rest. There is
+plenty of time. Let's have tea here instead of on the way home. There is
+cold tea and chicken-loaf, bread and butter, and half a tart."
+
+The doctor brightened. "You may have the half-tart," he concluded
+generously. "And in return you will forgive me my pessimism. I believe I
+am hungry and thirsty and--if I could only swear I should be all right
+presently."
+
+Esther put her small fingers in her ears and directed an absorbed gaze
+toward the sunset.
+
+Callandar laughed.
+
+"All over!" he called. "Richard is himself again. And now we have got to
+be serious. Painful as it is, I admit defeat. I can't make that car
+budge an inch. It won't move. We can't push it. We have no other means
+of conveyance. Deduction--we must walk!"
+
+"Yes, only like most deductions, it doesn't get us anywhere. We _can't_
+walk."
+
+"Not to Coombe of course. Merely to the nearest farm house."
+
+"There isn't any nearest farm house."
+
+"Then to the nearest common or garden house."
+
+"I thought we were going to be serious. Really, there is no house within
+reasonable walking distance. We are quite in the wilds here. Don't you
+remember the long stretches of waste land we came through? No one builds
+on useless ground. The nearest houses of any kind are over on the other
+side of the lake. The beach is good there and there are a few summer
+cottages and a boarding house. Farther in is the little railway station
+of Pine Lake--"
+
+"Jove! That's what we want! Why did you try to frighten me? Once let us
+reach the station and our troubles are over. There is probably an
+evening train into Coombe."
+
+"There is. But we shall never catch it. We are on the wrong side of the
+lake. We have no boat. There is a trail around but it is absolutely out
+of the question, too far and too rough, even if we knew it, which we do
+not. It would take a woodsman to follow it even in daylight."
+
+"But--" The doctor hesitated. He was beginning to feel seriously
+disturbed. It seemed impossible that they could be as isolated as Esther
+seemed to think. Distance is a small thing to a powerful motor eating up
+space with an effortless appetite, which deceives novice and expert
+alike. It is only when one looks back that one counts the miles. He
+remembered vaguely that the nearest house was a long way back.
+
+"I'll have another try," he answered soberly, "and in the meantime,
+think--think hard! There may be some place you have forgotten. If not,
+we are in rather a serious fix."
+
+"There are no bears now," said Esther.
+
+"There are gossips!" briefly.
+
+The girl laughed. The thought of possible gossip seemed to disturb her
+not at all. "Oh, it will be all right as soon as we explain,"
+confidently. "But Aunt Amy will be terrified. If we could only get word
+to Aunt Amy! I don't mind so much about Mrs. Sykes, for she is always
+prepared for everything. She will comfort herself with remembering how
+she said when she saw it was going to be a lovely day: 'It may be a fine
+enough morning, Esther, but I have a feeling that something will happen
+before night. I have put in an umbrella in case of rain and a pair of
+rubbers and a rug and you'd better take my smelling salts. I hope you
+won't have an accident, I'm sure, but it's best to be forewarned.'"
+
+The doctor glanced up from his tinkering to join in her laugh. He felt
+ashamed of himself. The possibility of evil tongues making capital of
+their enforced position had certainly never entered into the thought of
+this smiling girl. Yet that such a possibility might exist in Coombe as
+well as in other places he did not doubt. And she was in his charge. The
+thought of her clear eyes looking upon the thing which she did not know
+enough to dread made him feel positively sick!
+
+When he spoke to her again there was a subtle change in his manner. He
+had become at once her senior, the physician, and man of the world.
+
+"Miss Esther," he said, leaving his futile tampering with the machine,
+"I can see no way out of this but one. I am a good walker and a fast
+one. I shall leave you here with the car and the rugs and a revolver
+(there is one in the tool box), and go back along the road. I shall walk
+until I come to somewhere and then get a carriage or wagon--also a
+chaperone--and come back for you. It is positively the only thing
+to do."
+
+Esther's charming mouth drooped delicately at the corners. "Oh no!
+That's not at all a nice plan. I'm afraid to stay here. Not of bears,
+but of tramps--or--or something."
+
+"Where there are no houses there will be no tramps."
+
+"There may be. You never can tell about tramps. And I couldn't shoot a
+tramp. The very best I could do would be to shoot myself--"
+
+"But--"
+
+"And I might bungle even that!" pathetically.
+
+"But, my dear girl--"
+
+"And anyway, I've thought of another plan. There is a place on the lake,
+on this side. Not a house exactly, but a log cabin, where old Prue
+lives. Did you ever hear of old Prue? She is a man-hater and a recluse
+and lives all by herself in the bush. It is a dreadful place and she
+keeps a fierce dog! But perhaps she keeps a boat, too. She must keep a
+boat," cheerfully, "because she lives right by the water and I know she
+fishes. If she would only let us have the boat! But I warn you she may
+refuse. She is like the witch in 'Hansel and Gretel.' Do you remember--"
+
+But at the first mention of the boat, the doctor had sprung to action
+and was now standing ready laden with the basket and the rug. With the
+air of a man who has never heard of "Hansel and Gretel" he slipped a
+most businesslike revolver into a pocket of his coat. "For the dog, if
+necessary," he said. "We must have that boat! Is it far?"
+
+"Quite a walk. About two miles through the bush. But I know the way and
+the trail is fairly good, or should be. It branches off from the one we
+took this morning."
+
+The sun was gone when they turned back into the woods but the wonderful
+after-light of the long Canadian sunset would be with them for a good
+time yet. There was no breeze to stir the trees, but the air had cooled.
+It was not unpleasantly hot, now, even in the thickest places. The
+doctor stepped out briskly.
+
+"Listen!" Esther paused with uplifted finger. The trees were very still
+but in the undergrowth the life of the woods was beginning to stir.
+Startled squirrels raced up the fallen logs, glancing backward with
+curious but resentful eyes. Hidden skirmishings and rustlings were
+everywhere and something brown and furry darted across the path with a
+faint cry.
+
+"Don't you feel as if you were in some fairy country?" asked the girl.
+"You can feel and hear them all about you though they keep well hidden.
+A million eager eyes are watching, Lilliputian armies lie in ambush
+beneath the leaves. How quiet they are now that we have stopped moving,
+but as soon as we go on the hurry and skurry will break out afresh! We
+are the invading army and the fairies fly to help the wood-folk protect
+their homes."
+
+As they branched into the deeper path the light grew dimmer. Outside, it
+would still be clear golden twilight but here the grey had come. And now
+the trees grew closer together and a whispering began--a weird and
+wonderful sighing from the soul of the forest; the old, primeval cry to
+the night and to the stars.
+
+It was almost dark when they reached the tiny clearing by the lake.
+Across the cleared space the water could be seen, faintly luminous, with
+the black square of the cabin outlined against it. There was no sign of
+life or light from the dark windows. A dog began to bark sharply.
+
+"He is chained!" said Callandar. "We are fortunate."
+
+"How can you tell?"
+
+"A free dog never barks in that tone. I think he has been a bad dog
+to-day. Killing chickens, perhaps, or chasing cats. A man-hater, like
+your old witch, is certain to have cats! I wonder where she is? Does she
+count going to bed at sundown as one of her endearing peculiarities?"
+
+"Quite the contrary, I imagine. Let's knock."
+
+They raced up the path to the door like children and struck some lusty
+blows. No one answered. The door was locked and every window was blank.
+
+"Knock again!"
+
+They knocked again, banged in fact, and then rattled the windows.
+
+"She could never sleep through all that racket!" said Callandar with
+conviction. "She must be out. Well, out or in, we've got to get that
+boat. Let's explore--this path ought to lead to the lake."
+
+"Shall we steal it?" in a delighted whisper.
+
+"We probably shall. You won't mind going to jail, I hope?"
+
+"Not at all!" The doctor was walking so rapidly that Esther was a little
+out of breath. "Only, the oars--are certain--to be locked--in the
+house!" she warned jerkily.
+
+"Then we shall serve sentence for house breaking also."
+
+"Oh, gracious!" Esther stumbled over the root of a tree and nearly fell.
+But the doctor only walked the faster. They scrambled together down the
+steep path and over the stretch of rocky beach to where the tiny float
+lay a black oblong on the water. The boat house was beside it.
+
+"Eureka!" cried the doctor, springing forward.
+
+But the door of the boat house was open and the boat was gone.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+
+It is a fact infinitely to be regretted, but the doctor swore!
+
+"Well, did you _ever!_" exclaimed Esther. She was a little tired and
+more than a little excited, a condition which conduces to hysteria, and
+collapsing upon the end of the float she began to laugh.
+
+"I wish," said the doctor judicially, "that I knew exactly what you find
+to laugh at."
+
+"Oh, nothing! Your face--I think you looked so very murderous. And you
+did swear--didn't you?"
+
+"Beg your pardon, I'm sure," stiffly.
+
+For an instant they gazed resentfully at each other. The doctor was
+seriously worried. Esther felt extremely frivolous. But if he wanted to
+be stiff and horrid,--let him be stiff and horrid.
+
+"I declare you act as if it were my fault the old boat is gone!" she
+remarked aggrievedly.
+
+"Don't be silly!"
+
+An uncomfortable silence followed. Esther began to realise how tired she
+was. Callandar stared out gloomily over the darkening lake.
+
+"Anyway it's bad enough without your being cross," said Esther in a
+small voice.
+
+"Cross--my dear child! Did I seem cross? What a brute you must think me.
+But to get you into this infernal tangle!--If this old woman is out in
+the boat she'll have to come back some time. She can't stay out on the
+lake all night."
+
+Esther, who thought privately that this was exactly what the old woman
+might do, made no reply. She rather liked the tone of his apology and
+was feeling better.
+
+"Then there is the dog. If she is anywhere near, she will be sure to
+hear the dog. From the noise he is making she will deduce burglars and
+return to protect her property. As a man-hater she will have no fear of
+a mere burglar. Luckily for us, that dog has a carrying voice!"
+
+Scarcely had he spoken than the dog ceased to bark.
+
+"Shall I go and throw sticks at it?" asked Esther helpfully.
+
+"Hush! The dog must have heard something. Let's listen!"
+
+In the silence they listened intently. Certainly there was something, a
+faint indeterminate sound, a sound not in the bush but in the lake, a
+sound of disturbed water.
+
+"The dip of a paddle," whispered Callandar. "Some one is coming in a
+canoe. The dog heard it before we did--recognised it, too, probably. It
+must be the witch!"
+
+The dipping sound came nearer and presently there slipped from the
+shadow of the trees a darker shadow, moving. A canoe with one paddle was
+coming toward them.
+
+Esther with undignified haste scrambled up from the float, abandoning
+her position in the line of battle in favour of the doctor. The dog
+broke into a chorus of ear-splitting yelps of warning and welcome. The
+moving shadow loomed larger and a calm though harsh voice demanded, "Be
+quiet, General! Who is there?"
+
+"We are!" answered Callandar, stepping as far from the tree shadow as
+possible. "Picnickers from Coombe, in an unfortunate predicament. Our
+motor has broken down, and we want the loan of a boat to get over to
+Pine Lake station."
+
+As he spoke he was vividly conscious of Esther close behind. So near was
+she that he felt her warm breath on his neck. She was breathing quickly.
+Was the child really frightened? Instinctively he put out his hand,
+backward, and thrilled through every nerve when something cool and small
+and tremulous slipped into it.
+
+The canoe shot up to the float.
+
+"You can't get any boat here."
+
+There was no surprise or resentment in the harsh level voice. Only
+determination, final and unshakable.
+
+Esther felt the doctor's hand close around her own. Its clasp meant
+everything, reassurance, protection, strength. In the darkness she
+exulted and even ventured to frown belligerently in the direction of the
+disagreeable canoeist. They could see her plainly now. A tall woman in a
+man's coat with the sleeves rolled up displaying muscular arms. Her
+face, even in the half-light, looked harsh and gaunt. With a skill,
+which spoke of long practice, she sprang from the canoe, scarcely
+rocking it, and proceeded to tie the painter securely to a heavy ring in
+the float. Then she straightened herself and turned.
+
+"I'll loose the dog!" she announced calmly.
+
+Just that and no more! No arguments, no revilings, no display of any
+human quality. There was something uncanny in her ruthlessness.
+
+"If you do, it will be bad for the dog," said Callandar coldly. "Who
+are you who threaten decent people?"
+
+It was the tone of authority and for an instant she answered to it. Her
+harsh voice held a faint Scotch accent.
+
+"There'll be no decent people here at this hour o' the nicht. Be off.
+You'll get no boat. Nor the hussy either. The dog's well used to
+guarding it."
+
+"How dare you!" Esther was so angry at being called a hussy that she
+forgot how frightened she was and faced the woman boldly. But the old
+hard eyes stared straight into her young indignant ones and showed no
+softening. Next moment old Prue had pushed the girl aside and
+disappeared in the darkness of the wooded path.
+
+"Quick!" The doctor's tone was crisp and steady. "The canoe is our
+chance. Jump in, while I hold it--in the bow, anywhere!"
+
+"But the paddle! She has taken the paddle!" Even as she objected she
+obeyed. The frail craft rocked as she slid into it, careful only not to
+overbalance; next moment it rocked more dangerously and then settled
+evenly into the water under the doctor's added weight.
+
+"Sit tight!" Carefully he leaned over her, steadying the canoe with one
+hand on the float. In the other she saw the glint of a knife, felt the
+confining rope sever, felt the strong push which separated them from the
+float and then, just as a great dog, fiercely silent now, bounded from
+the path above, a paddle rose and dipped and they shot out into
+the lake.
+
+"If he follows and tries to overturn us I'll have to shoot him," said
+the doctor cheerfully. "But he won't. Hark to him!"
+
+The long bay of the baffled dog rose to the stars.
+
+"There was an extra paddle in the boat-house," he explained. "I
+took it out when we first came down--in case of accident. Old
+She-who-must-be-obeyed must have forgotten it. It is a spliced paddle
+but we shall manage excellently. Luckily I know how to use it. All I
+need now is direction. Lady, 'where lies the land to which this ship
+must go?'"
+
+"'Far, far away is all the seamen know,'" capped Esther, laughing. "But
+if you will keep on around that next point and then straight across I
+think we ought to get there--Oh, look! there is the moon! We had
+forgotten about the moon!"
+
+They had indeed forgotten the moon. And the moon had been part of their
+programme too. Both remembered at the same moment that, according to
+schedule, they were now supposed to be almost home, running down Coombe
+hill by moonlight.
+
+"This is much nicer," said Esther, comfortably.
+
+"But--" he did not finish his sentence. Why disturb her? Besides it
+certainly was much nicer! The forgotten moon bore them no malice. A soft
+radiance grew and spread around them, the whole sky and lake were
+faintly shining though the goddess herself had not yet topped the trees.
+The shadows were becoming blacker and more sharply defined. In front of
+them the point loomed, inky black. Like a bird of the night the little
+canoe shot towards it, skimmed its darkness and then slipped,
+effortless, into shining silver space. The smile of the moon! Pleasing
+old hypocrite! Always she smiles the same upon two in a canoe!
+
+They were paddling toward her so that her light fell full on the
+doctor's face--a clean cut, virile face, manly, stern, yet with a
+whimsical sweetness hidden somewhere.
+
+"How handsome he is!" thought Esther, exactly as the moon intended.
+
+"Strong, too," her thought added as the light picked out his well-set
+shoulders and the sweep of the arm which sped the paddle so lightly yet
+so strongly up and down. Clear, yet soft, the moon showed no touch of
+grey in the hair (although the grey was there) nor did she point out the
+markings which were the legacy of strenuous years. Seen so, he appeared
+no older than she who watched shyly from girlish eyes.
+
+With a little shiver of utmost content Esther settled herself against
+the thwart of the canoe.
+
+Manlike he did not know the meaning of that shiver.
+
+"Fool that I am!" he exclaimed. "You are cold, and behold we have left
+behind the shawl of Mrs. Sykes' grandmother!"
+
+"Indeed we have not! The dog would have torn it to bits. I assure you
+the shawl of the venerated ancestress was in the canoe before I was."
+
+"Then wrap yourself up. It is wonderful how cool the nights are."
+
+Esther was not cold. But it is sometimes pleasant to be commanded. This
+is what enables man to persist in a certain pleasing delusion regarding
+woman's natural attitude. When she occasionally pleases herself by a
+simulation of subjection he immediately thrills with pride, crying,
+"Aha! I have her mastered!" Of course he finds out his mistake later.
+
+It pleased Esther, though not cold, to wrap herself in the shawl and it
+pleased Callandar to see her do it. I assure you it left the whole
+question of the subjection of women quite untouched.
+
+The moon knew all about it but, feminine herself, she favoured the
+deception. Around the girl's dark head she drew a circle of light. The
+branching tendrils of her hair, all alive and fanlike now in the
+coolness of the night, made a nimbus of black and silver from which her
+shadowed face shone like a faint pure pearl. As he seemed younger, so
+did she seem older; under the moon she was no longer a child, but a
+woman with mysterious eyes.
+
+An impulse came to him--the rare impulse of confidence! Suddenly it
+seemed that what he had mistaken for self-sufficiency had been in
+reality loneliness. He had learned to live to himself not because he was
+of himself sufficient but because no one else, save the Button Moulder,
+had ever come within speaking distance. Lorna Sinnet, for all his
+admiration of her, had established no claim upon his confidence, yet
+now, with this young girl, whom he had known but a few weeks, a new need
+developed--a need to talk of himself! A primitive need indeed, but, like
+all primitive needs, compelling.
+
+We need not follow the history. Perhaps, reported, it would not seem
+very lucid. There were blanks, unsaid things, twists of phrase, eloquent
+nothings which, wonderfully understandable in themselves, do not report
+well. Somehow he must have made it plain, for Esther understood it and
+understood him, too, in a way which we, who have never sailed with him
+under the moon, cannot hope to do. Faults of expression are no hindrance
+to this kind of understanding. He did not talk well, was clumsy, not at
+all eloquent, but magically she reconstructed the hopes and dreams of
+his ambitious youth. From a few bald phrases she fashioned the
+thunderbolt which shattered them, saw him stunned, then alive again,
+struggling. With every ready imagination she leaped full upon the fires
+of an ambition which accepted no check but fed upon difficulty and
+overleapt obstacles. Between stories of his early college life, her
+sympathy sensed the deadly strain which his narrative missed and, long
+before he mentioned it, her foresight had descried the coming of hard
+won success.
+
+But the really vital thing, the core of the short history, she followed
+slowly word by word, anxiously. It told of wonders which she did not
+know--love, passion, despair! Now indeed he seemed to be speaking in a
+strange language--yet not strange entirely. She hid each broken phrase
+in her heart, knowing them rare, and wondering at the treasure entrusted
+to her. Some of her girlhood she left behind her as she listened.
+Something new, yet surely old, stirred faintly. What was this love he
+spoke of? The breath of bygone passion brushed across her untouched soul
+and left it trembling!
+
+Into the long silence which followed the story her voice drifted like a
+sigh.
+
+"If she could only have lived until you came!"
+
+It was of the girl wife she thought. Her heart was full of an aching
+pity for that other girl whom life had cheated of her sweetest gift.
+More than the man who had lived out a bitter expiation, did she pity her
+who had missed the fight, slipped out of the struggle. Death seemed to
+Esther such a terrible thing. The new life stirring in her shuddered at
+the thought of mortality. That breath of the divine which we name Love
+began already to proclaim itself immortal.
+
+Yet Molly, that other girl, had loved--and died.
+
+The doctor, too, was lost in self communings. Already, with the words
+not cold upon his lips, he was surprised that he had told the story. How
+could he? Why had he? That pitiful little story of Molly which had been
+too sacred for the touch of a word. Above all, why had the telling been
+a relief? It was a relief, he knew that. Somewhere, in the silver waters
+of Pine Lake he had buried a burden. He felt lighter, younger. Had his
+very love for Molly become a load whose proper name was remorse? Had his
+heart harboured regret and fear under the name of sorrow? Or had he
+never loved at all, never really sorrowed? Had the thing he called love
+been but a boy's hot passion caught in the grip of a man's awakening
+will, a mistake made irrevocable by a stubbornness of purpose which
+could not face defeat? Whatever it had been, it had come to be a burden.
+And the burden had lightened--it pressed no longer. In a word, he was
+free! He was his own man again, unafraid, able to look into his heart,
+to open all the windows--no dark corners, no haunting ghosts! He could
+enter now without the dread of echoing footsteps or wistful, half-heard
+whisperings. The shade of pretty, childish Molly would vex no more.
+
+The relief of it--the pain of it! It was like a new birth.
+
+Meanwhile the strong, sure strokes were bringing them swiftly nearer the
+opposite shore where yellow dots of light proclaimed the position of the
+summer cottages. One dot, larger, detached itself from the others and
+indicated the flare on the end of the landing float. Outlines began to
+be darkly discernible, the moon's silver mirror was shivered by lances
+of gold. Very soon their journey would be ended.
+
+The paddle dipped more slowly. Esther sighed, and sat up straighter.
+Considering all the trouble they had taken, neither of them seemed
+overjoyed to be so near the desired haven.
+
+"We are nearly there," said Callandar obviously.
+
+Esther looked backward over their shining wake. Something precious
+seemed to be slipping away on those fairy ripples. Yet all she could
+find to say was--
+
+"We have come very fast. You must be tired."
+
+Strange little commonplaces, how they take their due of all the
+wonderful hours of life! Esther wriggled out of the shawl, smoothed her
+hair, arranged her ruffled collar. Callandar shipped his paddle and
+resumed his coat.
+
+"Where to, now?" he asked practically.
+
+"There is only one landing, we shall be right on it in a moment.
+Then--there are several of the cottagers whom I know. But I think Mrs.
+Burton will be the best. She has often asked me to visit her and is such
+a dear that the present unexpected arrival will not make me
+less welcome."
+
+"That's good! As for me, I'll make for the station and send the
+telegrams. They won't be seriously anxious yet, do you think?
+Then--there is a train I think you said?"
+
+"You have missed that. But there is a very early morning train, a milk
+train--O gracious!" Esther broke off with a start of genuine
+consternation. "To-morrow is Sunday!"
+
+"Naturally!" in surprise.
+
+"How horribly unfortunate! The milk train doesn't run on Sunday!"
+
+"Does the milk object to Sunday travelling?"
+
+"Don't joke!" forlornly. "It's dreadful that it should be Sunday. People
+will talk!"
+
+"Oh, will they?" The doctor was immensely surprised. "Why?"
+
+"Because it's Sunday."
+
+"What has Sunday got to do with it? They can't talk. Here you are safe
+and sound with your friend Mrs. Burton by 9 o'clock, an intensely
+respectable hour even in Coombe. What can they say?"
+
+"But it's Sunday! You will return home, by rail, on Sunday. Every one
+will know. Your breaking of the Sabbath will be put down to careless
+pleasuring. It will hurt your practice terribly!"
+
+Callandar laughed heartily. But before he could reply the quick bursting
+out of a blaze upon the shore startled them both. "What is it?" he asked
+apprehensively.
+
+"Only a bonfire! Some one is giving a bonfire party. It is quite the
+fashionable thing. There will be songs and speeches with lemonade and
+cake. Oh, hurry! We shall be in time for the programme."
+
+The mysterious woman, born of the moon, was gone. In her place was a
+rumple-haired, bright-eyed child. Callandar took up the paddle with a
+whimsical smile.
+
+"Sit still or you'll overturn the canoe!" he said warningly. And across
+the narrowing stretch of water floated the opening sentiments of the
+patriotic cottagers.
+
+"O Cana_dah_, our heritage, our love--"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+
+Henry Callandar, resting neck-deep in the cool green swimming pool,
+tossed the wet hair out of his eyes and whistled ingratiatingly to a
+watching robin. A delightful sense of guilt enveloped him, for it was
+Sunday morning and, since his experience at Pine Lake a week ago, he had
+learned a little of what Sunday means in Coombe. Esther had been quite
+right in fearing that his return by train upon that sacred day might
+deal a severe blow to his prestige--at least until Mrs. Sykes had had
+time to explain to every one how unavoidable it had been--and he knew
+that if he were to be caught in his present delightful occupation his
+Presbyterian reputation might be considered lost forever.
+
+The robin twittered at him prettily but refused to be beguiled. Sunday
+bathing was not among its weaknesses. Presently it flew away.
+
+"Gone to tell the minister, I'll be bound!" murmured Callandar. "'Twill
+be a scandal in the kirk. I'll lose all my five patients. Horrid
+little bird!"
+
+Smiling, he drew himself from the embrace of the faintly shining water
+and retiring to the willow screen began to dress with that virtuous
+leisureliness which characterises those who rise before their fellows.
+He had the world to himself; a world of cool, sweet scents, pure light
+and Sabbath quiet--that wonderful quiet which seems a living thing with
+a personality of its own, so different is it from the ordinary quiet of
+work-a-day mornings.
+
+The primrose sky gave promise of a beautiful day. The blue grey vault
+overhead was already filling with shimmering golden light, the drooping
+willows and the dew-wet grass were stirring in the breeze of dawn, the
+voice of the water sang in the stillness.
+
+Callandar slipped his blue tie snugly under the collar of his white
+flannel shirt and sighed with the ecstasy of health renewed. A
+half-forgotten couplet hummed through his brain.
+
+ "Sweet day, so cool, so calm, so bright!
+ The bridal of the earth and sky--"
+
+"And it's a hymn, too, or I'm a Dutchman," he declared, much edified.
+"That proves that swimming on Sunday is quite compatible with proper
+orthodoxy of mind. Shouldn't wonder if the Johnnie who wrote that wrote
+it on Sunday morning after a dip. I'll tell Mrs. Sykes he did
+anyway--where in thunder did I put my boots?"
+
+The missing articles had apparently fulfilled the purpose of their being
+by walking away, or else the robin had collected them as evidence!
+Callandar chuckled at a whimsical vision of them in a church court,
+damningly marked "Exhibit 1." But as he searched for them the utter
+peace of the morning fled and suddenly he became conscious that he and
+the willows no longer divided the world between them. Some one was near.
+He felt eyes watching. The curious half-lost instinct which warns man of
+the approach of his kind, told him that he was no longer alone. The
+doctor fixed a stern eye on the screening willows.
+
+"Zerubbabel!" he commanded, "come out of there at once, sir!"
+
+A stirring in the bushes was the only answer.
+
+The doctor glanced at his bootless feet.
+
+"Bubble," more mildly, "if you want a swim--"
+
+"It isn't Bubble," said a meek voice, "it's me. Are you dressed enough
+for me to come out?" Without waiting for an answer the elfish face of
+Ann appeared through the willow tangle. "If you're looking for your
+boots," she remarked kindly, "they're hanging on that limb behind you."
+
+But boots no longer absorbed the doctor.
+
+"Come out of those willows, both of you!"
+
+"There's only me," still meekly. "And I didn't come to swim. I came for
+you. Honour bright! The Button Man's here."
+
+"What?"
+
+"Yes, he is. He came in a big grey car and was sitting on the doorstep
+when Aunt got up. He told her not to disturb you, but of course Aunt
+thought that you ought to know at once and when she found that you were
+gone"--a poignant pause!
+
+"Yes, when she found me gone--"
+
+"When she found you gone," slowly, "she said you must have been called
+up in the night to a patient!"
+
+"Did she really?" The doctor's laugh rang out.
+
+"And I hope the Lord will forgive her for such a nawful lie!" finished
+Ann piously.
+
+"He will, Ann, He will! You can depend on that. He has a proper respect
+for loyalty between friends. Did I understand you to say that you had
+seen my boots? Oh, yes, thanks! Now I wonder what can have brought our
+Button Man back so soon? He didn't by any chance say, I suppose?"
+
+"Him?" with scorn. "Not much fear! I'll do up your boots if you like."
+
+"Thanks, no. That would be using unseemly haste. Button-men who go
+visiting on Sunday must learn to wait. Don't you want to have a splash,
+Ann? I'll walk on slowly, you can easily catch me up!"
+
+The child looked enviously at the now sparkling water, but shook her
+head.
+
+"I'd love to. But I dasn't. Aunt always knows when I've been in. Even if
+I go and muddy myself afterwards, she knows. She says a little bird
+tells her."
+
+"A robin, I'll bet. I know that bird! Sanctimonious thing! He was
+watching me this morning and went off as fast as he knew how, to spread
+the news. Ann, you have lived in this remarkable town all your life. Can
+you tell me just why it is wicked to go swimming on Sunday?"
+
+Ann looked blank. "No. But it is. You're likely to get drowned any
+minute! Not but what I'd risk it if it wasn't for Aunt. I'm far more
+scared of Aunt than I am of God," she added reflectively.
+
+"Why, Ann! What do you mean?"
+
+"Well, you never can tell about God, but Aunt's a dead sure thing! If
+she says you'll get a smack for going in the river you'll get it--but
+God only drowns a few here and there, for examples like."
+
+"Look here!" Callandar paused in his stride and fixed her dark eyes by
+the sudden seriousness in his own. "You've got the thing all wrong. God
+doesn't drown people for swimming on Sunday. He isn't that sort at all.
+He--He--" the unaccustomed teacher of youth faltered hopelessly in his
+effort to instruct the budding mind, but Ann's eyes were questioning and
+at their bidding the essential truth of his own childhood came back to
+him. "God is Love," he declared firmly. "Great Scott! a person would
+think that we lived in the Dark Ages! Don't you let 'em frighten you,
+Ann. What are you allowed to do on Sunday anyway?"
+
+"Church," succinctly. "And Sunday-school and church and the 'Pilgrim's
+Progress.'"
+
+"Well, that's something. Jolly good book, the 'Pilgrim's Progress'!"
+
+"Yes," dubiously. "If it didn't use such a nawful lot of big words. And
+if he'd only get on a little faster. He was terrible slow."
+
+"So he was. Well, let us be merry while we can. I'll race you to the
+orchard gate."
+
+At the gate they paused to regain their lost breath and sense of decorum
+for, across the orchard, the veranda could be plainly seen with the trim
+figure of Professor Willits in close proximity to the taller and gaunter
+outline of Mrs. Sykes. With one of her shy quick gestures, the child
+slipped her fingers from the doctor's hold and sped away through the
+trees. Her friendship with Callandar was the most wonderful thing that
+had ever happened to Ann, but she was not of the kind which
+parades intimacy.
+
+"Patient dead?" asked Willits dryly after they had shaken hands.
+
+"Patient?" Then, catching sight of the flaming red in the cheeks of his
+landlady, "Dead? Certainly not. Even my patients know better than to die
+on a morning like this. But whatever possessed you to disturb a
+righteous household? Mrs. Sykes, he doesn't deserve breakfast, but I do.
+When do you think--"
+
+"In just about five minutes, Doctor. Soon's I get the coffee boiling and
+the cream skimmed. I didn't know," with an anxiously reproving glance,
+"but what you might want to get washed up after you got in."
+
+"I--no, I think I'm quite clean enough, Mrs. Sykes. But it was very
+thoughtful of you to wait--"
+
+"Aunt, the coffee's boiling over!" The warning was distinctly audible
+and, with a gesture of one who abandons an untenable position, Mrs.
+Sykes retreated upon the kitchen.
+
+The visitor watched her flight with mild amaze.
+
+"I suppose I should seem curious if I were to ask why the excellent Mrs.
+Sykes imperils her immortal soul in your behalf? But why in the name of
+common sense is the peril necessary? It isn't a crime, is it, for a
+medical man to get up early and go for a swim?"
+
+"You forget what day it is," said Callandar solemnly. "Or rather, you
+never knew. I myself was not properly acquainted with Sunday until I
+came to this place. Your presence here is in itself a scandal. People do
+not visit upon the Seventh day in Coombe."
+
+"No? You should have informed me of the town's eccentricities. As it is,
+if my presence imperils your social standing you can seclude me until
+the next train."
+
+"Better than that," cheerfully, "I can take you to church."
+
+The alarmed look upon the professor's face was so enticing that
+Callandar continued with glee:
+
+"Why not? I have always thought your objection to church-going a blot
+upon an otherwise estimable character. Hitherto I have been too busy to
+attend to it, but now--"
+
+"Quit chaffing, Harry! I came up because I had to see you. You pay no
+attention to my letters. I never dreamed that you would stay a month in
+this backwater. What is wrong? What is the matter with you?"
+
+"Look at me--and ask those questions again."
+
+The keen eyes of the Button-Moulder looked deep into the doctor's steady
+ones. There was a slight pause. Then--
+
+"Yes, I see what you mean. I saw it as you came across the orchard." The
+sharp voice softened. "My anxiety for your health could hardly survive
+the way in which you leaped that fence! But all this makes it only the
+more mysterious. Have you found the fountain of youth or--or what?"
+
+Callandar threw an affectionate arm over the other man's shoulders.
+
+"I _am_ young, amn't I! Trouble is, I didn't know it." He ruffled his
+hair at the side so that the grey showed plainly. "Terrible thing when
+one loses the realisation of youth! But I've had my lesson. I'll never
+be old again, never!"
+
+In spite of himself the professor's straight mouth curved a little. A
+spark of pride glowed in his cool eyes as he bent them upon the smiling
+face of his friend. Yet his tone was mocking as he said, "Then it is the
+fountain of youth? One is never too old to find that chimera."
+
+"It's not something that I've found, old cynic. It's something that I've
+lost. Look at me hard! Don't you notice something missing? Did you ever
+read the 'Pilgrim's Progress'?"
+
+"The Pilgrim's--"
+
+"Breakfast is ready!" called Ann, teetering on her toes in the doorway.
+
+"The Pil--"
+
+"And Aunt--says--will--you--please--come--at--once--so's--the
+coff--ee--won't--be--cold!" chanted Ann.
+
+"Yes, Ann. We're coming."
+
+"But I want to know--"
+
+"Old man, I'll tell you after breakfast. I want you to see me eat. I
+wish to demonstrate that there is no deception. A miracle has really
+happened. No one could observe me breakfasting and doubt it!"
+
+When they were seated he looked guilelessly into the still disapproving
+face of Mrs. Sykes. "Perhaps you are wondering, as I did, what has
+brought Professor Willits back to Coombe," he said, "but time and space
+mean little to professors, and the fact is that Willits has long wished
+to hear a sermon by the Reverend Mr. Macnair. He is coming with me this
+morning. Perhaps you hadn't better mention it, though. It might disturb
+Mr. Macnair to know that so eminent a critic was listening to him."
+
+The eminent critic frowned grimly and took a fourth cream biscuit
+without noticing it.
+
+"Not a mite!" declared Mrs. Sykes. "The man ain't born that can fluster
+Mr. Macnair. Nor yet the woman, unless it's Esther Coombe--Land sakes,
+Doctor! I forgot to tell you how that cup tips! Ann, get a clean table
+napkin. I hope your nice white pants ain't ruined, Doctor? I really
+ought to put that cup away but it's a good cup if it's held steady and I
+hate to waste good things. Last time it tipped was when the Ladies' Aid
+met here. Mrs. Coombe had it and the whole cup spilled right over her
+dress. I was that mortified! But she didn't seem to care. I can't
+imagine what's the matter with that woman. She's getting dreadful
+careless about her clothes. Next time I met her she wore that same
+dress, splash an' all! 'Tisn't as if she hadn't plenty of new
+things,--more than they can afford, if what folks say is true. You
+haven't met Mrs. Coombe yet, have you, Doctor?"
+
+"She is away from home."
+
+"Well, when you do meet her you'll see what I mean, or like as not you
+won't, being a man. Men never seem to see anything wrong with Mary
+Coombe. But Esther must feel dreadful mortified sometimes when her Ma
+forgets to get hooked up behind. Esther's as neat as a pin. Always was.
+Why, even when she got home last week after that awful time you and she
+had up at Pine Lake, and her having to stay overnight without so much as
+a clean collar, she walked in here as fresh as a daisy--won't you let me
+give you some more coffee, Professor?"
+
+"Thank you, yes. You were saying--"
+
+"Willits, do you think so much coffee is good for you?"
+
+"Land sakes, Doctor, my coffee won't hurt him! It never seems to trouble
+you any. As I was saying, one would almost have thought that what with
+picnicking in the bush all day and trapesing around in a canoe half the
+night and having to stay where she wasn't expected and wouldn't like to
+ask the loan of the flat-irons--"
+
+"Please, Mrs. Sykes, don't let Ann eat another biscuit. I don't want her
+to be ill just when I want a day off to take Willits to church. Willits,
+as your medical adviser, I forbid more coffee. He will really injure
+himself, Mrs. Sykes, if I do not take him away. He isn't used to
+breakfasts like this and his constitution won't stand it."
+
+Mrs. Sykes beamed graciously under this delicate compliment and
+confiscated Ann's latest biscuit with a ruthless hand. "If you gentlemen
+would like to sit in the parlour--" she offered graciously. But
+Callandar with equal graciousness declined. The office would do quite
+well enough. Willits might want to smoke. "And as it-seems that my watch
+has stopped," he added, "perhaps you would be so kind as to tell us
+when it is time to change for church."
+
+The professor settled himself primly upon the hardest chair which the
+office contained and refused a cigar.
+
+"You seem to have acquired a reprehensible habit of fooling, Henry," he
+said. "Your language also is strange. When, for instance, you say
+'change for church,' to what sort of transformation do you refer?"
+
+Callandar chuckled.
+
+"Only to your clothes, old chap. Don't worry. You wouldn't expect me to
+go to church in flannels?"
+
+"I should not expect you to go to church at all."
+
+"Well, the fact is, old man, you are painfully ignorant. I do go to
+church, and the proper church costume for a professional man is a frock
+coat and silk hat. But as you are a traveller, and as you are not
+exactly a professional man, I shall not lose caste by taking you as
+you are."
+
+The imperturbable Willits waived the point. "I understood you to say,
+also, that your watch had stopped. Was that a joke?"
+
+"No such luck!" The doctor took out his watch and shook it. "Mainspring
+gone, I'm afraid!"
+
+"A month ago," said the professor, "if your watch had stopped you would
+have had a fit."
+
+"Really! Was I ever such an ass? Well, I'm not the slave of my watch any
+longer. Time goes softly in Coombe. Aren't you glad I'm not taking
+a fit?"
+
+"I am glad. But I want to understand."
+
+"Then let's return to the 'Pilgrim's Progress.' Ann and I were talking
+about it this morning. Do you remember the man with the pack on his back
+and how when he reached a certain spot the pack, seemingly without
+effort of his own, fell off and was seen no more?"
+
+Willits reflected. The doctor was thoroughly in earnest now. "I seem to
+recollect the incident to which you refer," he said after a pause. "If I
+remember rightly it is an allegory and is used in a definitely religious
+sense. The man with the pack meets a certain spiritual crisis. Do I
+understand that you--er--that you have experienced conversion? I am not
+guilty of speaking lightly of so important a matter, but I hardly know
+how to frame my question."
+
+The doctor tilted back his chair and looked dreamily out of the window.
+"I did not mean you to take my illustration literally. My religious
+beliefs are very much the same as they have always been. To a
+materialist like you they seem, I know, absurdly orthodox; to a church
+member in good standing they might seem fatally lax; but such as they
+are I have not changed them. Still, I was, as you know, a man with a
+burden. You may call the burden consequence or what you will, the name
+doesn't matter. The weight of that youthful, selfish, unpardonable act
+which bound a young girl to me without giving her the protection which
+that bond demanded, was always upon me, crushing out the joy of life.
+The news of her death made no difference, except to render me hopeless
+of ever making up to her for the wrong I had done. Her death did not set
+me free, it bound me closer.
+
+"I seemed like one caught in the tow of some swift tide, always fighting
+to get back, yet eternally being drawn away. The tide still flows out,
+for the tide of human life is the only tide which never returns, but I
+have ceased to struggle. I no longer look back. It is not that God has
+forgiven me (I have never been able to think of God as otherwise than
+forgiving), it is that I have forgiven myself."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+
+"It amounts to this, then," said Willits presently. "You are cured. The
+balance is swinging true again. It has taken a long time, but the cure
+is all the more complete for that. Now, when are you coming back to us?"
+
+Callandar did not answer.
+
+"You are needed. Not a day passes that your absence is not felt. You
+used to have a strong sense of responsibility toward your work. What has
+become of it?"
+
+"I have it still. I am not slighting my work by taking time to build
+myself into better shape for it."
+
+"But you will simply stagnate here!" querulously. "You are becoming
+slack already. You let your watch run down."
+
+The doctor laughed.
+
+"If many of my patients could do the same without worry they would not
+need a doctor. Half of the nervous trouble of the age can be ultimately
+traced to watches which won't run down. Leisure--unhurried leisure--that
+is what we want. We've got to have it!"
+
+"Piffle! I shall hear you talk about inviting your soul next."
+
+"Well, if I do he is in better shape to accept the invitation than he
+used to be."
+
+The professor's gesture was sufficiently expressive.
+
+"Very well. I give up. Remember, I advise against it. I think you are
+making a mistake!--I'll have that cigar now. I suppose one is allowed to
+smoke in the garden?"
+
+"Yes, do, that's a good fellow! I must run up and make myself
+presentable. I suppose you haven't seen Lorna lately?"
+
+"I have seen her very lately. She asked to be remembered."
+
+"Oh, you old prevaricator! Lorna never asked to be remembered in her
+life. What she really said was, 'If you see Harry give him my love!'"
+
+"If she did, you don't deserve it! Oh, boy," with sudden earnestness,
+"why will you make a fool of yourself? She's a woman in a thousand.
+Others see it if you don't. Since you've been away, MacGregor is paying
+her marked attention."
+
+"Good old Gregor!" The doctor's exclamation was one of pure pleasure.
+"And yet you say my absence isn't doing any good? Go along with you!
+Take your cigar and wait for me underneath the Bough. I'll not be long."
+
+He was long, however. The professor's cigar and his cogitations came to
+an end together without the promised reappearance. Even when he returned
+to the office it was empty except for Ann, who in the stiffest of
+starched muslin and whitest of stockings was spread out carefully upon
+the widest chair. Her black hair was parted as if by a razor blade and
+plastered tightly in slablike masses while the tension of the braids was
+such that they stuck out on either side of the small head like decorated
+sign posts. Weariness, disgust and defiance were painted visibly upon
+the elfish face.
+
+"This is the best chair!" said Ann politely, "but if you'll excuse me I
+shan't get up. Every time I sit down it makes a crease in a fresh place.
+By the time church is over I look like I was crumpled all over. It's the
+starch!" she added in sullen explanation.
+
+Willits, who liked children but did not understand them, essayed a mild
+joke.
+
+"Did you put some starch in your hair too?"
+
+Ann flushed scarlet with anger and mortification and made no answer.
+
+"It looked much nicer at breakfast," blundered on the professor
+genially. "If I were you I should unstarch it--" he paused abashed by
+the glare in Ann's black eyes and turned helplessly to Callandar, who
+had just come in, resplendent in faultless church attire.
+
+"Don't listen to him, Ann!" said the doctor. "Button moulders are so
+ignorant. They know absolutely nothing about hair or the necessity for
+special tidiness on Sundays. All the same, I'm afraid we shall have a
+headache if we don't let a reef out somewhere. Sit still a moment, Ann.
+I was always intended for a barber."
+
+To the fresh astonishment of Willits his friend's skilful hands busied
+themselves with the tightly drawn hair which, only too eager for
+freedom, soon fell into some of its usual curves. With a quick, shy
+gesture the child drew the adored hand to her lips and kissed it.
+Callandar turned a deep red. The professor chuckled, and Ann, furious at
+betraying herself before him, fled precipitately, the crackling starch
+of her stiff skirts rattling as she ran.
+
+For a moment Willits enjoyed his friend's embarrassment and then, as the
+probable meaning of the frock coat began to dawn upon him, his
+expression changed to one of apprehension.
+
+"You weren't in earnest about that church nonsense, were you?"
+
+"Certainly. If you need a clean collar take one of mine, and hurry up.
+The first bell has stopped ringing."
+
+"But I'm not going!"
+
+"Not if I ask you nicely?"
+
+"But why? What are you going for?"
+
+"Come and see."
+
+The shrewd eyes of the professor grew coldly thoughtful.
+
+"That is exactly what I shall do," he decided.
+
+From the home of Mrs. Sykes upon Duke Street to the First Presbyterian
+Church upon Oliver's Hill is a brisk walk of fifteen minutes. As Coombe
+lies in a valley, Oliver's Hill is not a hill, really, but a gentle
+eminence. It is a charming, tree-lined street bordered by the homes and
+gardens of the well-to-do. It is, in fact, _the_ street of Coombe, and
+to live upon Oliver's Hill is a social passport seldom mentioned but
+never ignored.
+
+As if social prominence were not enough, it had another claim upon the
+affections and memories of many, for up this hill every Sunday in a long
+and goodly stream poured the first Presbyterians who were not only the
+elect but also the elite of Coombe. To see Knox Church "come out" was
+one of the sights of the town and, decorously hidden behind a muslin
+curtain, a stranger might feast his eyes upon greatness unrebuked. It
+was said at one time that every silk hat in Coombe attended Knox Church,
+but this was vainglory, for it was afterwards proved that several
+repaired to St. Michael's and at least one to the Baptist tabernacle.
+With this explanation you will at once understand why the sidewalk was a
+few feet broader upon the church side of Oliver's Hill, and if this
+circumstance savours to you of ecclesiastical privilege we can only
+conclude that you are not Presbyterian, and request you not to be so
+narrow-minded.
+
+As the doctor and his half-reluctant friend turned at the foot of the
+hill they were immediately absorbed by the stream pressing upwards, for
+the last bell had already begun to ring.
+
+"We're all right," whispered Callandar encouragingly. "It rings for five
+minutes."
+
+The professor opened his lips to say something, but shut them with a
+snap. There was probably method in the doctor's madness but it was
+method which would never be disclosed through much questioning. With an
+expression of intense solemnity he fixed his eyes, gimlet-like, upon the
+middle button of the Sunday blouse of the lady in front of him and
+followed up the hill. To the absurdly low-toned remarks of his companion
+he vouchsafed no reply whatever.
+
+They entered the church to the subdued rustle of Sunday silks and the
+whisper of Sunday voices. At the door some one shook hands with
+Callandar and remarked in a ghostly whisper that it was a fine day. A
+grave young man, in black, led them to a pew half way down the aisle.
+Most of the pews were already full, the latest comers showing slight
+signs of hurry; and as they seated themselves the bell stopped and the
+organ began.
+
+There was a moment's expectant interval and then two doors, one at
+either side of the pulpit, opened simultaneously and the minister
+entered from one side, the choir from the other. Before the minister
+walked a very solemn man with abnormally long upper lip. This was Elder
+John MacTavish, a man of large substance, of great piety and poor
+digestion. It was upon this latter account that the doctor always
+observed him with peculiar interest, for had not Mrs. Sykes declared
+that if he should only be called in once to prescribe for John
+MacTavish's stomach his future in Coombe was secure?
+
+"Doctor Parker is doing him just no good at all," she reported. "So keep
+an eye on him. If he looks especially dour it's a good sign."
+
+"Would you say that he looks especially 'dour'?" whispered Callandar to
+Willits.
+
+"I should. Why?"
+
+"Oh, nothing--only it's a good sign! Hush!"
+
+When the minister has entered the pulpit at Knox Church there is a
+moment during which you may bow your head, or, if you consider this
+popish, you may cover your face with your gloved hand. It is a moment of
+severe quiet. One does not dare even to cough. Hence the doctor's
+warning "hush!"
+
+But this morning the quiet was rudely broken. Somewhere, just outside
+the open windows, sounded a laugh; a young, clear, unrestrained laugh,
+then the call of a sharp whistle, and next moment, through the doors not
+yet closed, hurtled something yellow and long-legged! With a joyous bark
+it rushed along the nearest aisle, across the front of the pulpit, down
+the other aisle and out at the door again.
+
+The congregation was amazed and grieved. Its serenity was shaken, even
+the minister seemed disturbed. Some younger members of the choir
+giggled. It was most unseemly.
+
+"Naughty dog!" said the voice outside the window. "Go home! Don't dare
+to lick my hand!"
+
+One of the choir members grew red in the face and choked. It was
+outrageous! And then, as if nothing at all had happened, the girl who
+had been the cause of the whole unfortunate incident entered and walked
+down the aisle. She appeared to be quite undisturbed; was, in fact,
+smiling. Every eye in the church followed her as, a little out of
+breath, a little flushed, with dark hair slightly disarranged as if from
+an exciting chase, she took her seat, unconscious, or careless, of them
+all. The minister, who had paused with almost reproachful obviousness,
+gave out the opening psalm and the congregation freed itself from
+embarrassment with an accustomed flutter of hymn-books.
+
+Going to church was somewhat interesting after all, thought Professor
+Willits. Then, in common with the rest of the congregation, he detached
+his eyes from the girl's exquisite profile and focused them upon
+the minister.
+
+Friends of the Rev. Angus Macnair asserted that he was a man in a
+thousand. For that matter he was a man in any number of thousands; for
+his was a personality, true to type, yet not likely to be duplicated.
+Born of a Highland Scotch father and a Lowland Scotch mother, he
+developed almost exclusively in his father's vein. Loyal in the extreme,
+narrow to fanaticism, passionate, emotional, yet trained to the cold
+control of a red Indian, he was a man of power, at once the victim and
+the triumph of his creed.
+
+Early in life he had come under a conviction of sin, had received
+assurance of forgiveness and of election and, before he had left the
+Public School, his Call had come. From that time forward he had burnt
+with a fierce fire of godliness which, together with a natural
+incapacity for seeing two sides to anything, had carried him safely
+through the manifold temptations to unbelief and heresy which beset a
+modern college education. Many wondered that a man so gifted should
+remain in Coombe, but the explanation is simple. He suited Coombe; the
+larger churches of the larger cities he did not suit. Lax opinions,
+heretical doctrines, outlooks appallingly wide were creeping in
+everywhere. It is safe to say that in most of the churches of his own
+faith he would have seemed bravely but hopelessly behind the times. But
+in Coombe he had found his place. Coombe was conservative. Coombe
+Presbyterians were still content to do without frills in the matter of
+doctrine. Coombe could still listen to hell fire and, if not unduly
+disturbed, did not at least smile behind its hand.
+
+Something of all this the Button-Moulder, student of men, felt as he
+watched the sombre yet glowing face of the preacher.
+
+The sermon that morning was one of a series dealing with the
+Commandments and the text was, "Thou shalt not bear false witness
+against thy neighbour." The speaker had the scholar's power of
+concentration, the orator's power of delivery. He was both poignant and
+personal. He seemed to do everything save mention names. Some sinners in
+that congregation, thought Willits, had undoubtedly been bearing false
+witness, and were now listening to a few plain words! Cautiously he
+glanced around, almost expecting to see the tale of guilt and sorrow
+legibly imprinted upon some culprit's face. But no one seemed at all
+disturbed, save one old lady who glared back at him an unmistakable
+"Thou art the man!" The congregation sat, serenely, soberly attentive,
+testifying their entire agreement with the speaker by an occasional sigh
+or nod. The more fiery the preacher's denunciations, the more complacent
+his hearers. In astonishment Willits realised that, if appearances go
+for anything, no one in Knox Presbyterian Church had ever borne false
+witness against anybody!
+
+The collecting of the offering was somewhat of an anti-climax, as was
+also the anthem by the choir, the latter consisting of a complicated
+arrangement of the question, "If a man die shall he live again?"
+reiterated singly by all parts in succession, by duets and quartets and
+finally by the whole choir, without so much as a shadow of an answer
+appearing anywhere.
+
+Willits gave a long sigh as they stepped into the summer day again. It
+had not been uninteresting, but he was quite ready for lunch. The
+doctor, on the contrary, seemed unaccountably to linger. He even paused
+to talk to a fat lady in mauve velvet who had mauve cheeks to match.
+
+"So glad to see you in church, Doctor! Young men, you know, are inclined
+to be young men! And these nice days--very tempting, I'm sure! Is your
+friend a stranger?"
+
+Callandar gravely introduced Willits, who became immediately convinced
+that this mauve lady was the most unpleasant person he had ever seen and
+doubtless the very person to whom the minister had spoken in his sermon.
+
+Why had Callandar let him in for this? Why was he waiting around for
+anyway? There he was, shaking hands with some one else--this time it was
+the girl who had laughed.
+
+"May I present my friend, Professor Willits, Miss Coombe?"
+
+The girl extended a graceful hand and for an instant the professor was
+permitted a look into eyes which caused him to set his firm lips
+somewhat grimly.
+
+"And I know, Willits, you will be delighted to meet our pastor, Mr.
+Macnair."
+
+A spark began to glow in the professor's eye, but Callandar's face was
+guileless. The minister shook hands with professional heartiness, but
+his gaze, Willits thought, was wandering. He began to feel interested.
+
+"Very fine day," he remarked imperturbably.
+
+"Lovely, lovely," agreed the minister, still heartily. The mauve lady
+was waiting for the pastoral handshake, but he did not notice her. He
+was watching the dark girl talking to Callandar.
+
+"What is so rare as a day in June?" said Willits, with deliberate
+malice.
+
+"Ah, yes, very much so. Delighted to have met you. You will excuse me,
+I'm sure. Annabel," with an impatient glance toward a stout, awkward
+woman in the background, "if you are not quite ready I think Miss Coombe
+and I will walk on." He moved toward the dark girl as he spoke and
+Willits followed.
+
+"Then I'll have to come some other day to get the roses," they heard
+Callandar say. "But remember I haven't a single flower in the office. So
+it will have to be soon."
+
+"At any time," answered the girl, flushing slightly.
+
+"No flowers?" repeated the minister, a little fussily, "dear me, I will
+speak to my sister. Annabel will be delighted to send you any quantity,
+Doctor. You must really drop in to see our garden, some day. Sunday, of
+course, is a busy day with me. Come, Miss Esther. Good morning, Doctor.
+Good morning, Professor. Glad to see you at our services any time--"
+
+Bowing courteously, the minister moved away, followed perforce by Miss
+Coombe. (An invitation to lunch at the manse is an honour not to be
+trifled with.) Perforce also the doctor stood aside and Willits caught
+the look, half shy, half merry, which the girl threw him from the depths
+of her remarkable eyes. It was really quite interesting, and rather
+funny. Not often had he seen fair ladies carried off from under the nose
+of Henry Callandar. Transferring his glance quickly to the face of his
+friend, he hoped to surprise a look of chagrin upon his abashed
+countenance, but the countenance was not abashed, and the look which he
+did surprise there startled him considerably. Henry Callandar, of all
+men, to be looking after any girl with a look like that!
+
+Well, he had been invited to come and see. And he had seen.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+
+As Esther walked away, demurely acquiescent, by the side of the Rev. Mr.
+Macnair she was conscious of a conflict of emotions. The sight of the
+doctor's disappointed face as he stood hat in hand, awoke regret and
+perhaps a trifle of girlish gratification. She had been sorry herself to
+miss that half hour among the roses but she was still too young and too
+happy to know how few are such hours, how irrevocable such losses. Also,
+it had seemed good to her maidenly pride that Dr. Callandar should
+know--well, that he should see--just exactly what he should know and see
+she did not formulate. But underneath her temporary disappointment she
+felt as light and glad as a bird in springtime.
+
+The minister was speaking, but he had been speaking for several moments
+before Esther's delighted flutter would permit of her listening to him.
+When at last her thoughts came back she noticed, with a happy-guilty
+start, that his tone was one of dignified reproof.
+
+"Naturally we all understand," he was saying, "at least I hope we all
+understand, that you are not primarily to blame. At the worst one can
+only impute carelessness--"
+
+"Oh, but it wasn't carelessness! You don't know Buster. He's the
+_cleverest_ dog! He hid. I had no idea that he was with me until he
+bounded past me at the church door. And though I whistled and tried to
+grab him he was in before I knew it. I'll make him sit up meekly and beg
+your pardon."
+
+A flush of what in a layman might have been anger crimsoned the
+minister's cheek.
+
+"You are well aware," stiffly, "that I am not referring to the incident
+of the dog."
+
+"To what then? I am sorry I wasn't listening but you seemed to be
+scolding and I couldn't think of anything else." Even the abstruse Mr.
+Macnair saw that her surprise was genuine. His tone grew gentler.
+
+"You are very young, Miss Esther. But since I must speak more plainly, I
+was referring to that mad escapade of a week ago. Don't misunderstand
+me, the blame undoubtedly rests upon the man who was thoughtless enough,
+selfish enough, to put you in such a position."
+
+"Whatever do you mean?" Esther was torn between anger and a desire to
+laugh. But seeing the earnestness in his face, anger predominated. "Can
+you possibly be referring to the breakdown of Dr. Callandar's motor?"
+she asked coldly.
+
+"I refer to the whole unfortunate adventure. If your step-mother had
+been at home I feel sure it would not have happened. She would never
+have permitted the excursion to take place."
+
+The girl's dark brows drew together in their own peculiar manner.
+
+"Let us be honest," she suggested. "You know quite well that my
+step-mother would not have bothered about it in the least."
+
+"I feel it my duty," went on the minister, "to tell you that there were
+some peculiar features in connection with the disablement of the motor.
+I understand from the mechanician who accompanied Dr. Callandar to the
+spot for the recovery of the machine that there was really very little
+the matter. A short ten minutes completed the necessary repairs."
+
+"Ten minutes? Oh, how silly he must have felt--the doctor I mean. After
+all the hours he spent and the things he said." She laughed with
+reminiscent amusement. "He threw the monkey wrench at it, too. And he
+thought he knew so much about motors!"
+
+Her companion observed her with sombre eyes. Was it possible that she
+had actually missed the point of his remark?
+
+"Can you understand," he said slowly, "how a man used to driving a motor
+car can have been entirely baffled by so slight an accident? To me it
+seems--odd!"
+
+"So Dr. Callandar thought, only he expressed it more forcibly."
+
+"And you?"
+
+"Well, I suppose I was heartless. But it was the funniest thing I ever
+saw!" Esther's laughter bubbled again.
+
+They were now at the manse gate. He saw that he must hasten.
+
+"My dear Miss Esther, let us be serious. I do not like to
+disturb your mind but I have a duty in this matter. Has it never
+occurred to you that this so-called accident may not have been
+so--so--er--entirely--er--irremediable, so to speak, as it was made
+to appear?"
+
+"Do you mean that he did it on purpose?" The tone was one of blank
+amazement. Esther's hand was upon the gate but forgot to press the
+latch. She was a quick brained girl and the insinuation in the
+minister's words had been patent. Yet that he should be capable of such
+an idea seemed incredible! Had he been looking at her he would have seen
+the clear red surge over her face from neck to brow and then recede, but
+not before it had lighted a danger spark in her eyes.
+
+"You did mean that!" She went on before he could answer. The scorn in
+her voice stung. But the Reverend Angus was not a coward.
+
+"That was my meaning. You are a young and inexperienced girl. You go
+upon an excursion with a man whom none of us know. An accident, a very
+peculiar accident, happens. You are led to believe that the damage is
+serious, but later, when the matter is investigated, it is found to have
+been trifling. What is the natural inference? What have you to say?"
+
+"It has been said before," calmly.
+
+"Well--"
+
+"Thou shalt not bear false witness against thy neighbor."
+
+They faced each other, the man and the girl. And the man's eyes fell.
+
+"God forbid that I should do so," he murmured.
+
+Esther's face softened. Her anger was not proof against humility.
+
+"If you are really disturbed about it," she said slowly, "I can reassure
+you. You say that you do not know Dr. Callandar. But I do know him. The
+whole situation rests upon that. He is a man incapable of the caddish
+villainy you impute. Why he could not repair the car, I cannot say. I
+think," with a smile, "that he does not know quite as much about cars as
+he thinks he does. But he did his best, I know that! When we found his
+efforts useless we took the only course possible and made at once for
+the canoe. We had to steal it, you remember, but the doctor showed no
+faltering in that. He was also prepared to shoot the dog. And you have
+my word for it that he made no attempt to swamp the canoe or to
+otherwise complicate matters. I arrived at Mrs. Burton's by ten minutes
+past nine. She was delighted to see me. Dr. Callandar walked over to the
+station and sent telegrams to Aunt Amy and Mrs. Sykes. He returned to
+Coombe upon the morning train. I remained with Mrs. Burton and came back
+in time for school on the milk train Monday morning. That is the whole
+story of the adventure and, to be frank, I enjoyed it immensely."
+
+The minister shook his head, but he could say no more. His attitude had
+not changed, yet he felt a sense of shame before the straightforward
+honesty of Esther's outlook. She had no sense of the evil of the world.
+That very fact seemed to make the world less evil.
+
+"When will Mrs. Coombe be back?" he asked abruptly.
+
+Immediately the girl's frank look clouded. "I do not know," she said.
+"She hardly ever tells me when she is returning. She may be at home any
+day now. You know how impulsively she acts."
+
+"Yes--just so." The minister's manner was absent. "The fact is I wish
+very much to speak with your mother regarding a certain matter. Not the
+matter we have been discussing, we will say no more of that, but a
+matter of great importance to--er--to me. The importance is such indeed
+that I doubt if I am justified in delaying longer if you have no idea of
+when I may expect to see her."
+
+Had Esther been noticing she must have remarked the unusual agitation of
+his manner, but Esther was not noticing.
+
+"Is it anything you could discuss with me?" she asked innocently.
+"Mother cares less and less for business. Unless it is something quite
+private she will probably turn it over to me in any case."
+
+"But this is not--er--a matter of business. Not exactly. Not a business
+matter at all, in fact. It is a matter which--"
+
+"Oh, there you are!" Miss Annabel's voice was breathless but gratified
+and free from the faintest suspicion of having arrived, as usual, at
+exactly the wrong moment. "Are you showing Esther the new rose, Angus?
+Such a disappointment, Esther, my dear! I had quite made up my mind that
+it was to be red. It came out pink, and such a beautifully strong
+plant--such a waste! I simply can't make myself care for pink roses.
+They are so common. Was I very long? You must both be starved. I know I
+am. Won't you come upstairs, Esther, and put off your hat?"
+
+Esther intimated that she would. Just now, she had no desire for the
+further company of Mr. Macnair. She was conscious even of a faint
+stirring of dislike. Therefore the eagerness with which she followed
+Miss Annabel filled that good lady with hospitable reproach.
+
+"I didn't intend to be so long," she apologised, "but you know what
+choir-leaders are? And Angus won't speak to him. I can't make Angus out
+lately. Tell me," abruptly, as they stood in the cool front room with
+its closed green shutters, "did _you_ notice anything peculiar
+about Angus?"
+
+"No," in surprise, "is he peculiar?"
+
+"Quite. He's getting fussy. He never used to be fussy. The trouble was
+to induce him to be fussy enough. Except over church matters. But this
+morning he was just like an ordinary man. About his collar" (Miss
+Annabel had a fascinating habit of disjointing her sentences anywhere)
+"nothing suited him. And you know, Esther, what care I always take with
+his collars. He said they were too shiny. Of course they're shiny. Why
+not? He said he noticed that men weren't wearing shine on their collars
+now. Fancy that!"
+
+"Not really?" Esther's fresh laugh rang out.
+
+"Well, words to that effect. He asked me if I wanted to make him a
+laughing stock before the congregation. Did you ever? And he _banged
+the door_!"
+
+"Does he not bang doors usually?"
+
+"Never. And he banged it hard. It shook the house."
+
+"But people have to bang doors, hard, sometimes, even ministers. I
+wouldn't worry if I were you. It probably did him the world of good. As
+for the collars--he may have been noticing Dr. Callandar's. Mrs. Sykes
+says the doctor sends all his laundry to the city."
+
+"You don't say? And is it different from ours?"
+
+"I--yes, I think it does look different."
+
+"How did you happen to notice it? Oh, Esther, you aren't really carrying
+on with that strange young man, are you?"
+
+The girl's cheek flamed. The question, she knew, was void of offence.
+"Carrying on" meant nothing, but the homely phrase seemed suddenly very
+displeasing--horribly vulgar! Her very ears burned. What if, some time,
+he should hear a like phrase used to describe their wonderful
+friendship? The thought was acute discomfort. Oh, how mean and small and
+misunderstanding people were!
+
+She took off her hat and smoothed her hair without answering. But Miss
+Annabel was so used to having her anxious queries unanswered that she
+did not notice the lack.
+
+"I know you haven't, of course," she went on. "But Coombe is such a
+place for gossip. Ever since you and he had that smash-up with the
+automobile, people have kind of got it into their heads that you're
+keeping company. But I said to Mrs. Miller, 'I know Esther Coombe better
+than you do and it isn't at all likely that a girl who can pick and
+choose will go off with a stranger--even if he is a doctor. And,' I
+said, 'how do we know he is a doctor anyway?' Goodness knows he came
+into the place like a tramp. You've heard, haven't you, Esther, how he
+came into the Imperial with nothing but a knapsack and riding in
+Mournful Mark's democrat?"
+
+This time she did pause for an answer and Esther said "Yes," shortly.
+
+"Then that settles it. I knew you had some sense. Just like I said to
+Mrs. Miller. Next time I see her I'll tell her what you say. 'Tisn't as
+if we knew anything about the man. No wonder you feel vexed about it."
+
+"I hope you will not mention the subject at all."
+
+"Of course not. Except to tell them how silly they are. You're sure you
+didn't notice anything queer about Angus when you were walking home
+from church?"
+
+"Nothing at all." Yet, as she said it, it occurred to her that she had
+noticed something unusual in the minister's manner--an agitation, a lack
+of poise! "Perhaps he is disturbed about church matters," she suggested,
+thinking of the interrupted conversation about the important matter
+which was not business. "Why don't you ask him?"
+
+Miss Annabel shook her head. "Oh, I never ask him anything! But,"
+cheerfully, "I almost always manage to find out. I'm rather good at
+finding out things. But this isn't a church matter. I know all the
+symptoms of that. This is different. It's--it's more human!"
+
+"Liver?" suggested Esther.
+
+"No. I know the symptoms of liver too, Esther! What if it should be
+_Love_!"
+
+The idea was so daring that Miss Macnair justly spoke it in italics. But
+the attitude of her listener was disappointing. Esther looked as if it
+might be quite a natural thing for the minister of Knox Church to
+fall in love.
+
+"Love!" she said the word caressingly. "Perhaps it is. They say love is
+a disturbing thing. But--does it usually make a man bang doors?"
+
+"It often turns a sensible man into a fool." Miss Annabel's tone held
+bitterness. "But what I can't discover is this! If Angus is in love,
+whom is he in love with?" The question was delivered with such force
+that Esther jumped.
+
+"I'm sure I don't know!"
+
+"Nor do I. And that is what I must find out. I have my suspicions. My
+dear, don't let me startle you, but have you ever thought that it might
+possibly be--your mother?"
+
+"Gracious! So it might! I never thought of it."
+
+"I have not been blind," went on Miss Annabel complacently. "I have
+noticed how often he calls at the Elms and how long he stays. Also how
+very considerate he is of Mrs. Coombe, how patient with Jane, how
+indulgent with you--"
+
+"Indulgent with me!" indignantly. "Why should he be 'indulgent' with
+me?"
+
+"Why, indeed," asked Miss Macnair pointedly, "unless on account of your
+mother?"
+
+Esther subdued a desire to laugh. Many little things, half-observed,
+seemed to fit in with Miss Annabel's theory. Yet, somehow, instinct told
+her that the theory was wrong.
+
+"I don't believe it," she declared finally. "At first I thought it
+possible but now I seem to know that we're on the wrong track. Mr.
+Macnair is not in love with mother, and as for mother--Oh, the thing is
+absurd! Aren't you awfully hungry, Miss Annabel?"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+
+It was a curious luncheon party. The host was abstracted, nervous, far
+from being his usual bland self. The guest was subdued, silent, uneasy
+for no reason at all. The hostess, usually an ever-springing well of
+comment and question, had decided upon quiet dignity as the most fitting
+expression of sensibilities ignored by the banging of doors.
+
+"I think, Angus," she ventured once, "that you ought to remonstrate with
+Mr. McCandless in regard to 'If a man die.' An Easter Anthem is an
+Easter Anthem, but after five renderings it is hardly fair to expect the
+congregation to behave as if they had never heard it before."
+
+"Quite so," said the minister absently.
+
+"Then may I tell him myself that it is your special request--"
+
+"Certainly not. I wish you would not interfere, Annabel. The choir does
+very well. I think I have told you before that your continual desire for
+something novel in music has not my sympathy. I am not sure that I
+approve of this growing craze for anthems. They seem to me, sometimes,
+wholly unconnected with worship. We do not ask for new hymns every
+Sunday, nor do we ever become weary of the psalms. Indeed, familiarity
+seems often the measure of our affection."
+
+"Net with anthems," firmly. "Anthems are different. Aren't anthems
+different, Esther?"
+
+"I have known familiarity to breed something besides affection in the
+case of anthems," agreed Esther.
+
+In the ordinary course of things this remark would have aroused her host
+into delivering a neat and timely discourse upon the proper relation of
+music to the service of the Protestant Church and the tendency of the
+present age to unduly exalt the former at the expense of the latter. But
+to-day he merely upset the salt and looked things at the innocent
+salt-cellar which his conscience, or his cloth, did not allow him
+to utter.
+
+Miss Annabel raised her eyebrows at Esther in a significant way,
+telegraphing, "What did I tell you?" And Esther signaled back, "You were
+right. He is certainly not himself."
+
+Several other topics were introduced with no better result and every one
+felt relieved when lunch was over.
+
+"I think," said the Reverend Angus, as they arose, "that it is probably
+pleasanter in the garden."
+
+Esther glanced at Miss Annabel. She wanted very much to go home. Yet in
+Coombe it was distinctly bad mannered to leave hurriedly, after a meal.
+She thought of pleading a headache, but the excuse seemed too
+transparent and she could think of nothing better. Miss Annabel was
+unresponsive. Her host was already moving toward the door. Now he held
+it open for her. There was nothing to do but go. If she were clever she
+could keep the conversation in Miss Annabel's hands.
+
+But Miss Annabel's brother had other ideas. "I think," he suggested with
+the soft authority which in that house was law, "that as you are taking
+Mrs. Miller's class, Annabel, it might be well for you to look over the
+Sabbath School lesson. Our guest will excuse you, I know."
+
+"Why, I've hardly seen her at all, Angus."
+
+"There will be time later. I am sure Miss Esther understands."
+
+Esther understood very well and her heart sank. She was probably in for
+another scolding. However, as politeness required, she murmured that on
+no account would she wish to interfere with the proper religious
+instruction of Mrs. Miller's class. Miss Annabel looked rebellious, but
+as usual found discretion the better part and contented herself with
+another facial telegram to Esther: "Find out what is the matter with
+him." And Esther smiled and nodded: "I'll try."
+
+"Perhaps you would like to see the rose bush to which my sister
+referred," began the minister nervously as they stepped out upon the
+lawn. "It is a very fine rose, but pink, I regret to say, pink. It is
+unfortunate that Annabel should dislike pink so much. I think myself
+that a pink rose is very pretty. Something a little different from the
+red and white varieties."
+
+Esther murmured, "Naturally," and opened her strange eyes widely so
+that he could see the mischief which was like a blue flash in the depths
+of them. He coloured faintly.
+
+"I fear I am talking nonsense! The fact is that I am thinking of
+something else. Something so important that it occupies my mind
+completely. That is why, Esther, I wished to speak with you alone."
+
+The girl was thoroughly interested now. She was flattered also. Miss
+Annabel had been right. Something was troubling the minister. And she,
+Esther, was to be his confidant. To her untroubled, girlish conceit
+(girls are very wise!) it seemed natural enough. She had no doubt of
+her ability to help him. Therefore her face and her answering "Yes?"
+were warmly encouraging.
+
+It is a general belief that a woman always knows, instinctively, when a
+man is going to propose to her. She cannot be taken unawares; her
+flutter, her surprise, her hesitancy are assumed as being artistically
+suitable, but her unpreparedness is never bona fide. If this be the true
+psychology of the matter then Esther's case was the exception which
+proves the rule. No warning came to her, no intuition. She was still
+looking at the minister with that warm expression of impersonal
+interest, when, without further preliminaries, he began his halting
+avowal of love.
+
+Had the poor pink rose-bush suddenly flamed into crimson she could
+scarcely have been more surprised. She caught her breath with the shock
+of it! But shocks are quickly over. One adjusts one's self with
+incredible swiftness. A moment--and it seemed to Esther that she ought
+to have been expecting this. That she ought to have known it all along.
+Thousands of trifles mocked at her for her blindness, thousands of
+unheeded voices shrieked the truth into her opened ears. She felt
+miserably guilty. Not yet had she arrived at the stage when she could
+justify her blindness and deafness to herself. Later, she would
+understand how custom, the life-long habit of regarding the minister as
+a man apart, had helped to dull her perception. Later, common sense
+would prove her innocent of any wilful blunder. But just now, in her
+first bewilderment, it seemed that nothing could ever excuse that lack
+of understanding which had made this declaration possible!
+
+"I love you, Esther! I have loved you for two years." (It was like the
+Reverend Angus to refer to the exact period.) "You must have seen it.
+This can be no surprise to you. You may blame me in your heart for not
+speaking sooner. But you were young. There seemed time enough. Then,
+lately, when I saw that you were no longer a child, I decided to speak
+as soon as your mother should have returned. But to-day I felt that I
+could not wait longer. I must know at once--now! I must hear you say
+that you love me. That you will be my wife. You will--Esther?"
+
+His impassioned tones lingered on the name with ecstasy.
+
+The startled girl forced herself to look at him, a look swift as a
+swallow's dart, but in it she saw everything--the light on his face--the
+love in his eyes! And something else she saw, something of which she did
+not know the name but from which, not loving him, she shrank with an
+instinctive shiver of revolt. He seemed a different man. The minister,
+the teacher, was gone, and in his place stood the lover, the claimer.
+Yes--that was it. He claimed her, his glance, his voice--somewhere in
+the girl's heart a red spark of anger began to glow.
+
+She tried to speak, but he silenced her by a gesture. "No, do not answer
+yet. Although you must have known what I have felt for you, you are
+startled by my suddenness, I can see that. I have told you that it was
+not my intention to speak so soon. Circumstances have hurried me. I felt
+that I must have this settled. That--that episode of last week alone
+would have determined me. Things like that must not recur. I must have
+the right to advise, to--to protect you. You are so young. You do not
+know the world, its wickedness, its incredible vileness." His face was
+white with intense inward passion. "With me you will be safe. My God!
+to think of you at the mercy of that man--of any man! It stirs a madness
+of hate in me. Hate is a sin, I know, but God will understand--it is
+born of love, of my love for you."
+
+Again the girl tried to force some words from her trembling lips. And
+again he stopped her.
+
+"Do not speak yet. I apologise for my violence. Forgive it. We need not
+refer to this aspect of the matter again. Let us dwell only upon the
+sweeter idea of our love--for you do love me? You will love me--Esther?"
+
+But the time for speech had gone. To her own intense surprise and to the
+minister's consternation, Esther burst into tears.
+
+She was frightened, angry, stung with pity and a kind of horror. She
+felt herself honoured and insulted at the same time; and with this
+strange medley of emotions was a consciousness of youth and inexperience
+very different from the calm, untried confidence of a few
+minutes before.
+
+"Forgive me, forgive me!" pleaded the conscience stricken suitor. "I
+have been too sudden! I should have prepared you. I should have allowed
+you to see more plainly." With a lover's first, fond air of possession
+he attempted to take her hand.
+
+"Don't!" The word was sharp as a pistol shot. Esther's tears were
+suddenly stayed. Furtively she slipped the hand he had touched behind
+her. With the other she felt for her handkerchief and frankly wiped
+her eyes.
+
+"You startled me," she explained presently. "And I am so sorry, so very
+sorry! I never dreamed that you thought of me at all--in that way, any
+more than I have thought of you. You honour me very much. But it is
+impossible. Quite, quite impossible."
+
+"You mean my position here, as minister? Believe me, I have thought of
+all that. There may be difficulties but we will conquer them together.
+Nothing is impossible if you love me, dear."
+
+"Oh!" She turned wide blue eyes upon him. "That is just it. I do not
+love you."
+
+The blow fell swift, unerring, dealt by the mercilessly honest hand of
+youth. Esther's eyes were quite dry now. Her nervousness was passing.
+Regret and pity were merged in one overpowering, instinctive desire: the
+desire to show him beyond all manner of doubt that she repudiated that
+possessive touch upon her hand. "I could not ever possibly marry you,"
+she said, as calmly as if she had been accustomed to dismissing suitors
+all her life.
+
+They were still standing by the rose-bush whose desperate fate it was to
+produce pink roses. With incredulous dismay, the minister saw her turn
+from him and take a step toward the house.
+
+She had refused him! She was leaving him! At any moment Annabel might
+finish her Sunday School lesson and come out upon the lawn--all his
+self-possession vanished like a puff of smoke.
+
+"Esther!" he cried, "Esther! wait. Give me a moment."
+
+She paused, but did not turn.
+
+"I think there is nothing more to say--I am very sorry."
+
+Sorry! She was sorry. This young girl upon whom he had set his desire,
+of whom he had felt so sure, to whom his love should have come as a
+crown, was sorry. King Cophetua, flouted by the beggar maid, could not
+have been more astonished, more deeply humiliated!
+
+But the greater wound was not to his pride. At any cost to his dignity
+and self-respect he could not let her go like this. His ministerial
+manner fell away, his readiness deserted him. In a moment he became all
+lover, pleading, entreating, with the one great abandon of his life,
+with the stammering eloquence of unspeakable desire!
+
+Slowly the girl turned to him. He saw her pure profile, then the full
+charm of her changing face. The blue eyes, widely open, were darker,
+lovelier than ever--Surely there was softening in their depths....
+
+"Es--ther, Es--ther!" Miss Annabel's voice broke upon the tense moment
+with cheerful insistence, and Miss Annabel herself appeared at the turn
+of the walk, waving a slip of paper. She saw them at once.
+
+"You're wanted at home, Esther. Your mother's come back. To-day! Think
+of that! On the noon train. In face of the whole town. And all she said
+when Elder MacTavish met her coming up from the station was that she had
+forgotten it was Sunday. Fancy!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+
+Perhaps never, in all her life of inopportune arrivals, had Miss Annabel
+been so truly welcome--or so bitterly resented! Esther turned to her
+with a heart-sob of relief, the minister walked away without a word.
+
+"Dear me! What's the matter?" said the good lady. "You seem all excited.
+Perhaps I shouldn't have shouted out the news so abruptly. But it never
+occurred to me that you might be startled. 'Tisn't as if your mother had
+been away a year. Jane's waiting for you down by the gate. Such a
+peculiar child! Nothing I could say will induce her to come in. Don't
+you find Jane is a peculiar child, Esther?"
+
+"Only a little shy," said Esther, quickening her steps.
+
+"Shy! Mercy, I shouldn't call her shy. That child has the
+self-possession of a Chinee! I hope you won't mind me saying it, but a
+little shyness is exactly what Jane needs."
+
+Esther, whose shaken nerves threatened hysterical laughter, made no
+reply to this, but hurried toward the small figure by the garden gate.
+
+"Oh, Jane!" she called, somewhat shakily.
+
+At her voice, the Shy One stopped kicking holes in the turf with the
+toes of her new boots and executing a bearlike rush, threw herself into
+her sister's arms.
+
+"I'm home, Esther! So's mother! And she says I don't have to go to
+Sunday School. That's why I didn't want to come in. Let's hurry before
+the minister comes."
+
+"Listen to that!" said Miss Annabel in indignation. "Any one would
+think my brother was an ogre. Angus! Why, he's gone! I thought he was
+following us."
+
+"I think Mr. Macnair went into the house."
+
+"Did he? What did I tell you? Perhaps my news surprised him as well as
+you. I thought he looked as pale as a plate. What do you think?"
+
+"I think it is none of our business."
+
+Miss Annabel gave her a shrewd look. "Perhaps not your business. You
+don't have to live with him. But I do. Well, good-bye, my dear. Tell
+your mother," significantly, "that I'll be over to see her soon."
+
+Both girls were relieved that the minister did not leave his study to
+say good-bye. They breathed more freely and their steps slackened as
+soon as the corner which hid the manse had been safely passed.
+
+"I've got new boots," began Jane. "See them? And Fred's new dog has got
+puppies! He calls her Pickles. She got the puppies this morning. Oh!
+they're darlings! But Fred is horrid. He says he is going to give me one
+for my own, to make up for Timothy. Just as if anything ever could! I
+never knew any one so heartless as Fred--except Job."
+
+"Job who?" It was a relief to Esther to let the childish chatter run on.
+
+"Why, _Job_. Job was just like Fred. When all his wives died and his
+little children and his cows, he felt bad, but when God gave him more
+wives and more children and lots of cows he was pleased as Punch. I
+always thought that so strange of God," in a reflective tone, "but I
+expect he knew what kind of man Job was and that he didn't have any real
+feelings. Do you think I ought to take the puppy, Esther? I shouldn't
+like to be like Job."
+
+"I think there is no danger, dear. But how is mother? Better?"
+
+"Was she sick?" in surprise.
+
+"Her headaches, you know."
+
+"Oh, yes. I don't know whether they are better or not," carelessly. "I
+didn't see much of mother while we were away. I played all day with Mrs.
+Bremner's little girl. Except when we went shopping. I think she must be
+better, for she did such lots of shopping."
+
+Esther smiled. "Not very much, I think, Janie. Shopping takes money."
+
+"But she did! I have lots and lots of new clothes. Only,"
+discontentedly, "most of them don't fit. Mother could never be bothered
+trying them on. She's got some lovely things, too. Dresses and hats and
+piles of new shoes and heaps of silk stockings--"
+
+"Jane, why do you say 'lots' and 'piles' and 'heaps' when you know you
+are exaggerating?"
+
+But there was a note of anxiety in the reproof nevertheless.
+
+"I'm not exaggerating, Esther! She did. Even Miss Bremner asked her what
+she was going to do with them all."
+
+The elder girl's fingers tightened upon the small hand she held. Her red
+lips set themselves in a firm line. In face of a danger which she could
+see and measure Esther had courage enough. And she had faced this
+particular danger before.
+
+"Mother will tell me all about it, no doubt," she said calmly. "Did she
+get me something pretty, too?"
+
+"Yes. It's a surprise."
+
+"And when she got all the pretty things I suppose she told the clerks to
+charge them?"
+
+"Oh, no. She paid for them out of her purse."
+
+Esther was conscious of a swift reaction. The things were paid for. Of
+course Jane had exaggerated. Children have no sense of value. Some
+dainty things, Mrs. Coombe was sure to buy; but, as Esther well knew,
+her slender stock of money would hardly have run to "piles" and "heaps."
+And of course she had been unjust in fearing that Mary had gone into
+debt. They had one experience of that kind, an experience which had
+ended in a solemn promise that it would never happen again. Mary
+understood the position as well as she did.
+
+As the girl's thought trailed naturally into the problem paths of every
+day, her weeks of freedom, her new interests, the strange experience in
+the manse garden seemed already remote. With the little frown of
+accustomed perplexity slipping in between her straight, black brows, her
+deeper agitation quieted. The unusual has no antidote so effective as
+the commonplace.
+
+They found Mrs. Coombe waiting for them on the veranda. Lying back in
+the shade, in her white dress she looked very much at her ease. Yet a
+quick observer might have noticed a certain anxiety in the glance she
+tried to render merely welcoming. She was thinner than she had been;
+tired lines dragged at the corners of the pouting mouth and dark circles
+showed plainly through their dusting of pearl powder. Changes which
+creep in unnoticed when one sees a person every day are startlingly
+apparent when absence has forced a clearer focus. Esther had known that
+her step-mother had changed, was changing, but as she bent over her now,
+the extent of the change shocked her. With a tightening at her heart
+she wondered what her father would say if he could see the difference
+wrought by one short year. Pearl powder, lavishly used, is not becoming,
+especially when it sifts into multitudes of fine lines; nor can powder
+or anything else brighten a dull, yellowing skin which in health would
+still be delicately clear and firm.
+
+But the dulled eyes and the faded face were only the symptoms of the
+real change in Mary Coombe. The thing itself lay deeper. Striving to
+express a subtlety which would not lend itself to words, Esther had more
+than once told herself that her mother was "not the same woman." Yet it
+was only to-day, as she stooped to kiss her, that the startling, literal
+truth of the phrase struck home. The outside changes were nothing--it
+was the woman herself who had changed.
+
+"Well, Esther!" The sweet high voice with its impatient note was the
+same as ever. "Here we are home again. Fancy me forgetting it was
+Sunday! Wasn't it funny? We met old MacTavish coming up from the station
+(not a single cab down to meet the train, of course!) and he looked so
+shocked. Really, this place grows more insufferable every day. It seems
+to agree with you, though, you're looking awfully well. Amy looks well,
+too. The new doctor must be something of a wonder."
+
+"He is considered very clever. Aunt Amy is certainly better. Now that
+you are home you must let him see what he can do for you."
+
+Mrs. Coombe's pouting lips lengthened into a hard line.
+
+"I won't see a doctor. And that's flat."
+
+"Are you feeling better, then?"
+
+As was always the case, her mother's perversity dissipated Esther's
+sympathy and left her tone cold. It was all the colder probably because
+just at that moment she had noticed that the simple white frock Mrs.
+Coombe was wearing was not simple at all. The delicate embroidery on it
+was all hand work. And French embroidery is no inexpensive trifle. It
+was probably a new "best" gown; but if so, why had it been worn on the
+train, why was it soiled in places and carelessly put on? The skirt was
+not even, the collar, having lost a support, sagged at one side and just
+below the girdle belt there was a small, jagged rent. Esther noticed
+these details with vexation and discomfort, for it was part of the
+change in Mary Coombe that from being one of the most carefully gowned
+women in town she had become one of the most slovenly. All her natty,
+pretty, American "style" which the plainer Canadians had sometimes
+envied was gone. But this--this was worse than usual! The girl's quick
+eyes travelled downward, noting the increased signs of deterioration
+with something like distress.
+
+"Why, mother," she exclaimed involuntarily, "there is a hole in your
+stocking!"
+
+"Is there?" Mary Coombe thrust out a small and elegant foot clad in
+thinnest silk and shod with pretty slippers not very clean and turning
+over at the heel.
+
+"Dear me!" she said. "So there is. I need new slippers too. I quite
+forgot to get any."
+
+"Oh, mother!" Jane's cry was instant. "You got heaps. Tan ones and brown
+ones and white ones and black ones with silver buckles--"
+
+"Jane!" interrupted Esther, laughing. "Give your imagination a rest."
+
+"But you did, didn't you, mother?"
+
+"Did I? Why, yes--I did buy a few shoes. I had forgotten. The Customs
+man didn't find them either. Run and fetch me a clean white pair, Jane,
+and bring down the surprise we got for Esther--see how disapproving she
+looks. I declare, Esther, it would be just like you to make things
+disagreeable the moment I get home. I didn't charge a cent, if that's
+what you're afraid of."
+
+"I knew you wouldn't do that," gravely. "And of course I'm glad you got
+the things. But I can't see how you managed."
+
+"Oh, sales," vaguely. "Things are so cheap in Detroit and Jessica
+Bremner is a born shopper. She gets wonderful bargains. Anyway, I got
+them, and I'm not a cent in debt."
+
+"What's debt?" asked Jane.
+
+"Buying what you can't pay for, Janie."
+
+"Oh, mother paid for everything. I saw her. It's Mrs. Bremner that's in
+debt, isn't she, mother?"
+
+"Don't be silly, Jane, of course not. Jessica is far better off than we
+are."
+
+"But she only gave you half the money for the ring. I heard her say--"
+
+"Jane, get those slippers at once."
+
+"I'm going. But Mrs. Bremner said--"
+
+Mrs. Coombe's hand came down with stinging force upon the child's ear.
+
+"Will you obey me--or will you not?"
+
+Jane retired wailing and her mother sank back into her veranda chair,
+red spots burning through the powder on her cheeks.
+
+Esther sat very still for a moment, and then, without looking at the
+other, she asked in a low voice:
+
+"What did she mean?"
+
+"How should I know?" fretfully.
+
+"What ring did Mrs. Bremner give you money for? Did--you have to sell
+one of your rings?"
+
+"Yes, I did."
+
+"Which one?"
+
+"Oh, don't bother me, Esther."
+
+"But I want to know which one."
+
+"It was the big red one!" called Jane from the hallway, where she had
+waited, safely out of reach.
+
+Mary Coombe sprang up, fury blazing in her eyes, but Jane had fled, and
+Esther, cool and capable, was blocking the doorway.
+
+"Sit down, mother. I've got to know about this. What ring does she
+mean?"
+
+For an instant the older woman hesitated, then with a little shrug she
+turned back to the chair. The fury had died away as quickly as it
+had arisen.
+
+"I knew you would be disagreeable," she said. "And you were bound to
+hear about the ring some time. Jane is the most ungrateful child, and a
+little tell-tale; the makings of a regular little cat! I'm sure I spent
+her full share on her, and I've brought you something nice, too. Not
+that I expect to be thanked for it. Of course I had to have some money.
+I hadn't a rag to wear, not a rag. And I got everything ready made. It's
+cheaper. Anyway, I can't stand dressmakers any more. They paw one so. I
+can't bear to be touched, my wretched nerves! And I remembered the fuss
+you made about the bills last time. You know you did make a fuss,
+Esther, as if all your dear father left belonged to you and not to me--"
+
+"But what did you _do_?"
+
+"I'm telling you, amn't I? I sold the ring, of course."
+
+"Which ring?"
+
+"The ruby ring. It's the only one that is worth anything!"
+
+"You sold Aunt Amy's ring?"
+
+"If you wish to put it that way, yes. I consider it is as much my ring
+as hers. She is my aunt and it is understood that all her things will
+come to me. She has lived here ever since I was married and I think it's
+a funny thing if she can't help me out occasionally. I simply had to
+have money and the ruby was the only thing worth selling. Good Heavens!
+Don't look so crazy. One would think I had stolen it!"
+
+"You have."
+
+Again Mrs. Coombe arose; this time without flurry. The little excitement
+had done her good. The dull eyes were actually sparkling, the sallow
+cheeks were flushed. She looked just as she used to look in one of her
+little rages before the great change came.
+
+"That's enough, Esther. I'll take no more from you. I did what seemed to
+me right. If Amy were in her right mind I should not have had to take
+the ring, she would have offered it. Under the circumstances I did the
+only sensible thing. Amy will never discover the loss. I am getting a
+very good price for it from Jessica Bremner. It is a valuable jewel. She
+snatched at the chance of getting it."
+
+Behind its whiteness Esther's face seemed to glow with pale flame. "Is
+it possible that you have forgotten the history of that ring?" she
+asked. "That it was poor Auntie's engagement ring and that, although she
+can't remember anything about it, she knows it means something more than
+life to her. And that she always says that she cannot die without the
+ruby on her finger?"
+
+Mrs. Coombe looked uncomfortable, but kept her poise.
+
+"It's all rubbish. She'll forget all about it. Dying people don't think
+of ruby rings. And anyway, she will probably outlive all of us. If
+not--we can easily divert her attention."
+
+The girl looked at her step-mother in horror, half believing that this
+must be some cruel joke. The callousness of the words seemed
+unbelievable. But the reality of them could no longer be doubted and the
+pale glow died out of her face, leaving it white and hard.
+
+"I do not understand you," she said slowly. "Somehow you do not seem
+quite--human. But be sure of this, Aunt Amy shall have back her lover's
+ring. Jane says it has not all been paid for. How much did you receive?"
+
+"I shall not tell you. And I warn you, Esther, not to waste your money.
+If you buy it back, I shall sell it again."
+
+They were standing now facing each other. Esther took a step forward and
+looked down steadily into her step-mother's face. Her own curious eyes
+were wide open, they looked like blue stars, bright, cold and
+powerful as flame.
+
+"No! You shall not."
+
+For a space Mary Coombe met that sword-like look, then her weaker will
+gave way. Her eyes shifted and fell. Her hands began to pluck nervously
+at the embroidery of her dress. She laughed, a little, affected laugh
+with no mirth in it, turned and entered the house.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX
+
+
+We have stated elsewhere that Coombe was conservative, but by this we do
+not mean to imply that it was benighted. Far from it! True, it talked a
+great deal before it ventured upon anything strange or new, referred
+constantly to the tax rate and ran no risks, but at the time of which we
+write it had decided to take a plebescite upon the matter of Local
+Option and, a little later, the council wished to go so far as to
+present Andrew MacCandless, who had served them five times as mayor,
+with an address and a purse of fifty dollars.
+
+The Presbyterian church, too, although still clinging to solid doctrine,
+was far removed from the tuning-fork stage. Through throes of terrible
+convulsion it had come to possess an organ, a paid soloist, and a
+Ladies' Aid, that insidious first thing in women's clubs.
+
+The first meeting of the Knox Church Ladies' Aid, after the return of
+Mrs. Coombe and Jane, was held for the purpose of putting together a
+quilt, not the old-fashioned kind, of course, but something quite
+new--an autograph quilt, very chaste.
+
+It was a large meeting and, providentially, Mrs. Coombe was late. I say
+providentially because, had she been early, it is difficult to imagine
+how her fellow members would have eased their minds of the load of
+comment justified by her indiscreet home-coming, and several other
+things equally painful but interesting. The Ladies' Aid had its printed
+constitution but it also had its unwritten laws and one of these laws
+was that strictest courtesy must always be observed. No member, whatever
+her failings, was ever discussed in meeting--when she was present.
+
+"What I cannot excuse," said Mrs. Bartley Simson, "is the tone of levity
+in which she answered Mr. MacTavish when he met her on the way from the
+station. It is possible that she had some good reason for coming on that
+particular train. I am not one of those who hold that nothing can ever
+justify Sunday travel. Exceptional cases must be allowed for. But the
+frivolity of her excuse nothing can justify."
+
+"Besides," said Miss Atkins, the secretary, "it was a--it sounded
+like--what I mean to say is that she could not possibly, _no one_ could
+possibly, have forgotten what day of the week it was."
+
+A subdued chorus of "Certainly not" and "Absurd" showed the trend of
+public opinion upon this point.
+
+"I once forgot that Wednesday was Thursday," said the youngest Miss
+Sinclair, who always stood for peace at any price.
+
+"Don't be silly, Jessie!" The elder Miss Sinclair, who believed in war
+with honour, jogged her sister's elbow none too gently. "That's a
+different thing altogether. For my own part," raising her voice, "I
+think that as a society we cannot be too careful how we minimise the
+fact itself. To us, as a society, it is the fact itself that matters,
+and not what Mrs. Coombe said about it. That, to a certain extent, may
+be her own affair. But I hold, and I say it without fear of successful
+contradiction, that no member of a community can disregard the Sabbath
+in a public way without affecting the community at large. That is why I
+feel justified in criticising Mrs. Coombe's behaviour. And I hope," here
+she raised a piercing eye and let it range triumphantly over the circle,
+"I sincerely hope that the minister has been told of this occurrence!"
+
+The meeting rustled with approbation. This, it felt, was something like
+a proper spirit. There was no compromise here. A thrill of conscious
+virtue, raised to the _n_th power, shot through the circle.
+
+"You think that Mr. Macnair ought to take cognizance of it officially?"
+asked Miss Atkins. (Being the secretary she used many beautiful words.)
+
+"I do."
+
+"But he and Mrs. Coombe are such friends!" objected the younger Miss
+Sinclair, who was a kindly creature.
+
+An electric silence fell upon the quilters. Every one looked toward the
+president.
+
+"I cannot allow such insinuations to be made at this meeting," said the
+President firmly.
+
+"But--but I did not insinuate anything!" stammered poor Miss Jessie who,
+severely jogged by her sister and transfixed by the President's eye, had
+turned the colour of the crimson square before her.
+
+"We all know," went on the President more mildly, "that Mr. Macnair
+calls fairly often at the Elms. We may even have heard rumours to the
+effect that he intends--I hardly know how to phrase it, but as our
+minister is unmarried and Mrs. Coombe is a widow you will understand
+what I mean. But, ladies, I may state on no less an authority than Miss
+Annabel that Mr. Macnair has no such intentions. There is absolutely
+nothing in it. His calls no doubt may be accounted for by the presence
+of--er--affliction in the house."
+
+"Do you mean Aunt Amy?" A younger woman with a clever and rather pretty
+face looked up. "Why, can't you see that there is a much simpler
+explanation than that?"
+
+It was certainly unfortunate that Mrs. Coombe should have chosen this
+moment to arrive. But the Ladies' Aid were used to interrupted
+statements. It was felt to be very convenient that one of the windows
+looked out directly upon the steps so that the meeting was never quite
+taken by surprise. A sudden pause there might be, but late arrivals had
+learned to expect that. It was the penalty for being late.
+
+"Dear Mrs. Coombe, so glad you have come!" said the hostess pleasantly.
+"No, you are not very late. We are only just beginning."
+
+Every one nodded and smiled. Chairs were moved and sewing shifted to
+provide space for the newcomer. A few left their work in order to shake
+hands and there was a general readjustment of everything, including
+topics of conversation. In the space of a few seconds it was noticed
+that Mrs. Coombe wore a new hat, a new gown, new slippers and silk
+stockings and that in spite of all these advantages they had never seen
+her look worse.
+
+"Dear Mrs. Coombe, I think your belt-pin has become--allow me!" Miss
+Milligan, dressmaker in private life, with a discreet swiftness,
+twitched the blouse and skirt into place and deftly fastened it. At the
+same time she closed a gap in the fastening of the blouse itself.
+
+Mary Coombe laughed. "Dear me! Am I undone? I must have forgotten to
+ask Amy to fix me. These blouses that fasten in the back are such a
+nuisance!"
+
+The President smiled politely, but with evident effort. Mrs. Coombe was
+a prominent member. Still, on principle, she, a president, could not be
+expected to approve of people who forgot to have themselves done up.
+Supposing the minister had been present!
+
+"What are we doing this afternoon?" asked the unconscious delinquent
+languidly. "Autograph quilts? I've got a lot of blocks for you--friends
+of mine in the city." She began to fumble in the pretty workbag she
+carried. "Gracious, I was sure I had them with me! Isn't that odd? I
+can't find them."
+
+"Let me look," suggested Miss Jessie Sinclair kindly.
+
+But the other snatched back the open bag with a gesture which was almost
+rude.
+
+"Oh, no--they are not there! I can't imagine what I have done with
+them." She looked up in a bewildered way. Indeed the perturbation was so
+out of proportion to the size of the calamity that the ladies questioned
+each other with their eyes.
+
+The President tapped with her thimble upon the quilting frame and every
+one became very busy. "I hope," she said, taking the conversation into
+her own hands for safe keeping, "that you found all well upon your
+return, Mrs. Coombe? I hardly ever seem to see Esther now. Did you know
+that we have been talking of changing our meeting to Saturday afternoon
+so that Esther and some more of our younger folk may join us? We thought
+that it would be so nice for them--and for us too," she finished
+graciously.
+
+Mrs. Coombe looked surprised. "I can hardly see Esther at a Ladies' Aid
+Meeting," she said. "Did she tell you she would come?"
+
+"No. We have not yet told any one of the proposed change. But we all
+felt--"
+
+"We all felt," interrupted Miss Sinclair, who was fairly sniffing the
+air with the spirit of glorious war, "that the less time our young girls
+have to go off philandering with young fools whom no one knows anything
+about, the better it will be for everybody concerned!"
+
+Mary looked up with an air of pleased surprise.
+
+"Has Esther been philandering?" she asked eagerly.
+
+The President frowned. This was hardly according to Hoyle.
+
+"I really think," began Miss Jessie Sinclair indignantly, "that Esther
+ought to be allowed to tell her mother--"
+
+"Gracious! Esther never tells me anything. And I'm dying to know. Who is
+the 'young fool'?--do tell me, somebody."
+
+Strangely enough, now that the way was open, no one seemed to have
+anything to say.
+
+"You've simply got to tell me now," urged Mary delightedly. "Unless it's
+only a silly bit of gossip."
+
+This fillip had the desired effect. Everybody began to talk at once and
+in five minutes Esther's step-mother knew all about the new doctor and
+the broken motor. When they paused for breath, she laughed softly.
+
+"It's the most amusing thing I've heard in ages. Fancy--Esther! Oh, it's
+delicious." She looked around the circle of surprised and disappointed
+faces and laughed again. "Oh, don't pretend! You know very well that
+you're not a bit shocked, really. And surely you don't think that I
+ought to scold Esther? Why," with a little flare of her old-time
+loyalty, "Esther is worth a dozen ordinary girls. I'd trust Esther with
+Apollo on a desert island. But I'll admit I'm rather anxious to see the
+young man. He must be rather nice if Esther agreed to show him around.
+As for the accident," she shrugged her shoulders, "I know enough about
+motors to know that that might happen any time."
+
+"You are right, of course," the President's tone was more cordial. "And
+anyway we have no right to discuss Esther's affairs. The reference to it
+grew out of the proposed change of meeting. And the change of meeting
+was thought of chiefly because when Mr. Macnair heard about the escapade
+he seemed much worried. Naturally, as he says, he carries all his young
+people on his heart, and Dr. Callandar being such a newcomer--"
+
+"Oh, yes, naturally." Mary Coombe's little gurgle of amusement had a
+note of cruelty in it, for she alone of all these women had guessed why
+the Rev. Angus Macnair should have taken Esther's escapade so much to
+heart. She knew, too, that the minister had no chance, but the idea of a
+rival was novel--and entertaining. Could Esther really have taken a
+fancy to this young doctor? Mary knew the Coombe gossips too well to
+take their chatter seriously, but there might be something in it. At any
+rate, there was enough to use as a conversational weapon against Esther.
+She was becoming a little nervous of Esther lately. The girl was
+positively growing up. Somehow, almost overnight it seemed, a new
+strength had come to her, a strength which her step-mother's weakness
+felt and resented. But now with this nice little story in reserve,
+things might be more even. Mary's eyes sparkled as she thought of some
+of the smart things she could say the next time Esther began to make a
+fuss about--about the matter of the ruby ring, for instance. Esther had
+been most disagreeable about that. Just as if any one could have
+foreseen that Amy would miss it so soon, or indeed at all, since it had
+been her fancy to keep it shut up in a stupid box.
+
+As a matter of fact, the affair of the ring had assumed the proportions
+of a small catastrophe. Aunt Amy had been feeling so much better that it
+had occurred to her to see if the ring were feeling better too. Only one
+peep she would take, hopeful that at last its strange enchantment might
+be past. If she could look into its depths without the blackness coming
+close she would know, with utter certainty, that Dr. Callandar's
+cleverness had circumvented the power of her old enemies. "They" would
+trouble her no more.
+
+But when, flushed with hope, she looked--the ring was gone!
+
+Esther, reading in the sitting room, was startled beyond words by the
+scream which rang through the house. She seemed to know at once what had
+happened and her gaze flew to her step-mother, laden with bitter
+reproach, before she sped up the stairs to Aunt Amy's room. The door was
+open and the tragedy was plain to see. Aunt Amy stood by the bureau with
+the empty box in her hand and on her face an expression so dreadful, so
+hopeless that, with a sob, the girl tried to crush it out against
+her breast.
+
+"What is it, dear? Don't look like that."
+
+"The ring, Esther! 'They' have taken the ring!"
+
+For an instant the girl hesitated, but common justice demanded that the
+sordid truth be told.
+
+"No, dear. The ring is safe. It was taken from the box, but in quite an
+ordinary, simple way. Don't tremble so! It is not lost. It is just as if
+I had gone to the box and borrowed it--"
+
+As she faltered, the poor woman raised her head in an agony of hope.
+"Have you got it, Esther? Oh, Esther, give it to me! I love you, Esther!
+You shall have it when I am dead. But I can't die without it. I promised
+somebody--I--I can't remember. Oh, Esther, don't keep it away from
+me--give it to me now!"
+
+Bitter, angry tears filled the girl's eyes as she took the pleading,
+fluttering hands in hers.
+
+"Don't, dear! Listen. It is quite safe. But I haven't got it. I promise
+you solemnly I will get it back. You'll believe me, won't you? You know
+I would not deceive you. And you won't be frightened? No one had
+anything to do with taking it but ourselves. I am going to tell you just
+how it happened--"
+
+"Don't bother. I'll tell her myself."
+
+In the doorway stood Mrs. Coombe, her eyes venomous with the anger of
+tortured nerves. Her high voice trembled on the verge of hysteria, yet
+she tried to speak with her usual mocking lightness.
+
+"There is no need to make a mystery of the thing, I'm sure. I took the
+ring because I was hard up--needed money at once. You understand what
+that means, I suppose, Amy? You never wore the ring, nor would you allow
+me to wear it. It was simply wasted lying in that silly box. My own
+jewelry is of much less value. Besides, I use it. One would have thought
+that you would be glad to assist in some way with the--er--household
+expenses. In any case, no such fuss is necessary, and I should advise
+you," her voice grew suddenly cold and menacing, "not to scream like
+that again. A few more such shrieks and--people will begin to wonder."
+Without so much as a glance at Esther she passed on to her own room.
+
+"Don't mind her!" The indignant girl tried to draw the trembling woman
+close. But Aunt Amy cowered away. Five minutes had undone the work of
+weeks. All the doctor's carefully laid foundations were crumbling.
+Esther, wrung with pity and remorse, stroked the grey hair in silence.
+She expected an outbreak of childish tears, but it did not come. Rather,
+the shivering grew less and presently Aunt Amy raised her head.
+
+"It was she--Mary--who took it?" she asked in a whisper.
+
+"Yes. But remember I have promised to get it back."
+
+Aunt Amy looked at her blankly. She did not seem to hear.
+
+"I never guessed it was Mary. Never! But now I know. I'll never be
+fooled again."
+
+"Know what?" asked Esther uneasily. There was a look in Aunt Amy's eyes
+which she disliked, a sly, cool look--more nearly mad than any look she
+had ever surprised there. "Tell me what it is that you know," she
+repeated coaxingly.
+
+But Aunt Amy would not tell. It was just as well, she thought, that
+Esther should not know that at last, after many years, she had found out
+the agent employed by "they" for her undoing. Ah, if she had only found
+out sooner. The ruby ring might still be shining in its box. But of
+course "they" knew that she would never suspect Mary, her own niece.
+They were so clever! But now she could be as clever as they--oh, very,
+very clever!
+
+"What did she mean about my screaming?" she asked, looking at Esther
+cunningly.
+
+"Nothing, nothing at all! Don't think of it."
+
+"But she did. I know what she meant. She meant that if I
+get--troublesome--she will shut me up!"
+
+"Nonsense!" declared Esther, thrilled to the heart with pity. "You must
+never think such a thought, dear. You shall never live anywhere but here
+with us. Why, you are our good angel, Auntie. We could never get on
+without you--you know that."
+
+Aunt Amy nodded, stroking the girl's soft hand with her work-worn one.
+"You are good and kind, Esther. I know you will take care of me, if you
+can. And I'm not afraid just now. It will be all right if I am clever. I
+must not be troublesome. If I am, she will put me away with the mad
+people. The people that make faces and scream. I never scream. Until
+to-day I haven't screamed for a long time. And I'll be more careful. Oh,
+I can be very careful, now that I know!"
+
+Again the strange mad look. It flitted across her lifted eyes like a
+dark shadow behind a window shade. And again Esther tried gently to
+question her, but Aunt Amy was "clever." She didn't intend that Esther
+should find out.
+
+The girl left her at last feeling both troubled and sad, but Mary Coombe
+laughed at her fears. She was in one of her most difficult moods.
+
+"It was all a tempest in a tea cup, as usual," she declared pettishly.
+"I do wish, Esther, that you would not be so disagreeable. She will have
+forgotten all about the ring by to-morrow. All she needs is a little
+plain speaking, and firmness."
+
+"Firmness! Cruelty, you mean. You terrified her."
+
+"Well, it had a good effect. She quieted down at once."
+
+"She is too quiet. It's that which troubles me. Surely you can see the
+damage that has been done? All her new cheerfulness is gone. She is back
+to where she was before the doctor helped her."
+
+"I never believed that any real improvement was possible. Insane people
+never recover."
+
+"She is not insane! How can you say so? But how shall we explain the
+change in her to Dr. Callandar? We can't tell him that--that you--"
+
+"Oh, don't mind me!" flippantly.
+
+"Anyway, the ring will soon be back, thank heaven! I have written to
+Mrs. Bremner."
+
+"You wrote to Jessica?"
+
+"Certainly. I told you I should. It was the only thing to do."
+
+Mary Coombe's rage flickered and sank before the quiet force in the
+girl's face and voice. With all the will in the world she was too weak
+to oppose this new strength in Esther. And before her mortified pride
+could frame a retort, the girl had left the room.
+
+It was of this quiet exit of Esther's that Mary was thinking as she
+sewed on the autograph quilt. Better than anything else it typified the
+change in the girl. It meant decision, and decision meant action. Mary
+shrugged her shoulders and frowned over the quilt. Yes, undoubtedly,
+Esther was getting troublesome. It might be well if she were married.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX
+
+
+Meanwhile, unconscious of her step-mother's troubled musings, Esther was
+loitering delightfully on her way from school. Aunt Amy, who never
+looked at a clock, but who always knew the time by what Jane called
+"magic," was beginning to wonder what had kept her. Strain her eyes as
+she would, there was no glint of a blue dress upon the long straight
+road, and Dr. Callandar, who in passing had stopped by the gate,
+declared that he had noticed a similar absence of that delectable colour
+between the cross roads and the school house.
+
+"I thought that I might meet her," he confessed ingenuously, "but when
+she was not in sight, I concluded that I was too late. Some of those
+angel children have probably had to be kept in. Could you make use of me
+instead? I run errands very nicely."
+
+"Oh, it isn't an errand." Aunt Amy smiled, for she liked Dr. Callandar
+and was always as simple as a child with him. His easy, courteous
+manner, which was the same to her as to every one else, helped her to be
+at once more like other people and more like herself. "It's a letter. I
+wanted Esther to read it to me. Of course I can read myself," as she saw
+his look of surprise, "but sometimes I do not read exactly what is
+written. My imagination bothers me. Do you ever have any trouble with
+your imagination, Doctor?"
+
+"I have known it to play me tricks."
+
+"But you can read a letter just as it's written, can't you?"
+
+"Yes. I can do that."
+
+"Then your imagination cannot be as large as mine. Mine is very large.
+It interferes with everything, even letters. When I read a letter myself
+I sometimes read things which aren't there. At least," with a faint show
+of doubt, "people say they aren't there."
+
+"In other words," said Callandar, "you read between the lines."
+
+Aunt Amy's plain face brightened. It was so seldom that any one
+understood.
+
+"Yes, that's it! You won't laugh at me when I tell you that everything,
+letters, handkerchiefs, dresses and everything belonging to people have
+a feeling in them--something that tells secrets? I can't quite explain."
+
+"I have heard very sensitive people express some such idea. It sounds
+very fascinating. I should like very much to hear about it."
+
+"Would you? You are sure you won't think me queer? My niece, Mary
+Coombe, does not like me to tell people about it. She has no imagination
+herself, none at all. She says it is all nonsense. But I think,"
+shrewdly, "that she would like to know some of the things that I know.
+Won't you come in, Doctor? Come in and sit under the tree where it
+is cooler."
+
+The doctor's hesitation was but momentary. He was keenly interested. And
+at the back of his mind was the thought that Esther must certainly be
+along presently. Fate had not favoured him of late. He had not seen her
+for five days. It is foolish to leave meetings to fate anyway. Then, if
+another reason were needed it was probable that if he stayed he would
+meet Esther's mother. He was beginning to feel quite curious about
+Mrs. Coombe.
+
+"Thanks. I think I will come in. All the trees in Coombe are cool, but
+your elm is the coolest of them all. Let me arrange this cushion for
+you. Is that right?"
+
+He settled Aunt Amy comfortably upon the least sloping portion of the
+old circular bench and, not wishing to trust it with his own weight, sat
+down upon the grass at her feet.
+
+"Now," he said cheerfully, "let us have a regular psychic research
+meeting. Tell me all about it."
+
+"What's that?" suspiciously.
+
+"Psychic research? Oh, just finding out all about the queer things that
+happen to people."
+
+"Do queer things happen to other people besides me?"
+
+"Why, of course! Queer things happen to everybody."
+
+Aunt Amy seemed glad to know this.
+
+"They never talk about them," she said wistfully. "But, then, neither do
+I. Except to you. What was it you wanted me to tell you?"
+
+"Tell me what you mean when you say that you read in a letter what is
+not written there. You see I haven't much imagination myself and I don't
+understand it."
+
+"Neither do I," naively. "But it seems to be like this--take this
+letter, for instance, when I found it in--well, it doesn't matter where
+I found it--but as soon as I picked it up, I knew that it was a love
+letter. I felt it. It is an old letter, I think. And some one has been
+angry with it. See, it is all crumpled. But it is a real love letter.
+All the love is there yet. When I took it in my hands it all came out
+to me, sweet and strong. Like--like the scent of something keen,
+fragrant, on a swift wind. I can't explain it!"
+
+"You explain it very beautifully," gravely. "I can quite understand that
+love might be like that."
+
+"Can you?" with a pleased smile. "And can you understand how I feel it?
+I can feel things in people, too. Love and hate and envy and all kinds
+of things. I never say so. I used to, but people did not like it. They
+always looked queer, or got angry. They seemed to think I had no right
+to see inside of them. So I soon pretended not to see anything. But a
+letter doesn't mind. This one," swinging the crumpled paper swiftly
+close to his face, "is glad I found it. Can't you feel it yourself?"
+
+Callandar shook his head. "I am far too dull and commonplace for that!"
+He smiled. "But I have no doubt it is all there, just as you say. Why
+not? Our knowledge of such things is in its infancy."
+
+Aunt Amy stroked the paper with gentle fingers. "Yes, yes, it is all
+there," she murmured. "But I may have read it wrongly for all that. The
+written words I mean. I can't help reading what I feel. Once I felt a
+letter that was full of hate, dreadful! And I read quite shocking things
+in it. But when Esther read it, it was just a polite note, beginning
+'Dear' and ending 'Your affectionate friend."'
+
+"It might have been very hateful for all that."
+
+"But no one knew it. That is why I am so anxious always to know if I
+read things right. Will you read this letter to me?"
+
+"With pleasure--if I may."
+
+"Oh, it doesn't belong to any one. It isn't Esther's because it's too
+old and it begins 'Dearest wife' and it isn't Mary's because it isn't
+Doctor Coombe's writing; so you see I thought it might not hurt anybody
+if I pretended it was mine."
+
+"No," gently, "I do not see why it would."
+
+"I never had a love letter of my own. Or if I did I cannot find it. The
+only thing I ever had with love in it was the ruby ring, and that--"
+
+She checked herself suddenly; her small face freezing into such a mask
+of tragedy that Callandar was alarmed. But to his quick "What is it?"
+she returned no answer and the expression passed as quickly as it
+had come.
+
+When he held out his hand for the letter, she seemed to have forgotten
+it. Her gaze had again grown restless and vague. It would do no good to
+question further, the rare hour of confession was past.
+
+"You both look very comfortable, I'm sure!" It was Esther's laughing
+voice. She had come so quietly that neither of them had heard her. Aunt
+Amy's vagueness vanished in a pleased smile and Callandar, as he sprang
+to open the gate, forgot all about the unread letter and everything
+else, save that she had come.
+
+Why was it, he wondered, that he could never recall her, save in dulled
+tints. Lovely as she had lingered in his memory, her living beauty was
+so much lovelier. There, in the shade of the elm, her blue dress flecked
+with gold, the warm pallor of heat upon her face, her hair lying close
+and heavy, a little pulse beating where the low collar softly disclosed
+the slim roundness of her white throat, she was not only beautiful, she
+was Beauty. She was not only Beauty, she was Herself, the one woman in
+the world! He acknowledged it now, with all humility.
+
+The girl greeted him quietly. She did not, as was her custom, look up
+at him with that sweet widening of the eyes which he had learned to
+hunger for. The truth was that she, too, was moving slowly toward her
+awakening. The days in which they had not met had been full of thoughts
+of him. Dreams had come to her, vague, delicious bits of fancy which had
+whispered in her ear and passed, leaving a new softness in her eyes, a
+new flush upon her cheek. There was about her a dewy freshness which
+seemed to brighten up the world. Vaguely her girl friends wondered what
+had "come over" Esther Coombe, and at home Aunt Amy's pathetic eyes
+followed her, dim with a half-memory of long past joy. But it was Mrs.
+Sykes' Ann who best expressed the change in her beauty when, one day,
+she said to Bubble: "Esther Coombe looks like she was all lighted up
+inside and when she walks you'd think the wind was blowing her."
+
+So it happened that while yesterday she might still have smiled into the
+doctor's eyes as she greeted him, to-day she shook hands without looking
+at his face at all.
+
+Callandar found himself remarking that it was a fine day. Esther said
+that it was beautiful--but dusty. A little rain would do good. She
+fanned herself with her broad hat, and stopped fanning to examine
+closely a tiny stain on the hem of her frock.
+
+"Dear me," she said, "I'm afraid it's axle grease! Mournful Mark gave me
+a lift this morning."
+
+"Oh, I hope not!" anxiously from Aunt Amy, and referring, presumably, to
+the grease.
+
+The doctor looked at the little stray curl on the nape of the graceful
+neck and wished--all the foolish things that lovers have wished since
+the world began. But he had a great longing to see her eyes. If he were
+to say sharply, "Look at me!" would she look up? Absurd idea! And
+anyway he couldn't say it, or anything else, for the first time in his
+life Henry Callandar was tongue-tied.
+
+Did she, too, feel strange? Was that why she kept her eyes so
+persistently lowered? No, it could hardly be that. She laughed and
+talked quite naturally--seemed entire mistress of herself.
+
+"I know I am late, Auntie. It's Friday, you know, and I walked slowly. I
+forgot that I had promised to help Jane wash the new pup. But there is
+time yet. Supposing we have tea, English fashion, out here. I'll
+tell mother--"
+
+"She is at the Ladies Aid, Esther."
+
+"Oh, yes. I forgot. Well, then you must entertain Dr. Callandar while I
+see about tea."
+
+"No tea for me, thanks," said the doctor hastily. He didn't know why he
+said it except that he wanted to say something, something which might
+make her look at him.
+
+But she did not look. His refusal lost him a cup of tea and gained him
+nothing whatever.
+
+"No tea?" Her tone was mildly wondering, but she was looking at Aunt Amy
+while she spoke. "I'm sorry you are in a hurry. Bubble said you
+were busy."
+
+"Not busy exactly. But it's office hours, you know. My partner grows
+quite waxy if I'm late, and I'm late now."
+
+"Another day, then?" Esther's tone was charmingly gracious, but she
+seemed to be addressing the gate post, as far as he could judge from the
+direction of her gaze.
+
+Callandar picked up his hat, gloomily. There was nothing to do now but
+take his leave. And if he had had any sense he might have been going to
+stay for tea. Office hours be hanged!
+
+"Thank you, another day I shall be delighted." He took the hand she
+offered and bowed over it. Delightful custom this of shaking hands!
+Esther's hand was cool as a wind-blown leaf. Would she actually say
+good-bye without looking at him? He held the hand firmly but she did not
+seem to be conscious that he held it. She was smiling at some children
+who were going by on the sidewalk.
+
+"Good-bye," said Callandar in a subdued voice.
+
+"Good-bye," said Esther sweetly.
+
+He dropped her hand, they bowed formally, and the foolish, poignant
+little tragedy of parting was over. Not once had they looked into each
+other's eyes.
+
+When he had gone Esther sank down upon the elm tree seat.
+
+"Oh, Auntie!" she said with a little sob in her voice. "I want--some
+tea!"
+
+Aunt Amy glanced irresolutely from the open letter in her hand to the
+girl's face, and decided to postpone the matter of the letter. "I'll get
+it, Esther. You sit here and rest."
+
+When she returned the girl seemed herself again. She took the tea-tray
+and kissed the bearer with a fervour born of remorse. "I am a Pig," she
+declared, "and you are a darling! Never mind, we'll even up some day."
+
+"When you have had your tea, Esther, I've got a letter I want you to
+read."
+
+"A letter? Who from? I mean, from whom? Gracious! I'll have to be more
+careful of the King's English, now that I'm a school teacher."
+
+"I don't know. It is signed just 'H' and it's written to 'Dearest wife.'
+You don't know who that could be, do you?"
+
+"Mother, perhaps?"
+
+"No. It's not in your father's writing and his name did not begin with
+'H.'"
+
+"Where did you find it, dear?"
+
+"Up in an old trunk of your grandma's--I mean of Mary's mother's. One of
+the trunks that were sent here after she died. Mary asked me to put moth
+balls in it. This letter was all crushed up in a corner. I took it out
+to smooth it, because I knew it was a love letter. You don't think any
+one would mind?"
+
+"N--o." Esther, who knew Aunt Amy's feeling about love letters, could
+not find it in her heart to disagree. "I think we may fairly call it
+treasure-trove. It's only a note anyway." Her eyes ran swiftly over the
+two short paragraphs upon the open sheet.
+
+"Dearest wife:--
+
+"At last I can call you 'wife' without fear. Our waiting is over. Brave
+girl! If it has been as long to you as to me, you have been brave
+indeed. But it is our day now. Even your mother cannot object any
+longer. I am coming for you to-morrow. Only one more day!
+
+"Dear, I think that in my wild impatience I did you wrong. But love does
+not blame love. No wife shall ever be so loved as you. May God forget me
+if I forget what you have done for me...."
+
+"What a strange letter!" Esther looked up wonderingly.
+
+"Is that all, Esther?" Aunt Amy's face was vaguely disappointed. "The
+one I read was much longer than that."
+
+"That is all that is written here, Auntie. But it is a beautiful letter.
+They had been separated, you see, and she had been brave and waited. One
+can imagine--"
+
+The click of the garden gate interrupted her.
+
+"Here's your mother," said Aunt Amy, in a flurried tone. "Don't let
+her--"
+
+"Is that the mail, Esther?" Mrs. Coombe's high voice held a fretful
+intonation. Aunt Amy seized the letter and hid it in her dress. "She
+shan't see it," she whispered childishly.
+
+"Is that the mail?" repeated Mrs. Coombe, coming up the walk.
+
+"No, there is no mail," said Esther, "No one has been to the post
+office. Perhaps Jane had better run down now."
+
+"But you had a letter," suspiciously. "I'm sure I saw it. Where is it?"
+
+"Don't be absurd, mother. I have no letter. Nor would I think it
+necessary to show it to you if I had. I am not a child."
+
+"You are a child. And let me tell you, a clandestine correspondence is
+something which I shall not tolerate. Let me see the letter."
+
+Esther was feeling too happy to be cross. Besides it was rather funny to
+be accused of clandestine correspondence.
+
+"I think I'll go and help Jane with the pup," she said cheerfully. "Too
+bad you didn't come in sooner, mother. Dr. Callandar was here."
+
+"Then you do refuse to show me the letter?"
+
+"If I had one I should certainly refuse to show it. Why do you let
+yourself get so excited, mother? You never used to act like this. It
+must be nerves. Every one notices how changed you are." She paused,
+arrested by the frightened look which replaced the futile anger on her
+step-mother's face.
+
+"I'm not different. Who says I am different? It is you who are trying
+to make a fuss. I'm sure I do not care about your letter. Why should I?
+Your father always seemed to think you needed no advice from any one.
+Only don't imagine that I am blind. I _saw_ you with a letter."
+
+Having triumphantly secured the last word, she turned to busy herself
+with the tea-tray, and Esther, knowing the uselessness of argument, went
+on toward the house. Aunt Amy attempted to follow but was stopped
+by Mary.
+
+"Amy, what did that doctor want here?"
+
+"He came to see me."
+
+Mary laughed. "Likely!" she said. "This tea is quite cold. Was it he who
+left the letter for Esther?"
+
+"Esther didn't have a letter. I had one."
+
+Again the incredulous laugh, and the dull red mounted into Aunt Amy's
+faded cheeks. She clutched the treasured letter tightly under her dress.
+This mocking woman should never see it! But as she turned again to leave
+her, another consideration appealed to her unstable mind. Mary suspected
+Esther--and nothing would annoy her more than to find herself mistaken.
+On impulse Aunt Amy flung the letter upon the tea-tray.
+
+"There it is. Read it, if you like. It has nothing to do with Esther. Or
+any one else. I found it in one of your mother's old trunks."
+
+Left alone, Mary Coombe drank her tea, which after all was not very
+cold. She was not really interested in the letter, now that she had got
+it. Had not a vagrant breeze tossed it, obtrusively, upon her lap, she
+would probably not have looked at it.
+
+Listlessly she picked it up, opened it, glanced at the firm, clear
+writing....
+
+A sharp, tingling shock ran through her. It was as if some one had
+knocked, loudly, at dead of night at a closed door! That writing--how
+absurdly fanciful she was getting!
+
+"Dearest wife," she read, "at last I can call you 'wife' without
+fear"--the vagrant breeze, which had tossed the letter into her lap,
+tossed it off again. Her glance followed it, fascinated!
+
+Of course she had dreamed the writing? She had been terribly troubled by
+dreams of late. But what had Amy said about finding the paper in her
+mother's trunk? The whole thing was a fantastic nightmare. She had but
+to lean forward, pick up the letter, read it properly and laugh at her
+foolishness.
+
+But it was a long time before she found the strength to pick it up. When
+she did, she read it quietly to the end with its scrawled "H." Then she
+read it over again, word by word. Her expression was one of terror
+and amaze.
+
+When she had finished she looked up, over the pleasant garden, with
+blank eyes. Her face was ashen.
+
+"He came," she said aloud. "He came! But--_what did she tell him when he
+came_?"
+
+The garden had no answer to the question. Somewhere could be heard a
+girl's laugh and the sharp bark of a protesting puppy. Mary Coombe drew
+her hand across her eyes as if to clear them of film and, trying to
+rise, slipped down beside the elm-tree seat, a soft blot of whiteness on
+the green.
+
+They found her there when they had finished washing the puppy, but
+though she came quickly to herself under their eager ministrations, she
+would not tell them what had caused her sudden illness. To all their
+questionings she answered pettishly, "Nothing! Nothing but the heat."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI
+
+
+When a man of thirty-five has at last shaken himself free from the
+burden of an unhappy love affair, he is not particularly disposed to
+welcome an emotional reawakening. He knows the pains and penalties too
+well; the fire of Spring, he has learned, can burn as well as brighten.
+Callandar thought that he had done with love, and a growing suspicion
+that love had not done with him brought little less than panic. Upon the
+occasion of Willits' second visit he had begun to realise his danger and
+the professor never guessed how nearly he had persuaded him to leave
+Coombe. Some deep instinct was urging flight, but the impulse had come
+just a little bit too late. He could not go, because he wanted so very
+much to stay.
+
+After Willits' departure he had deliberately tested himself. For five
+days he did not try to see Esther and upon the sixth he realised finally
+that seeing Esther was the only thing that mattered. Then had come the
+short interview under the elm tree--an interview which had shown him a
+new Esther, demure, adorable, with eyes which refused to look at him. He
+had come away from that meeting with a new pulse beating in his heart.
+
+To doubt was no longer possible. He loved her.
+
+But she? Lovers are proverbially modest, but their modesty is fear
+disguised. They hope so much that they fear to hope at all; it seemed
+impossible to Callandar that Esther should not love him and yet it
+seemed impossible that she should. Only one thing emerged clearly from
+the chaos--the immediate necessity of finding out.
+
+"Why don't you ask her?" demanded Common Sense in that wearily patient
+way with which Common Sense meets the vagaries of lovers.
+
+"But it is so soon," objected Caution, while Fear, aroused, whispered,
+"Be careful. Give her time." Even Mrs. Grundy made herself heard with
+her usual references to what people, represented by Mrs. Sykes, might
+say, adding scornfully, "Why, you haven't met the girl's mother yet.
+Don't make a fool of yourself, please."
+
+But over all these voices rose another voice, insistent, demanding to be
+satisfied. It might be premature, it might be all that was rash and
+foolish but he simply had to find out at once whether or not Esther
+Coombe loved him.
+
+His final decision came one morning when driving slowly home from an all
+night fight with death. He was tired but exultant, because he had won
+the fight, and life, which slips so easily away, seemed doubly precious.
+After all, he was no longer a boy. If life still held something
+beautiful for him, why should he wait? He had waited so many
+years already.
+
+Guiding the car with one hand, he slipped the other into his pocket and
+opening a small locket which he found there, gazed long and earnestly at
+the picture it contained. The face it showed him was a young face, fair,
+rounded, childish. Dear Molly! his thought of her was infinitely tender.
+He loved her all the more for the knowledge that he had not loved her
+enough. Well, he could never atone now. She was gone--slipped away, he
+thought, with but little more knowledge of living than the tiny baby he
+had just helped to bring into the world. Brushing away the mist which
+for a moment blurred his sight, Callandar kissed the picture gently and
+shut the case.
+
+The dawn was golden now. The motor began to gather speed. An early
+farmer getting into market with a load of hay, drew amiably to one side
+to let it pass. From a, wayside house came the cheerful noise of opening
+shutters; a milk cart rattled out of a nearby gate; the motor sped still
+faster--the new day was fairly begun.
+
+Early as it was, Mrs. Sykes was busy washing the veranda. This was a
+ritual, rigorously observed twice every day; in the morning with a pail
+and broom, in the evening with the hose. Par be it from us to malign the
+excellent Mrs. Sykes or to suggest that her opportune presence on the
+front steps was due to anything save the virtue of cleanliness. Mrs.
+Sykes, as she often said, couldn't abide curiosity. Still, it would be
+very interesting to know whether Amelia Hill's latest was a boy or a
+girl. Mrs. Hill had already been blessed with nine olive branches, all
+girls, and had confided to Mrs. Sykes that if the tenth presented no
+variation, she didn't know what on earth Hill would do--he having acted
+so kind of wild-like last time. Mrs. Sykes, unable to resist the trend
+of her nature, had advised that no variation could be looked for. "It
+may be," she had said, "but after a run of nine, it isn't to be
+expected. There's no denying that girls run in some families. I know
+jest how you feel, Mrs. Hill, and, if I could, I'd encourage you, for
+I'm a great believer in speaking the truth in kindness. But it's best to
+be prepared, and a girl it will be, you may be sure."
+
+"You are up early, Mrs. Sykes," said the doctor cheerfully. "Wait till I
+take the car around and I'll finish up those steps for you."
+
+"Land no! I won't let you, Doctor. You're clean tired out. I've got a
+cup of hot coffee waiting. I don't suppose, with Amelia laid aside, any
+of them Hills would think to give you so much as a bite. All girls too."
+
+"Not all girls now, Mrs. Sykes," said the doctor cheerfully. "A son and
+heir arrived this morning. Fine little fellow. They appear to be
+delighted."
+
+The discomfited prophet leaned against the door-post for support.
+
+"A boy? It can't be a boy! It doesn't stand to reason!"
+
+"It never does, Mrs. Sykes."
+
+"And I was so sure 'twould be another girl!" There was an infinitesimal
+pause during which Mrs. Sykes' whole outlook readjusted itself, and then
+with a heavy sigh she continued, "Poor Amelia Hill! She'll certainly
+have her troubles now. I shouldn't wonder a mite if it didn't live.
+Miracles like that seldom do. And if it does, it will be spoiled to
+death. No boy can come along after nine sisters and not be made a sissy
+of. Far better if it had been a girl in the first place. And yet I
+suppose Amelia's just as chirpy as possible? She never was one to look
+ahead to see what's coming."
+
+"Lucky for her!" murmured Callandar, as he picked his way over the
+shining wetness of the veranda. "And now, Mrs. Sykes, I want you to do
+me a favour. Don't go predicting to my patient that her boy baby will
+die, or if he doesn't it would be better for him if he did. A woman who
+has mothered nine children is entitled to a little peace of mind with
+the tenth. Don't you think so?"
+
+"Land sakes, yes. If you put it that way. But the shock will be all the
+worse when it comes. Still, if you want the poor thing left in a fool's
+paradise I don't object. Perhaps it would be a good thing to have the
+three littlest Hills over here to spend a week with Ann. I can stand
+them if you can."
+
+"Good idea!" Callandar smiled at her, but attempted no thanks. He had
+learned early that she was as shy about doing a kindness as a child who
+hides its face, while offering you half of its lolly-pop. "I'll fetch
+them. But some one will have to pick them out. Likely as not I'd bring
+the middle three instead."
+
+"They are dreadful similar," assented Mrs. Sykes, pouring coffee. "I
+don't know but what it was them Hill children that made me a
+suffragette!"
+
+"What?"
+
+Mrs. Sykes did not notice the unflattering (or flattering) surprise in
+the doctor's voice.
+
+"Yes. I think it was the Hill children as much as anything. There they
+are, nine of them, like as peas in a pod, and all healthy. I shouldn't
+wonder if the whole nine grows up--and what then? Amelia Hill just can't
+hope to marry nine of them. Three out of the bunch would be about her
+limit. And what are the others going to get? I say, give them the vote.
+Land sakes! Why not? I ain't one to refuse to others what I don't
+want myself."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII
+
+
+Tired though he must have been, the doctor had never felt less like
+sleep. There was a fever in his blood which the cool quietness of the
+spare room could not soothe. The lavendered freshness of the bed invited
+in vain. Crossing to the western window, he threw up the blind and
+looked out to where, peeping out between roofs and trees, the gable
+window of the Elms glittered in the early sun. The morning breeze blew
+softly on his face, sweet with the scent of flowering pinks and
+mignonette. In the orchard all the birds were up and singing. Every
+blade of grass was gemmed with dew, sparkling through the yellow glory
+of dawn like diamonds through a primrose veil. But Callandar, usually so
+alive to every manifestation of beauty, saw nothing save the distant
+glitter of the gable window. The morning, in which he could hardly hope
+to see Esther, stretched before him intolerably long.
+
+Upon impulse he drew his desk to the window and, sitting down, began to
+write:
+
+"Dear Old Button-Moulder--
+
+"Behold the faulty button about to be recast! This is to be a big day. I
+am writing you now because if she refuses me, I shan't be able to tell
+you of it, and if she accepts me I shan't have time. I fancy you know
+who she is, old man. I saw enlightenment grow in your eyes that day
+after church. I hardly knew it myself, then, but now I am sure. Do you
+remember that house we looked at one day? I have forgotten even the
+street, but we can find it again. It had a long sloping lawn, you
+remember, and stone steps and a beautiful panelled hall running straight
+through to a walled garden which might well have fallen there by some
+Arabian Nights enchantment. That is the house I mean to have for Esther.
+I can see her there quite plainly, in her blue dress, filling the rose
+bowl which stands upon the round table in a dusky corner of the hall.
+Over her shoulder, through the open door, glows the riotous colour of
+the garden. Her pure profile gleams like mother-o'-pearl against the
+dark panelling--say, Willits, just go and look up that house, will you?
+I am going to ask her to marry me. And I never knew before what a coward
+I am. Was there ever a chap named Callandar who quoted uppish remarks
+about being Captain of his Soul? If so, let me apologise for him. I
+think the chap who wrote those verses could never have been in love--or
+perhaps he wrote them after she said 'yes.' I'll telegraph the news.
+Don't expect me to write. And don't dare to come down to see me. H.C.
+
+"P.S.--I came upon a good thing the other day. It is by Galsworthy, the
+chap who writes English problem novels:
+
+ "'If on a spring night I went by
+ And God were standing there,
+ What is the prayer that I would cry
+ To Him? This is the prayer:
+ O Lord of courage grave,
+ O Master of this night of spring,
+ Make firm in me a heart too brave
+ To ask Thee anything!'"
+
+"Rather fine, don't you think? Or is it just a madness of pride? On
+second thought, I don't believe that I have arrived at the stage when I
+can do without God. H."
+
+He folded the letter, stamped and addressed it and placed it upon the
+table in the hall where Ann would find and post it. Then, lighting a
+cigar, he sat down beside the open window and began to wonder how the
+momentous meeting with Esther could be best arranged. Perhaps if he
+walked out to the schoolhouse and waited until lunch time? No, it was
+Saturday morning and there was no school. The obvious thing was to call
+at the house, but this, the doctor felt, was sure to be unsatisfactory.
+Not only was there Jane to think of and Aunt Amy--but there was also the
+as-yet-unknown Mrs. Coombe. The visit would almost certainly end in a
+formal call upon the family. He might perhaps send Bubble over with an
+invitation to go fishing. No, that was too risky. Esther might refuse to
+go fishing and that would be a bad omen.
+
+In a sudden spasm of nervousness Callandar threw the half-burned cigar
+out of the window and, following it with his eyes, was not sorry to be
+distracted by the sight of Ann in her night-dress, crying under the pear
+tree. Ann crying was an unusual sight, but Ann in a night-dress was
+almost unbelievable. The doctor knew at once that something serious must
+have happened and went down to see.
+
+The child looked up at his approach, all the natural impishness of her
+small face drowned in sorrow. In her open hand she held the body of a
+tiny bird, all that was left of a fledgling which had tried its
+wings too soon.
+
+"It toppled off and died," said Ann. "All its brothers and sisters
+flewed away."
+
+"Heartless things!" said Callandar, and then seeing that comfort was
+imperative he sat down beside the mourner and tried to do the proper
+thing. He explained to her that the dead bird was only one of a
+nest-full and that the dew was wet and that she was getting green stains
+on her nightie. He reminded her that birds' lives, for all their seeming
+brightness, are full of danger and trouble. Perhaps the baby bird was
+just as well out of it. At least it would never know the lack of a worm
+in season, nor the bitterness of early snow. This particular style of
+comfort he had found very effective in cases other than baby birds, but
+it didn't work with Ann.
+
+"I don't care," she sobbed, "it might have lived anyway. It never had a
+chance to live."
+
+Living, just living, was with Ann clearly the great thing to be desired.
+
+Callandar stopped comforting and took the child on his knee.
+
+"I believe you've got the right idea, little Ann," he said. "It isn't so
+much the sorrow that counts or the joy either, but just the living
+through it. We're bound to get somewhere if we keep on. Don't cry any
+more and we'll bury the little bird all done up in nice white fluffy
+cotton. As Mrs. Burns says when any one dies: 'It's such a comfort to
+have 'em put away proper.' And then after a while you and Bubble might
+go fishing."
+
+"I can't." Ann showed signs of returning tears. "If Aunt lets me go
+anywhere, I promised to go and help Esther Coombe pick daisies to fix
+the church for to-morrow."
+
+Here was chance being kind indeed! But the doctor dissembled his
+exultation.
+
+"Hum! too bad. Where did Miss Esther tell you to go?" he asked
+guilelessly.
+
+"To the meadow over against the school."
+
+"What time?"
+
+"Half past two."
+
+"Well, cheer up, I'll tell you what--I'll go and help Miss Esther pick
+the daisies. I can pick quite as fast as you. And I'll speak to Aunt
+Sykes and make it right with her. So if you run now and get dressed you
+and Bubble may go just as soon as you've had breakfast. And stay all
+day. Be sure you stay all day, mind."
+
+A good sound hug was the natural answer to this and when the
+conspirators met at breakfast everything had been satisfactorily
+arranged. Ann had her holiday and the doctor's way lay clear before him.
+For all his apparent ignorance Callandar knew that daisy field quite as
+well as Ann. It was wild and lonely, yet full of cosy nooks and hollows.
+Mild-eyed cows sometimes pastured there. It was a perfect paradise for
+meadow-larks. Could any man ask better than to meet the girl he loved in
+a field like that?
+
+"You're not eating a mite, Doctor."
+
+With a start, Callandar helped himself to marmalade.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+So much for the morning of the eventful day. We have given it in detail
+because it was so commonplace, so empty of any incident which might have
+foreshadowed the happenings of the afternoon. Callandar was restless,
+but any man is restless under such circumstances. He found the morning
+long, but that was natural. Long afterwards he thought of its slow
+moving hours, lost in wonder that he should have caught no glimpse,
+heard no whisper, while all the time, through the beauty of the scented,
+summer day, the footsteps of inescapable fate drew so swiftly near.
+Fortunate indeed for us that the fragile house we dwell in is provided
+with no windows on the future side, and that the veil of the next moment
+is as impenetrable as the veil of years.
+
+What are they, anyway, these curious combinations of unforeseen
+incidents which under the name of "coincidence" startle us out of our
+dull acceptance of things? Can it be that, after all, space and
+circumstance are but pieces in a puzzle to which the key is lost, so
+that, playing blindly, we are startled by the _click_ which announces
+the falling of some corner of the puzzle into place? Or is it merely
+that we are all more closely linked than we know, and is "coincidence"
+but the flashing of one of numberless invisible links into the light of
+common day? Some day we shall know all about it; in the meantime a
+little wonder will do us good.
+
+It was, of course, coincidence that this afternoon Mary Coombe should
+offer to gather the marguerites for Esther and that, the Saturday help
+having failed to materialise, Esther was glad of the offer which left
+her free to help Aunt Amy in the kitchen. It was also coincidence that
+Mary should choose to wear her one blue dress and her shady hat which
+looked a little like Esther's. But, given these coincidences, it is easy
+to understand why the doctor, passing slowly by the field of
+marguerites, felt his heart bound at the supposed sight of Esther among
+the flowers.
+
+Now that the moment had really come, his restlessness fell from him. He
+felt cool, confident, happy! The world, the beautiful world, was gay in
+gold and green. Over the rise, half hidden by its gentle undulation, he
+caught the glint of a blue gown--
+
+Running his car under the shade of some nearby trees, the doctor leapt
+the pasture fence in one fine bound. The blue figure among the daisies
+was stooping, her face hidden by a shady hat. No one else was in
+sight--just he and she in all the lovely, sunny, breeze-swept earth! He
+came towards her softly; called her name, but so low that she did not
+hear. Then a meadow-lark, disturbed, flew up with his piercing "sweet!"
+the stooping figure turned and he saw, in the clear sunlight, the face
+under the shady hat--
+
+Had something in his brain snapped? Or was he living through a nightmare
+from which he would awake presently? The world, the daisy field, the
+figure in blue, himself, all seemed but baseless fabrics of some
+fantastic vision!
+
+For, by a strange enchantment, the face which should have been Esther's
+face was the face of Molly Weston, his lost wife!
+
+It could not be! But it was.
+
+Incredible the swiftness with which nature rights herself after a
+stunning shock. Only for a moment was Callandar left in his paradise of
+uncertainty. The next moment, he knew that he beheld no vision, knew it
+and accepted it as certainly and completely as if all his life had been
+but a preparation for the revelation.
+
+"You!" he said. It was only a whisper but it seemed to fill the
+universe. "You--Molly!"
+
+At the name, the hazel eyes which had met his so blankly sprang suddenly
+alive--recognition, knowledge, fear, entreaty, flashed across them in
+one moment's breathless space--then they grew blank again and Mary
+Coombe fell senseless beside her sheaf of daisies.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII
+
+
+Bending over the form of his lost wife, Henry Callandar forgot Esther.
+His mind, careful of its sanity, removed her instantly from the
+possibility of thought. She was gone--whisked away by some swift genie
+and, with her, vanished the world of blue and gold inhabited by lovers.
+
+There remained only that white, faded face among the daisies. With
+careful hands he removed the crushed hat and loosened the collar at the
+neck. It was Molly. Not a doubt of that. Not Molly as he remembered her
+but Molly from whom the years had taken more than their toll, giving but
+little in return. He could not think beyond this fact, as yet. And he
+felt nothing, nothing at all. Both heart and mind lay mercifully numb
+under the anaesthetic of the shock.
+
+Deftly he did the few things necessary to restore the swooning woman,
+noting with a doctor's eye the first faint flush of pink under the dead
+white nails, then the flutter of breath through the parted lips and the
+slow unclosing of the hazel eyes which, at sight of him, sprang widely,
+vividly into life.
+
+"Harry!" The name was the merest whisper and held a quiver of fear. He
+remembered, stolidly, that just so had she whispered it upon the evening
+of their hurried marriage.
+
+"Yes, Molly. It is all right. Don't be frightened!"--Just so had he
+soothed her.
+
+She closed her eyes a moment while strength came back and then, raising
+herself, slipped out of his arms with a little breathless movement of
+avoidance. She seemed indeed to cower away and the fear in her eyes hurt
+him with a physical pang. Instinctively he put out his hand to reassure
+her, repeating his entreaty that she should not be frightened.
+
+"But I am frightened!" Her voice was hoarse. "You terrified me! You had
+no right to come like that. You should have let me know--sent
+word--or--or something."
+
+"Sent word?" He repeated the words, in a dazed way. "How could I? How
+could I know?"
+
+"How could you come if you didn't know?" Already the miracle of
+readjustment which in women is so marvellously quick, had given back to
+Mary Coombe something of her natural manner. Besides, she had always
+known that some day he might find her--if he cared to look.
+
+"Why should you come at all?" she flashed, raising defiant eyes. "The
+time to come was long ago."
+
+"I did come." Callandar spoke slowly. "I came--" he paused, for how
+could he tell her that his coming had been to a house of death.
+
+The bald answer, the strangeness of his gaze stirred her fear again. For
+a moment they stared at each other, each busy with the shifting puzzle.
+Then her quicker intuition abandoned the mystery of the present meeting
+to straighten out the past.
+
+"Then you followed the letter?"
+
+"Yes, I followed the letter."
+
+"And you saw her--my mother?"
+
+"Yes, I saw your mother."
+
+Impulsively he moved toward her but she shrank back, plainly terrified.
+
+"Don't! I didn't know. I swear I did not know. I never saw the
+letter--until last night. And I don't understand. What--what did my
+mother tell you when you came?"
+
+"There was only one thing which would have kept me from you, Molly."
+
+"Only one thing? What?" she almost whispered.
+
+"She told me you were dead."
+
+The flash of understanding on her face showed that she, at least, had
+shifted part of the puzzle into place.
+
+"I see now," she said slowly, "I have wondered ever since I saw the
+letter. But I did not think she would go that far. Yet it was the
+simplest way. There was no date on the letter--but I guessed that it
+must have come too late."
+
+"Too late?"
+
+"Yes, or she would never have dared. Besides she might not have wanted
+to. She didn't know. I never had the courage to tell her. But if the
+letter had come in time--"
+
+She faltered, growing confused under his intense gaze.
+
+"In time for what?" he prompted patiently.
+
+She brushed the question aside.
+
+"Did you believe her when she said that?"
+
+"Yes. Why should I have doubted? It seemed to be the end. I fainted on
+the doorstep. A long illness followed, when it was at its worst a friend
+came--helped me to pull out. When I was well again, I searched for your
+mother, employed detectives, but we never found her. Neither did we find
+anything upon which to hang a doubt of what she had told me."
+
+"No. She was very clever."
+
+"But _why?_ For God's sake, why? Why should she lie to me? I had never
+harmed her. We were married. I could give you a home. She knew it. I
+told her. Why should she do this senseless, horrible thing?"
+
+She looked at him with wide eyes and stammered,
+
+"Don't--don't you know?"
+
+A sense of some hitherto undreamed horror came to him with that
+stammering whisper. The spur of it brought some of his firmness back.
+
+"I do not know. There must have been a reason. You must tell me."
+
+He forced her, through sheer will, to lift her eyes to his. They were
+startled and sullen. With a start he saw, what he had missed before,
+that this woman, his wife, was a stranger. But he had himself well in
+hand now and his gaze did not falter. There was no escaping its demands.
+Her answer came in a little burst of defiance.
+
+"Yes, there was a reason. You may as well know it. Your letter and your
+coming were both too late. I was married."
+
+The doctor was not quick enough for this--
+
+"Yes, of course you were, but--"
+
+"Oh, not to you! Can't you understand? I was married to another man....
+You need not look like that! What did you expect? I warned you. I knew I
+could never defy mother. I told you so. But you said it wouldn't be
+long--that she need never know. And I waited and waited. I could have
+married more than once but I wouldn't. I faced mother and said I
+wouldn't. But every time it was harder. I couldn't keep it up. And you
+didn't come. Then when he came and we thought he was so rich she made me
+marry him. She _made_ me. I thought you were never coming back anyway. I
+wrote you once telling you to come. You didn't answer."
+
+She paused breathless but he could find nothing to say. It seemed a
+small thing that the letter must have missed him somewhere, his whole
+mind was absorbed in trying to comprehend one stupendous fact. The
+puzzle had shifted into place indeed.
+
+"I thought you didn't care any more," her words raced as if eager to be
+done, "and mother gave me no peace. You will never understand how
+terrified I was of mother. And he seemed so kind and was going to be
+rich. He owned part of a gold mine--mother was sure it would mean
+millions. But it didn't. Mother was fooled there!" with a gleam of
+malice. "The mine turned out to be worthless--after we were married."
+
+Callandar drew a sharp breath and shook himself as if to throw off the
+horror of some enthralling nightmare.
+
+"You married him--this man--knowing that you were a wife already?"
+
+"A fine sort of wife!" He quivered at the coarseness of meaning in her
+tone. "We were never really married."
+
+"What do you mean?"
+
+"I mean that it was all a farce. What's a ceremony? For all I knew it
+wasn't even legal. When you did not answer my letter I thought that was
+what your silence meant. I asked a girl to ask her father who was a
+lawyer if a marriage was legal when the girl was under age and the
+parents didn't know about it. He said sometimes it wasn't."
+
+Callandar groaned. "And you married again--on that?"
+
+"Yes. I had to, anyway. I couldn't hold out against mother. I daren't
+tell her. She left us after the wedding, when the mine failed, and went
+back to Cleveland. It was there she must have got your letter, and the
+note I found last night. And when you came, she told you I was dead--to
+save the scandal. She was always different after that, though I never
+guessed why. It was a lie, you see, and mother was terrified of telling
+lies. It was the only thing she was afraid of. She believed that liars
+go to hell."
+
+The tone in which she spoke of the probable torment of her mother was
+quite without feeling. Callandar listened in fascinated wonder. Was this
+Molly?--Pretty, kind-hearted Molly?
+
+"I cannot understand," he said in a stifled voice. "It is all too
+horrible! This man you married--"
+
+"He is dead. He died a year ago. I thought at first that you must have
+found out and that was why you came. I should have died of fright if you
+had come while he was alive. He would never have understood--never! He
+didn't like mother but he wasn't afraid of her. And I think that at last
+he suspected that she had made me marry him for his money. But he was
+always good. At first I was afraid all the time--oh, it was dreadful! I
+think I have always been afraid--all my life--" Without warning she
+threw her hands out wildly and broke into choking sobs, crying with the
+abandon of a frightened child. Yet no one could have mistaken the
+impulse of her grief. It was for herself she wept.
+
+Was it possible that she was a child still? A child in spite of her
+woman's knowledge, and the dulled lustre of her hair? Callandar
+remembered grimly that Molly's views of right and wrong had always been
+peculiarly simple. She had never wished to do wrong, but when she had
+done it, it had never seemed so very wrong to her. Her greatest dread
+had always been the dread of other people's censure.
+
+"Don't cry," he said gently.
+
+She must have felt the change in his voice, for although her sobs
+redoubled she did not again shrink from the hand he laid upon her hair.
+It was all over. She had told him the truth. Surely he must see that he
+was the one to blame, not she.
+
+After a while she dried her eyes and looked up at him timidly but with
+restored confidence.
+
+"People need never know now!" she said more calmly.
+
+"People? Do people matter?"
+
+She picked a daisy and began nervously to strip it of its petals--a pang
+of agony caught at the man's heart. So, only that morning, had he
+imagined himself consulting the daisy oracle. "She loves me, she loves
+me not." Absolutely he put the memory from him. Molly was speaking.
+
+"People do matter. They make things so unpleasant. Not that I care as
+much about them as I used to; but still, one has to be careful. People
+are so prying, always wanting to know things," she glanced around
+nervously, "but let's not talk about them. I don't understand things
+yet. How did you find me, if you thought I was--dead?"
+
+"Accident, if there be such a thing. I was driving down the road. I am
+living in the town near here--in Coombe!"
+
+"But you can't! I live in Coombe. It is my home. There isn't a Chedridge
+in the place."
+
+"My name is not Chedridge now. I took my uncle's name when I inherited
+his money. I am called Henry Callandar."
+
+"Callandar!" Her voice rose shrilly on the word. "And you are living in
+Coombe? Why you are--you must be--Esther's Dr. Callandar!"
+
+The man went deathly white, yet his enormous self-control, the fruit of
+years, held him steady.
+
+Mary Coombe began to laugh weakly. "Why, of course, that explains it
+all, don't you see? Haven't you placed me yet? Esther is my
+step-daughter. The man I married was Doctor Coombe."
+
+"Good God!" The exclamation was revelation enough had Mary Coombe heard
+it. But she did not hear it; this new aspect of the situation had seemed
+to her so farcical that her laughter threatened to become hysterical.
+"Oh, it's so funny!" she gasped.
+
+It was certainly funny--such a good joke! The Doctor thought he might as
+well laugh too. But at the sound of his laughter, hers abruptly ceased.
+
+"Don't do that!"
+
+He tried to control himself. It was hard. He wanted to shriek with
+laughter. Esther's step-mother, the mysterious Mrs. Coombe, was
+Molly--his wife! Some mocking demon shouted into his ears the words he
+had intended to say to her when he came to tell her that he and Esther
+loved each other. He thought of his own high mood of the morning, of the
+tender regret which he had laid away with the dead of the dead past. It
+seemed as if all the world were rocking with diabolic laughter--Fate
+plans such amusing things!
+
+He caught himself up--madness lay that way.
+
+"Please don't laugh!" said Mrs. Coombe a trifle fretfully. "At least not
+so loudly. You startle me. My nerves are so wretched. And anyway it's
+more serious than you seem to think. We shall have to discuss ways of
+managing so that people will not know. Your being already acquainted
+with Esther will help. It will make your coming to the house quite
+natural. But it will be better to admit that we knew each other years
+ago, were boy and girl friends or something like that. Your change of
+name and my marriage will explain perfectly why we did not know each
+other until we met. Nobody will go behind that. They will think it quite
+romantic. The only one we need be afraid of is Esther. She is so quick
+to notice--"
+
+She did not know about Esther then? She had never guessed that the girl
+was more to him than a mere acquaintance. Thank God for that! And thank
+God, above all, that the worst had not happened--Esther herself did not
+know, would never know now--
+
+"I believe it can come quite naturally after all," Mary went on more
+cheerfully. "No one will wonder at anything if we say we are old
+friends. And we can be specially careful with Esther. I wouldn't have
+her know for anything. She is like her father. She would never
+understand. She doesn't know what it is to be afraid, as I was afraid of
+my mother. Do you think it is wicked that sometimes I'm glad she is
+dead, mother, I mean?"
+
+He answered with an effort. "You used to be fond of your mother, Molly."
+
+"Oh, don't call me Molly. Call me Mary. It will sound much better. No
+one has ever heard me called Molly here. If Esther heard it she would
+wonder at once. You will be careful, won't you?"
+
+"Yes. I shall be careful." He had not heard what she said, save that she
+had mentioned Esther's name. Rather he was thinking with a gratitude
+which shook his very soul that fate had at least spared the innocent.
+Esther was safe. She did not love him. He felt sure of that now. Strange
+irony, that his deepest thankfulness should be that Esther did not
+love him.
+
+A small hand fell like a feather upon his arm.
+
+"Harry!"
+
+"Yes, Molly!"
+
+He looked down into her quivering face and saw in it, dimly, the face of
+the girl in his locket, not a mere outward semblance this time but the
+soul of Molly Weston, reaching out to him across the years. Her light
+touch on his arm was the very shackle of fate. Her glance claimed him.
+Nothing that she had done could modify that claim--the terrible claim of
+weakness upon the strength which has misled it.
+
+Vaguely he felt that this was the test, the ultimate test. If he failed
+now he was lost indeed. Something within him reached out blindly for the
+strength he had dreamed was his, found it, clutched it desperately--knew
+that it held firm.
+
+He took the slight figure in his arms, felt that it still trembled and
+said the most comforting thing he could think of. "Don't worry, Molly.
+No one will ever know."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV
+
+
+Ester was sitting upon the back porch, hulling strawberries and watching
+with absent amusement the tireless efforts of Jane to induce a very fat
+and entirely brainless pup to shake hands. It had been a busy day, for
+owing to the absence of the free and independent "Saturday Help" Esther
+had insisted upon helping Aunt Amy in the kitchen. Now the Saturday pies
+and cakes were accomplished and only the strawberries lay between Esther
+and freedom.
+
+She had intended, a little later, to walk out along the river road in
+search of marguerites, but when Mary, more than usually restless after
+her fainting spell of yesterday, had offered to go instead, she had not
+demurred. It would be quite as pleasant to take a book and sit out under
+the big elm. Esther was at that stage when everything seems to be for
+the best in this "best of all possible worlds." She was living through
+those suspended moments when life stands tiptoe, breathless with
+expectancy, yet calm with an assurance of joy to come.
+
+With the knowledge that Henry Callandar was not quite as other men, had
+come an intense, delicious shyness; the aloofness of the maiden who
+feels love near yet cannot, through her very nature, take one step
+to meet it.
+
+There was no hurry. She was surrounded with a roseate haze, lapped in
+deep content; for, while the doctor had learned nothing from their last
+meeting under the elm, Esther had learned everything. She had not seemed
+to look at him as they parted, yet she had known, oh, she had known very
+well, how he had looked at her! All she wanted, now, was to be alone
+with that look; to hold it there in her memory, not to analyse or
+question, but to glance at it shyly now and again, feeding with quick
+glimpses the new strange joy at the heart.
+
+"D'ye think He ever forgets to put brains into dogs?" asked Jane
+suddenly. "Oh, you silly thing, don't roll over like that! Stop
+wriggling and give me your paw!"
+
+"He, who?" vaguely.
+
+Jane made a disgusted gesture. "You're not listening, Esther! You know
+there is only one Person who puts brains into dogs!"
+
+"But Pickles is such a puppy, Jane. Give him time."
+
+"It's not age," gloomily. "It's stupidness. All puppies are stupid, but
+Pickles is the most abnormously stupid puppy I ever saw."
+
+Esther laughed. "Where did you get the word, ducky?"
+
+"From the doctor. It was something he said about Aunt Amy. Say, Esther,
+isn't he going to take you driving any more? I saw him going past this
+very afternoon. He turned down towards the river road. There was lots of
+room. Next time he takes you, may Pickles and me go too?"
+
+"Pickles and I, Jane."
+
+"Well, may we?"
+
+"I don't know. Perhaps. When did the doctor go past?"
+
+"Nearly two hours ago. I wonder if there's some one kick down there?
+Bubble says they're getting a tremenjous practice. I don't like Bubble
+any more. He thinks he's smart. I don't like Ann, either. I shan't ask
+her to my birthday party."
+
+"I thought you loved Ann."
+
+"Well, I don't. She thinks she's smart!"
+
+"Ann, too? Smartness must be epidemic."
+
+"It's all on account of the doctor," gloomily. "They can't get over
+having him boarding at their place. I told Ann that my own father was a
+doctor, but she said dead ones didn't count. Then I told her that my
+mother didn't have to keep boarders anyway."
+
+"That was a naughty, snobbish thing to say. I'm ashamed of you!"
+
+"What's 'snobbish'?"
+
+"What you said was snobbish. Think it over and find out."
+
+Jane was silent, apparently thinking it over. The fat pup, tired with
+unwonted mental exertions, curled up and went to sleep. Esther returned
+to her dreams. Then, into the warm hush of the late afternoon came the
+quick panting of a motor car.
+
+"There he is!" cried Jane excitedly. "Let's both run down to the gate to
+see him."
+
+"Jane!" Esther's cheeks were the colour of her ripest berry. "Jane, come
+here! I forbid you--Jane!"
+
+"He's stopping anyway. He'll be coming in. You had better take off that
+apron.--Oh, look! Some one's with him. Why," with some disappointment,
+"it's mother! He is letting her out. I don't believe he is coming in at
+all--let go! Esther, you pig, let me go!"
+
+She wriggled out of her sister's firm hold but not before the motor had
+started again; when she reached the gate it was out of sight.
+
+Mrs. Coombe surveyed her daughter coldly. "You are a very ill-mannered
+child," she said, and putting her aside walked slowly up the path and
+around the house to where Esther sat on the back porch.
+
+"Where are the daisies?" asked Esther, looking up from her berries.
+
+"The daisies?" vaguely. "Good gracious! I forgot all about the daisies."
+
+"Didn't you get any?"
+
+"Heaps, but the fact is I didn't bring them home. I felt so tired. I
+don't know how I should have managed to get home myself if Dr. Callandar
+hadn't picked me up."
+
+"Dr. Callandar?" Esther's voice was mildly questioning.
+
+"Yes, why not?"
+
+"I thought you had not met him."
+
+"Neither I had--at least I hadn't met him for a good many years." Mary
+gave a little excited laugh. "But that's the funny part of it--he is an
+old friend."
+
+Esther looked up with her characteristic widening of the eyes. The news
+was genuinely surprising. And how agitated her mother seemed!
+
+"It is really quite a remarkable coincidence," went on Mary nervously.
+"I was so surprised, startled indeed. Although it's pleasant, of course,
+to meet an old schoolmate."
+
+"You and Doctor Callandar schoolmates?" The eyes were very wide now.
+
+Mary grew more and more confused.
+
+"Yes--that is, not exactly. I mean his name wasn't Callandar then. His
+name was Chedridge. Did you never hear me speak of Harry Chedridge?"
+
+"Never."
+
+"Well, you never listen to half I say. And how was I to know that Doctor
+Callandar was the Harry Chedridge I used to know? He took the name of
+Callandar from an uncle--or something. Anyway it isn't his own."
+
+Esther hulled a particularly fine berry and carefully putting the hull
+in the pan, threw the berry away.
+
+"Curiouser and curiouser!" she said, quoting the immortal Alice. "Did
+you recognise him at once?"
+
+If it be possible for a lady of this enlightened age to simper, Mrs.
+Coombe simpered. "He recognised me at once!" with faint emphasis on
+the pronouns.
+
+The girl choked down a rising inclination to laugh.
+
+"Why shouldn't he? I suppose you haven't changed very much."
+
+"Hardly at all, he says; at least he says he would have known me
+anywhere. But it's quite a long time, you know, terribly long. I was a
+young girl then. Naturally, he was much older."
+
+"I should have thought so. That's why it seems queer--your having been
+schoolmates."
+
+Mrs. Coombe looked cross. "I did not mean schoolmates in that sense."
+
+"Oh, merely in a Pickwickian sense!" Esther's laugh bubbled out.
+
+Mary arose. She was afraid to risk more at present, until she had been
+to her room and--rested awhile. "You are rude, as usual," she said with
+dignity. "When I said that Dr. Callandar and I were schoolmates I meant
+simply that we were old friends, that we knew each other when we were
+both younger. I do not see anything at all humorous in the statement."
+
+"No, of course not!" with quick compunction. "It's quite lovely. Just
+like a book. Why didn't he come in?"
+
+The question was so cleverly casual that no one could have guessed the
+girl's consuming interest in the answer. But its cleverness had overshot
+the mark, for so colourless was the tone in which it was asked that Mary
+did not notice it at all. Instead she retreated steadily along her
+own line.
+
+"I hope I always treat your friends with proper courtesy, Esther. And I
+shall expect you to do the same with mine. Dr. Callandar is a very old
+friend indeed. Should he call to-night I wish you to receive him
+as such."
+
+"I'll try," said the girl demurely.
+
+The way of escape was now open, but Mrs. Coombe hesitated. She seemed to
+have something else to say. Something which did not come easily. "It's
+horrid living in a town like Coombe," she burst out. "People always want
+to know everything. We met the elder Miss Sinclair on the river
+road--you know what that means! If people ask you any question--or
+anything--you had better tell them at once that Dr. Callandar is not a
+stranger."
+
+"I should not dream of suppressing the fact."
+
+"You see," again that odd hesitation, "he may call--rather often.
+And--people talk so easily."
+
+Despite her care, Esther's sensitive face flamed in answer to the
+quickened beat of her heart. What an odd thing for her mother to say!
+What did she mean? Was it possible that he had already told her--asked
+her? Or had she merely guessed? There was a moment's pause, and then,
+"Let them talk!" said the girl softly. "It can't make any difference, to
+them, how often Dr. Callandar calls."
+
+Mrs. Coombe looked doubtful, hesitated once more, but finally turned
+away without speaking. As she went, she cast a careless glance at Aunt
+Amy, who stood just within the kitchen doorway, a curiously watchful
+look in her usually expressionless eyes.
+
+"Berries all ready, Auntie," said Esther cheerfully. "What's the matter
+with me as a Saturday Help?"
+
+But Aunt Amy did not smile as she usually did.
+
+"She's gone to get dressed," she said abruptly, indicating with a
+backward gesture Mrs. Coombe's retiring figure.
+
+"Well?"
+
+"For him. She's gone to get dressed for him."
+
+Esther was puzzled. "Why shouldn't she? Oh, I forget you didn't know!
+It's quite a romance. Mother used to know Dr. Callandar when she was a
+girl. 'We twa hae rin aboot the braes,' you know. Only it seems so
+funny. Fancy, Dr. Callandar and mother! But we shan't have to worry any
+more about her health. She can't possibly avoid him now."
+
+Aunt Amy was not listening. The curiously watchful look was still in her
+eyes and suddenly, apropos of nothing, she began to wring her hands in
+the strange, dumb way which always preceded one of her characteristic
+mental agonies,--agonies which, far beyond her understanding as they
+were, never failed to awake profound compassion in Esther.
+
+"What is it, dear?" she asked gently. "Are you not so well?"
+
+"Don't you ever feel things, Esther? Don't you ever sense
+things--coming?"
+
+"No, dear. And neither do you, when you are well. You are tired." She
+placed her hands firmly upon the locked hands of Aunt Amy and with
+tender force attempted to separate them. But Jane, who had been a silent
+but interested spectator, spoke eagerly.
+
+"Don't, Esther! Do let her tell us what is coming. You know she always
+tells right when she wrings her hands. Go on, Auntie--"
+
+"Jane, be quiet! I'll tell you why afterwards. Auntie dear, sit down."
+
+'Aunt Amy's hands relaxed and the strange look faded. "It's nothing,"
+she said. "It's gone! I must be more careful. Do not mention it to your
+mother, children. She might think me queer again, and I am not at all
+queer any more. You have noticed that I'm not, haven't you, Esther? I'll
+do anything you say, my dear."
+
+"Then lie out in the hammock while I get supper. The berries are all
+ready. Then we'll all get dressed. Jane may wear one of her new frocks
+and you shall wear your grey voile. It will be quite a party."
+
+"Will there be ice cream? Because if there isn't I don't want to get
+dressed," sighed Jane. "My new things don't fit. They look like bags."
+
+"It will soon be holidays and then I'll fix them for you."
+
+Jane laid a childish cheek to her sister's hand.
+
+"Nice Esther," she cooed. "I'm sorry I called you a pig." Then, in a
+change of tone as they left Aunt Amy resting in the hammock, "Esther,
+why is Auntie so afraid of mother lately? She says such queer things I
+don't know what she means."
+
+"Neither do I, dear. But I think it is just a passing fancy. She was
+very much hurt about the ring being sold. When she gets it back she will
+forget about it."
+
+"She looks at mother as if she hates her."
+
+"Oh, no!" in a startled tone. "How can you say such a thing, Jane?"
+
+"But she does. I've seen her. I don't blame her. I think it was
+horrid--"
+
+"That's enough. You know nothing about it. Little girls who do not
+understand have no right to criticise."
+
+"Fred says it was the most underhan--"
+
+"Jane, one word more and you shall have no berries to-night. Duck, don't
+you realise that you are speaking in a very unkind way of your
+own mother."
+
+The child's eyes filled with ready tears, but her little mouth was
+stubborn. "Auntie's more my mother, Esther, and so are you. And it was
+mean to take the ring and I don't care whether I have any berries
+or not."
+
+Supper was a very quiet meal that night. Mrs. Coombe, interrupted in the
+process of dressing, came down in an old kimono, but ate almost nothing,
+Jane was sullen, Aunt Amy silent and Esther happily oblivious to
+everything save her own happy thoughts.
+
+As soon as she could, she slipped away to her own room, and, choosing
+everything with care, began to dress herself as a maiden dresses for the
+eye of her lover. She was to be all in white, her dainty dress, her
+petticoats, stockings and shoes. White made her look younger than ever,
+absurdly young. He had never seen her all in white and she knew quite
+well how soft it made the shadows of her hair, how startlingly blue her
+eyes, how warm and living the ivory of her lovely neck.
+
+"Oh, I am glad I am pretty!" she whispered to her mirror. "Glad, glad!"
+Then with a laugh at her own childishness she "touched wood" to
+propitiate the jealous fates and ran down stairs to hide herself in the
+duskiest corner of the veranda.
+
+It was delightful there. The cooling air was sweet with the mingled
+perfumes of the garden border below, an early star had fallen,
+sparkling, upon the blue-grey train of departing day, a whispering
+breeze crept, soft-footed, through the shrubbery. Esther lay back in the
+long chair and closed her eyes. For thirty perfect moments she waited
+until the click of the garden gate announced his coming. Then she sprang
+up, smiling, blushing,--peering through the screen of vines--
+
+A man was coming up the path. At first sight he seemed a stranger, some
+one who walked heavily, slowly--the doctor's step was quick and
+springing. Yet it was he! She drew back, shyly, yet looked again. Some
+one, in a pretty green silk gown, had slipped out from under the big elm
+and was meeting him with outstretched hands.
+
+"Mother," thought Esther, "how strange!"
+
+They had paused and were talking together. Mary's high, sweet laugh
+floated over the flowers, then her voice, a mere murmur. His voice,
+lower still. Then silence. They had turned back, together, down the
+lilac walk.
+
+Esther sat down again. She felt numb. She closed her eyes as she had
+done before. But all the dreams, all the happy thoughts were gone. She
+opened them abruptly to find Aunt Amy staring down upon her, dumbly,
+wringing her hands. In the warm summer air the girl shivered.
+
+"What is it?" she asked a little sharply. But Aunt Amy seemed neither to
+see nor hear her. She flitted by like some wandering grey moth into the
+dim garden, still wringing her hands.
+
+Esther sat up. "How utterly absurd," she said aloud. Indeed she felt
+heartily ashamed of herself. To behave like a foolish child, to startle
+Aunt Amy into a fit and all because her mother and Dr. Callandar had
+gone for a stroll down the lilac walk--the most natural thing in the
+world. They would return presently. She had only to wait. But the
+waiting was not quite the same. Those golden moments already sparkled in
+the past. Nothing could ever be quite the same as if he had come
+straight up the path to where she waited for him in the dusk.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In the living-room, Jane who had small patience with twilight, had
+lighted the lamp. Its shaded beams fell in golden bars across the
+veranda floor. The sky was full of stars, now, but the voice of the
+breeze was growing shrill, as if whistling up the rain.
+
+They were coming back along the side of the house. Esther rose quickly
+and slipped into the safety of the commonplace with Jane and the lighted
+lamp. Mrs. Coombe entered first, there was an instant to observe and
+wonder at her. She seemed a different woman, young, pretty, sparkling;
+even her hair seemed brighter. Behind her came Callandar and when Esther
+saw his face her heart seemed to stop. It was the face, almost, of a man
+of middle age, a firm, quiet face with cold eyes.
+
+"Esther!" Mrs. Coombe's voice held incipient reproof.
+
+The girl came forward and offered her hand. The doctor, this new doctor,
+took it, let it drop and said, "Good evening, Miss Esther," then turned
+to Jane with a politely worded message from Ann and Bubble.
+
+"You can tell them I won't go," said Jane crossly. "They think they are
+smart. Just because--"
+
+Esther slipped quietly from the room. In the hall outside she paused,
+breathless. She felt as if she had run a long way. Shame enveloped her,
+a shame whose cause she could not put into words. She only knew that she
+had, in the few seconds of that cold greeting, been profoundly
+humiliated. She quivered with the sting of unwarranted expectancy. But
+if this had been all, it would have been well. There was something else,
+some deeper pain surging through the smart of wounded pride, something
+which led her with blind steps into a dark corner of the stairs where
+she sat very quiet and still.
+
+Through the open front door, she could see the bars of lamplight on the
+deserted veranda, and hear from the open windows of the living-room a
+hum of conversation in which Jane seemed to be taking a leading part.
+Then came the tinkle of the old piano and Mary's voice, singing, or
+attempting to sing, for it was soon apparent that her voice sagged
+pitifully on the high notes.
+
+Presently Jane came out, banging the door. Jane's manners, Esther
+thought, were really very bad. She had probably banged the door because
+she had been sent to bed and she had probably been sent to bed because
+she had been saucy. Esther wondered what particular form her sauciness
+had taken, but when Jane called softly, "Esther!" she did not answer.
+She did not want to put Jane to bed to-night. The child flashed past her
+up the stairs and soon could be heard from an upstair window calling
+imperatively for Aunt Amy. But Aunt Amy, flitting through the dim garden
+wringing her hands, did not hear. Jane, much injured, went to bed by
+herself that night.
+
+In the lamp-lit room there was no more music. The murmur of voices grew
+less distinct. There were intervals of silence. (Only very old friends
+can support a silence gracefully--but of course these two were very old
+friends.) Esther wondered, idly, how it would be best to explain her
+absence to her mother. Toothache, perhaps? Not that the excuse mattered.
+Mary never listened to excuses. She would be cross and fretful anyway
+and complain that Esther never treated her friends with proper courtesy.
+The best thing she could do would be to go to bed. But she made no
+movement to go; the moments ticked by on the hall clock unnoticed.
+
+After a time, which might have been long or short, there was a stir in
+the room and her mother's voice called "Esther! Esther!"
+
+The girl stood up, smoothed her white dress, slipped out on to the
+veranda and into the garden. From there she answered the call.
+"Yes, Mother?"
+
+"Where are you? You sound as if you had been asleep. Doctor Callandar is
+going."
+
+Esther came lightly up the steps.
+
+"So soon?"
+
+"It is early," agreed Mrs. Coombe playfully, "but I can't keep him."
+
+Esther, herself in shadow, could see the doctor's face as he stood
+quietly beside his hostess. It was full of an endless weariness. Her
+pride melted. Impulsively she put out a warm hand--
+
+"Good night, Miss Esther. How very sweet your garden is at night. But it
+feels as if our fine weather were over. The wind begins to blow
+like rain."
+
+Esther's hand dropped to her side. Perhaps he had not seen it in the
+dusk.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV
+
+
+We all know that strange remoteness into which one wakes from out deep
+sleep. Though the eye be open, the Ego is not there to use it. For an
+immeasurable second, the awakener knows not who he is, nor why, nor
+where. Only there is, faintly perceptible, a reminiscent consciousness
+whether of joy or sorrow, a certain flavour of the soul, sweet or
+bitter, into which the Ego, slipping back, announces, "I am happy" or "I
+am miserable."
+
+Esther had not hoped to sleep that night but she did sleep and heavily.
+When she awoke it was to blankness, a cold throbbing blankness of
+undefined ill being. Then her Ego, with a sigh, came back from far
+places; the busy brain shot into focus; all the memories, fears,
+humiliation of the night before stood forth clear and poignant. She
+buried her face in the pillow.
+
+Yet, after the first rush of consciousness, there came a difference.
+There always is a difference between night and day thoughts. Fresh from
+its wonder-journey, the soul is braver in the morning, the brain is
+calmer, the spirit more hopeful. After a half-hour's self-examination
+with her face in the pillow Esther began to wonder if she had not been
+foolishly apprehensive and whether it were not possible that half her
+fears were bogies. The weight began to lighten, she breathed more
+freely. Looking over the rim of the sheltering pillow the morning seemed
+no longer hateful.
+
+Foremost of all comforting thoughts was the conviction that instinct
+must still be trusted against evidence. Through all her speculations as
+to the unexplained happenings of the previous day, she found that
+instinct held firmly to its former belief regarding the doctor's
+feelings toward herself. There are some things which one knows
+absolutely and Esther knew that Henry Callandar had looked upon her as a
+man looks upon the woman he loves. He had loved her that night when they
+paddled through the moonlight; he had loved her when he watched for her
+coming along the road, but most of all he had loved her when, under the
+eye of Aunt Amy, they had said good-bye at the garden gate. This much
+was sure, else all her instincts were foresworn.
+
+After this came chaos. She could not in any way read the riddle of his
+manner of last night. Had the sudden resumption of his old friendship
+with her mother absorbed his mind to the exclusion of everything else?
+Impossible, if he loved her. Had purely physical weariness or mental
+worry blotted her out completely for the time being? Impossible, if he
+loved her. Then what had happened?
+
+Doubtless it would all be simple enough when she understood. She sighed
+and raised her head from the pillow. At any rate it was morning. The day
+must be faced and lived through. Any one of its hours might bring
+happiness again.
+
+The rainstorm which had swept up during the night had passed, leaving
+the morning clean. She needed no recollection to tell her that it was
+Sunday. The Sabbath hush was on everything; no milkman's cans jingled
+down the street; no playing children called or shouted; there was a bell
+ringing somewhere for early service. Esther sighed again. She was sorry
+it was Sunday. Work-a-day times are easiest.
+
+A rich odour of coffee, insinuating itself through the half open door,
+testified mutely to the fact that Aunt Amy was getting breakfast. It was
+later than usual. After breakfast it would be time to dress for church.
+Every one in Coombe dressed for church. It was a sacred rite. One and
+all, they had clothes which were strictly Sabbatarian, known indeed by
+the name of Sunday Best.
+
+Esther's Sunday best was a blue, voile, a lovely blue, the colour of her
+eyes when in soft shadow. It was made with a long straight skirt
+slightly high at the waist, round neck and elbow sleeves and with it
+went soft, wrinkly gloves and a wide hat trimmed with cornflowers. She
+knew that she looked well in it--and the doctor would be in church.
+
+On this thought which flew into her mind like a swift swallow through an
+open window, her lethargy fled and in its place came nervous haste; a
+feverish impatience which brought her with a bound out of bed, flushed
+and eager. Philosophy is all very well but it never yet stilled the
+heart-beat of the young.
+
+Aunt Amy looked up in mild surprise as she hurried into the kitchen in
+time to butter toast and poach the eggs.
+
+"Why, Esther!" she said in her bewildered way. "I thought--I didn't
+think that you would get up this morning."
+
+"Why? I am perfectly well, Auntie. Where is mother?"
+
+"Oh, she's up! Picking flowers."
+
+Esther looked slightly surprised. It was not Mrs. Coombe's habit to rise
+early or to pick flowers, but before she had time to comment, Mary
+herself entered the kitchen with an armful of roses.
+
+"Hurry with your breakfast, Jane," she said, "I want you to take these
+over to the doctor's office. I wonder you have not sent some to the poor
+man before this, Esther. Mrs. Sykes' roses never amount to anything.
+Shall I pour the coffee? I suppose you felt that you did not know him
+well enough. But flowers sent in a neighbourly way would have been quite
+all right. If you weren't always so stiff, people would like you better.
+I felt quite ashamed of your behaviour last night. Of course it wasn't
+necessary for you to stay in the room _all_ the evening, but it was
+simply rude to run away as you did. You needn't make Jane an excuse.
+Jane could put herself to bed, for once."
+
+"I did--" began Jane, but catching sight of her sister's face, went no
+further. And Mrs. Coombe, who was always talkative when airing a
+grievance, paid no attention.
+
+"If you are feeling huffy about the motor breaking down, you'll just
+have to get over it," she went on. "It couldn't possibly have been Dr.
+Callandar's fault anyway."
+
+"I am quite sure that it wasn't."
+
+"Then don't sulk. He is rather fine looking, don't you think? Though as
+a boy he was almost ugly. It doesn't seem to matter in men--ugliness, I
+mean. And of course in those days he could not afford to dress; dress
+makes such a difference. I shouldn't be a bit surprised if his clothes
+are English made. That baggy look that isn't really baggy, you know.
+When I knew him his people were quite poor. Only a mother and sister.
+The father shot himself. People said suicide ran in that family. But
+Harry--Henry said that if it did, it was going to stop running. He said
+such odd things. I was staying with friends when I met him, at a church
+social. One meets all kinds at an affair like that. My friends didn't
+ask him to the party they gave for me. For although they were a very
+good family, the Chedridges, Henry was almost a hired man at that time,
+working for old Dr. Inglis, to put himself through college. His mother
+and sister never went out."
+
+"Were they both invalids?"
+
+"Don't be clever, Esther! I mean socially, of course. Jane, run up to my
+dresser and look in the second drawer on the right hand side and bring
+down my small photo case. I think I have a photo somewhere, not a very
+good one, but enough to show how homely he was.... Amy, aren't you going
+to eat any breakfast this morning?"
+
+Aunt Amy, who had been following her niece's unusual flow of talk with
+fascinated attention, returned with a start to her untasted egg. Esther
+tried to eat some toast and choked. In spite of all her resolutions she
+felt coldly and bitterly angry. That her mother should dare to gossip
+about him like that! That she should call him "ugly," that she should
+speak with that air of almost insolent proprietorship of those wonderful
+early years long, long before she, Esther, had come into his life at
+all, it was unendurable!
+
+Do not smile, sophisticated young person. When you are in love you will
+know, only too well, this jealousy of youless years; this tenderness for
+photos and trifling remembrances of the youth of the one you love. You
+will envy his very mother, who, presumably, knew him fairly well in the
+nursery, and that first dreadful picture of him in plaid dress and
+plastered hair will seem a sacred relic.
+
+In the meantime you may take my word for it, and try to understand how
+Esther felt as she bent, perforce, over the photo of a dark-browed lad
+whose very expression was in itself a valid protest against photography.
+
+"Ugly, wasn't he?" asked Mrs. Coombe.
+
+"Very," said Esther.
+
+"Perfectly fierce," said Jane, peering over her shoulder. "Really
+fierce, I mean, not slang. He looks as if he would love to bite
+somebody."
+
+"The photographer, probably."
+
+Esther shrugged her shoulders and laid the photo carelessly upon the
+table. So careless was she, in fact, that a sharp "Look out!" from Jane
+did not prevent a sudden jerk of her elbow upsetting her steaming cup of
+coffee right over the pictured face.
+
+With an angry exclamation, Mary sprang forward to rescue her property
+but Esther had already picked it up and was endeavouring to repair the
+damage with her table napkin.
+
+"Oh, do take care!" said Mary irritably. "Don't rub so _hard_--you'll
+rub all the film off--there! What did I tell you?"
+
+"Dear me! who would ever have dreamed it would rub off that easily?"
+Esther surveyed the crumpled bits of photo with convincing dismay.
+
+"Any one, with sense. It's ruined--how utterly stupid of you, Esther."
+Mary's voice quivered with anger. "You provoking thing! I believe you
+did it on purpose."
+
+The cold stare from the girl's eyes stopped her, but she added
+fretfully, "You are always doing things to annoy me. I can't think why,
+I'm sure."
+
+"She was trying to dry it," declared Jane, belligerently. "She didn't
+mean to hurt the old photo. Did you, darling?"
+
+"I can hardly see what my motive could have been," said Esther politely,
+rising from the table. She had deliberately tried to destroy the
+photograph and was exultantly glad that she had succeeded, yet, so
+quickly does the actress instinct develop under the spur of necessity,
+that her face and manner showed only amused tolerance of such a foolish
+suspicion.
+
+Later, the culprit smiled understandingly at her image in the mirror as
+she dressed for church. "I did not know I could be so catty," she told
+her reflection, "but I don't care. She hadn't any right to have that
+darling picture. Ugly, indeed!" The blue eyes snapped and then became
+reflective. "Only she didn't think it ugly any more than I did. It was
+just talk. She was certainly furious when the film rubbed off. I
+wonder--" She fastened the last dark tress of hair, still wondering.
+
+All the way to church she wondered, walking demurely with Jane up
+Oliver's Hill, while Mary, nervously gay, fluttered on a step or two
+ahead. Jane found her unresponsive that morning. The acquaintances they
+passed found her distant. They wondered if Esther Coombe were becoming
+"stuck up" since she had a school of her own? For although, as Miss
+Agnes Smith said, it is not quite the thing to do more than nod and
+smile on the way to church, one doesn't need to pass one's friends
+looking like an absent-minded funeral.
+
+Poor Esther! She saw nobody because she looked for only one.
+
+"Oh, Esther, Mrs. Sykes has a new bonnet. There she is, Esther, look!"
+
+"Very pretty," murmured Esther absently.
+
+Jane dropped her hand. "You're blind as well as deaf, Esther. It's
+perfectly, dreadfully awful, and you know it!"
+
+Thus abjured, Esther managed to look at Mrs. Sykes' bonnet. And, having
+looked, she laughed. Mrs. Sykes had certainly surpassed herself in
+bonnets. And poor Ann, her skirts were stiffer, her pig-tails tighter
+and her small face more mutinous than ever. The doctor was not of the
+party. Esther had known that, long before Jane had noticed the bonnet.
+
+Still, there was nothing in that. He did not always walk with Ann to
+church. He might not come up Oliver's Hill at all. He might come from
+the opposite direction. He might be in church already. Esther's step
+quickened. But she had no excuse for hurry. Unless one sang in the choir
+or were threatened with lateness it was not etiquette to push ahead of
+any one on Oliver's Hill. Decently and in order was the motto, so Esther
+was sharply reminded when she had almost trodden on the unhastening
+heels of Mrs. Elder MacTavish.
+
+Mrs. MacTavish turned in surprise but, seeing Esther, relaxed into the
+usual Sunday smile and bow.
+
+"Good morning, Esther. Good morning, Mrs. Coombe. Good morning, Jane.
+What perfect weather we are having. You are all well, I hope?"
+
+"Very well, thank you."
+
+"And dear Miss Amy?"
+
+"Very well indeed."
+
+"So sad that she never cares to come to church. But of course one
+understands. And it must be a satisfaction to you all that she keeps so
+well. I said to Mr. MacTavish only last night that I felt sure Dr.
+Callandar was not being called in professionally. That is the worst of
+being a doctor. One can hardly attend to one's social duties without
+arousing fear for the health of one's friends. Not that Dr. Callandar is
+overly sociable, usually."
+
+The last word, delivered as if by an afterthought, said everything which
+she wished it to say. Esther's lips shut tightly. Mary Coombe flushed.
+But she was quick to seize the opening nevertheless.
+
+"Such an odd thing, dear Mrs. MacTavish! Dr. Callandar turns out to be
+quite an old friend of--of my family. We knew each other as boy and
+girl. In his college days, you know."
+
+"How very pleasant. But I always understood your family lived in
+Cleveland. Did Dr. Callandar take his degree in the States?"
+
+"Oh, no, of course not, but I was visiting in Canada when we knew each
+other. Mutual friends and--and all that, you know."
+
+"Very romantic," said Mrs. MacTavish. Her tone was pleasantly cordial,
+yet there was a something, a tinge--her quick glance took in Mrs.
+Coombe's pretty dress and flowered hat, and the beginning of a smile
+moved her thin lips. She said nothing. But then she did not need to say
+anything. Mind reading is common with women.
+
+Mrs. Coombe was furious. Esther laughed suddenly, a bubbling, girlish
+laugh, and then pretended that she had laughed because Jane had stubbed
+her toe. Jane looked hurt, Mrs. Coombe suspicious and Mrs. MacTavish
+amused. So in anything but a properly Sabbatical frame of mind the
+little party arrived at the church door.
+
+Who does not know, if only in memory, that exquisite thrill of fear and
+expectation with which Esther entered the place which might contain the
+man she loved? Another moment, a breath, and she might see him!... And
+who has not known that stab of pain, that awful darkness of the spirit,
+which came upon her as, instantly, she knew that he was not there?
+
+He was not in the church. Mental telepathy is recognised as well by its
+absence as by its presence. Esther knew that the church was empty of her
+lover and that it would remain empty. He was not coming to church
+to-day. Fortunate indeed that Mrs. MacTavish was not looking, for the
+girl's lip quivered, an unnatural darkness deepened the blue of her
+eyes. Then, smiling, she followed her mother up the aisle. Girls are
+wonderfully brave and if language is given us to conceal our thoughts
+smiles are very convenient also.
+
+Mary Coombe settled herself with a flutter and a rustle, and then,
+behind the decorous shield of a hymn book, she whispered,
+
+"Did you see Dr. Callandar as we came in?"
+
+"No."
+
+"Look and see if he is here."
+
+The girl glanced perfunctorily around.
+
+"No," she said.
+
+Mrs. Coombe frowned. She was patiently annoyed and Esther felt cold
+anger stir again. What difference could the doctor's absence possibly
+make to Mary Coombe?
+
+The singing of the psalm and the reading were long drawn out
+wearinesses. Esther had not come to church to worship that morning. We
+do not comment upon her attitude. We merely state it. To-day, church,
+the service and all that it stood for had been absolutely outside of
+her emotions. Yet with the prayer came the thought of God and with the
+thought a thrill of angry fear--a fear which was an inevitable after
+effect of her very orthodox training. God, she felt dimly, did not like
+people to be very happy. He was a jealous God. He was probably angry now
+because she had come to church thinking more of Dr. Callandar than of
+Him. "Thou shalt have no other Gods before me!" Awful, mystical words!
+Did they mean that one couldn't have any human god at all? Not even a
+near, kind protecting god--like the doctor? It frightened her.
+
+She found herself explaining to God that her lover was not really a
+rival. That although she loved him so terribly it was in quite a
+different way and would never interfere with her religious duties. Then,
+feeling the futility of this, she pretended carelessness, trying to
+deceive God into the belief that she didn't think so very much of the
+doctor anyway.
+
+This was in the prayer, while she sat with her eyes decorously shaded by
+her hand. Above her in the pulpit, the minister in an ecstasy of
+petition set forth the needs of the church, the state and the
+individual. Esther did not hear a word until a sudden dropping of his
+voice forced a certain phrase upon her attention. He was praying, with
+an especial poignancy for "that blessing which maketh rich and addeth
+no sorrow."
+
+Was there such a blessing? A blessing which would make rich and add no
+sorrow? No wonder the minister prayed for it. To Esther, whose mind was
+saturated with the idea of God as the author of chastenings, the
+possibility came with a shock of joy. She, too, began to pray, and she
+prayed for one thing only, over and over--the blessing that maketh rich
+and addeth no sorrow. There was no need, she felt, to specify further.
+God was sure to guess what blessing she meant.
+
+A subdued rustle, a swaying as of barley in a gentle breeze and the
+prayer was over. Esther removed her hand from her eyes and looked up at
+the minister. For a tiny second his glance met hers. A thrill shot
+through her, a thrill of dismay. With all the force of a new idea, it
+came to her that she and he were in the same parlous case. He loved her,
+as she loved--somebody else.
+
+And that meant that he must suffer, suffer as she had suffered last
+night. Last week when he had told her of his love she had been
+surprised, sorry and a little angry. But last week he had spoken of
+unknown things. Love and suffering had been words to her then, now they
+were realities.
+
+Then, for she was learning quickly now, came another flash of
+enlightenment. They had been praying for the same thing. He, too, had
+prayed for the blessing which maketh rich--and he had meant _her_. She
+knew it. He had been asking God to give her to him. Horrible!
+
+Common sense shrank back before the invading flood of fear. What if God
+had listened? What if He had answered? Ministers, she knew, have great
+influence with God. What if He had said, "Yes"? What if all the trouble
+of last night, the blankness of to-day, were part of the answer?
+
+"Never! Never!" she said. She almost said it aloud, so real had her fear
+been. Her eyes, fixed upon the minister's face, were terrified, but her
+soul was strong. Fearful of blasphemy, yet brave, she faced the bogie of
+a God her thought had evoked, saying, "I make my own choice. Take my
+lover from me if you will--I shall never give myself to another."
+
+All this was very wrong, shocking even, especially in church. But it
+really happened and is apt to happen any Sunday in any church so long as
+human love rebels at the idea of a Divine love less tender than itself.
+
+Gradually the panic fear died down. Esther's sane and well-balanced
+nature began to assert itself. Some voice, small but insistent, began to
+say, "God is not like that," and she listened and was comforted. She had
+not yet come to the love which casts out fear, but she was done with the
+fear which casts out love.
+
+So that when on the church steps in the sunshine she felt Angus
+Macnair's hand tremble in hers, she was able to meet his eyes,
+straightly, understandingly, but unafraid.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVI
+
+
+The manner in which Dr. Callandar spent that tragic Sunday is not
+clearly on record. We have watched Esther so closely that he has been
+permitted to escape our observation, and it would be manifestly unfair
+to expect any coherent account of the day from him. He knows that he
+went for a walk, early, and that he walked all day. He remembers once
+resting by the willow-fringed pool which had seen his introduction into
+Coombe, but he could not stay there. Between him and that hot June day
+lay the wreck of a world. Once he stumbled upon the Pine Lake road and
+followed it a little way. But here, too, memory came too close and drove
+him aside into the fields. There he tried to face his future fairly,
+under the calm sky. But it was hard work. With such a riot of feeling,
+it was difficult to think. His mind continually fell away into the
+contemplation of his own misery. It was a bad day, a day which left an
+ineffaceable mark.
+
+With night came the first sign of peace, or rather of capitulation. He
+fought no more because he realised that there was nothing for which to
+fight. There had never been, from the very first moment, a possibility
+of escape, the smallest ray of hope. Fate had met him squarely and the
+issue had never been in doubt.
+
+It was a "wonderful clear night of stars" when, having circled the town
+in his aimless wandering, he found himself opposite the schoolhouse gate
+and calm enough to allow his thoughts to dwell definitely upon Esther.
+She, at least, was safe, and the knowledge brought pure thankfulness.
+Not for anything in the world would he have had her entangled in this
+tragic coil. Leaning over the gate he saw the school steps, faintly
+white in the starlight. It needed small effort of imagination to see her
+there as he had seen her that first day--a happy girl, looking at him
+with the long, straight glance of unawakened youth. A great wave of
+protecting love went out to meet that vision. Self was lost in its
+immensity. As he had found her, so, please God, she was still and so he
+would leave her.
+
+Then, somewhere in the back of his brain, a question sprang to vivid
+life. Was she the same? He knew that all day he had been fighting back
+that question. Last night something had frightened him--something
+glimpsed for a moment in Esther's face when she had come in from the
+garden to say good-night. Fancy, perhaps, or a trick of the lamplight.
+She could not really have changed. He would not allow himself even to
+dream that she had changed.
+
+By this time she would know about himself and Mary--know all that any
+one was to know. He had insisted upon that. Mary had promised to tell
+her to-day that they were to be married soon. Next time he saw her she
+would look upon him with different eyes; eyes which would see not her
+sometime friend and companion but her step-mother's future husband. He
+must steel himself for this. Probably she would laugh a little. He hoped
+she would laugh. Last night she had looked so--she had not looked like
+laughter. If she should laugh it would answer the last doubt in his
+heart. He would know that she was free.
+
+Presently he felt himself to be unbearably weary. Physical needs,
+ignored all day, began to clamour. He must get home at once. No _outré_
+proceedings must raise the easy breath of gossip. He must not flinch, he
+dared not run away, all must be done decently and in order. Let him only
+keep his head now--the bravest man need not look too far into
+the morrow.
+
+It must be late, he knew. The road into Coombe was deserted. All the
+buggies of the country folk returning from evening service had passed
+long ago and even the happy young couples indulging in a Sunday night
+"after church" flirtation had decorously sought their homes. He looked
+at his watch by the clear starlight. It was later even than he had
+thought. No need to avoid passing the Elms, now; they would all be
+asleep--he might perhaps be able to sleep himself if he knew that no
+light burned in Esther's window.
+
+There was no light in the house anywhere. It stood black in the shadow
+of its trees. The doctor found himself walking softly. His steps grew
+slower, paused. Irresistibly the "spirit in his feet" drew him to the
+closed gate from where he could see the black oblong of her window.
+
+"She is asleep," he thought. "Of course she is asleep. Thank God!"
+
+Then, on the instant of dropping his eyes from the window, he saw her.
+She was standing quite near, in the shadow of the elm.
+
+"Esther!" The one word leaped from his lips like a cry.
+
+"Yes, it is I," she said.
+
+She offered no word of explanation nor did any need of one occur to
+him. Moving from the shadow into the soft starlight she came toward him
+like the spirit of the night. But when she paused, so close that only
+the gate divided them, he saw that her eyes were wide and dark
+with trouble.
+
+"I am so glad you came. I wanted to see you. I--I could not sleep." She
+spoke with the direct simplicity of a child, yet nothing could have
+shown more plainly that she was a child no longer. All her pretty
+girlish hesitation, all her happy shyness had passed away on the breath
+of the great awakening. It was a woman who stood there, pale, remote,
+with a woman's question in her eyes.
+
+The keen shock of the change in her filled Callandar with rebellious
+joy; it would be pain presently, but, just for the moment, love exulted
+shamelessly, claiming her own. He tried to answer her but no words came.
+
+"You look very tired." She seemed not to notice his silence. "I must not
+keep you. But there is a question I want to ask. Mother told me to-night
+that you and she are to be married. Is it true?"
+
+How incredible she was, he thought. How perfect in her direct and simple
+dignity. Yet there had crept into her tone a wistfulness which broke
+his heart.
+
+"Yes. It is true." He could do no less than meet her on her own high
+ground.
+
+"She said," the girl's sweet, remote voice went on, "that you had loved
+each other all your lives. Is that true, too?"
+
+He had hoped that he might be spared the bitterness of this, but since
+only one answer was possible, "It is true," he said hoarsely, "it is
+true that we loved each other--long ago."
+
+"Long ago--and now?" He was to be spared nothing, it seemed. Her wide
+eyes searched his face. Lest she should read it too plainly, he
+bowed his head.
+
+Then suddenly, even as she drew back from him, hurt to the heart, some
+trick of moonlight on his half-hidden face, linked to swift memory,
+showed her another moonlight night, a canoe, a story told--and in a
+flash the miracle had happened. Intuition had leaped the gulf of his
+enforced silence--Esther knew.
+
+A great wonder grew in her eyes, an immense relief.
+
+"Why," she spoke whisperingly, "I see, I know! She, my mother, is the
+girl you told me of. The girl you married--"
+
+She did not need the confirmation of his miserable eyes. It was all
+quite plain. With a little broken sigh of understanding, she leaned her
+head against the gate post and, all child again, began to cry softly
+behind the shelter of her hands.
+
+"Esther!"
+
+He could say nothing, do nothing. He dared not even touch the dark, bent
+head. But we may well pity him as he watched her.
+
+The girl's sobbing wore itself out and presently she lifted
+tear-drenched eyes, like the blue of the sky after rain. Her tragic,
+unnatural composure had all been wept away.
+
+"I understand--now," she faltered. "Before, I didn't. I thought dreadful
+things. I thought that I--that you--oh, I couldn't bear the things I
+thought! But it's better now. You did love me--didn't you?"
+
+"Before God--yes!"
+
+She went on dreamily. "It would have been too terrible if you hadn't--if
+you had just pretended--had been amusing yourself--been false and base.
+But I felt all along that you were never that. I knew there must be
+some explanation and it didn't seem wrong to ask. Instead of pretending
+that I didn't know all the things you had not time to say. Forgive me
+for ever doubting that you were brave and good."
+
+"Spare me--"
+
+She was not yet old enough to understand the tragic appeal. For she
+leaned nearer, laying her soft hand over his clenched ones.
+
+"It is all so very, very sad," she said with quaint simplicity which was
+part of her, "but not so bad--oh, not nearly so bad as if you had been
+pretending--or I mistaken. Think!--How terrible to give one's love
+unworthily or unasked!"
+
+"But you do not love me," he burst out, "you cannot! You must not!"
+
+Never had he seen her eyes so sweet, so dark.
+
+"I do love you. And I honour you above all men."
+
+Before he could prevent her, she had stooped--her lips brushed his hand.
+
+"Oh, my Dear!"--He had reached the limit of his strength--instant flight
+alone remained if he would keep the precious flower of her trust. And
+she, too, was trembling. But in the soft starlight they looked into each
+other's eyes, and what they saw there helped. Their hands clasped, but
+in that moment of parting neither thought of self, so both were strong.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVII
+
+
+Mrs. Sykes thought much about her boarder in those days and, for a
+wonder, said very little. Gossip as she was, she could, in the service
+of one she liked, be both wise and reticent. Perhaps she knew that
+oracles are valued partly for their silences. At any rate her prestige
+suffered nothing, for the less she said, the more certain Coombe became
+that she could, if she would, say a great deal. Of course her pretence
+of seeing nothing unusual in the doctor's engagement was simply absurd.
+Coombe felt sure that like the pig-baby in "Alice," she only did it "to
+annoy because she knows it teases."
+
+One by one the most expert gossips of the town charged down upon the
+doctor's landlady and one by one they returned defeated.
+
+"True about the doctor and Mary Coombe? Why, yes of course it's true.
+Land sakes, it's no secret." Mrs. Sykes would look at her visitor in
+innocent astonishment. "Queer? No. I don't see anything queer about it.
+Mary Coombe's a nice looking woman, if she is sloppy, and I guess she
+ain't any older than the doctor, if it comes to that. No, the doctor
+doesn't say much about it. He ain't a talking man. Sudden? Oh, I don't
+know. 'Tisn't as if they'd met like strangers. As you say, they _might_
+have kept company before. But I never heard of it. I always forget,
+Mrs. MacTavish, if you take sugar? One spoon or two? As you say, old
+friends sometimes take up with old friends. But sometimes they don't. My
+Aunt Susan found her second in a man who used to weed their garden. But
+it's not safe to judge by that. Ann, hand Mrs. MacTavish this cup, and
+go tell Bubble Burk that if he doesn't stop aggravating that dog, it'll
+bite him some day, and nobody sorry."
+
+In this manner did Mrs. Sykes hold the fort. Not from her would Coombe
+hear of those "blue things of the soul" which her quick eye divined
+behind the quiet front of her favourite. But with the doctor himself she
+had no reserves, it being one of her many maxims that "what you up and
+say to a person's face doesn't hurt them any." The doctor was made well
+aware that her unvarnished opinion of his prospective marriage was at
+his disposal at any time.
+
+"I'm not one as gives advice that ain't asked," declared Mrs. Sykes with
+sincere self-deception. "But what sensible folks see in Mary Coombe I
+can't imagine. I may be biased, not having ever liked her from the very
+first, but being always willing to give her a chance--which I may say
+she never took. There's a verse in the Bible she reminds me of,
+'Unstable as water'--Ann, what tribe was it that the Lord addressed them
+words to?"
+
+"I don't know, Aunt."
+
+"There, you see! She doesn't know! That's what happens along of all
+these Sunday Schools. In my day I'd be spanked and sent to bed if I
+didn't know every last thing about the tribes."
+
+"Ann and I will go and look it up," said the doctor hastily, hoping to
+escape; "it will be good discipline for both of us."
+
+"Land sakes! I'm not blaming you, Doctor. Naturally you haven't got your
+mind on texts, and I don't blame you about the other thing either. Men
+are awful easy taken in. My Aunt Susan used to say that the cleverer a
+man was the more he didn't understand a woman. Dr. Coombe was what you'd
+call clever, too, but it didn't help him any. Mind you, I'm not
+criticising, far from it, but I suppose a person may wonder what a man's
+eyes are for, without offence. No one knows better than you, Doctor,
+that I'm not an interfering woman and I'd never dream of saying a word
+against Mary Coombe to the face of her intended husband, but if I did
+say anything it would have to be the truth and the truth is that a more
+thorough-paced bit of uselessness I never saw."
+
+"Mrs. Sykes," the doctor's voice was dangerously quiet, "am I to
+understand that you are tired of your boarder?"
+
+Mrs. Sykes jumped.
+
+"Land, Doctor, don't get ruffled! I'm real sorry if I've hurt your
+feelings. I didn't mean to say a word when I set out. My tongue just
+runs away. And naturally you have to stand up for Mrs. Coombe. I see
+that. That'll be the last you'll hear from me and 'tisn't as if I'd ever
+turn around and say 'I told you so' afterwards."
+
+This was _amende honorable_ and the doctor received it as such; but when
+he had gone into his office leaving his breakfast almost untouched, Mrs.
+Sykes shook her head gloomily.
+
+"You needn't tell me!" she murmured, oblivious of the fact that no one
+was telling her anything. "You needn't tell me!" Then, with rare
+self-reproach, "Perhaps I hadn't ought to have said so much, but such
+blindness is enough to provoke a saint. If he'd any eyes--couldn't he
+see Esther?" Mrs. Sykes sighed as she emptied the doctor's untasted cup.
+
+More frankly disconsolate, though not so outspoken, were Ann and Bubble.
+Not only did they dislike the bride elect but they objected to marriage
+in general. "A honeymoon will put the kibosh on this here practice,
+sure," moaned Bubble.
+
+"Look at me. I'm not thinking of getting married, am I? No, and I'm
+never going to get married either."
+
+"I am," said Ann, "and I'm going to have ten sons and the first one is
+going to be called 'Henry' after the doctor."
+
+"Huh!" said Bubble, "bet you it isn't. Bet you go and call it after its
+father. They all do."
+
+"No chance! Bet you I won't. I wouldn't call it 'Zerubbabel' for
+anything."
+
+For an instant they glared at each other, and then as the awful
+implication dawned upon Bubble his round face grew crimson and his voice
+thrilled with just resentment.
+
+"Well, if you think you're going to marry me, Miss Ann, you're jolly
+well mistaken."
+
+"Will if I like," said Ann, retiring into her sun-bonnet.
+
+Upon the whole, however, their affection for the doctor kept them
+friendly. Both children felt that something was wrong somewhere. Their
+idol was not happy. Bubble whispered to Ann of long hours when the
+doctor sat in his office with an open book before him, a book the pages
+of which were never turned. Ann told of weary walks when she trotted
+along by his side, wholly forgotten. Only between themselves did they
+ever speak of the change in him, and Henry Callandar was well repaid
+for the careless kindness of his brighter hours by a faithful
+guardianship, a quick-eyed consideration and a stout line of defence
+which protected his privacy and ignored his moods without his ever being
+aware of such a service.
+
+Esther he seldom saw. She was remarkably clever, he thought, with a
+tinge of bitterness, in arranging duties and pleasures which would take
+her out of his way. It was better so, of course. It was the worst of
+injustice to feel hurt with her for doing what of all things he would
+have had her do. But one doesn't reason about these things, one feels.
+
+Sometimes he wondered if that midnight interview with her at the gate
+had ever really taken place--or had it been midsummer madness, too sweet
+to exist even in memory? Certainly, in the Esther he saw now there was
+nothing of the Esther of the stars. She wore her mask well. School had
+closed for the holidays and the summer gaieties of Coombe were in full
+swing. Esther boated, picnicked, played croquet and tennis. If there was
+any change in her at all it showed only in a kind of feverish gaiety
+which seemed to wear her strength. She was certainly thinner. Callandar
+ventured to suggest to Mary that she was looking far from well. But Mary
+laughed at the idea. She was very much annoyed with Esther. The girl
+appeared to care nothing at all for the great event, refused to discuss
+it, declined absolutely to put herself out in the slightest for the
+entertainment of her mother's prospective husband, seemed to avoid him
+in fact. Moreover, she openly expressed her intention of leaving home
+immediately after the wedding. Mrs. Coombe was afraid people would talk.
+
+Of them all, Aunt Amy was the only one who understood. How her poor,
+unsound brain arrived at the knowledge we cannot say. Perhaps Esther was
+more careless in her presence, dropping her mask almost as if alone, or
+perhaps Aunt Amy's strange psychic insight took no note of masks, or
+perhaps--account for it as you will, Aunt Amy knew! Esther and Dr.
+Callandar loved each other, and Mary stood between. This latter fact was
+not at all surprising to Aunt Amy. Was it not the special delight of the
+mysterious "They" to bring misery to all Aunt Amy loved, and was not
+Mary their accredited agent? The affair of the ruby ring had proved her
+that, though no one else must guess it. What would come of it all, Aunt
+Amy could not tell. Wring her hands as she might she could not see into
+the future. Often she would mutter a little as she went about her work,
+or stand still staring, straining into the dark. No one noted any
+difference in her save Jane, for Jane was as yet happily free to
+observe. The others, caught up in the whirl of their own destinies, saw
+nothing save the problems in their own anxious hearts.
+
+"Esther," said Jane one evening, "Aunt Amy is odder and odder and you
+don't seem to care a bit."
+
+Esther, who was preparing to go to a garden party, turned back, a little
+startled.
+
+"What do you mean, Jane?"
+
+"I don't know. Can't you see that she isn't happy?"
+
+"But she is better. She never complains. She almost never fancies things
+now."
+
+"She goes into corners and stares--and she wrings her hands."
+
+"But she always did that, duck."
+
+Jane was not equal to a more lucid explanation.
+
+"It's not the same," she insisted. "I know it isn't. Esther, when you
+go away, will you take Aunt Amy and me?"
+
+"How could I, dear? Your home is here. And you like Dr. Callandar, don't
+you?"
+
+"I used to. But he never plays with the pup any more. He's different.
+And you're different and mother's different. I don't want to live with
+mother. That was a fib I told you the other day about the cut on my
+head. I didn't fall and hurt it. It was mother She threw her clothes
+brush at me."
+
+"Jane!" There was pure horror in her sister's voice.
+
+"Yes, she did. I went into her room when she was taking some medicine in
+a glass and I asked her what it was. Honest, Esther, that is all I did.
+And she screamed at me--and threw the brush."
+
+Esther came back into the room and sat down.
+
+"When was this?" in businesslike tones.
+
+Jane considered. "It was that day she wasn't down stairs at all, and
+sent word to Dr. Callandar not to come--three days ago I think."
+
+"Yes, I remember. O Janie dear, it looks as if things were going to be
+bad again! It must have been one of her very bad headaches. She was
+probably in great pain. Of course she did not mean to throw the brush
+Are you sure it was medicine she was taking?"
+
+"It was something in a glass," vaguely, "she was mixing it--look out,
+Esther! You are spoiling your new gloves."
+
+The girl threw the crumpled gloves aside and drawing the child to her
+knee kissed her gently.
+
+"It seems to me," she said slowly, "that big sister has been losing her
+eyes lately. She must find them again; it isn't going to help to be a
+selfish pig."
+
+"Help what, Esther?"
+
+Esther's only answer was another kiss, but when she had hurried out of
+the room, Jane found something round and wet upon her hand.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVIII
+
+
+Jane was still looking at the wet place on her hand when the doctor
+entered.
+
+"Esther's been crying," she told him. In her voice was the awe which
+children feel at the phenomenon of tears in grown-ups.
+
+Callandar felt his heart contract--Esther crying! But he could not
+question the child.
+
+"I don't know why," went on Jane obligingly. "Esther's so strange
+lately. Every one is strange. You are strange too. Am I strange?"
+
+"A little," said Callandar gravely.
+
+"Perhaps it's catching? Do you want mother? She is upstairs and her door
+is locked. Perhaps she'll be down in a little while. She said Esther was
+to stay in and entertain you, but Esther wouldn't. She has gone to a
+garden party. I'll entertain you if you like."
+
+"That will be very nice."
+
+"Shall I play for you on the piano?"
+
+"Thanks. And you won't mind if I sit in the corner here and close my
+eyes, until your mother comes?"
+
+"No. You may go quite to sleep if you wish. I'm not sensitive about my
+playing. Bubble says you are nearly always tired now. He says you have
+such a 'normous practice that you hardly ever get a wink of sleep.
+That's what makes you look so kind of hollow-eyed, Bubble says."
+
+"So Bubble has been diagnosing my case, has he?"
+
+"Oh, he doesn't talk about professional cases usually. He said that
+about you because Mrs. Atkins said that being engaged didn't seem to
+agree with you. She said she was just as glad you didn't take a fancy to
+her Gracie if prospective matteromony made you look like the dead
+march in Saul."
+
+"Observing woman!"
+
+"What," resumed Jane, "is a dead march in Saul?"
+
+"It is a musical composition."
+
+Jane considered this and then dismissed it with a shrug. "It sounded as
+if it was something horrid. Mrs. Atkins thinks she's smart. Anyway, I
+didn't tell mother."
+
+"Well, suppose you run now and tell her that I am here."
+
+"Can't. The door is locked."
+
+"Then let us have some of the music you promised. I'll sit here and
+wait."
+
+Strange to say, Jane's music was not unsoothing. She had a smooth, light
+touch and the little airs she played tinkled sweetly enough from the old
+piano. The weary, nerve-wrung man was more than half asleep when she
+grew tired of playing and slipped off to bed without disturbing him. The
+moments ticked themselves away on the big hall clock. Mrs. Coombe did
+not come, nor did the doctor waken.
+
+He was aroused an hour later by a voice upon the veranda. It was
+Esther's voice and in response to it he heard a deeper murmur, a man's
+voice without doubt. There was a moment or two of low-toned talk, then
+"Good-night," and the girl came in alone.
+
+She did not see him as she came slowly across to the table. He thought
+she looked grave and sad, older too--but, so dear! With a weary gesture
+she began to pull off her long gloves.
+
+"Who was it with you, Esther?" He tried hard to make the inquiry, so
+devouringly eager, sound carelessly casual.
+
+She looked up with a start.
+
+"Oh--I didn't see you, Doctor! Mr. Macnair was with me. Did you wish to
+see him?" She could play at the game of carelessness better than he.
+"Where is mother?" she added quickly.
+
+"In her room, I think. Esther, are you going to marry Macnair?"
+
+The girl slipped off her second glove, blew gently into its fingers,
+smoothed them and laid it with nice care upon the table beside
+its fellow.
+
+"I do not know."
+
+He realised with a shock that he had expected an indignant denial.
+
+"You do not love him!"
+
+"No. Not now. He knows that. And I do not expect ever to love him. But
+perhaps, after a long while, if I could make him happy--it is so
+terrible not to be happy," she finished pathetically.
+
+Callandar could have groaned aloud; the danger was so clear. And how
+could he, of all men, warn her. Yet he must try. He came quickly across
+to where she stood and compelled her gaze to his.
+
+"Do not make that mistake, Esther! It is fatal. Try to believe that in
+spite of--of everything, I am speaking disinterestedly. You are young
+and the young hate suffering. You would marry him, out of pity. But I
+tell you that no man's happiness comes to him that way. You will have
+sacrificed yourself to no purpose. The risk is too awful. Wait. Time is
+kind. You will know it, some day. But even though you do not believe it
+now--wait. Wait forever, rather than marry a man to whom you cannot give
+your heart."
+
+"That is your advice?" She spoke heavily. "You would like some day to
+see me marry a man I could--love?"
+
+"Yes, a thousand times yes!"
+
+"I shall think over what you say." She was still gravely controlled but
+it was a control which would not last much longer. She glanced around
+the empty room with a quick caught breath. "Why are you left all alone?"
+
+"Is a keeper necessary?" Then, ashamed of his irritation and willing to
+end a scene which threatened to make things harder for both of them, he
+added in his ordinary tone, "I really do not know who is responsible for
+such unparalleled neglect. Jane played me to sleep, I fancy. She said
+her mother was upstairs but would be down presently. It must be late. I
+had better go."
+
+"Wait a moment, I will see if there is any message from mother."
+
+As she left the room her light scarf slipped from her shoulders and fell
+softly across his arm. Callandar crushed it passionately to his lips and
+then, folding it carefully, laid it beside the gloves upon the table.
+Even the scarf was not for him. Aunt Amy, passing through the hall on
+her way upstairs, saw the dumb caress and shivered anew at the
+mysterious power of "They" which could tear such a man as Callandar from
+the woman he loved.
+
+Esther was gone only a moment and when she returned she brought with her
+a change of atmosphere. Something had banished every trace of
+self-consciousness from her manner. She looked anxious but it was an
+anxiety with which no embarrassment mingled.
+
+"Doctor," she said at once, "mother seems to be ill. The door is locked
+and she did not answer my knocking. Yet she is not asleep. I could hear
+her talking. I think you ought to come up."
+
+An indescribable look flitted across the doctor's face. He looked at the
+girl a moment in measuring silence and then pointed to a chair.
+
+"Sit down," he said briefly, "I thought that this would come. I have
+been afraid of it for some time. Is it possible that you have no
+suspicion at all in regard to these peculiar--illnesses--of your
+mother's?"
+
+The startled wonder in her eyes was answer enough even without the
+quick, "What do you mean?"
+
+Callandar's face grew gravely compassionate. "I think you ought to
+know," he said. "I have put off saying anything because I was not
+absolutely sure myself. And I have never had quite the right opportunity
+of finding out. But I have had fears for some time now that your mother
+is in the habit of taking some drug which--well, which is certainly not
+good for her. Do not look so frightened. It may not be serious. Do you
+remember when you first consulted me about your mother and how we both
+agreed that the medicine she was taking for her nervous attacks might be
+harmful? I was suspicious then, but there was little to go on, only her
+fear of any one seeing the prescription, and a few general symptoms
+which might be due to various causes. Since then I--I have noticed
+things which have made me anxious. I think for her own sake as well as
+yours and mine, the sooner the truth is known the better. Are you sure
+the door is locked?"
+
+"Yes," the girl's voice was tense, "but the window is open. It opens on
+the top of the veranda. You could enter there."
+
+"If that is the only way, I must take it. I thought, I hoped that if
+things were as I feared she would tell me herself, but she never has. It
+is useless, now, to hope for her confidence. The instinct is so strongly
+for concealment. We must help her in spite of herself."
+
+"Hurry then! I shall wait here. You will call me if necessary?"
+
+She did not ask him exactly what it was that he feared nor did he tell
+her, but for the first time in many weeks they were able to look at each
+other as comrades look. The eruption of the old trouble into the new
+obscured the latter so that, for the time at least, the sick woman
+behind the locked door held first place in both their thoughts.
+
+It seemed to Esther that she waited a long time before the summons came.
+Then she heard him call, "Esther!" It was a doctor's call, cool,
+passionless, commanding. She flew up the stairs, closing Jane's door as
+she hurried by. The door to her mother's room was open. It was brightly
+lighted. The shade of the lamp had been removed and its garish yellow
+fell full upon the bed and the strange figure which lay there.
+
+Mary Coombe had apparently thrown herself down fully dressed--but in
+what a costume! Surely no nightmare held anything more bizarre. Esther
+had no time to notice details but she remembered afterwards how the feet
+were clothed in different coloured stockings and that while one
+displayed a gaily buckled slipper, the other was carefully laced into a
+tan walking boot. Just now she could see nothing but the face, for the
+greatest shock was there. It did not look like Mary's face at all--it
+was strange, old, yellow and repulsive. Her unbrushed, lustreless hair
+hung about it in a dull mat, one of her hands was clutched in it--the
+hand was dirty.
+
+A terrible thought struck every vestige of colour from Esther's cheek.
+Her terrified gaze swept over the disordered room, up to the face of the
+man who stood there so silently, then down again to the inert woman upon
+the bed. Once, not long ago, she had seen a drunken man asleep upon the
+roadside grass--like this.
+
+"Is it--is it drink?" The words were a whisper of horror.
+
+The doctor shook his head.
+
+"I wish it were. I wish it were only that. Have you never heard of the
+drug habit--morphia, opium? That is what we have to fight--and it is
+what I feared."
+
+"Oh!" It was a breath of relief. To Esther, who knew nothing of drugs,
+or drug habits, the truth seemed less awful than the thing she
+had imagined.
+
+"Is--is it serious?" she asked timidly.
+
+The doctor smiled grimly. "You will see. No need to frighten you now.
+But it will be a fight from this on." He threw a light coverlet over the
+helpless figure and replacing the shade on the lamp, turned down the
+flaring wick. "I will tell you what I can, but at present it is very
+little. Probably this began long ago, before your father's death. In the
+first place there may have been a prescription--I think you said she had
+had an illness in which she suffered greatly. The drug, opium in some
+form probably, may have been given to reduce the pain--and continued
+after need for it was gone without knowledge of its dangerous qualities.
+Nervous people form the habit very quickly. Then--I am only
+guessing--as the amount contained in the original prescription ceased to
+produce the desired effect, she may have found out what drug it was that
+her appetite craved. If she saw the danger then, it was already too
+late. She could not give up voluntarily and was compelled to go on,
+shutting her eyes to the inevitable consequences, if indeed she ever
+clearly knew them."
+
+"But now that you know? It ought not to be hard to help her now that you
+know. There are other drugs--"
+
+"Yes. There is a frying-pan and a fire. In fact I fear that she has
+already tried that expedient herself. Some of the symptoms point to
+cocaine. No, our best hope is in the decreasing dose with proper
+auxiliary treatment. I cannot tell yet how serious the case may be. At
+any rate there must be an end of the mystery. Every one in the house
+must know, even Jane; for in this fight ignorance means danger. But," he
+hesitated and his face grew dark, "you cannot realise what this is going
+to mean. It is my burden, not yours. At least I have the right to save
+you that. We must have a nurse--"
+
+A little eager cry burst from her. "Oh, no! Not that! You wouldn't do
+that. You can't mean not to let me help."
+
+"You do not know--"
+
+"I do not care what it means. But if you won't let me help, if you shut
+me out--" Her voice quivered dangerously, but with a spark of her old
+fire she recovered herself. "You cannot," she added more firmly,
+"because it is my burden as well as yours. Whatever she is to you, she
+was my father's wife and I am responsible to him. Unless extra help is
+really needed, no nurse shall take my place."
+
+"Very well," quietly. "Call Aunt Amy, then, and search the room. She
+will sleep for a long time yet. When she wakes there must be no more of
+the drug within her reach. I must find out the amount to which she has
+been accustomed and arrange a decreasing dose. But if you are to be a
+nurse, you know, you must expect a bad time. It will not be easy."
+
+Esther's reply was to call Aunt Amy and while the doctor explained to
+the bewildered old lady the danger in which her niece stood and the
+absolute importance of keeping all "medicine" away from her, Esther
+quietly and swiftly searched the room. Boxes and drawers she unlocked
+and opened, the dresser, the writing-table, the bureau, the long unused
+sewing basket, all were examined without success. But in the locked box
+which contained her father's portrait, she made another discovery which
+woke a little throb of angry pity in her heart. There, still wrapped in
+its carelessly torn off postal wrappings, lay the box containing the
+ruby ring which Jessica Bremner had returned. Mary must have got it from
+the post herself and had immediately hidden it, careless of the fact
+that all Esther's careful savings had been necessary to make the return
+possible. Without comment she slipped the ring into the bosom of
+her dress.
+
+"Have you found anything?"
+
+"Nothing yet."
+
+Aunt Amy took a fascinated step nearer the figure on the bed. If
+Callandar could have intercepted the look she cast upon it he might have
+been warned of the subtle change which had taken place in her of late,
+but the doctor had turned to help Esther. Aunt Amy could gaze
+undisturbed.
+
+"She looks like Richard," said Aunt Amy suddenly. "Do you remember
+Richard?" She brushed her hand over her eyes in a painful effort of
+memory. "He was a bad man, a very bad man."
+
+"She means her brother Richard," explained Esther. "He has been dead for
+ages. I believe he was not a family ornament."
+
+"Just like Richard," murmured Aunt Amy again with a quickly checked
+chuckle. "But you ought to be glad of that. You won't have to marry her
+now. You can marry Esther."
+
+If a shell had burst in the quiet room, it could scarcely have caused
+more consternation. The doctor's stern face quivered, Esther's searching
+hand dropped paralysed. Here was a danger indeed! Was their secret
+really so patent? Or had it been but a vagrant guess of a clouded mind?
+
+Callandar recovered himself first. Without glancing at the girl he
+walked quietly over to the bed and placing his hand upon Aunt Amy's
+shoulder compelled wavering eyes to his.
+
+"Aunt Amy, you must never say that again." He spoke with the crisp
+incisiveness of a master, but for once his subject did not immediately
+respond. With a sulky look she tried to wrench herself free.
+
+"Why?" she questioned. But Callandar knew his business too
+well to argue. "You must never say it again," he repeated.
+"You--must--never--say--it--again!"
+
+The poor, weak lips began to quiver. Her own boldness had frightened her
+quite as much as his vehemence. Her eyes fluttered and fell.
+
+"Very well, Doctor," she answered meekly.
+
+They searched now in silence and presently Esther emerged from the
+closet with a pair of dainty slippers in her hand.
+
+"I think I have found something," she said. "There are three pairs of
+party slippers and the toes of them are all stuffed with these." She
+handed the doctor a package of innocent looking tablets done up in
+purplish blue paper.
+
+Callandar glanced at them, shook them out and counted their number.
+
+"You are sure you have them all?"
+
+"I can find no trace of more."
+
+"Then I think we have a strong fight coming--but a good hope, too."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIX
+
+
+Miss A. Milligan stood before the door of her select dressmaking
+parlours, meditatively picking her teeth with a needle. We hasten to
+observe that her teeth were quite clean and that this was merely a
+harmless habit denoting intense mental concentration. Miss Milligan was
+tall and full of figure with an elegant waist and a bust so like a
+pin-cushion that it fulfilled the duties of that article admirably. Her
+small bright eyes set in a wide expanse of face suggested nothing so
+much as currants in an underdone bun, and just now, as she watched the
+graceful figure of Mrs. Coombe, bride to be, disappear around the
+corner, they gave the impression of having been poked too far in while
+the bun was soft.
+
+The door of Miss Milligan's select parlours did not open upon the main
+street, it being far from her desire to attract promiscuous trade. The
+parlours, indeed, were situated upon one of the "nicest" streets in
+Coombe and occupied a corner lot, so that a splendid view down two of
+the most genteel residential streets was obtainable from their windows.
+The only sign of business anywhere was a board of chaste design over the
+doorway, bearing the simple legend, "A. MILLIGAN." Even the word
+"Dressmaker" was considered superfluous. Also there was one window, near
+the door, which from time to time displayed wonderfully coloured plates
+of terribly twisting and elegantly elongated females purporting to be
+the very latest from Paris (_France_).
+
+Mrs. Coombe was getting some "things" made at Miss Milligan's. It had
+been rumoured at first that she had contemplated running down to Toronto
+and Detroit, buying most of her trousseau there, but for some
+unexplained reason the plan had been given up. Doctor Callandar, it
+appeared, believed in patronising local tradesmen and had been
+sufficiently ungallant to veto the Detroit visit altogether. Everybody
+wondered why Mary Coombe stood it. Surely it was bad enough when a man
+sets up to be a domestic tyrant after marriage. They were surprised at
+Dr. Callandar--they hadn't thought it of him.
+
+"It is women like Mary Coombe who submit tamely to such indignities,"
+declared the eldest Miss Sinclair, "who have held back the emancipation
+of women from the beginning of time."
+
+"She looks so poorly, too," agreed Miss Jessie. "I am sure she needs a
+change. I should think that Esther would insist upon it."
+
+But Esther appeared in all things to back up Dr. Callandar. People
+admitted that they were disappointed in Esther and only hoped that the
+day would never come when she would be sorry. For if all the world loves
+a lover, all the world is indulgent to a prospective bride and any one
+could see that this particular bride was being denied her proper
+privileges. Any one would think she was a child and not to be trusted
+alone. Esther went with her everywhere, simply everywhere. Of course it
+was sweet of Esther to be so attentive, but people didn't wonder that
+her mother didn't like it.
+
+Such were the current comments of the town, sent out somewhat in the
+nature of feelers, for behind them all, Coombe, having a very sensitive
+nose for gossip, was uneasily aware that their cleverest investigators
+were not yet in possession of the root of the matter. Every one seemed
+to know everything, and yet--no wonder that Miss Milligan picked her
+teeth in agonies of mental tumult at finding herself sole possessor of a
+satisfactory explanation which she was bound in honour not to disclose.
+
+Mrs. Coombe had just been in. She had been having a "first fitting" and
+in the privacy of the fitting room she had been perfectly frank with
+Miss Milligan. She had told Miss Milligan "things." She had told her
+things which would move a heart of stone, regardless of the fact that
+Miss Milligan's heart was made of the softest of soft materials and beat
+warmly under her spiky pin cushion. The fact that her eyes were hard and
+black had nothing to do with it; mistakes in eyes occur constantly in
+the best regulated families. At this very moment when her eyes were more
+like currants than ever she was making up her mind that, come what
+might, doctors or no doctors, she was not going to see a fellow
+creature put upon.
+
+For, you see, Mrs. Coombe, poor little thing, had confided in Miss
+Milligan. She had told her all about it, and like most mysteries, it had
+turned out to be very simple. It seemed that Dr. Callandar, such a
+perfectly charming man in most respects, had a most absurd prejudice
+against patent medicines. This prejudice, common to the medical
+profession on account of patents interfering with profits, was, in Dr.
+Callandar's case, almost an obsession. Miss Milligan, being a sensible
+person, knew very well that there are patents _and_ patents. Some of
+them are frauds, of course, but there are others which are better than
+any prescription that any doctor ever wrote. Miss Milligan did not speak
+from hearsay, she had had an extensive experience the results of which
+lent themselves to conversational effort. Therefore it is easy to see
+how she understood and sympathised at once when Mrs. Coombe told her of
+a remedy which she had found to be quite excellent but which the doctor
+absolutely forbade her to use.
+
+"Not that he means to be inconsiderate, dear Miss Milligan, only he is
+so very sure of his own point of view. Doctors have to be firm of
+course. But you can see it is rather hard on me. The trouble is that I
+cannot obtain the remedy I need in Coombe. It is a remedy very little
+known and useful only in obscure nerve troubles. I have been in the
+habit of getting it from a certain firm in Detroit, not a very
+well-known firm, and now, of course, that is impossible--without
+upsetting the doctor, which I hesitate to do."
+
+Miss Milligan was of the opinion that a little upsetting was just what
+the doctor required.
+
+"No--o." The visitor shook her head. She could not bring her mind to it.
+She would prefer to suffer herself. But did not Miss Milligan think
+that, in face of such an unreasonable and violent prejudice, a little
+innocent strategy might be justified?
+
+Miss Milligan thought so, very emphatically.
+
+Mrs. Coombe sighed. "I do so want to look well for the wedding, you
+know. And really, nothing seems to help me like my own particular
+medicine. It is hard, very hard, to be without it."
+
+Miss Milligan did not doubt it. It seemed, to her, a perfect shame. But
+had Mrs. Coombe ever tried "Peebles' Perfect Pick-me-ups" for the
+nerves? They were certainly very excellent.
+
+Yes. Mrs. Coombe had heard of them and no doubt they were very good for
+some people. But constitutions differ so. On the whole she felt sure
+that even "Peebles' Perfect Pick-me-ups" would not suit her nearly as
+well as her own particular remedy.
+
+It was at this point that Miss Milligan stopped fitting and began to
+pick her teeth, a sign, as we have before stated, of great mental
+activity. If nothing would suit Mrs. Coombe but this one medicine and if
+the medicine could be obtained in Detroit and if Mrs. Coombe had the
+correct address--why not write for it? It was a brilliant idea, but Mrs.
+Coombe shook her head.
+
+She had the address, naturally, and she had also thought of writing, but
+it would be of no use. Esther and the doctor actually watched her mail.
+
+"Incredible!"
+
+"Oh, not in any offensive way. They did not mean to be tyrannous. They
+were quite convinced that patent medicines were very injurious. But
+women suffering from nerves (like yourself, dear Miss Milligan) know
+that relief is often found in the least likely places and from remedies
+not mentioned in the Materia Medica."
+
+Miss Milligan knew that very well. And people are so hard to convince.
+When Mrs. Barker, over the hill, had first recommended that new
+blood-purifier to Miss Milligan, Miss Milligan had laughed. But after
+taking only six bottles she had thanked Mrs. Barker with tears in her
+eyes. "And I must say," added she in a burst of virtuous indignation,
+"that if I were going to Detroit to-morrow I would bring you back all
+the patent medicine you wanted, Mrs. Coombe, and be very glad to
+do it."
+
+This was most satisfactory save for one small fact, namely that Miss
+Milligan was not going to Detroit to-morrow. Mrs. Coombe thanked her
+very much and raised her arm (which shook sadly) while Miss Milligan
+pinned in the underarm seam.
+
+"Even as it is," went on Miss Milligan, "I don't see why--a little
+higher please, and turn a trifle to the light, thank you!--I don't see
+why it can't be done. Nobody inspects my mail, thank heaven! and one
+address is as good to a druggist as another."
+
+What a bright idea! Strange that it had never occurred to Mrs. Coombe to
+arrange things so easily. It was very, very clever and kind of Miss
+Milligan to think of it. But--people might talk! Think how upset the
+doctor would be if their innocent little plot were spoken of abroad.
+People are so unkind, quite horrid in fact. And as Esther and the doctor
+were doing it all for her good they would naturally hate to have their
+actions misunderstood. Of course, Mrs. Coombe knew that Miss Milligan
+herself would never mention it to a soul. She felt quite sure of that,
+still--as it did not appear how the little plot could be spread abroad
+under those circumstances unless the lay-figure in the corner should
+become communicative, Mrs. Coombe's sentence remained plaintively
+unfinished. Miss Milligan, in spite of its being so very unnecessary,
+found herself promising solemnly never to mention it.
+
+As the whole thing was entirely unpremeditated it seemed like a special
+piece of good luck that Mrs. Coombe should have at that moment in her
+pocket a note to the druggists (who were not called druggists, exactly)
+and that all she needed to do was to add Miss Milligan's address, and
+hand to that lady sufficient money to secure a postal note as an
+enclosure. She did this very quickly and the whole little affair was
+satisfactorily disposed of when Esther was seen coming hurriedly down
+the street.
+
+"I thought," said Esther, who entered a little out of breath and with a
+worried pucker between her eyes, "I thought that I would just run in and
+see how the linings look."
+
+"You can never tell anything from linings," said Miss Milligan in an
+injured tone. "Gracious! I don't suppose any one would ever want a dress
+if they went by the way the linings look. I always advise my customers
+never to look in the glass until I get to the material, what with seams
+on the wrong side and all!"
+
+"There is really nothing at all to see as yet," assented Mrs. Coombe
+crossly.
+
+Esther seated herself by the open window.
+
+"Very well," she said quietly. "I won't look. I'll just wait."
+
+Mrs. Coombe shrugged her shoulders and displaced a pin or two. There was
+an injured look upon her face and Miss Milligan, replacing the pins,
+wondered how it is that nice girls like Esther Coombe never see when
+they're not wanted.
+
+The fitting went quickly forward. Mrs. Coombe seemed to have lost all
+her genial expansiveness. Miss Milligan's pins had overflowed from her
+pin-cushion into her mouth and Esther, who appeared tired, gazed
+steadily out of the window. Only the humming of the machines in the
+adjoining workroom and the subdued talk and laughter of Miss Milligan's
+young ladies saved the silence from becoming oppressive. Occasionally,
+when her supply of pins became exhausted, Miss Milligan would
+contribute a cooing murmur to the effect that it did "set beautiful
+across the shoulders" or that "the long line over the hip was
+quite elegant."
+
+Without doubt the atmosphere had changed with the coming of Esther. Mrs.
+Coombe became each moment more fidgety, she became, in fact, jerky! Her
+hands twitched, her head twitched, she could not stand still and
+suddenly she twitched herself out of Miss Milligan's hands altogether
+and flinging herself into a chair declared that she couldn't stand any
+more fitting that day. Even Miss Milligan's black currant eyes could see
+that her nerves were terribly wrong--she looked ghastly, poor thing! And
+all on account of a silly prejudice regarding patent medicines.
+
+Esther, who exhibited no surprise at her mother's sudden collapse,
+helped Miss Milligan to unpin the linings.
+
+"My mother has been a little longer than usual without her tonic," she
+calmly explained. "The other fittings can wait," and quickly, yet
+without flurry, she found Mary's hat, bag, gloves and parasol and picked
+up her handkerchief which she had flung upon the floor.
+
+Mrs. Coombe accepted these services without thanks, indulging indeed in
+a little spiteful laugh which Miss Milligan obligingly attributed to her
+poor nerves. Things had come to a pretty pass indeed, thought the
+sympathetic dressmaker, when a grown woman is obliged to have her
+medicine chosen for her like a baby.
+
+As she stood in the doorway watching the two ladies out of sight, a just
+indignation grew within the breast so strongly fortified outside, so
+vulnerable within; and without even waiting to call her giggling young
+ladies to order, she pinned on her hat and departed to send Mrs.
+Coombe's postal note to the Detroit druggist, who, oddly enough, was not
+a druggist at all.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXX
+
+
+Esther and her step-mother set out upon their homeward walk in silence.
+The older woman's face was drawn and bitter, Esther's thoughtful and
+sad. Though there seemed no reason for haste, Mrs. Coombe's steps grew
+constantly quicker until she was hurrying breathlessly.
+
+More than once the girl glanced at her anxiously as if about to speak,
+yet hesitating. Then when the walk threatened to become a run she laid a
+detaining hand upon her arm.
+
+"If you walk so very rapidly, mother, people will notice." It was the
+only argument which never failed of effect. Mrs. Coombe's steps
+slackened.
+
+"Besides," went on Esther eagerly, "every moment is a gain. Ten minutes
+more will make this the longest interval yet. Don't you think you
+could try...."
+
+"No!"
+
+The word was only a gasp and the face Mary turned for a moment on the
+girl was livid. The eyes shone with hate. "You--you beast!" she muttered
+chokingly.
+
+Esther turned a shade paler, but otherwise gave no sign that she had
+heard. "Mother, just try, you are doing so well, so splendidly. The
+doctor says ..."
+
+"Be quiet--be quiet! I hate him. I won't try. I won't be tortured--oh,
+why can't you all leave me alone!" She began to sob and moan under her
+breath, careless even of a possible passerby. Fortunately there was no
+one, and they were already within sight of home. Esther, very white,
+supported the shaking woman with her arm and they hurried on together.
+At the door she would still have accompanied her but Mary flung herself
+angrily from her hold and ran up the stairs with sudden feverish
+strength. Esther turned into the living room and dropped into the
+nearest chair.
+
+She was still sitting there without having removed either hat or gloves
+when, a little later, Callandar entered.
+
+"Well, nurse," with a faint smile, "how are things to-day?" His quick
+eye had noticed in a moment the girl's closed eyes and listless
+attitude, but nothing in his tone betrayed it.
+
+"Very well, I think, until a little while ago. We were late in getting
+home from the dressmaker's--"
+
+"I see. You look rather done up. The fact is you are overdoing things.
+Rather foolish, don't you think?"
+
+"No," stubbornly. "I am all right."
+
+"You are exhausted and there is no need. Things are going well. The dose
+is steadily diminishing, more quickly than she suspects. It looks as if
+we might begin to breathe again. It is a great gain to feel reasonably
+sure that she has no more of the stuff hidden anywhere. If she had, she
+would have used it during that last crisis."
+
+The girl in the chair winced. She hated even to think of the night to
+which his words referred. "Yes," she said, "but--but there won't be any
+more times like that, will there?"
+
+"Yes," grimly. "We are not through yet. But every crisis will be a
+little easier--if things go as they are going."
+
+Esther sighed. "It is very terrible, isn't it?" she said. "And really it
+doesn't seem fair, for it wasn't her fault; in the beginning she didn't
+know. And she does suffer so."
+
+"We must not think of it in that way. It helps more to think of the
+suffering she is escaping. What she is going through now is saving her,
+body and soul. It is taking her out of torment and leading her back to
+life, and sanity. You don't know, but I do, and any struggle, any
+suffering is mild compared to the horrors before her if she kept on. She
+was taking some cocaine too. The word means nothing to you, but to a
+physician it spells hell. So you see--it gives one strength."
+
+Esther sat up and straightened her collar. "I'm ashamed of myself," she
+said. "No wonder you want another nurse. But I won't resign yet. And I
+wanted to ask you--do you think it is necessary now to be with her
+whenever she goes out? She hates it so. I think she is getting to hate
+me, too. Where could she possibly get the stuff? None of our local
+stores would sell it without a prescription."
+
+"I know. But in a case like this you can never be sure of anything. No,
+we must not relax in the slightest. Even as it is, I am continually
+afraid." He began to pace the room restlessly. "There may be a weak spot
+somewhere, some loop-hole we have forgotten. I think the druggists are
+safe and the mail is watched. That last supply, you are sure it was all
+destroyed?"
+
+"Yes, I burned it. At least I gave it to Aunt Amy to burn. I couldn't
+leave mother."
+
+"Well, let us call Aunt Amy, and make sure. I believe I am foolishly
+nervous, but--" without finishing his sentence the doctor walked to the
+door and waited there until Aunt Amy answered his call.
+
+"Auntie," said Esther, "you remember the little package I gave you that
+night when mother was so ill? It was done up in purplish blue paper."
+
+"Yes, Esther."
+
+"Do you remember what you did with it, dear?"
+
+Aunt Amy looked frightened.
+
+"I--I don't know. I've a very good memory, Esther. But somehow I'm not
+quite sure."
+
+"You will remember presently," said Callandar kindly. "We want to be
+quite sure that it was destroyed. You know, I explained to you, that
+Mary must take no more of that medicine. It is very dangerous...."
+
+"What does it do?" unexpectedly.
+
+"It is a kind of poison. It makes people very ill, so ill that in time
+they die."
+
+"Mary likes it. She says it makes her nerves better and puts her to
+sleep."
+
+"When did she say that?"
+
+"When she asked me if I had any."
+
+The doctor and the girl exchanged a quick look.
+
+"And you gave her some?"
+
+"Oh, no, I couldn't. I had burned it in the stove--I remember now."
+
+They both drew a breath of intense relief. But when she had left them,
+Callandar looked very sober. "There, you see," he said, "was a
+possibility we had overlooked."
+
+"Yes, and it would have been my fault. I should have made sure long ago.
+It is hard to get out of the habit of taking things for granted."
+
+"Yet it is the one thing we must never do. In this we must trust no one,
+and nothing. Then we shall win. If there is no relapse now, the worst,
+the slowest part, is over. Soon you will be free, dear girl--and God
+bless you forever for what you have been to her and to me."
+
+She answered him only with a wistful smile and when he had gone, she
+sighed. She would be free soon, he said. Strange that he could not see
+that it was her freedom that she dreaded. Hard as it had been, hard as
+it was, there was a still harder time coming--the time when she would be
+free--free, to leave forever the man she loved.
+
+The present with its load of duty and anxiety, the constant strain of
+watching, its bearing of poor Mary's thousand ingratitudes seemed dear
+and desirable when she thought of the black gulf of separation at the
+end of the tortuous way. But of course he could not guess. How could he?
+Men are so different from women.
+
+She knew, though, that she was coming to the end of her strength. Not
+even the doctor guessed how great the strain of those past weeks
+had been.
+
+When Mary had awakened to find that her secret was discovered she had
+been like a mad thing. There had been rage, tears, protestations,
+hysterical denials--finally confession and anguished promises. That she
+had never realised the reality of her danger, nor the extent of her
+servitude was plain. It seemed easy enough to promise. Esther and the
+doctor were making a terrible fuss about nothing, as usual. She grew
+sulky under Callandar's warnings and her fury knew no bounds when she
+found that certain of her hidden stores had been confiscated. She
+demanded that the supply be left in her hands; was not her
+promise enough?
+
+But all this was before she knew what denial meant, before she realised
+that the way back along the path she had trodden so easily was
+thick-set with suffering; that every backward inch must be fought for
+with agony and tears. Then she had broken down altogether, had raved and
+pleaded. The very knowledge of the depth to which she had fallen,
+threatened to send her deeper still. Callandar soon realised that if she
+were to be saved it must be in spite of herself. There were but two
+points of strength in her weak nature; one the newly awakened, yet
+capricious passion for himself, and the other that ruling terror of her
+life, which of all her inherent safeguards was the last to give way
+under the assaults of the drug, namely, "What will people say?" but
+neither of these, nor both of them together, could stand for a moment
+before the terrible appetite when once its craving was denied.
+
+Twice she failed her helpers just when they were beginning to hope. In
+her first search Esther had not exhausted the hiding places of the
+poison and, to retain the temptation by her, Mary had lied and lied
+again. Twice when the crises of her desire had come upon her she had
+given way, helplessly, completely; and twice they had begun all over
+again. The third time she had not been able to procure the drug, had
+been compelled to fight through on the decreasing dose which the doctor
+had allowed.
+
+No wonder Esther shuddered when she thought of that night! Yet at the
+time she had stood beside the moaning woman, white and firm, when even
+Callandar had staggered for a moment from the room.
+
+Next morning they had taken heart of hope again. Undoubtedly Mary had
+exhausted the supply, and the possibility of its being replenished
+seemed remote. It was only a matter of time now; of care, of
+unremitting, yet gentle vigilance and Mary would be cured. The bride
+could go to her husband, clean and in her right mind. And Esther
+would be free.
+
+Strangely enough, it was Mary herself who objected to a hastening of
+their remarriage. Perhaps in spite of her inevitable deterioration there
+was that in her still which forbade her going to him as she was. Perhaps
+it was only another and more obscure effect of the drug; some downward
+instinct which made her dread the putting of herself within the circle
+of her husband's strength. She would fight her fight outside. Why? Was
+it because she would conquer of herself, or because she did not really
+wish to conquer at all?
+
+To Esther, Mary's refusal came as a reprieve. But to Callandar it was
+but a lengthening out of torture. Man's love must always, in its
+essence, be different from woman's; though many women seem incapable of
+recognising this fact. To Esther, now that she had put aside her first
+half-understood glimpse of passion, it was sweet to be near him, to hear
+his voice, to touch his hand and, above all, to spend her strength in
+his service. But to him the strain was almost intolerable. The sight of
+her, the touch of her, the whole soul-shattering nearness of her beauty
+meant constant conflict; all the fiercer since it must be unsuspected.
+
+Willits, the only man who had been told the truth, watched the fight
+with admiration, sharply touched with anxiety. Expert in the moulding of
+buttons, he knew very well that Callandar was drawing rather recklessly
+upon his newly acquired strength. If the tension did not slacken soon
+there might be another physical breakdown, and then--Willits shrugged
+his shoulders. It would be entirely too bad if this very fine button
+were to be spoiled after all. His heart was sore for his friend.
+
+"You see," Callandar had written in one of his rare letters, "it was a
+right instinct which warned me that no man escapes the consequences of
+his own acts. There did come a short, golden time when I put the voice
+of instinct behind me and dared to think that I, at least, had shaken
+myself free. Closing the door of yesterday, I boldly knocked open the
+door of to-morrow--and lo, to-morrow and yesterday were one!
+
+"I know, now, that even had poor Mary been dead, as I believed, the
+payment would have been exacted in some other way. When my brain is
+clear enough to think, I have flashes of thankfulness that payment is
+permitted to take the form of expiation. I can save Mary, and I will. In
+some strange and rather dreadful way her need is my salvation.
+
+"I have said nothing of Esther. How can I? The other day I heard Miss
+Sinclair say that Esther Coombe was losing all her good looks. 'Thin as
+a rail, and peeked as a pin' were the words she used. To me she has
+never been so lovely. She is thinner; there are hollows in her cheeks;
+her lips are no longer a thread of scarlet. The transparent lids of her
+deep, wonderful eyes droop often and her hair seems to have lost its
+life and hangs soft and very close to her face. I love her. I love her
+as a man loves a woman, as a knight loves his lady, as a Catholic loves
+the Madonna! This terrible strain must soon be over for her. I am doing
+all in my power to hurry on the marriage. She is young. She is bound to
+forget. When she leaves here she goes out of my life--and may God
+speed her!
+
+"She is to go to Toronto. Lorna Sinnet has good friends there and they
+will take her into their circle. She will begin to taste a fuller life,
+and as her interests expand the old wound will heal. She will find
+happiness yet. When Mary recovers, she and I will return to Montreal. I
+am quite fit now. I feel that I can never work hard enough. Mary will
+like the excitement of city life, and I rely upon you and Lorna to make
+our coming as easy as possible. How is Lorna? A talk with her will be
+a tonic.
+
+"Does not all this sound admirably lucid and sensible? I want you to see
+that I am not losing my hold--that I have finally faced down the problem
+of the future. And there is one thing that has come to me out of all
+this, a wonderful thing; I have forgotten Fear. It seems to me that all
+my life I have lived in fear. Now I am not afraid...."
+
+It was when Bubble was entering the post office for the purpose of
+posting this letter that he met Miss Milligan, coming out. Miss Milligan
+was evidently in a hurry, so great a hurry that she had not time to
+question Bubble upon affairs in general as was her usual custom. Instead
+she asked him to do something for her. It was a trifling service, only
+to deliver to Mrs. Coombe a small postal packet which she held in
+her hand.
+
+"It will only take you a few moments, Zerubbabel," she said. "I was
+going to deliver it myself but Mrs. Stanton wants a fitting right away.
+I ought not to have come down to the post at all. But I promised Mrs.
+Coombe--does Dr. Callandar permit you to run messages in your
+spare time?"
+
+"Sure," declared the youth, "only I don't get much spare time. The
+doctor's terrible busy. Since we got the phone in, it's ringing all the
+time! But I guess I can slip over to Mrs. Coombe's or if I see Jane I
+can give the parcel to her."
+
+"No!" Miss Milligan seemed struck with a sudden hesitancy. "You must
+not give it to Jane, you must give it to Mrs. Coombe. Dear me, I believe
+I had better take it myself."
+
+Without listening to the boy's polite protests she hurried off again.
+Bubble gazed after her with relieved astonishment.
+
+"Guess it must be something for the wedding," declared he, sapiently.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXI
+
+
+The next day was the day of the Presbyterian Sunday school picnic. It
+was bound to be beautiful weather, because it always was. The
+Presbyterians seemed to have an understanding with Providence to that
+effect. But Jane, who must have been born a sceptic, was up very early
+just to see that there was no mistake.
+
+There was a hint, just a hint, of autumn in the air. On the window-sill
+lay a golden leaf. It was the forerunner. The garden lay quiet,
+brooding; the rising sun shone softly through a yellow haze.
+
+Jane shivered deliciously in her thin night gown. It was going to be a
+perfectly glorious, scrumptious day. She leaned farther out to make sure
+that the leaves of the small silver maple beneath her window were not
+turned wrong side up--a sure sign of rain. And as she looked, she
+noticed a curious thing--the side door was open.
+
+Somebody else must be up. If it were Esther, Jane decided that she would
+call "Boo" very loudly and surprise her; but it was her mother and not
+Esther who came out of the open door. Jane drew back, watching through
+the curtains. She thought her mother looked very pretty in her dressing
+gown with her hair down and her bare feet thrust into pink satin mules.
+It was a pity, Jane thought, that she wasn't as nice as she looked. And
+how curiously she was acting. She was actually climbing up the little
+ladder which led to the bird house by the side of the lawn. Jane knew
+there was nothing at all in the bird house, for she herself had placed
+the ladder there the day before. Whatever was she doing? Jane giggled,
+for one of Mary's slippers had fallen off leaving her foot bare. But she
+didn't seem to care. She was putting her hand far into the bird house.
+Jane watched the hand carefully to see what it might bring out. But it
+came out empty. Mary hurriedly climbed down the ladder, picked up her
+slipper, glanced quickly around the empty garden and ran back into the
+house closing the door without a sound.
+
+Jane was puzzled. What had her mother hoped to find in the bird house?
+She crept back into bed, wondering, and just as she was slipping off to
+sleep, the solution came. "She was hiding something," thought Jane,
+sleepily, "and when I get up I'll find out what it is."
+
+Little things are the levers which move the big things of life. Had it
+been any other day save the day of the picnic, Jane would certainly have
+found out what Mary hid in the bird house and many things might have
+been different. But there was so much to do that morning and Ann and
+Bubble came over before Jane finished breakfast so that in the
+delightful hurry of getting ready and packing baskets, she forgot
+all about it.
+
+There was a disappointment, too, at the last moment, for just when they
+were all ready and the doctor had come with the motor, Mrs. Coombe
+decided that she really did not feel equal to going and that meant that
+Esther had to stay behind. Jane showed signs of tears. Ann and Bubble
+protested volubly. Even the doctor did his best to change
+Mary's decision.
+
+"You really ought to come, Mary," he said, "the drive alone will do you
+good, and if you get tired of it, I can bring you home early." He looked
+at her rather anxiously as he spoke but she did not seem ill. She looked
+better than usual for her eyes were brighter and her face was
+faintly flushed.
+
+"No, I won't come to-day. I'm tired. There is not the slightest need for
+Esther to stay. I am going to stay in my room with a good book."
+
+"Oh, Esther, do come! Oh, Esther, you promised!" Thus Ann and Bubble,
+while Jane pulled at her frock.
+
+Mary looked on with a slightly acid smile. The doctor drew her aside.
+
+"Won't you come?" he asked patiently. "You see how disappointed the
+children are."
+
+"Yes, about Esther. And Esther does not need to stay. It's absurd. Are
+you never going to trust me?"
+
+"You know it isn't you that we distrust. It is something stronger than
+you, or any of us. Mary, be patient, just a little longer. You want to
+be free, don't you?"
+
+She hid the glitter in her eyes, against his coat. "Yes, of course. Only
+don't ask me to go to-day. It excites me. I want to be quiet."
+
+"Very well, and you promise--"
+
+"Yes, I'll promise anything. And if Esther stays I'll be decent to her.
+Though why you bother about her so much, I don't see. She is nothing
+to you."
+
+"She is very much to you," sternly.
+
+"Yes--a spy! Oh, well, don't let's quarrel. Be sure to be back early for
+the supper party to-night. Mr. Macnair and Annabel are invited. You can
+bring them with you in the motor. It is just as well Esther isn't
+going. There'll be lots of little things to attend to."
+
+"That's settled then." Knowing that further persuasion was useless, he
+kissed her and turned to quiet the eager children.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Almost she held her breath as she watched him go. Her small hands
+twisted, a pulse beat visibly in her temple, her lips worked, she shook
+from head to foot. Nevertheless she stood there, controlling herself,
+until the motor horn had honked its farewell to a chorus of children's
+laughter. Then, as one released from some desperate strain, she turned
+and fled to her room....
+
+"Mother!" Esther came in slowly, unpinning her hat. There was no answer
+to her call. But she had not expected any. In her sulky moods Mrs.
+Coombe often went for days without speaking to her step-daughter. When
+the girl saw that she had gone to her room she was rather relieved than
+otherwise; it meant at least a peaceful afternoon. Mary, in her room,
+was considered safe and all that Esther need do was to be ready in order
+to accompany her if she decided to go out.
+
+She was not disappointed at missing the picnic. It was getting rather
+hard to be gay. And it would be nice to have everything ready when the
+party returned.
+
+It was a quietly beautiful afternoon and as the girl went about her
+simple tasks she was not unhappy. Already she was learning the great
+lesson which many more fortunate lovers miss, that the rarest fragrance
+of love lies in its bestowal. That is why love is of all things most
+securely ours.
+
+Once she called up to the blowing curtains of Mrs. Coombe's window.
+
+"Mother, won't you come and help me with the flowers?" But no hand
+pushed the curtain aside, nor did she receive any answer. Perhaps Mary
+was really asleep. In that case she was sure to be amiable at
+supper time.
+
+Everything was daintily ready and Esther had had time to slip on her
+prettiest frock when the "honk" of the returning motor brought a faint
+colour into her pale cheeks.
+
+"Dear me, you've got quite a colour, Esther," said Miss Annabel Macnair
+in a slightly injured voice. She had come intending to tell Esther how
+badly she was looking and to recommend a tonic.
+
+"I don't see why you didn't come to the picnic."
+
+"Oh, Esther," Jane's plain little face was radiant, "you missed it! It
+was the nicest picnic yet. I won one race and Bubble won another, and
+Ann won't speak to either of us. She says she hates her aunt because
+she'd have won a race too if she hadn't had so much starch in her
+petticoats. But Mrs. Sykes says she wouldn't be a mite surprised if Ann
+has a bad heart--not a wicked heart, just a bad one, the kind that makes
+you drop down dead. Some of Ann's folks died of bad hearts, Mrs. Sykes
+says. But the doctor says it's all nonsense. He agreed with Ann that it
+wasn't anything but petticoats--Oh, say! how pretty the table looks. Did
+mother say you could use the best china?"
+
+"Seeing that it's Esther's china on her own mother's side, I guess she
+can use it if she likes," said Aunt Amy, mildly belligerent. "I thought
+you might want to set the table before we got home, Esther, and I was so
+afraid you might forget and use the sprigged tea set. But the doctor
+said you'd be sure not to."
+
+"That's one of her queer notions, I suppose?" said Miss Annabel in a
+stage whisper plainly heard by every one. "How odd! Can you come
+upstairs with me, Esther? I want to speak to you most particularly and I
+haven't seen you for ages.
+
+"Not that I haven't tried," she continued in her jerky way as they went
+up the stairs together; "but you seem to be always with your mother.
+Going to lose her soon. Natural enough. I said to Mrs. Miller, 'There's
+real devotion.' Possible to overdo it though. Marriage is terribly
+trying. For relatives. But long engagements are worse. How was it you
+didn't get to the picnic?"
+
+Esther murmured that she hadn't quite felt like going to the picnic.
+
+"Well, you didn't miss much. Even Angus wasn't as cheerful as usual.
+Inclined to be moody. And that brings me to what I wanted to tell you.
+Remember that last time you had lunch with us?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Remember me saying that I never ask questions, but that I always find
+out? Well--I have."
+
+"Have what?" asked Esther, who had not been following.
+
+"Found out. Found out what is the matter with my brother. Exactly what I
+thought. He is the victim of an unhappy attachment. Unreciprocated!"
+
+"But--"
+
+"You remember you laughed at me, Esther. Suggested liver. And when I
+mentioned your mother you almost convinced me that I was wrong. Although
+I am never wrong. It _is_ your mother, Esther. My poor brother,
+brokenhearted, quite--utterly!"
+
+This was so amazing that Esther waited for more.
+
+"I suppose he felt certain of her until Dr. Callandar stepped in. Could
+hardly believe it. When I told him of your mother's reputed engagement
+he was not in the least disturbed. Said 'Pshaw!' Couldn't imagine such a
+possibility. I said, 'I assure you it is the truth, Angus,' and he
+merely remarked, 'Well, what if it is?' in a most matter of fact way.
+Quite calm!"
+
+"And you think--"
+
+"My dear, I am sure. All put on. To deceive me. Although I never am
+deceived. So I waited. And then one night last week I happened to get
+home from a business session of the Ladies' Aid, early. I went in
+quietly. Angus was in his study, without a light, but the door was a
+little bit open, and I could hear his voice quite plainly. He was
+praying--"
+
+"Oh, please--"
+
+"My dear, I couldn't help hearing. I didn't listen. I was rooted to the
+spot. Positively! He--"
+
+"You must not tell me, Miss Annabel, I won't listen."
+
+"Very well, my dear. Perhaps you are right. Couldn't tell you his very
+words anyway. I cannot remember them. He was very eloquent, terribly
+worked up! And he was praying for Her. That's what he called your
+mother, just Her. It sounded almost--almost popish, you know! Then
+suddenly he stopped as if something had cut him off--sharp. There was a
+silence. So long I began to be frightened and then he cried out loud,
+'Not for me! Not for me!' It was dreadful! But it proves my point, I
+think. Why, my dear, whatever is the matter?"
+
+Esther, leaning against the window frame, was sobbing weakly.
+
+"Dear me! I had no idea you would feel it so badly. Take a sip of
+water--do!"
+
+Esther struggled to regain her self-control.
+
+"It seems so--sad," she faltered.
+
+"Yes, of course. It is sad. And I have great sympathy with my poor
+brother," went on Miss Annabel pinning down her hair net. "But do you
+know, I sometimes think," she hesitated and a slow blush arose in her
+middle-aged cheek, "I sometimes think that people in love aren't to be
+pitied after all. Though it is hardly a thought to express to a young
+girl like you.
+
+"You know," she went on awkwardly as Esther still made no remark, "they
+feel a great deal, of course, but it must be so very _interesting_. A
+little cold cream for my nose, Esther. If I leave it until I get home I
+shall certainly peel."
+
+Esther provided the cream and a powder puff. She felt sick at heart. Her
+calmer world of the afternoon burst like a bubble leaving only a tear
+behind. The vision of Angus Macnair in the dark study reaching out
+frantic hands for the thing he knew could never be his, seemed a last
+touch of unendurable irony. Surely some one, somewhere, must be moved to
+dreadful mirth at these blunders of the fates. From the echo of such
+laughter commonplace was the only refuge. Esther bathed her eyes and
+called to Jane to let her mother know that supper was ready.
+
+The sounds of the child's cheerful tattoos upon Mrs. Coombe's door
+accompanied them down the stairs, but when they had waited a few
+minutes, Jane came quietly into the room alone.
+
+"Mother doesn't answer me, Esther."
+
+Miss Annabel looked surprised, then curious. Esther felt her face flame.
+It was really too bad of Mary to make things so much harder than she
+need. Her refusal to answer could only mean that she had determined to
+be thoroughly disagreeable; and with company in the house. But her
+annoyance was abruptly checked by the effect of the news upon the
+doctor. It was not annoyance she read in his eyes. It was dismay. With a
+murmured sentence, which may or may not have been excuse, he turned
+from the room.
+
+"I am so sorry," explained Esther smoothly. "Mother is not at all well,
+one of her old headaches. The doctor has gone up to see if he can be
+of any use."
+
+Miss Annabel shook her head gloomily. "Mark my words," she said, "your
+mother ought to take those headaches of hers more seriously. A headache
+seems a little thing, but I know of a case--"
+
+With Esther's sympathetic encouragement the good lady launched upon a
+recital of melancholy happenings more or less connected with headaches
+which occupied her attention very pleasantly and prevented any one else
+from saying anything until the return of the awaited guest. He came in
+looking as usual and bearing an apology from the hostess for her sudden
+indisposition. "Nothing at all serious," he added lightly. "It is
+possible that she may join us later." But it was noticeable that as he
+spoke he did not look at Esther nor could her anxious glance read the
+impassive sternness of his face.
+
+It was not a successful meal. In spite of the pretty table, the dainty
+food, the well kept up fire of conversation, the beautiful evening out
+of doors, the softly shaded light inside, from first to last the supper
+was a nightmare. Of what avail the careful pretence that nothing was
+wrong? A very miasma of dread enveloped that table, a thing so palpable
+that Miss Annabel found herself starting at a sound, the minister's
+ready tongue faltered on a favourite phrase, Esther's clear voice grew
+blurred, Aunt Amy wrung her hands, Jane's eyes were wide with
+unchildlike care. Only Callandar seemed undisturbed, courteous,
+interested.
+
+It was a relief to them all when after an uncomfortable half-hour with
+coffee on the veranda the minister suddenly remembered a forgotten
+committee meeting and hurried Miss Annabel away with half her parting
+words unspoken. The doctor, still courteous and interested, walked down
+with them to the gate. He would wait, he said, a little longer to see
+how Mrs. Coombe found herself. Esther carried off a subdued and silent
+Jane to bed.
+
+"Esther," whispered Jane as her sister bent to kiss her, "why do lovely,
+lovely days always end so badly?"
+
+"They don't, Janie."
+
+The child sighed. "Mine do. I never had a perfect day in all my life."
+
+"You will have. Every one has perfect days--sometime."
+
+"Have you, Esther?"
+
+"Yes, dear."
+
+Jane looked up sleepily. "Perhaps mine will come to-morrow!"
+
+Esther went slowly down stairs and out into the garden. Callandar was
+coming up the path from the gate. He walked slowly. When they met, he no
+longer avoided her glance.
+
+"Well?" She had no need to ask. Yet she did ask, falteringly.
+
+"We have failed," he said briefly.
+
+The quiet hopelessness of his voice left no room for argument. Esther
+opened her lips to protest, but found nothing to say.
+
+"She has outwitted us," he went on. "How? who can say? They have the
+cunning of the devil! There is only one thing to do now. Only one way--"
+
+"You mean?--"
+
+"The wedding must take place at once. I suppose the farce is really
+necessary. But there must be no more delay. Only the unsparing use of a
+husband's authority can save her now. I shall take her away. I must be
+with her day and night. In France there is a place I know, beautiful,
+isolated. I shall take her there. If all else fails there is the
+treatment of hypnotic suggestion. But--I shall not fail, I dare not!"
+
+Blindly she put out her hand--he clasped it gently--yet not as if he
+knew whose hand it was. Then, laying it aside, he passed by, and,
+leaving her sobbing in the dusk, went on into the house and up the
+stairs to the closed room.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXII
+
+
+It became quickly known in Coombe that, owing to Mrs. Coombe's delicate
+health, the wedding would take place much sooner than had been expected.
+A sea voyage, it was conceded, was the necessary thing and as Dr.
+Callandar would not allow his fiancée to go away alone it seemed only
+fair that he should make haste to go with her. Comment on all these
+points was much more restrained than usual because, just at this time,
+Coombe withstood the shock of finding out that Dr. Callandar was no less
+than Dr. Henry Chedridge Callandar of Montreal. No, not his brother, nor
+his cousin, but the man himself!
+
+Of course Coombe had suspected this all along. Never for a moment had it
+been really deceived. Over and over again it had said: "My dear, that
+young man is not a mere local practitioner, mark my words!" From the
+first, Coombe had observed the marks of true distinction in him. He was
+so odd! He seemed to care nothing at all for appearances, and, as
+everybody knows, this comfortable attitude of mind is the privilege of
+the famous few. Besides, there was the matter of the marriage. Coombe
+had been right in thinking that Mary Coombe had not gone into the matter
+blindfold. She had known very well upon which side her bread was
+buttered, and as to her giving way to his whims in the absurd way she
+did--that, too, was understandable under the circumstances.
+
+What puzzled Coombe, now, was how she had managed it. She was not
+pretty, at least not very pretty. She was not young, at least only
+comparatively young. And goodness knows, she was not clever! Hardly a
+mother in Coombe but had at least one daughter prettier, younger and
+cleverer; a daughter, in fact, who could give Mary Coombe aces and kings
+and still win out. Why had the doctor not been attached to one of these?
+It was incomprehensible. Even if, through a misplaced devotion to his
+profession, he had determined to marry into a doctor's family--there was
+Esther! Esther Coombe was a fine girl and quite nice looking before she
+had begun to "go off." Even as it was she had more to recommend her than
+her step-mother. There seemed to be a general impression that all men
+are fools.
+
+"If they would only let some woman with sense choose their wives for
+them," declared the eldest Miss Sinclair in a burst of confidence, "they
+might get along fairly well. But if ever a man gets married to the right
+woman, it happens by accident."
+
+Nevertheless, at a special meeting of the Ladies' Aid, called for the
+purpose, it was decided to give the bride a present. They had not
+intended to do it for fear of establishing a precedent. But when it came
+out who Dr. Callandar was, it hardly seemed right to let one of their
+best known members go from them to a more exalted sphere in a city
+(which many of them might, from time to time, feel inclined to visit)
+without showing her by some small token how very highly she was held in
+their regard. Every one could see the sense of this and the vote was
+unanimous. In regard to the nature of the gift there was more diversity
+of opinion, but it was finally decided that, as the value of this kind
+of thing lies not in the gift but in the spirit of the giving, a brown
+jar with the word "Biscuits" in silver lettering would do very well.
+Carving knives were thought of but as Mrs. Atkins very fitly said,
+"Everybody is sure to give carving knives"--a phenomenon which all the
+ladies accepted as a commonplace.
+
+Of the prospective bride herself, Coombe saw little. She remained very
+much at home. She had lost much of her spasmodic energy, was inclined to
+be moody and even rude. Her state of health accounted naturally for this
+and also for the arrival of a new inmate at the Elms, a cool and capable
+looking person who was discovered, after much amazed enquiry, to be a
+trained nurse. Not a hospital nurse exactly but a kind of special nurse
+whose duties included massage, and the giving of certain baths and
+things which the doctor thought strengthening. Her name was Miss Philps.
+Coombe never got behind that. No one could ever boast that she knew more
+of Miss Philps than her name. She was, and remains to this day,
+a mystery.
+
+There are people like that, although this was Coombe's first experience
+of one. Miss Philps was not a recluse. Everywhere Mrs. Coombe went, Miss
+Philps went too. Even Esther was not more assiduous in her attentions.
+She was not a silent person either, far from it. She bubbled over with
+precise and cheerful comment, she appeared to talk even more than was
+absolutely necessary and it was only upon her departure that her
+entertainers noticed that she had said nothing at all. A very baffling
+person to deal with. Coombe could not manage to "take to" her at all and
+great sympathy was felt for Mrs. Coombe when she was reported to have
+said to Miss Milligan that going out with Miss Philps felt exactly like
+a jail delivery--whatever that might be!
+
+But if Miss Philps was not appreciated at large it was different in her
+own immediate circle. She had not been at the Elms a day before Esther
+recognised the doctor's wisdom in getting her. She was discreet,
+capable, kindly. The burden upon the girl's shoulders grew momentarily
+lighter. Miss Philps, with her matter of fact cheeriness, her strength
+and her experience, was exactly what that house of overstrained
+nerves needed.
+
+"Dear me," she said, "you're all as fidgety as corn in a popper. And no
+need for it. I've nursed dozens worse than your mother, Miss Esther, and
+had them right as a trivet before I got through. As long as we can keep
+her hands off the stuff--and that's what I'm here for. So don't worry!"
+
+Esther drew a deep breath. It was certainly good to feel the strain
+lifting, to have time for dreams again. The time was so pitifully short
+now. Two more weeks and she would leave Coombe behind her. The old life
+would be definitely over and done with. Looking back, she could see that
+it had been a happy life, and the future looked so dark. In youth, all
+life's happenings seem so terribly final. Every parting feels like a
+parting forever. Esther felt quite sure that she would never return
+to Coombe.
+
+In the week before the wedding, freed from her continual attendance upon
+her mother, she unobtrusively paid farewell to all her old haunts and
+favourite places. It was a sweet sadness. She did not taste the sweet,
+but it was there. As one grows older, one does not linger over sad
+moments. It is because the sweet has vanished, only the bitter remains.
+But in untried youth sadness has a touch of beauty, a glamour of
+romance which shrouds its deepest pain. It is as if something within us,
+infinitely wise, were smiling, knowing well that for the young there is
+always to-morrow.
+
+The maple by the schoolhouse turned early that year. When Esther, in her
+pilgrimage, came to say good-bye it welcomed her with all the glory of
+autumn. Against its greener brothers it stood out, naming, defiant.
+Beside it, the red pump seemed no longer red. Red and yellow, its
+falling leaves tossed themselves into the girl's lap as she sat upon the
+porch steps. It is almost certain that, as Esther gathered them, she
+compared her sad heart to a leaf which had fluttered from the tree of
+happy life. There seemed no outlook for her. She could not see through
+winter into spring.
+
+The school children with their new teacher (whom Esther could not help
+but feel was sadly incompetent) had all gone home and it was very quiet
+on the porch steps. She closed her eyes and dreamed and clearly through
+her dream she heard, as she had heard that first morning in early
+summer, a determinedly cheerful, yet husky, voice singing. Some one was
+coming down the hill.
+
+ "From Wimbleton to Wombleton is fifteen miles;
+ From Wombleton to Wimbleton is fifteen miles;
+ From Wimbleton to Wombleton, from Wombleton to Wimbleton,
+ From Wimbleton to Wombleton,--"
+
+The song trailed off into silence as it had done before. The girl's
+closed eyes smarted with tears--"Oh, it is a very long way!" she
+murmured, and burying her face in fallen leaves she felt that at last
+she knew the meaning of despair.
+
+But though his voice had echoed through Esther's dream, Callandar was
+not on the long hill nor anywhere near it. Unlike Esther, he paid no
+farewells during these last days. He avoided the hill particularly and
+drove past the schoolhouse seldom and always at top speed. If the sight
+of the turning maples moved him at all it was not because he compared
+his lost happiness to a fallen leaf. Callandar was long past such gentle
+sadnesses as these. Every day he filled as full of work as possible. He
+walked far and hard in hope of tiring himself into dreamless sleep at
+night. And every day his face grew older, greyer, more sternly set.
+
+At the very last, and as if inspired by some special imp of the
+perverse, Mary declared that she must have a church wedding. Opposition
+was useless. With all the distorted force of her drug-ridden brain, she
+desired this one thing. She wept, she coaxed, she raved. Every woman,
+she stormed, had a right to a proper wedding. She had always been
+cheated, she had been a pawn shoved about at the bidding of others, her
+own wishes never consulted. Was there any reason, any reason at all, why
+she should not be properly married in the church?
+
+He ventured quietly to remind her that there were peculiar circumstances
+in the case. But she burst out at that. He was ashamed of her. Ashamed
+of his own wife. If there were peculiar circumstances whose fault were
+they? Not hers, surely? Would she be where she was now if he had not
+neglected her all those years? Anyway, peculiar circumstances or not,
+she would be married decently or she would not be married at all.
+
+With set lips, the doctor gave in. Opposition maddened her, and, after
+all, one farce more or less could not matter much.
+
+"Very well," he said, "make your own arrangements."
+
+Immediately, Mary became amiable. She was quite polite to Miss Philps,
+almost pleasant to Esther. Into the preparations for the wedding she
+entered with some of her old spasmodic energy. The occasion, she
+determined, should be a talked of one in Coombe. She made plans, a fresh
+one every day, and talked of them continually.
+
+Only--there was one plan of which she did not speak. There was one
+unsaid thing which matured quietly, covered by the noise of much
+talking. Yet this plan more than any other would have to do with the
+success of her last appearance in Coombe. It would be foolish indeed,
+she decided, to let any promise, however well-meant, stand in the way of
+this success. She could not, and would not, face a crowded church
+feeling as she felt now. That was absurd! She would need some little
+stimulant to help her carry it off. A very slightly increased dose would
+do it. Only sufficient to banish that horrible craving, to give her a
+long, satisfying sleep and then just a touch more, very little, to brace
+her in the morning. Enough to send warm tingling thrills of well being
+through her tired body, to brighten her eyes, to clear her brain and
+steady her shaking nerves--to make her young again, young and a bride.
+
+Only this once! Never again.
+
+Of what use to continue the sophistries which justified her treachery to
+herself! Perhaps of the three it was she who suffered most during that
+last week. She lived in an agony of anticipation, a hell of desire for
+which a sane pen has no description. Yet no one must suspect that she
+anticipated or desired anything--not the cool-eyed Miss Philps, not
+Esther, not the doctor, not even Jane. The mask must not slip for one
+single moment. So far, they suspected nothing; but they were always on
+their guard, always. A careless look, an unconsidered movement might
+betray her, and then--! She raved in her room sometimes when she thought
+of a possible balking of her purpose.
+
+She was very clever. She still had self-control when it was necessary to
+have it in the furtherance of the one devouring passion. Only when she
+was quite alone did she ever give way. The doctor thought her
+wonderfully docile and took heart of hope. A month or two alone with her
+in Prance and all would be well. In the meantime, patience! Naturally
+she was full of childish whims. He smiled at her indulgently when she
+asked him to request Miss Philps to stay outside of the fitting room at
+Miss Milligan's. "For you know," she said, "it is bad luck, very bad
+luck, for any person to see one, in one's wedding gown before the proper
+time. And anyway," the grey eyes filled with easy tears, "I'm sure it
+isn't good for me never to be trusted, not even with silly Miss
+Milligan."
+
+The plea seemed genuine. It was like Mary to be concerned about the
+wedding-dress superstition. And what possible danger could there be?
+Miss Milligan in all probability had never heard the fatal names of
+opium and cocaine save as unpleasant things associated with Chinese and
+tooth-drawing. It was absurd to imagine Mary coming to harm there.
+
+From this you will see that, upon the occasion of the last discovery,
+Mary had lied desperately and well. The "cache" in the bird-house had
+been found, but Miss Milligan's name had never been connected in the
+most remote way with that relapse. Mary had sworn that the new supply
+had not been new at all but had formed part of an old cache which she
+had hidden, in a place which even she had forgotten, all quite
+accidentally. And although many supplementary enquiries were made, the
+real truth had remained undiscovered.
+
+So in the simplest way in the world, Mary secured several uninterrupted
+"fittings" with Miss Milligan while the excellent Miss Philps sat
+without and waited.
+
+"This is positively the last time I shall have to trouble you, dear Miss
+Milligan," said her customer sweetly. "Of course, as soon as we are
+married, I am going to tell Dr. Callandar all about it and when he sees
+how very much better my medicine has made me, he will be quite ready to
+withdraw his objections. In the meantime I am sure you feel, as I do,
+that our little ruse has been quite justifiable!"
+
+Miss Milligan did. She felt quite proud of her part in it. It is
+something to help a fellow woman and still more to get the better of a
+fellow man. Especially such a celebrated man as Dr. Callandar! She would
+order the fresh supply at once, that very afternoon, by the first mail.
+And as soon as the packet came she would see that Mrs. Coombe had it in
+person. "There is certain to be a few last touches necessary to the
+dress after it has been sent home," she remarked with a smile of truly
+Machiavellian subtlety.
+
+"Yes!" said Mary. "That night--after the dress comes home!" She spoke
+sharply, unnaturally. Her face turned a dull, pasty white. She shook so
+that Miss Milligan was thoroughly frightened. But presently she
+controlled herself and forced a pathetic smile.
+
+"You see, dear Miss Milligan, how much I need it."
+
+"Indeed a blind bat could see that!" said the dressmaker pityingly.
+"Shall I call the nurse?"
+
+But Mrs. Coombe would not hear of Miss Milligan calling the nurse!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIII
+
+
+It is the onlooker who sees most of the game and Aunt Amy was an ideal
+onlooker. Always self-effacing and silent, she was now more silent and
+self-effacing still. Consequently the principal actors tended to forget
+their parts when in her presence. No one explained anything to Aunt Amy
+but no one concealed anything from her. She simply "didn't matter." So
+far as the playing out of the little drama was concerned, Aunt Amy was
+supposed to be safely off the stage. She looked and listened, had her
+strange flashes of psychic insight and came to her own conclusions about
+it all, quite undisturbed by facts as they appeared to others. Her
+conclusions were very simple. Esther loved the doctor. The doctor loved
+Esther. That, in spite of this, Callandar was deliberately planning to
+marry Mary she considered a purely arbitrary matter arranged by those
+mysteriously malignant powers known as "They." Callandar, himself, had
+clearly no choice, Esther was helpless, and Mary triumphed easily and
+inevitably because Mary was one of "Them" herself. Aunt Amy had become
+firmly convinced of this latter fact. Everything went to prove it--the
+theft of the ring, the threat to shut her (Amy) up, the easy triumph
+over Esther, and a thousand and one trifles all "confirmation strong as
+proofs of holy writ." Of course it would be impossible to make this
+clear to Esther or the doctor. Amy realised that and did not try. But in
+her own mind she thought of it continually. And her little pile of proof
+mounted higher day by day.
+
+Esther, absorbed in the care of her step-mother, was not even aware that
+Aunt Amy noticed her growing listlessness, her heavy eyes, her fits of
+brooding. She did not know that a silent foot paused before her closed
+door, listening. All she knew was that it was relief unspeakable to be
+with Aunt Amy, to let drop the mask of cheerful energy without fear of
+questioning or of wonder. Aunt Amy didn't matter.
+
+Mary, too, felt that it was needless to hoodwink Amy. No need to pretend
+with her. She might show herself as irritable, as conscienceless, as
+nerve-racked and disagreeable as she chose without fear of displaying
+"symptoms." Aunt Amy was not looking for symptoms, indeed Mary thought
+she grew more stupid daily. After her marriage something would really
+have to be done about Amy. She hoped the doctor wouldn't be silly
+about it.
+
+Even Dr. Callandar was not careful to hide his burden from those faded
+eyes. He was more self-conscious even with Ann or Bubble than he was
+with her. What matter if she did see his mouth harden or his eyes
+burn?--Poor Aunt Amy, such things could have no meaning for her. She was
+a soul apart.
+
+A soul apart indeed, how far apart none of them quite realised; yet near
+enough to love--and hate. As the days went by and Esther drooped like a
+graceful plant athirst for water there grew in Aunt Amy's twisted brain
+a slow corroding anger. The timid, bitter anger of a weak nature which
+is often more deadly than the lordly passion of the strong.
+
+If she could only do something. If she could only outwit "Them"! She
+would do anything at all, if she could only find the thing to do. It was
+terrible to be so helpless. It was maddening to have to be so careful.
+Yet careful she must be, she never forgot that. Often as she went about
+the house or stood in the sunny kitchen rolling out her flaky pie-crust,
+she pondered over ways and means. But none seemed suitable. Some of her
+plans were fantastic to a degree, but she always had sense enough to
+reject them in the end. In her planning she was conscious of no sense of
+right or wrong but only of suitability. There could be no question of
+right or wrong in dealing with "Them." They were outside the pale. No.
+What she wanted was something simple and effective. A little poison,
+now--in a pie? But Amy knew nothing of poison, nor how to obtain any,
+nor how to use it effectively in a pie when once obtained. She might
+consult the doctor perhaps? But something warned Aunt Amy that the
+doctor would not take kindly to the idea of a little poison in a pie. So
+this beautiful scheme had to be given up. She sighed.
+
+"What a big sigh, Auntie!" Esther, who was sitting at the table peeling
+apples, looked up questioningly. "A penny for your thoughts."
+
+A look of cunning came over Aunt Amy's face. And instead of speaking her
+real thoughts she said, "I was thinking of weddings, Esther."
+
+"But why the sigh?"
+
+"I don't like weddings. Once there was a young girl going to be married.
+She was very happy. She was so happy that she was afraid to look at her
+own face in the glass. And it was eleven o'clock on Tuesday. I mean she
+was waiting for eleven o'clock on Tuesday. She was to be married then.
+But just one minute before the time, something happened--the clock
+stopped, I think. Anyway eleven o'clock on Tuesday never came. So she
+could not get married. And she grew old and her flowers fell to pieces.
+It was very sad."
+
+"Poor Auntie!"
+
+Aunt Amy moved uneasily. "Do you know who the girl was, Esther?"
+
+"Don't you know, Auntie?"
+
+"No, that is, I am never sure. Sometimes I think I used to know her. But
+she's gone. I never see her now. I'd like to find her if I could."
+
+"You will find her some day, Auntie. Try not to fret about it."
+
+It was seldom indeed that Aunt Amy spoke even thus vaguely of that other
+self of hers which she had lost in the tragedy of her youth. Esther's
+heart was full of pity as she listened. What was her own trouble
+compared to this? She at least would have her memories.
+
+"There is just one chance," went on Aunt Amy, now gently excited. She
+had never spoken of this chance before but she felt that Esther might
+like to hear of it. "Just one chance! You see, the world being
+round--the world is round, isn't it, Esther?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Well, the world being round there is a chance that, if she waits long
+enough, eleven o'clock on Tuesday may come around again. Then if she is
+ready and if she has the ring he gave her, the red ring, and if they are
+both very quick they may be married after all."
+
+"Oh, Aunt Amy, _dear_! That is why you love the ruby ring?"
+
+But the old lady's memory was clouding again. She looked bewildered and
+would say no more. Esther kissed her with new tenderness. "I am so glad
+you have it safely back," she whispered. "You need never be afraid of
+losing it again."
+
+Aunt Amy found it hard to make the pies that morning. She was enveloped
+in a deep sadness, a sadness which in some misunderstood way seemed
+inseparable from the idea of that lost friend of hers, the girl-bride
+whose marriage hour had never struck. It seemed to Aunt Amy that the
+girl had been waiting a very long time and was tired. Even if the world
+were round, it was a very big world and eleven o'clock on Tuesday took a
+wearisome time to travel around it. She could not understand why she
+should feel so terribly sorry for the waiting girl, but she did. A hot
+tear fell into the pie-crust. That would never do! The pie-maker
+furtively dried her eyes and came back to the consideration of more
+immediate problems.
+
+It may seem strange that no one noticed the morbid state of Aunt Amy at
+this time. But it would have been more strange if any one had noticed
+it. Of outward signs there were practically none. Even the silent
+hand-wringing had ceased. She ceased to rebuke Jane for stepping upon
+the third stair; she ceased to talk of the peculiarities inherent in
+sprigged china. She was more and more careful not to mention "Them,"
+and, as always, her housekeeping was a wonder and a delight.
+
+She even offered to make Mary's wedding-cake. An offer which Mary
+received graciously. No one could make fruit cake like Aunt Amy and if
+it proved too big for the house oven the baker could bake it in his.
+Jane was delighted. She told Bubble that it was to be a "hugeous" cake,
+the like of which was never seen in Coombe and she defied Ann to produce
+any relative or ancestor whatever whose wedding-cake had even faintly
+approached such dimensions. Ann retorted that big wedding-cakes were
+vulgar and that her Aunt Sykes did not think it proper for a widow woman
+to have a wedding-cake at all.
+
+The making of the cake was a great mental help to Aunt Amy. It seemed to
+ease her mind and aid her to think clearly. She thought of many things
+as she prepared the materials, made most clever plans. That all the
+plans had to do with the preventing of the marriage and the final
+circumventing of "Them" goes without saying. There was one especially
+good plan which came to her while she stoned the raisins. Still another,
+while the currants were being looked over, and a third, more brilliant
+than either, while she chopped the candied peel. The trouble was that
+when she came to mix all her ingredients into the batter, her plans
+began to mix up too, until all was hopeless confusion. It was most
+disheartening! And the wedding, now, only a few days off. She wanted to
+go away into a corner and wring her hands, but if she did, some one
+might notice--and then "They" would have the chance they were looking
+for. Aunt Amy was too clever for that!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIV
+
+
+The day before the wedding, the wedding dress came home. No one had seen
+it. Mary's superstition in regard to this point was indulgently smiled
+at by everybody.
+
+"But hadn't I better see it on you just once," suggested Esther. "Some
+trifle may have been forgotten and a missing hook and eye might spoil
+the effect of the whole thing."
+
+"Oh, I have thought of that. Miss Milligan is going to run in after
+supper to see that everything is right. Then if anything is needed she
+can attend to it at once. Of course, it doesn't matter about Miss
+Milligan seeing it--for bad luck I mean."
+
+"How about me?" asked Callandar, smiling.
+
+"You!" with a playful shriek, "you would be worse than anybody. You
+would hoodoo it entirely!"
+
+"How about little girls?" asked Jane coaxingly.
+
+Mary turned suddenly peevish. "Don't bother me, Jane. I shall not let
+any one see it and that's enough." But their combined suggestions had
+disturbed her, and it was only upon their serious assurance that of
+course her wishes would be respected that her amiability returned.
+
+Yet it was apparent that she felt rather worried about the dress herself
+for she had worked herself into a small fever of nervous anxiety before
+the promised appearance of Miss Milligan for the last fitting. When at
+last that lady arrived, a trifle late, and very much out of breath, Mary
+would hardly let her say good evening to the others, before hurrying
+her upstairs.
+
+"And I think," said she hesitatingly, "that I shan't come down again
+to-night. I am tired. If the doctor calls in, tell him that I am trying
+to get a good rest for to-morrow. Good night, Miss Philps. Good
+night, Esther!"
+
+To the girl's astonishment she kissed her. A light, hot kiss which fell
+on her cheek like a fleck of glowing ash. Yet it was a real kiss and may
+have meant that the giver was not ungrateful. Jane, too, had a good
+night kiss that night; but Aunt Amy had already gone upstairs.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"Well?" They were safely in the upstairs room now and the door was
+closed.
+
+"I've got it. It came on the afternoon mail. I went down to the post
+office specially. I knew you kind of counted on it for to-morrow."
+
+With the glee of a child playing conspirator Miss Milligan dived into
+the recesses of the reticule she carried. "Here it is. No, that's
+peppermints. But it's here somewhere--"
+
+"Oh, hurry!" Mary almost snatched the packet from the friendly hand. At
+sight of it she turned deathly white and began to shake as she had
+shaken that day in the fitting-room. But this time she recovered
+quickly, almost before Miss Milligan had noticed it.
+
+"Thank you so much," she said. With the last effort of her self-control
+she forced herself to place the packet upon the dresser. She wanted to
+snatch at it to tear it open, to scream with the relief of the tablets
+in her hand, but she did none of these things. Instead she thanked Miss
+Milligan again and proceeded to talk of other things, anything that
+would do to fill up the short time necessary to conceal the real purpose
+of the visit so that Esther and Miss Philps would not suspect--never for
+a moment suspect!
+
+"Do you think we really need try on the dress?" asked the conscientious
+Miss Milligan.
+
+Mrs. Coombe thought not. It was quite all right, she felt sure of that.
+And really she was a little tired. It had been a trying day. She
+moistened her lips and tried to smile, keeping her eyes well away from
+the tempting heaven in the little pasteboard box. Would the woman
+never go!
+
+Fortunately Miss Milligan was a lady who prided herself upon her good
+sense and also upon her proper pride. She always knew, she declared,
+when she was not wanted, and, strange as it may seem, it began to dawn
+upon her that this was one of those rare occasions. Mrs. Coombe was very
+pleasant, of course, but Miss Milligan missed something, a certain
+cordiality which might have tempted her to prolong her stay. She was not
+offended, for if she considered that her self-denying journeys to the
+post office were meeting with less than their just deserts, she was not
+a woman to insist upon gratitude where gratitude was not freely given.
+She stayed therefore no longer than the fiction of dress-fitting
+required and then with a somewhat strained "good night" passed down the
+stairs and out of the house.
+
+Mary waited, rigid as a statue, until she heard the front gate close,
+then, the last defence down, she sprang to the dressing table--tearing
+off the paper from the package as a puppy dog might tear the covering
+from a bone. A glass of water stood ready. Her shaking hands reached for
+it, counted the number of tablets and slipped them in. Then, with a long
+breath of relief, the tension relaxed. She raised her eyes, triumphing
+eyes, to the mirror and saw--Aunt Amy watching her from the doorway.
+
+She had forgotten to lock the door!
+
+But it was only Aunt Amy.
+
+Fear and relief came in almost the same breath. She steadied herself
+against the dresser.
+
+"Shut the door!"
+
+Aunt Amy obeyed. But she shut herself inside the door. "What do you
+want?" Mary never wasted words on Amy--"Ah!"
+
+With a motion so swift that it seemed like a conjuror's miracle, Aunt
+Amy had slipped from her stand by the door, snatched up the open box,
+and was back again before the choking cry on the other's lips had
+formed itself.
+
+"Esther says you musn't take these," said Aunt Amy in her colourless
+voice.
+
+For a second Mary hesitated. If she made the murderous spring which
+every baffled nerve in her tortured body urged her to make, Amy would
+scream. A scream would mean, Miss Philps--Esther--the doctor: agony and
+defeat. With a mighty effort she held herself. She tried to
+speak quietly.
+
+"Don't be a fool, Amy. This is some medicine the doctor gave me himself.
+Hand it to me at once."
+
+Aunt Amy smiled. It was a sly little smile. It made Mary want to rave,
+for it said more plainly than words that Aunt Amy knew. Swiftly she
+changed her tactics. Her face softened, became gentle, entreating--
+
+"Amy--dear. I am only going to use a little. If you love me, give me the
+box."
+
+Useless! Aunt Amy still smiled. She put the box behind her. With her
+other hand she felt for the door knob.
+
+"Amy, give it to me! What have I ever done to you?"
+
+"You stole my ring." In exactly the same tone she might have said, "You
+are a murderess."
+
+The ring! Mary had forgotten the ring. Wait, perhaps it was not hopeless
+even yet. Amy placed an absurd value on that ring--and she, Mary, had
+the gem in her possession. She did not know that Esther had found and
+restored it. To her it was still in the box at the bottom of her drawer.
+A dazzling plan flashed through her excited brain. She would bribe Amy
+with the ring. The thought nerved her.
+
+"Do you really want your ring back?" she asked sweetly.
+
+Aunt Amy paused with her hands on the door knob.
+
+"I have it back."
+
+"Oh, no. You haven't. It is in a box in my drawer."
+
+"It is not. Esther gave it to me!" But there was a spark of fear in
+Amy's eyes. Contradiction so easily confused her. _Had_ Esther given her
+the ring? She felt oddly uncertain.
+
+Mary laughed, and the laugh increased Aunt Amy's confusion. After all it
+was quite possible that Mary had taken the ring again. It had been
+locked away and hidden, but locks and hiding-places were never an
+obstacle to "Them."
+
+"I've got it safe enough!" taunted Mary, tormentingly.
+
+The spark of fear flamed. Amy took a swift step forward. "Give it to
+me!"
+
+"Give me the box--and I will."
+
+Aunt Amy had ceased to care about the box. Almost she placed it in the
+outstretched hand, then, with quick cunning, caught it back.
+
+"The ring first."
+
+Mary shrugged her shoulders. She felt cool enough now. It was going to
+be easy. She turned to the bureau and began to pull things out of the
+drawer, scattering them anywhere. She could not remember exactly where
+she had put the ring. As she searched, she talked.
+
+"There is nothing to be tragic about," she said. "I intended to give you
+your ring anyway--some day. And the medicine is nothing that will hurt.
+It is only something to make me sleep so that I shan't look a sight
+to-morrow. I am taking only a little. No one will know. I shall not even
+oversleep. But if Esther or any of them knew, they would make a fuss.
+You must promise not to tell them--before I give you the ring. Just tell
+Esther that I do not want to be disturbed early. I'll wake myself, in
+plenty of time for the wedding."
+
+"In plenty of time for the wedding!" For a moment Amy wondered what it
+was about the phrase which sounded familiar? Then she seemed to see, as
+in a dream, the vision of a young girl all in white, with flowers in her
+hands, sitting alone in a room waiting, watching a clock--a clock which
+never quite came round to the hour of eleven on Tuesday. Time has a
+great deal to do with weddings, evidently. People who wish to be married
+must be ready at the fateful moment, otherwise they have to
+wait--forever, perhaps. "Plenty of time"--suddenly a flash of direct
+inspiration seemed to coordinate her scattered faculties. She saw
+clearly a plan, a beautiful, simple plan to prevent the marriage. What
+if Mary should _not_ wake in plenty of time for the wedding? What if the
+hour, the wedding hour, should not find her ready? The thing was so
+simple! If one tablet would make Mary sleep, two would make her sleep
+longer. For the moment she forgot even the ruby ring in her childish
+pleasure at such a clever idea. Her worn face was lit by a satisfied
+smile as she swiftly, quietly dropped more tablets from the box into the
+glass--one--two--she was not quite sure how many!
+
+"Here is the ring," said Mary turning at last from the disturbed drawer
+with a cardboard box in her hand. It was the box from which Esther had
+taken the ring long before, but Mary was in too great a hurry to open
+it. She did not doubt that it contained the ring. For once in her life
+Mary thought she was playing fair.
+
+They completed the exchange in silence, Mary wondering a little at the
+pleasant change which she saw in Amy's face. But she was too hurried to
+enquire into the cause of it. She hardly waited to hear her promise not
+to tell Esther but fairly pushed her from the room. Then, secure behind
+her locked door, she wiped the perspiration from her forehead and sank
+exhausted into the nearest chair.
+
+When her strength came back her first care was to hide the remaining
+tablets in a safe place in her travelling bag, she never intended to use
+them again, never! But it would do no harm to feel that she could trust
+herself to leave them alone, as of course she could. Then she loosened
+her hair, not pausing to brush it, and, slipping off her dress, wrapped
+herself in a certain flowered dressing gown. Not one of the dainty new
+ones, but a gown whose lace was yellowed and torn, a gown which felt
+like an old friend but which, after to-night, she would wear no more--
+
+Listen! Was that some one at the door?
+
+Only Miss Philps calling good-night. Mary answered "Good-night" in a
+sleepy voice, and the step passed on. It left her shaking like a leaf in
+the wind. What else indeed was she? A fluttering, fading leaf shaken in
+the teeth of a wind of dread and mad desire.
+
+All was quiet now. She would be disturbed no more that night. Her
+shaking hands rattled the spoon which stirred the mixture in the glass.
+The familiar motion quieted her. Here, right in her hands, was peace,
+rest, a swift and magical release from the torment of appetite denied.
+To-morrow--but why think of to-morrow? She might be stronger then.
+Everything might be easier. All she really needed was a long
+night's sleep.
+
+She turned out the light and throwing up the blind stood for a moment
+looking out into the soft moonlight. The moon was clear. It would be a
+beautiful day for the wedding! Smiling, she picked up the glass and
+with a whispered, "Here's to the bride!" raised it to her eager lips
+and drank.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Silence settled down upon the Elms. There was a harvest moon that night,
+a glorious rounded moon more golden than silver. The garden slumbered,
+wrapped in mellow light, even the shadows gleamed faintly luminous. The
+breeze, roaming at will, shook drowsy perfume from the lingering
+flowers, but for all it aped the summer it was unmistakably an autumn
+breeze, melancholy, earth-scented. It stirred the curtains at Mary's
+window; rustled through the great bowlful of crimson leaves upon
+Esther's writing table and softly stirred the dark hair of the girl as
+she sat with her face hidden in her curved arms. For a very long time
+she sat there while the moon looked in and looked away again and who
+can tell what her thoughts were, or if she thought at all.
+
+By and by she rose and went to the window, looking out to where a month
+ago she had stood by the garden gate under the stars. It was drenched
+with moonlight now and the shadow under the elm tree was dark.
+
+What was that? A darker shadow in the shadow? Esther's hand caught at
+the curtain, her heart gave a great leap and then grew still. She knew
+who stood there. This was the good-bye he could not speak. Tears fell
+unheeded down the girl's pale cheeks. If during those last days she had
+had any doubt of the love which loyalty to Mary had helped him hide so
+well, they were all swept away now. A warm spot grew and glowed in her
+heart and a line from that old immortal love lyric which she had learned
+in her school days came back vivid with eternal truth.
+
+ "I had not loved thee, dear, so much
+ Loved I not honour more."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXV
+
+
+It was a perfect day for the wedding. Autumn at her brightest and gayest
+before her new bright robes began to brown. Soft air, mellow sun,
+cool-lipped breeze, horizon veiled in tinted mist--a gem of a day, the
+jewel of a season.
+
+"Them as has, gets," murmured Mrs. Sykes, gloomily, as she tied on her
+Sunday bonnet. She rather resented the kindness of nature upon this
+present occasion. A nice rain would have suited her mood better.
+
+Nevertheless, much as her mind misgave her in regard to the wedding, she
+was early on her way to the Elms to see if she could help.
+
+"They're sure to be flustrated," she told herself. "Aunt Amy's just as
+likely as not to lose what little bit of head she has and hired help are
+broken reeds. Esther will have the brunt of it. She'll be glad enough to
+see me, I'll be bound."
+
+Do not imagine that Mrs. Sykes was curious. Curiosity was a failing
+which she systematically repudiated. But she was a very helpful person
+and it was wonderful how many opportunities of helpfulness she found
+upon solemn or joyous occasions. If, while helping, her ears were open,
+and her eyes shrewd, can she be blamed for that? There may be people
+with ears who hear not but they do not live in Coombe. The only
+difficulty is to manage to be, like Mr. Micawber, on the spot.
+
+Mrs. Sykes was early, but not too early. When she slipped in at the side
+door there was already a stir of unusual movement in the house but the
+final flutter was still measurably distant. Jane dashed past with
+crimped hair and white ribbons flying. Miss Philps, very stately in a
+new gown, was arranging flowers in geometrical patterns. Dr. Callandar,
+self-possessed as ever, talked upon the veranda with Professor Willits
+who had arrived the night before. Aunt Amy was busy in the kitchen.
+Esther, flushed and excited, with eyes that flashed blue fire, seemed
+everywhere at once.
+
+"Oh, Mrs. Sykes," she exclaimed, "how nice of you to come! Won't you
+please get Jane and tie her up--her ribbons, I mean? It is almost time
+to dress."
+
+"Would you like me to assist?" asked Miss Philps, looking up from a
+geometrical pattern.
+
+"Oh, thanks, Miss Philps. There are some hooks I cannot manage. But
+mother will probably need a lot of help. I thought you were with
+her now."
+
+"No. She has not yet sent for me." Miss Philps drew out her watch and
+consulted it. "Dear me!" with slight surprise, "it is much later than I
+thought. Perhaps I had better go up."
+
+Esther looked worried. "I believe you had--if she hurries at the last
+she will be terribly excited. Aunt Amy told me she wished particularly
+not to be disturbed this morning, but surely she has forgotten how late
+it is getting."
+
+"I'll go up," said Miss Philps. "It's time for her tonic anyway, and we
+must persuade her to eat something. When you are ready for me to hook
+your dress, call. I can easily manage you both."
+
+This is all that Mrs. Sykes heard, for just then Jane flew by again like
+a returning comet and had to be captured and properly tied up. Mrs.
+Sykes, as she admitted herself, was no hand at fancy fixings but she was
+painstaking and conscientious and the bow-tying absorbed all her
+energies. She was getting on very well and had almost succeeded in
+adjusting the last bow when a cry from the room above startled her into
+the tying of a double knot.
+
+"What was that?"
+
+It was not a loud cry--but there was something in it which brought Mrs.
+Sykes' heart leaping into her throat, which sent Esther reeling against
+the stair baluster, which brought the doctor, white-faced from the
+veranda--it was the kind of cry which carries in its note the psychic
+essence of terror and disaster.
+
+Mrs. Sykes for all her iron nerve felt suddenly faint. Jane began to
+cry. The doctor and Esther had raced up the stairs. But there was no
+repetition of the cry. Instead there was silence. Then a murmur of
+voices and sounds of ordered activity overhead.
+
+Clearly something had happened. But what? Mrs. Sykes wanted very much to
+go and see. But the glimpse she had caught of Callandar's eyes as he
+sprang to the stair, the look of white horror in Esther's face as she
+followed him, and above all, that strange terrifying Something in the
+cry she had heard seemed to discourage enquiry. The good lady turned her
+attention to the comforting of Jane. After all, if she waited long
+enough she could hardly help hearing all about it. At first hand, too.
+
+It seemed a long time that she waited. Miss Philps came up and down the
+stairs several times but she did not appear to see Mrs. Sykes. Jane
+stopped crying and wandered out into the garden. Still Mrs. Sykes
+waited and presently Aunt Amy came in, looking quite excited and asked
+eagerly what time it was. Mrs. Sykes told her, adding with asperity that
+these were fine goings-on, and that they'd all be late for the wedding
+if they didn't hurry up.
+
+"Yes, I think they will. I'm almost sure they will," said Aunt Amy, and
+she laughed as a child laughs when it is greatly pleased.
+
+"Dear me, she is much madder than I thought," murmured Mrs. Sykes.
+"Whatever is the matter? What are they doing?" she asked in a
+louder tone.
+
+Aunt Amy raised a finger, "Hush! she's asleep. Let us tidy up the room.
+I don't think she is going to wake up for a long time yet. And then
+she'll have to wait till the world goes round again."
+
+"Well of all the--" began Mrs. Sykes, but she was interrupted by the
+entrance of Professor Willits. With the virtuous air of one who strictly
+minds her own business she began to tie her bonnet strings.
+
+"Don't go, Mrs. Sykes," said the professor gravely. "I think--I'm afraid
+you may be needed."
+
+"I hope nothing serious has happened?" faltered Mrs. Sykes, now
+thoroughly disturbed, but he did not seem to hear her. He was listening
+intently to the sounds overhead. They were very slight sounds now and
+presently they ceased altogether. Willits looked more anxious. Then, in
+the midst of a new, heavier silence, Dr. Callandar himself came down
+the stairs.
+
+At first sight he appeared almost as usual. He did not notice Mrs. Sykes
+but went straight across the room to Willits.
+
+"Nothing--any use--" he began haltingly. Then suddenly the words ceased
+to come. His lips moved but there was no sound. With an expression of
+intense surprise he lifted his hand to his head, and swayed awkwardly
+into the nearest chair.
+
+"Land sakes, look out! he's going to fall," cried Mrs. Sykes in terror.
+
+"Breakdown," said the professor briefly. "I expected something of the
+kind. Help me to get him to the car."
+
+"Oh, Land, Land," moaned; Mrs. Sykes, "whatever"--but realising that the
+time for questioning was not yet, she did what she was told without
+more words.
+
+"Better send for Dr. Parker," said Willits crisply to Miss Philps who
+had come in quietly. "Better tell the minister, too. Keep the little
+girl down stairs. I'll be back as soon as I can. Mrs. Sykes, I shall
+want you to come with me."
+
+"Oh, Land--" but she got no further, the car was off like the wind.
+
+Later when the doctor had been put to bed like a child and telegrams
+dispatched which would bring a specialist and a nurse on the afternoon
+train, the good lady drew a long breath and decided that she couldn't
+"last out" a moment longer.
+
+Drawing Willits from the room her questions burst forth in their
+unstemmed torrent.
+
+The tall man listened at first in bewilderment. Then, as the true
+inwardness of the case dawned on him, a look which was almost admiration
+came over his angular countenance.
+
+"Why, Mrs. Sykes," he said, "is it possible that you do not know? I
+would have told you before but I took your knowledge for granted. The
+poor lady whom my friend was to marry was found dead in her bed. She
+died during the night. An overdose of sleeping powder."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVI
+
+
+Autumn that year was short and golden. Winter came early. In November it
+stormed, thawed, stormed again and began to freeze in earnest. The frost
+bit deeply but one night when its grip was sure, the temperature rose a
+little and snow began to fall. For days and nights it snowed, softly,
+steadily, without wind, and then the clouds parted and the sun shone
+out--a far off sun in a sky as blue as summer and cold as polar seas.
+The air tingled and snapped with frost. In the azure cup of the sunlit
+sky it sparkled like golden wine, and, like wine, it thrilled and
+strengthened. People stamped their feet and beat their hands to keep
+warm but smiled the while and murmured: "Glorious!"
+
+So much for the weather--since it was the weather which became the main
+factor in helping Coombe forget the tragedy at the Elms. Wonder is no
+nine-day affair in Coombe. One sensation is carefully conserved until
+the next one comes along, but in this case the early winter with its
+complete change of interests, its sleighing, skating and snow-shoeing,
+its reawakening of business and social bustle proved a distraction
+almost as effective as battle, murder or sudden death. The talk died
+down, the interest slackened, and the principal actors were once more
+permitted to become normal persons living in a normal world.
+
+For a time it had seemed that this desired condition would never be
+obtained. Coombe had felt the breath of a mystery. It was supposed to
+know everything and suspected that it knew nothing--a state of things
+aggravating to any well regulated community.
+
+There had been an inquest, of course, and at the inquest the whole sad
+affair was supposed to have been made plain. It was simplicity itself.
+Simplicity, in fact, was its most annoying characteristic. Mrs. Coombe,
+it appeared, had been for a long time somewhat of a sufferer from an
+obscure trouble, referred to generally as "nerves." For the relief of
+this trouble, one of whose symptoms was insomnia, she had, from time to
+time, had recourse to narcotics which, as everyone knows, are dangerous,
+if not, as many thought, positively immoral. Undoubtedly the poor lady
+had died from an overdose. It was easy, the coroner said, for a
+sympathetic mind to reconstruct the details of the terrible occurrence.
+It was the night before the wedding and the deceased had retired early.
+Miss Milligan, who had run in for a last look at the wedding gown, and
+who had been the very last person to see and speak with her, deposed
+that she had appeared more than ordinarily tired and seemed anxious to
+be alone. Asked if she detected any other signs of disordered nerves the
+witness had said, no. The deceased had not appeared worried about
+anything? No. The wedding gown had been quite satisfactory? Quite.
+
+No more questions were asked and Miss Milligan had not thought it
+necessary to go into the matter of the getting of the nerve tonic. The
+dead woman's harmless little deception was safe in her hands. It hadn't
+anything to do with the case anyway. Although in her own heart Miss
+Milligan blamed Dr. Callandar severely for not allowing the poor woman
+to use her tonic constantly. Had he done so the final tragedy might
+never have happened. Needless to say this good lady never knew what she
+had done. The fact that Mary Coombe had been a drug victim under
+treatment did not come out at the inquest. The coroner knew, but he was
+a sensible man and a very kind one. It hardly needed the logical
+arguments of Miss Philps or the heart-broken entreaties of Esther to
+convince him that knowledge of this fact was not for the general public.
+The only legally necessary information was the cause of death and that
+was simple enough. Easily understood, too, for given a tendency to
+sleeplessness and the excitement incident to a wedding, what more
+natural than that the excited bride should have sought relief in her
+customary sleeping draught.
+
+The mistake, the taking of a lethal dose, was, as all such mistakes are,
+inexplicable. Did her hand shake? Had she miscounted the number of
+tablets? Had she, in her nervous state, deliberately risked a larger
+dose whose danger she did not realise? These questions would never be
+answered. She had been alone in her room, nor was there a thread of
+evidence upon which to hang a theory. Esther, the nurse, Jane, Dr.
+Callandar (poor man!) had noticed nothing out of the ordinary when they
+had parted from her that last time. Aunt Amy's evidence was not taken.
+No one thought to question her and she volunteered no information. Of
+all the household at the Elms she was least disturbed by the tragedy,
+but, naturally, one does not expect the mentally weak to realise sorrow
+like ordinary people. This exemption was, as many did not fail to
+remark, one of their compensations. So in this, as in other things, Aunt
+Amy did not matter. She went her quiet way undisturbed, the one
+contented and peaceful person in that house of shock and horror.
+
+Why, then, since all was so plain, did Coombe scent a mystery? It would
+be hard to say. Perhaps the curious behaviour of Dr. Callandar was
+partly responsible. When the news of his sudden breakdown became known
+the first natural comment was, "So, you see, he did love her after all."
+But, upon longer consideration this did not seem to meet the case. A man
+may be genuinely in love with a woman and yet not be stricken, as had
+the doctor, by her sudden death. Dimly, Coombe felt that there must be a
+cause behind the cause. Miss Sinclair, the eldest, even went so far as
+to quote Shakespeare to the effect that "men have died and the worms
+have eaten them, but not for love." True, the doctor was not dead but
+his illness was proving a very long and stubborn one. In its early
+stages he had been taken away to Toronto for special treatment and had
+been quite unable to see any one, even the minister, before he left.
+Mrs. Sykes alone, with the exception of the trained nurses, had laid
+eyes on him since his sudden collapse on the day of the wedding. And
+Mrs. Sykes, miraculously, had nothing to say.
+
+It was rumoured, however, that his brain was affected, that he was
+paralysed, that he was deaf and blind, that he was dying of slow
+decline. Somehow the town felt that Mary Coombe, living or dead, did not
+loom large enough as a cause of such disintegration.
+
+Esther's actions, too, were part of the puzzle. It had been confidently
+supposed that she would go away at once for a rest and change. Every one
+knew that the Hollises had offered to take her with them on a long trip
+to the Pacific Coast. But Esther had declined to go. She declined to go
+anywhere. Worn out as she was with strain and grief, she persisted in
+disregarding the advice of everybody. ("So headstrong in a young girl!
+But Doctor Coombe, her father, was always like that.") Apparently she
+intended to go on exactly as if nothing had happened and to all
+arguments said nothing save, "I think it will be best," or, "I am not
+fit for strange scenes just now," or something equally futile. Coombe
+was quite annoyed with Esther--so stubborn!
+
+Only to Miss Annabel did the girl attempt to justify her attitude when
+that kind soul had exhausted persuasion and was inclined to feel both
+worried and hurt.
+
+"Don't you see," she explained haltingly, "I can't go away. I don't want
+to. I can't make the effort. Here every one understands and will make
+allowances. I want to be quiet, to rest, to think. I want to get back to
+where I was before--if I can."
+
+"Before what, my dear?"
+
+"Before--everything! I can't explain. But I know it is the only way I
+shall ever be content. I want to take my school again and to go on
+working and looking after Jane and Aunt Amy. Although," with a little
+smile, "it is really Auntie who looks after Jane and me. Won't you help
+me, dear Miss Annabel? I am quite sure that this is the only thing
+to do."
+
+"You are a strange girl, Esther. One would think you would be crazy to
+get away. Look at Angus! He's going. He has suddenly found out that a
+trip to the Holy Land is necessary if one is to speak intelligently upon
+many portions of the Bible. Absurd! But I never let him dream that I
+know that isn't his reason. And I hope you won't. It is all over now and
+the sooner he forgets the better. But I think even you are convinced,
+now, that I was right about--you know to what I refer!"
+
+Esther murmured something indistinguishable and Miss Annabel departed
+much pleased with her own perspicacity. And she did help. She let it be
+known at the Ladies' Aid that she quite understood Esther and approved
+of her. After all, it was senseless to run away from trouble since
+trouble can run so much faster. And it was natural and right of Esther
+to feel that nowhere could she find so much sympathy and consideration
+as in her own town. Travelling was fatiguing anyway.
+
+As for the school, that was easily arranged. A little discreet wire
+pulling and Esther was once more established as school mistress of
+District Number Fifteen. People shook their heads, but by the time of
+the first snowstorm they had ceased to prophesy nervous prostration, and
+by the time sleighing was fairly established they were ready to admit
+that the girl had acted sensibly after all.
+
+No one guessed that there was another reason for Esther's refusal to go
+away. It was a simple reason and had to do with the fact that in Coombe
+the mails were sure and regular. Travellers miss letters and strange
+addresses are uncertain at best, but in Coombe there was small chance of
+any untoward accident befalling a certain weekly letter in the
+handwriting of Professor Willits. Esther lived upon these letters. Brief
+and dry though they were, they formed the motive power of her life and
+indeed it was from one of them that she had received the impetus which
+roused her from her first trance of grief and horror.
+
+"My dear young lady (Willits had written).
+
+"I believe that there are times when the truth is a good thing. It might
+be tactful to pretend that I do not know the real reason of Calendar's
+collapse but it would also be foolish. I think he is going to pull
+through. Now the question is--how about you? Are you going to be able to
+do your part?
+
+"Let me be more explicit. It may be a long time before our friend is
+thoroughly re-established in health but it is quite probable that he
+will be well enough, and determined enough, to face some of his problems
+in the spring. He will turn to you. Are you going to be able to help
+him? When he comes to you will he find a silly, nervous girl, all
+horrors and regrets and useless might-have-beens or will he find you
+strong and sane, healthily poised, ready to face the future and let the
+dead past go? For the past is dead--believe me!
+
+"You have seemed to me to be an excellently normal young person, but no
+doubt the shock and trouble of late events have done much to disturb
+your normality. Can you get it back? On the answer to that, depends
+Callandar's future. I shall keep you informed, weekly, of his progress."
+
+Esther had thought deeply over this letter. Its brief, stern truth was
+exactly the tonic she needed. Like a strong hand it reached down into
+her direful pit of morbid musings, and, clinging to it, she struggled
+back into the sunlight. Above all and in spite of everything, she must
+not fail the man she loved!
+
+At first she had to fight with terrors. She feared she knew not what.
+The vision of Mary upon the bed, still and ghastly in the golden light
+of morning, came back to shake her heart. The memory of Callandar's
+face, of the frantic struggle to drag the dead woman back to life, made
+many a night hideous. The endless questioning, Could it have been
+prevented? Could I have done more? tortured her, but by and by, as she
+faced them bravely, these terrors lost their baleful power. Her youth
+and common-sense triumphed.
+
+The school helped. One cannot continue very morbid with a roomful of
+happy, noisy children to teach and keep in order. Jane's need of her
+helped, for she, dared not give way to brooding when the child was
+near. Aunt Amy helped--perhaps most of all. She was a constant wonder
+to the girl, so cheerful was she, so thoughtful of others, so forgetful
+of herself. Her little fancies seemed to have ceased to fret her, there
+was a new peace in her faded eyes. Sometimes as she went about the house
+she would sing a little, in a high thready voice, bits from songs that
+were popular in her youth. "The Blue Alsatian Mountains" or "When You
+and I Were Young, Maggie" or "Darling Nellie Grey." She told Esther that
+it was because she felt "safe." "The blackness hardly ever comes now,"
+she said. "I don't think 'They' will bother me any more."
+
+"Why?" asked Esther, curious.
+
+But Aunt Amy did not seem to know why--or if she knew she never told.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVII
+
+
+A robin hopped upon the window sill of School-house Number Fifteen and
+peered cautiously into the room. He had no business there during lesson
+hours and the arrival of Mary's little lamb could not have been more
+disturbing. The children whispered, fidgeted, shuffled their feet and
+banged their slates.
+
+"Perhaps they do not know it is spring," thought the robin and ruffling
+his red breast and swelling his throat he began to tell them.
+
+"It is spring! It is spring! It is spring!"
+
+The effect was electrical. Even the tall young teacher turned from her
+rows of figures on the blackboard.
+
+"Come out! come out! come out!" sang the robin.
+
+The teacher tapped sharply for order and the robin flew away. But the
+mischief was done. It was useless to tell them, "Only ten minutes more."
+Ten minutes--as well say ten years. The little fat boy in the front seat
+began to cry. A long sigh passed over the room. Ten minutes? The teacher
+consulted her watch, hesitated, and was lost.
+
+"Close books," she ordered. "Attention. Ready--March." The jostling
+lines scrambled in some kind of order to the door and then broke into
+joyous riot. It was spring--and school was out!
+
+Their teacher followed more slowly, pausing on the steps to breathe
+long and deeply the sweet spring air. In a corner by the steps there was
+still a tiny heap of shrinking snow, but in the open, the grass was
+green as emerald, violets and wind flowers pushed through the tangle of
+last year's leaves. The trees seemed shrouded in a fairy mist of green.
+Robins were everywhere.
+
+The girl upon the steps was herself a vision of spring--the embodiment
+of youth and beautiful life. Coombe folks admitted that Esther Coombe
+had "got back her looks." Had they been less cautious they might have
+said much more, for the subtle change which had come to Esther, the
+change which marks the birth of womanhood, had left her infinitely
+more lovely.
+
+From the pocket of the light coat she wore she brought forth a handful
+of crumbs and scattered them for the saucy robins and then, unwilling to
+hasten, sat down upon the steps to watch their cheerful wrangling.
+Peeling for more crumbs she drew out a letter--a single sheet covered
+with the crabbed handwriting of Professor Willits. At sight of it a soft
+flush stole over her face. She forgot the crumbs and the robins for,
+although her letter was two days old and she knew exactly what it
+contained, the very sight of the written words was joy to her. Like all
+Willits' notes it was short and to the point.
+
+"Our friend has gone," she read. "We wanted to keep him for a month yet,
+but the robins called too loudly. He left no word of his destination,
+only a strange note saying that at last he was up the hill and over. May
+he find happiness, dear lady, on the other side."
+
+One thing I notice--this recovery of his is different from his former
+recovery. If I were not afraid of lapsing into sentiment, I should say
+that he has achieved a soul cure. The morbid spot which troubled him so
+long is healed. A psychologist might explain it, but you and I must
+accept the result and be thankful. It is as if his subconscious self
+had removed a barrier and signalled 'Line clear--go ahead.' It is more
+than I had ever dared to hope.
+
+ Your friend,
+ E.P. Willits.
+
+"P.S.: Are you ready?"
+
+Esther looked at the postscript and smiled--that slow smile which lifted
+the corner of her lips so deliciously.
+
+"May we wait for you, Teacher?"
+
+"Not to-day, dears."
+
+The children moved regretfully away. Presently the school yard was
+deserted. The busy robins had finished quarrelling over their crumbs and
+were holding a caucus around the red pump. In the quietness could be
+heard the gurgle of the spring rivulets on the hill.
+
+Was there another sound on the hill, too? A far off whistling mingled
+with the gurgling water and twittering birds? Esther's hand tightened
+upon the letter--she leaned forward, listening intently. How loud the
+birds were! How confusing the sound of water! But now she caught the
+whistling again--
+
+ "_From Wimbleton to Wombleton is fifteen miles_"--
+
+The familiar words formed themselves upon the girl's lips before the
+message of the tune reached her brain and brought her, breathless, to
+her feet. He was coming--so soon!
+
+Panic seized her. Her hand flew to her heart--she would hide in the
+school-room, anywhere! Then she remembered Willits' postscript, the
+postscript which she had thought so needless. Her hand fell to her side.
+The panic died. Next moment, head high and eyes smiling, she walked down
+to the gate.
+
+He was coming along the road under the budding elms--hatless, carrying a
+knapsack. His tweeds were splashed with mud from the spring roads, his
+face was thin, his hair was almost grey. Yet he came on like a conqueror
+and there was nothing old or tired in the bound wherewith he leaped the
+gate he would not pause to open.
+
+"Esther!"
+
+She looked up into his eyes and found them shadowless. Her own eyes
+veiled themselves,
+
+Neither found anything to say.
+
+But overhead a robin burst into heavenly song.
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 10438 ***
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #10438 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/10438)
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+The Project Gutenberg eBook, Up the Hill and Over, by Isabel Ecclestone
+Mackay
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: Up the Hill and Over
+
+Author: Isabel Ecclestone Mackay
+
+Release Date: December 12, 2003 [eBook #10438]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK UP THE HILL AND OVER***
+
+
+E-text prepared by Brendan Lane, Charlie Kirschner, and the Prooject
+Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading Team
+
+
+
+UP THE HILL
+
+AND OVER
+
+BY
+
+ISABEL ECCLESTONE MACKAY
+Author of "The House of Windows," etc.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ _The road runs back and the road runs on,
+ But the air has a scent of clover_.
+ _And another day brings another dawn,
+ When we're up the hill and over_.
+
+
+
+TO MY MOTHER
+
+WHO MIGHT HAVE LIKED THIS BOOK HAD SHE LIVED TO READ IT
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+
+ "From Wimbleton to Wombleton is fifteen miles,
+ From Wombleton to Wimbleton is fifteen miles,
+ From Wombleton to Wimbleton,
+ From Wimbleton to Wombleton,
+ From Wombleton--to Wimbleton--is fif--teen miles!"
+
+The cheery singing ended abruptly with the collapse of the singer upon a
+particularly inviting slope of grass. He was very dusty. He was very
+hot. The way from Wimbleton to Wombleton seemed suddenly extraordinarily
+long and tiresome. The slope was green and cool. Just below it slept a
+cool, green pool, deep, delicious--a swimming pool such as dreams
+are made of.
+
+If there were no one about--but there was some one about. Further down
+the slope, and stretched at full length upon it, lay a small boy. Near
+the small boy lay a packet of school books.
+
+The wayfarer's lips relaxed in an appreciative smile.
+
+"Little boy," he called, somewhat hoarsely on account of the dust in his
+throat, "little boy, can you tell me how far it is from here to
+Wimbleton?"
+
+Apparently the little boy was deaf.
+
+The questioner raised his voice, "or if you can oblige me with the exact
+distance to Wombleton," he went on earnestly, "that will do quite
+as well."
+
+No answer, civil or otherwise, from the youth by the pool. Only a
+convulsive wiggle intended to cover the undefended position of the
+school books.
+
+The traveller's smile broadened but he made no further effort toward
+sociability. Neither did he go away. To the dismayed eyes, watching
+through the cover of some long grass, he was clearly a person devoid of
+all fine feeling. Or perhaps he had never been taught not to stay where
+he wasn't wanted. Mebby he didn't even know that he _wasn't_ wanted.
+
+In order to remove all doubt as to the latter point, the small boy's
+head shot up suddenly out of the covering grass.
+
+"What d'ye want?" he asked forbiddingly.
+
+"Little boy," said the stranger, "I thank you. I want for nothing."
+
+The head collapsed, but quickly came up again.
+
+"Ain't yeh goin' anywhere?" asked a despairing voice.
+
+"I was going, little boy, but I have stopped."
+
+This was so true that the small boy sat up and scowled.
+
+"I judge," went on the other, "that I am now midway between Arden,
+otherwise, Wimbleton, and Arcady, sometime known as Wombleton. The
+question is, which way and how? A simple sum in arithmetic will--little
+boy, do not frown like that! The wind may change. Smile nicely, and I'll
+tell you something."
+
+Urged by necessity, the badgered one attempted to look pleasant.
+
+"That's better! Now, my cheerful child, what I really want to know is
+'how many miles to Babylon?'"
+
+A reluctant grin showed that the small boy's early education had not
+been utterly neglected. "Aw, what yeh givin' us?" he protested
+sheepishly, "if it's Coombe you're lookin' for, it's 'bout a mile and a
+half down the next holler."
+
+"Holler?" the stranger's tone was faintly questioning. "Oh, I see. You
+mean 'hollow,' which being interpreted means 'valley,' which means, I
+fear, another hill. Little boy, do you want to carry a knapsack?"
+
+"Nope."
+
+"No? Strange that nobody seems to want to carry a knapsack. I least of
+all. Well," lifting the object with disfavour, "good-day to you. I
+perceive that you grow impatient for those aquatic pleasures for which
+you have temporarily abjured the more severe delights of scholarship.
+Little boy, I wish you a very good swim."
+
+"Gee," muttered the small boy, "gee, ain't he the word-slinger!"
+
+He returned to the pool but something of its charm was dissipated. Vague
+thoughts of school inspectors and retribution troubled its waters. Not
+that he was at all afraid of school inspectors, or that he really
+suspected the stranger of being one. Still, discretion is a wise thing
+and word-slinging is undoubtedly a form of art much used in high
+scholastic circles. Also there had been a remark about a simple sum in
+arithmetic which was, to say the least, disquieting. With a bursting
+sigh, the small sinner scrambled to his feet, reached for the hated
+books, and disappeared rapidly in the direction of the halls of
+learning.
+
+Meanwhile the stranger, unconscious of the moral awakening behind him,
+plodded wearily up the steep and sunny hill. As he is our hero we shall
+not describe him. There is no hurry, and there will be other occasions
+upon which he will appear to better advantage. At present let us be
+content with knowing that there was no reason for the hat and suit he
+wore save a mistaken idea of artistic suitability. "If I am going to be
+a tramp," he had said, "I want to look like a tramp." He didn't, but his
+hat and coat did.
+
+He felt like a tramp, though, if to feel like a tramp is to feel hot and
+sticky and hungry. Perhaps real tramps do not feel like this. Perhaps
+they enjoy walking. At any rate they do not carry knapsacks, but betray
+a touching faith in Providence in the matter of clean linen and
+tooth brushes.
+
+Before the top of the hill was reached, Dr. Callandar wished devoutly
+that in this last respect he had behaved like the real thing. In setting
+out to lead the simple life the ultimate is to be recommended--and
+knapsacks are not the ultimate. They are heavy things with the property
+of growing heavier, and prove of little use save to sit upon in damp
+places. The doctor's feelings in regard to his were intensified by an
+utter lack of dampness anywhere. The top of the hill was a sun-crowned
+eminence, blazingly, blisteringly, suffocatingly hot. The valley, spread
+out beneath him, was soaked in sunshine, a haze of heat quivered visibly
+above the roofs of the pretty town it cradled. There was a river and
+there were woods, but the trees hung motionless, and the river wound
+like a snake of brass among them.
+
+The doctor regarded both the knapsack and the prospect resentfully. He
+had hoped for a breeze upon the hill-top, and there was no breeze.
+Raising his hand to remove his hat, he noticed that the hand was
+trembling, and swore softly. The hand continued to tremble, and holding
+it out before him he watched it, interestedly, until a powerful will
+brought the quivering nerves into subjection.
+
+"Jove!" he muttered. "Not a moment too soon--this holiday!"
+
+Then, hat in hand, he started down the hill.
+
+It was a long hill, very long, much longer than it had any need or right
+to be. It had a twist in its nature which would not allow it to run
+straight. It meandered; it hesitated; it never knew its own mind, but
+twisted and turned and thought better of it a dozen times in half a
+mile. It was a hill with short cuts favourably known to small boys and
+to tramps with a distaste for highways; but this tramp, not being a real
+one, knew none of them, and was compelled to do exactly as the hill did.
+The result was, that when at last it slipped into the cool shade of a
+row of beeches at its base, its victim was as exhausted as itself.
+
+He was thirsty, too, and, worse still, he knew from a certain dizzy
+blindness that one of his bad headaches was coming on--and there still
+lay another mile between him and the town. Pressing his hand against his
+eyes to restore for the moment their normal clearness of vision, he saw,
+a short way down the road, a gate; and through the gate and behind some
+trees, the white gleam of a building. But better than all, he saw,
+between the gate and the building, a red pump! Then the blindness and
+pain descended again, and he stumbled on more by faith than by sight;
+blundering through the half-open gate, his precarious course directed
+wholly by the pump's exceeding redness, which shone like a beacon
+fire ahead.
+
+Fortunately, it was a real pump with real water and a sucker in good
+standing, warranted to need no priming. At the stroke of the red handle
+the good, cool water gurgled and arose with a delightful "plop!" It
+splashed from the spout freely upon the face and hands of the victim of
+the long hill--delicious, life-giving! The delight it brought seemed
+compensation almost for heat and pain and weariness. Callandar felt that
+if he could only let its sweetness stream indefinitely over his closed
+eyes it would wash away the blindness and the ache. Perhaps--
+
+"I am afraid I cannot allow you to use this pump!" said a crisp voice
+primly. "This is not," with capital letters, "a Public Pump!"
+
+Callandar wiped the surplus water from his face and looked up. There,
+beside him in the yellow haze of his semi-blindness, stood the owner of
+the voice. She appeared to be clothed in white, tall and commanding.
+Surrounded by the luminous mist, her appearance was not unlike that of a
+cool and capable avenging angel.
+
+"This pump," went on the angel with nice precision, "is not for the use
+of pedestrians."
+
+"Ah!" said the pedestrian.
+
+"If you will continue down the road," the voice went on, "you will find,
+when you reach the town, a public pump. You may use that."
+
+The pedestrian, feeling dizzier than ever, sat down upon the pump
+platform. It was wet and cool.
+
+"The objection to that," he said wisely, "is simple. I cannot continue
+down the road."
+
+"I should like you to go at once," patiently. "There is a pump--"
+
+The pedestrian raised a deprecating hand.
+
+"Let us admit the pump! Doubtless the pump is there, but there is a pump
+here also, and a pump in the hand is worth two pumps, an ice-box and a
+John Collins in town. You doubtless know the situation created by
+Mahomet and the mountain? This is the same, with a difference. In this
+case the pump will not come to me and I cannot go to the pump. Therefore
+we both remain _in statu quo_. Do I make myself plain?"
+
+Apparently he did, for there was no answer. Logic, he concluded, had
+achieved its usual triumph. The avenging angel had withdrawn. Blissfully
+he stooped again, closing his eyes to the cool drip of the water, but
+scarcely had they felt its chill relief when a sharp bark caused them to
+fly open with disconcerting suddenness--the avenging angel had returned,
+and with her was an avenging dog! Seen through the mist, the dog
+appeared to be a bull pup of ferocious aspect.
+
+"I am sorry," the cool voice had no ruth in it, "but it is my duty not
+to allow tramps upon these grounds. If you will not go, I must ask
+the dog--"
+
+"ASK the dog!" In spite of his aching head the tramp (now no longer
+pedestrian) laughed weakly.
+
+"Oh, please don't ask him!" he entreated. "He looks too awfully willing!
+Besides, I begin to perceive that my presence is not desired. Naturally
+I scorn to remain."
+
+Very slowly he raised himself from the damp pump platform by means of
+the red pump-handle. In this manner he achieved an upright position
+without much difficulty and all might have gone well had he behaved like
+a proper tramp. But forgetting himself, under the tyranny of training
+and instinct, he attempted, in deference to the sex of the angel, to
+raise his hat (which was not on his head anyway). In so doing he
+released the red pump-handle, lost his balance, struggled wildly to
+regain it, and then collapsed with a terrible sense of failure and
+ignominy, right into the open jaws, as it were, of the avenging dog!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+
+He had a fancy that something cool and kind was licking his hand....
+
+It felt like the tongue of a friendly dog. He seemed to have been
+dreaming about dogs. Something soft and cold lay on his head. It felt
+like a wet handkerchief ... the pain had dulled to a slow throbbing ...
+if he opened his eyes he would know who licked his hand and what it was
+that lay upon his head ... on the other hand, opening his eyes might
+bring back the pain. It seemed hardly worth the risk ... still, he would
+very much like to know--
+
+Without being able to decide the question, he fell asleep.
+
+When he awoke, his head was clear and the pain was gone. He felt no
+longer unbearably tired, but only comfortably weary, deliciously drowsy.
+Had he been at home in his own bed he would have turned over and gone
+cheerfully to sleep again. As it was, he opened his eyes with a zestful
+sense of curiosity.
+
+He was lying, very easily, upon soft grass. Above him spread the thick
+greenery of a giant maple; his head rested upon a cushion and close
+beside him, with comforting nose thrust into his open palm, lay a
+ferocious-looking bull pup. The pup grinned with delight at his
+tentative pat; barked fiercely, and then grinned again as if to say,
+"Don't mind me, it's only my fun!"
+
+There was a noise somewhere, a loud, cheerful noise--the noise of
+children playing. Not one child, nor two, but children--lots of them!
+This was perplexing; and another perplexing thing was the nearness of a
+white stoop which led up to the door of a white building; neither stoop
+nor building had he ever seen before. Again the dog barked, loudly, and
+as if in answer to the bark, the door above the stoop opened and a young
+girl came out. She cast a casual glance at him as he lay under the tree,
+and, settling herself daintily upon the white steps, opened a small
+basket and took from it a serviceable square of white damask and a
+lettuce sandwich. He could see the lettuce, crisp and green, peeping out
+at the edges.
+
+At the sight, he was conscious of a strange sensation; an almost
+forgotten feeling to which, for the moment, he could put no name.
+
+And then, as the girl bit into the sandwich, illumination came. He was
+_hungry_! But what an unkind, inconsiderate girl!--Another bite and the
+sandwich would be gone--
+
+"I am awake," he suggested meekly.
+
+"So Buster said." The girl smiled approvingly at the dog. "Good Buster!
+You may come off guard, sir. Run away and get your lunch."
+
+With a delighted bark for thanks the bull pup trotted away. Callandar's
+sense of injury deepened. The girl had begun upon a second sandwich.
+Perhaps there were only two!
+
+"Are you hungry, Mr. Tramp?" asked the girl innocently.
+
+"I think," he said, pausing in order to give his words full weight, "I
+am starving!" Then, as the blissful meaning of this first feeling of
+healthy hunger dawned upon him, he added solemnly: "Thank the Lord!"
+
+"Yes?" There was a cool edge of surprise in the girl's voice. She
+proceeded thoughtfully with the second sandwich.
+
+"Yes. Hunger is a beautiful thing, a priceless possession. Money cannot
+buy it, skill cannot command it. The price of hunger is far
+above rubies."
+
+The girl looked down upon him and smiled. It was such a dear little
+smile that for a moment its recipient forgot about the disappearing
+sandwich.
+
+"I am so glad," she said warmly, "that you feel like that!"
+
+There was a slight pause. "Because," she went on, finishing the last
+bite of the second sandwich, "until now I had always thought that hunger
+wasn't a bit nice. Unless, of course, one has the power to gratify it."
+
+"Fortunately," said Callandar a little stiffly, "I have that power."
+
+The girl raised her eyebrows. They were long and straight and black, and
+she raised them charmingly. But she was a most unkind and heartless
+girl, for all that. Never while he lived would he ask her for a
+sandwich. With a comfortable feeling of security his hand felt for his
+well-filled pocketbook. It was gone!
+
+"By Jove!"
+
+Stronger ejaculation seemed forbidden by the Presence on the steps. He
+tapped all his pockets carefully. The pocketbook was in none of
+them--and he had used the last cent of loose change for a glass of milk
+for breakfast.
+
+"I suppose," the girl had apparently not noticed his sudden
+discomfiture, "that you mean you have money? But the nearest place where
+money would be of use is Coombe, and Coombe is a full mile away. It is
+a pity that my principles, and the principles of the school-board,
+should be all against the feeding of tramps. Otherwise I might offer you
+a sandwich."
+
+"You might," bitterly, "but I doubt it!"
+
+"Even now, putting the school-board aside, I might offer you one if you
+were to ask prettily and to apologise to me for making rather a fool of
+me this morning over there by the pump!"
+
+The pump! Why, of course, the pump! It all came back to him now--the
+pump, the avenging angel! (Had this been the avenging angel?) The
+avenging dog!--Oh, heaven, was _that_ the avenging dog?
+
+He burst into a boyish shout of laughter.
+
+"There are only two sandwiches left," she warned him. The doctor stopped
+laughing.
+
+"Oh, please!" he said.
+
+There was something very pleasant about him when he used that tone; a
+persuasive charm, a trace of command. The girl liked it--and passed
+a sandwich.
+
+"Anyway it was you who took for granted that I was a tramp," he smiled
+at her. "If I remember rightly I was hardly in a condition to contradict
+you. Not but that it was a natural conclusion. I am curious to know why
+you changed your mind."
+
+"Oh! as soon as you fainted I knew. Tramps don't faint!"
+
+"Not ever?"
+
+"Well--hardly ever! And besides--look at your hands!"
+
+The doctor looked, and blushed.
+
+"Dirty?" he ventured.
+
+"Not half dirty enough! And it wasn't only your hands. I noticed--oh!
+lots of things!" For no perceptible reason a tiny blush fluttered
+across the whiteness of her face like a roseleaf chased by the wind. The
+pleasure of watching it made the doctor forget to answer, and the
+girl went on:
+
+"I know lots more about you than that you aren't a tramp. I know what
+you are. You are a doctor!" triumphantly.
+
+"A Daniel come to judgment!"
+
+"Yes, a Daniel! Only I wouldn't have been quite so sure if you hadn't
+dropped this out of your pocket." With a gleeful laugh she held up a
+clinical thermometer.
+
+The doctor laughed also. "Men have been hanged on less evidence than
+that," he admitted. "All the same I don't know where it came from. Some
+one must have judged me capable of wanting to take my own temperature.
+Anything else?"
+
+"Only general deductions. You are a doctor, you are going to
+Coombe--deduction, you are the doctor who is going to buy out Dr.
+Simmonds's practice."
+
+Callandar scrambled up from his pillow with a look of delighted surprise
+on his face.
+
+"Why--so I am!" he exclaimed.
+
+"You say that as if you had just found it out."
+
+"Well, er--you see I had forgotten it--temporarily. My head, you know."
+
+The suspicion in the girl's eyes melted into sympathy. "I suppose you
+know," she said with quite a motherly air, "that old Doc. Simmonds
+hasn't really any practice to sell?"
+
+"No? That's bad. Hasn't he even a little one? You see" (the sympathy had
+been so pleasant that he felt he could do with a little more of it), "I
+could hardly manage a big one just now. As you may have noticed, my
+health is rather rocky. Got to lay up and all that--so it's just as
+well that old Simpkins' practice is on the ragged edge."
+
+"The name is Simmonds, not Simpkins," coldly.
+
+"Well, I didn't buy the name with the practice. My own name is
+Callandar. Much nicer, don't you think?"
+
+"I don't know. A well-known name is rather a handicap."
+
+This time the doctor was genuinely surprised.
+
+"A handicap? What do you mean?"
+
+"People will be sure to compare you with your famous namesake, Dr.
+Callandar, of Montreal. Everyone you meet," with a mischievous smile,
+"will say, 'Callandar--ah! no relation to Dr. Henry Callandar of
+Montreal, I suppose?' And then they will look sympathetic and you will
+want to slap them."
+
+"Dear me! I never thought of that! I had no idea that the Montreal man
+would be known up here. In the cities, perhaps, but not here."
+
+The girl raised her straight black brows in a way which expressed
+displeasure at his slighting tone.
+
+"You are mistaken," she said briefly. "I must go now. It is time to ring
+the bell. The children are running wild."
+
+For the first time the doctor began to take an intelligent interest in
+his surroundings, and saw that the tree, the white stoop and the small
+white building were situated in a little, quiet oasis separated by a low
+fence from the desert of a large yard containing the red pump. On the
+other side of the fence was pandemonium!
+
+"Why, it's a school!" he exclaimed.
+
+The school-mistress arose, daintily flicking the crumbs from her white
+piqué skirt.
+
+"District No. 15. The largest attendance of any in the county. I really
+must ring the bell." She flicked another invisible crumb. "I hope," she
+added slowly, "that I haven't discouraged you."
+
+"Oh, no! not at all. Quite the contrary. It seems unfortunate about the
+name, but perhaps I can live it down. It isn't as if I were just out of
+college, you know.--In fact," as if the thought had just come to him,
+"do I not seem to you to be a little old for--to be making a
+fresh start?"
+
+The girl's eyes looked at him very kindly. It was quite evident that she
+thought she understood the situation perfectly. "I shouldn't worry about
+that, if I were you," she said. "Young doctors are often no use at all.
+A great many people _prefer_ doctors to be older! I know, you see, for
+my father was a doctor. He was Dr. Coombe; for many years he was the
+only doctor here, the only doctor that counted," with a pretty air of
+pride. "The town was named after his father-I am Esther Coombe."
+
+The doctor acknowledged the introduction with a bow and a quick smile of
+gratitude.
+
+"You are really very kind, Miss Coombe," he said. "If--if I should take
+Dr. Spifkin's practice, I hope I may see you sometimes. It is not far
+from here, is it, to the town--pump?"
+
+Esther laughed. "No, but I do not live out here. I only teach here. We
+live in town, or almost in. You will pass the house on the way to the
+hotel. But before you go--" with a gleeful smile she handed him his lost
+pocketbook--"this fell out of your coat when I pull--helped you under
+the tree. I should have given it to you before, but I wanted you to
+understand just how far the blessing of hunger depends upon one's power
+to gratify it."
+
+They laughed together with a splendid sense of comradeship; then with a
+startled "I really must ring the bell!" she turned and ran up the steps.
+
+Smilingly he watched her disappear, waiting musingly until a sudden
+furious ringing told him that school was called.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+
+Two sandwiches, an apple, and a glass of water may save a man from
+starvation, but they do not go far towards satisfying the reviving
+appetite of a convalescent. Walking with brisk step down the road,
+Callandar began to imagine the kind of meal he would order--a clear
+soup, broiled steak, crisp potatoes--a few little simple things like
+that! He fingered his pocketbook lovingly, glad that, for the first time
+in some months, he actually wanted something that money could buy.
+
+Now that noon was past, the intense heat of the morning was tempered by
+a breeze. It was still hot and his footsteps raised little cyclones of
+dust which flew along the road before him, but the oppression in the air
+was gone, and walking had ceased to be a weariness. The mile which
+separated him from Coombe appeared no longer endless, yet so insistent
+were the demands of his inner man that when a town-going farmer hailed
+him with the usual offer of a "lift," he accepted the invitation
+with alacrity.
+
+"Better," he murmured to himself, "the delights of rustic conversation
+with a good meal at the end thereof than lordly solitude and
+emptiness withal."
+
+But contrary to expectation the rustic declined to converse. He was a
+melancholy-looking man with a long jaw and eyes so deep-set that the
+observer took them on faith, and a nose which alone would have been
+sufficient to identify him. Beyond the first request to "step up," he
+vouchsafed no word and, save for an inarticulate gurgle to his horse,
+seemed lost in an ageless calm. His gaze was fixed upon some indefinite
+portion of the horse's back and he drove leaning forward in an attitude
+of complete bodily and mental relaxation. If his guest wished
+conversation it was apparent that he must set it going himself.
+
+"Very warm day!" said Callandar tentatively.
+
+"So-so." The farmer slapped the reins over the horse's flank, jerked
+them abruptly and murmured a hoarse "Giddap!" It was his method of
+encouraging the onward motion of the animal.
+
+"Is it always as warm as this hereabouts?"
+
+"No. Sometimes we get it a little cooler 'bout Christmas."
+
+The doctor flushed with annoyance and then laughed.
+
+"You see," he explained, "I'm new to this part of the country. But I
+always thought you had it cooler up here."
+
+The manner of the rustic grew more genial.
+
+"Mostly we do," he admitted; "but this here is a hot spell." Another
+long pause and then he volunteered suddenly: "You can mostly tell by
+Alviry. When she gets a sunstroke it's purty hot. I'm going for the
+doctor now."
+
+"Going for the doctor?" Callandar's gaze swept the peaceful figure with
+incredulous amusement. "Great Scott, man! Why don't you hurry? Can't the
+horse go any faster?"
+
+"Maybe," resignedly, "but he won't."
+
+"Make him, then! A sunstroke may be a very serious business. Your wife
+may be dead before you get back."
+
+The deep-set eyes turned to him slowly. There seemed something like a
+distant sparkle in their depths.
+
+"Don't get to worrying, stranger. It'll take more 'an a sunstroke to
+polish off Alviry."
+
+"Was she unconscious?"
+
+"Not so as you could notice."
+
+"But if it were a sunstroke--look here, I'll go with you myself. I am a
+doctor."
+
+"Kind of thought you might be," he responded genially. "Thinking of
+taking on old Doc. Simmonds's practice?"
+
+"I don't know. But if your wife--"
+
+The rustic shook his head. "No. You wouldn't do for Alviry. She said to
+get Doc. Parker, and a sunstroke ain't going to change her none. But if
+she likes your looks she'll probably try you next time. Tumble fond of
+experiments is Alviry--hi! giddap!" He slapped his horse more forcibly
+with the loose reins and settled into, mournful silence.
+
+"Going to put up at the Imperial?" he asked after a long and peaceful
+pause.
+
+"I want to put up somewhere where I can get a good meal and get it
+quickly."
+
+The mournful Jehu shook his head gloomily.
+
+"You won't get that at the Imperial."
+
+"Where had I better go?"
+
+"There ain't any other place to go--not to speak of."
+
+The doctor let fall a fiery exclamation.
+
+"What say?"
+
+"I said that it must be a queer town."
+
+"I'm a little hard of hearing, now and agin. But I gather you're not a
+church-going man. It's a great church-going place, is Coombe. Old Doc.
+Simmonds was a Methody. We were kind of hoping the next one might be a
+change. There's two churches of Presbyterians and they're tumble folk
+for hanging together."
+
+The doctor laughed. "Thanks for the tip. I'll remember. Coombe is
+considered a healthy place, isn't it?"
+
+"Danged healthy."
+
+The commiseration in the other's tone lent to the simple question such
+an obvious meaning that the doctor hardly knew whether to be amused
+or annoyed.
+
+"Heavens, man! I'm not an undertaker. I asked because I'm rather rocky
+myself. That is, partly, why I'm here."
+
+The mournful one nodded. "Good a reason as any," he assented sadly.
+
+"By the way--er--there used to be a Dr. Coombe here, didn't there?
+Didn't he live somewhere hereabouts?"
+
+The sad one turned his meditative eyes from their focus upon the horse's
+back and rested them upon the open and guileleas face by his side. Then
+from deep down in his brawny throat came a sudden sound. It was
+unmistakably a chuckle. Without the slightest trace of an accompanying
+smile, the sound was startling.
+
+"What's the matter?" asked the doctor irritably.
+
+"Nothing. Only when anybody's seen Esther, they always start asking
+about old Doc. Coombe. It gives them a kind of opening. Yes, that's the
+old Coombe place--over there. The one with the fir trees and the big elm
+by the gate."
+
+"A pleasant house," said Callandar in a detached voice.
+
+"So-so. The old Doc. uster putter around considerable. But they say his
+widow isn't doing much to keep it up. Tumble flighty woman, so they say.
+Young, you know, just about young enough to be the old Doc.'s
+daughter--"
+
+"But--"
+
+"Oh! Esther ain't her child. Esther's ma died when she was a baby. There
+is a child, though, Jane they call her, a pindling little thing. But
+p'r'aps you've met Jane too?"
+
+"I did not say--"
+
+"No, but I thought likely if you'd met one, you'd have met the other.
+Jane's nearly always hanging around Esther 'cept in school hours. Awful
+fond of Esther she is. Folks say that Esther's more of a mother to Jane
+than her own ma. But I dunno. Alviry says it's a shame the way Esther's
+put upon; all the cares of the house when she had ought to be playing
+with her dolls. Stepmother with 'bout as much sense as a fly. Old Aunt
+Amy, nice sort of soul but--" he touched his head significantly and
+heaved the heaviest sigh yet.
+
+"Do you mean to say that there is an aunt who isn't quite sane?" asked
+Callandar, surprised.
+
+"_I_ don't say so. Some folks does. Alviry says she's a whole lot wiser
+than some of the rest of us."
+
+From the tone of this remark it was evident that Alviry's observation
+had been intended personally. Callandar choked back a laugh.
+
+"What say?" asked the other suspiciously.
+
+"I said, rather hard luck for a young girl."
+
+The mournful one nodded and relapsed into melancholy. The doctor
+turned his attention to the house which a flicker of the whip had
+pointed out. It was long and low, with wide verandas and a somewhat
+neglected-looking lawn. At one side an avenue of lilacs curved, and on
+the other stood a stiff line of fir trees. The front of the house was
+well shaded by maples and near the gate stood a giant elm-tree, around
+the trunk of which ran a circular seat. It all looked cool, green and
+inviting. As the old horse walked sedately past, a woman's figure came
+out of one of the long windows and flung itself lightly, yet, even at
+that distance, with a certain suggestion of impatience, into one of the
+veranda chairs.
+
+"That'll be Mrs. Coombe now," volunteered his informant. "Tumble saucy
+way she has of flinging herself around--jes' like a young girl! Mebby
+you can see what sort of dress she's got on. Alviry'll be int'rested
+to know."
+
+"It's too far off," said Callandar, amused. "All I can see is that the
+lady is wearing something white."
+
+"Went out of weeds right on the dot, she did! It's not much over a year
+since the old Doc. died. Esther's still wearing some of her black, but
+jes' to wear them out, not as symbols. Mrs. Coombe's got a whole new
+outfit, Alviry says. Turrible extravagant! Folks says it takes Esther
+all her time paying for them with her school money. But I dunno.
+What say?"
+
+"I didn't say anything. But, since you ask, do you think all this is any
+of my business?"
+
+"Well, since you ask, it ain't. 'Tisn't my business either; but it kind
+of passes the time. Giddap!"
+
+Perhaps the old horse knew he was getting near the end of his journey
+for, contrary to expectation, he did "giddap" with a jerk which nearly
+unseated the doctor and caused a flicker of mild surprise to flit across
+the sad one's face.
+
+"Turrible fast horse, this," he confided, "all you got to do is to get
+him going."
+
+"Don't let me take you out of your way. If you'll tell me the
+direction--"
+
+"Sit still, stranger. I'm going right past the Imperial. Hardly any
+place in Coombe you can go without going past the Imperial. It's what
+you call a kind of newclus."
+
+As he spoke, the horse, now going at a fairly respectable rate, turned
+into the main street of the town; a main street, thriftily prosperous
+but now somewhat a-doze in the sun. Half-way down, the intelligent
+animal stopped with another jerk for which the doctor was equally
+ill-prepared. Before them stood a modest red brick building, three
+stories in height, with a narrow veranda running across the lowest story
+just one step up from the pavement. On the veranda were green chairs and
+in the chairs reclined such portion of the male Coombers as could do so
+without fear and without reproach. Along the top of the veranda was a
+large sign displaying the words, "HOTEL IMPERIAL."
+
+Callandar alighted nimbly from the democrat, that being the name of the
+light spring wagon in which he had travelled, and shook his good
+Samaritan by the hand. "Thank you very much," he said, "and I sincerely
+hope that the sunstroke will not have terminated fatally by the time you
+reach home."
+
+The deep-set eyes turned to him slowly and again he fancied a twinkle in
+their mournfulness. "If it does," said the sad one tranquilly, "it will
+be the first time it ever has--giddap!"
+
+As no one came forth to take his knapsack, Callandar slung it over his
+shoulder and entered the hotel. The parting remark of his conductor had
+left a smile upon his lips, which smile still lingered as he asked the
+sleepy-looking clerk for a room, and intimated that he would like lunch
+immediately.
+
+"Dining room closed," said that individual shortly.
+
+"What do you mean?"
+
+"Dining room closes at two; supper at six."
+
+"Do you mean to say that you serve nothing between the hours of two and
+six?"
+
+"Serve you a drink, if you like," with an understanding grin at his
+questioner's dusty knapsack.
+
+Forgetting that he had become a Presbyterian, the doctor made a few
+remarks, and from his manner of making them the clerk awoke to the fact
+that knapsacks do not a hobo make nor dusty coats a tramp. Now in Canada
+no one is the superior of any one else, but that did not make a bit of
+difference in the startling change of demeanour which overtook the
+clerk. He straightened up. He removed his toothpick. He arranged the
+register in his best manner and chose another nib for his pen. When
+Callandar had registered, the clerk was very sorry indeed that the hotel
+arrangements were rather arbitrary in the matter of meal hours. He was
+afraid that the kitchen fires were down and everything cold. Still if
+the gentleman would go to his room, he would see what could be done--
+
+The gentleman went to his room; but in no enviable frame of mind. So
+wretched was his plight that he was not above valuing the covert
+sympathy of the small bell-boy who preceded him up the oilclothed
+stairs. He was a very round boy: round legs, round cheeks, round head
+and eyes so round that they must have been special eyes made on purpose.
+There was also a haunting resemblance to some other boy! Callandar
+taxed his memory, and there stole into it a vision of a pool with
+willows. He chuckled.
+
+"Boy," he said, "have you a little brother who is very fond of going to
+school?"
+
+"Nope," said the boy. (It seemed to be a family word.) "I've got a
+brother, but he don't sound like that."
+
+"You ought to be in school yourself, boy. What's your name?"
+
+"Zerubbabel Burk."
+
+"Is that all?"
+
+"Yep. Bubble for short."
+
+"Have you ever known what it is to be hungry?"
+
+"Three times a day, before meals!"
+
+"Well, I'm starving. Do you belong to the Boy Scouts?"
+
+"Betyerlife."
+
+"Well, look here. I am an army in distress. Commissariat cut off,
+extinction imminent! Now you go and bring in the provisions. And, as we
+believe in honourable warfare, pay for everything you get, but take no
+refusals--see?" He pressed a bill into the boy's ready hand and watched
+the light of understanding leap into the round eyes with pleasurable
+anticipation.
+
+"I get you, Mister! Here's your room, number fourteen."
+
+The boy disappeared while still the key with its long tin label was
+jingling in the lock. The doctor opened the door of room number fourteen
+and went in.
+
+Rooms, we contend, like people, should be considered in relation to that
+state in which it has pleased Providence to place them. To consider
+number fourteen in any environment save its own would be manifestly
+unfair since, in relation to all the other rooms at the Imperial,
+number fourteen was a good room, perhaps the very best. A description
+tempts us, but perhaps its best description is to be found in its effect
+upon Dr. Callandar. That effect was an immediate determination to depart
+by the next train, provided the next train did not leave before he had
+had something to eat.
+
+He was aroused from gloomy musings by a discreet tap announcing the
+return of the scouting party. The scouting party was piled with parcels
+up to its round eyes and from the parcels issued an odour so delicious
+that the doctor's depression vanished.
+
+"Good hunting, eh?"
+
+"Prime, sir. 'Tisn't store stuff, either! As soon as I see that look in
+your eye I remembered 'bout the tea-fight over at Knox's Church last
+night and how they'd be sure to be selling off what's left, for the
+benefit of the heathen." The boy gave the roundest wink Callandar had
+ever seen and deposited his parcels upon the bed. "They always have
+'bout forty times as much's they can use. Course I didn't get you any
+_broken_ vittles," he added, noticing the alarm upon the doctor's face.
+"It's all as good as the best. Wait till you see!"
+
+He began to clear the wash-stand in a businesslike manner, talking all
+the time. "This here towel will do for a cloth. It's bran' clean--cross
+my heart! I borrowed a dish or two offen the church. They know me....
+We'll put the chicken in the middle and the ham along at this end and
+the pie over there where it can't slip off--"
+
+"I don't like pie, boy."
+
+"I do. Pie's good for you. We'll put the beet salad by the chicken and
+the cabbage salad by the ham and the chow-chow betwixt 'em. Then the
+choc'late cake can go by the pie--"
+
+"Boy, I don't like chocolate cake."
+
+"Honest? Ah, you're kiddin' me! Really? Choc'late cake's awful good for
+you. I love chocolate cake. This here cake was made by Esther Coombe's
+Aunt Amy--it's a sure winner! Say, Mister, what do you like anyway?"
+
+"Ever so many more things than I did yesterday. By Jove, that chicken
+looks good!"
+
+"Yep. That's Mrs. Hallard's chicken. I thought you'd want the best. She
+ris' it herself. And made the stuffin' too."
+
+"Did she 'ris' the ham also?"
+
+"Nope. It's Miss Taylor's ham. Home cured. The minister thinks a whole
+lot of Miss Taylor's curin'. Ma thinks that if Miss Taylor wasn't quite
+so hombly, minister might ask her jest on account of the ham. You try
+it--wait a jiffy till I sneak some knives!"
+
+Callandar looked at the decorated wash-stand and felt better. He had
+forgotten all about the room, and when the knives came, in even less
+than the promised jiffy, he forgot everything but the varied excellences
+of the food before him. The chicken was a chicken such as one dreams of.
+The salads were delicious, the homemade bread and butter fresh and
+sweet; the ham might well cause feelings of a tender nature towards its
+curer! The chocolate cake? He thought he might try a small piece and,
+having tried, was willing to make the attempt on a larger scale. The boy
+was a most efficient waiter, discerning one's desires before they were
+expressed. But when they got to the pie, the doctor drew up another
+chair at the pie side of the table and waved the waiter into it.
+
+There was no false modesty about the boy; neither did he hold malice. If
+he had felt slightly aggrieved at not having been invited earlier, he
+forgot it after the first mouthful and for a time there was no further
+conversation in number fourteen. The doctor had temporarily discarded
+his theory that it is better to rise from the table feeling slightly
+hungry. The boy had never had so foolish a theory to discard. The
+chicken, the ham, the pie, disappeared as if conjured away. The boy
+grew rounder.
+
+"Boy," said the doctor at last, "hadn't you better stop? You are
+'swelling wisibly afore my werry eyes!'"
+
+The boy shook his head, but presently he began to have intervals when he
+was able to speak.
+
+"Better plant all you can," he advised. "Ma says the grub here would
+kill a cat. I eat at home. Ma wouldn't risk my stomach here.
+It's fierce."
+
+"But I'll have to eat, boy. Isn't there another hotel?"
+
+"Yep; two. But you couldn't go to them. This here's the only decent one.
+Gave you a nice room anyway." He looked around admiringly. "Going to
+stay long?"
+
+"No--that is, yes--I don't know! How can I stay if I can't eat?"
+
+The boy picked his round white teeth thoughtfully with a pin.
+
+"You might get board somewheres."
+
+This was a new idea.
+
+"Why--so I might! Does Mrs. Hallard who raises chickens or Miss
+What's-her-name who cures ham, keep boarders?"
+
+"Nope. But they're not the only oysters in the soup--There's the bell!
+They never give a man a minute's peace. Say, if you don't really like
+that pie, don't waste it--see? Tell you about boarding-houses later."
+
+Callandar had to clear the table himself. This he did by the simple
+expedient of putting everything on top of everything else. But he did
+not waste anything, a precaution whose value he realised that night upon
+returning from the dining room where he had spent some time in looking
+at that repast known to the Imperial as supper. Bubble, the bell boy,
+found him with his mind made up.
+
+"Boy," he said, "you have saved my life. But I fear I can sojourn no
+longer in your delightful town. Find me the first train out in the
+morning.".
+
+The boy's face fell.
+
+"Ain't you going to stay? Why, it's all over town that you're the new
+doctor come to take old Doc. Simmonds's practice. Mournful Mark, that
+you drove up with, told it. He said he shouldn't wonder if you're real
+clever. Says he suspects you're an old friend of Doc. Coombe's
+folks--went to college with the doctor, mebby. Says that likely Alviry
+will have you next time she gets a stroke."
+
+"Tempting as the prospect is, boy, I fear ..."
+
+"Oh, dang it! There's the bell again."
+
+He darted out, bumped down the sounding stairs and, while the doctor was
+still considering the words of his ultimatum, appeared again at the
+door, this time decorously on duty.
+
+"A call for you, sir," said Bubble primly.
+
+"A--what?"
+
+"A call, sir. Mrs. Sykes wants to know if the new doctor will call
+'round first thing in the morning to see Mrs. Sykes's Ann. She dunno,
+but she thinks it's smallpox."
+
+"Quit your fooling, boy."
+
+"Cross my heart, doctor!"
+
+"Smallpox?"
+
+"Oh!" cheerfully, "I don't cross my heart to that. Mrs. Sykes always
+thinks things is smallpox. Ann's had smallpox several times now. But the
+rest is on the level. What message, sir?"
+
+Callandar hesitated. (And while he hesitated the Fateful Sisters
+manipulated a great many threads very swiftly.) "What train ..." he
+began. (The Fateful Sisters slipped a bobbin through and tied a cunning
+knot.) Without knowing why, Callandar decided to stay. He laughed.
+Bubble stood eagerly expectant.
+
+"Tell Mrs. Sykes I'll come, and ..." but Bubble did not wait for the
+end of the message.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+
+Coombe is a pretty place. It has broad streets, quiet and tree-lined. It
+has sunny, empty lots where children play. No one is crowded or shut in.
+The houses stand in their own green lawns, and are comfortable and even
+picturesque. The Swiss chalet style has not yet come to Coombe, so the
+architecture, though plain, is not productive of nightmare. The roads
+are like country roads, soft and yellowish; green grass grows along the
+sides of many of them, and board sidewalks are still to be found,
+springy and easy to the tread. There is a main street with macadamised
+roadway and stone pavements, real flat stone, for they were laid before
+the appearance of the all-conquering cement. There is a postoffice with
+a tower and a clock, a courthouse with a fountain and a cannon, a park
+with a bandstand and a baseball diamond, a townhall with a belfry and no
+bell, an exhaustive array of churches, the Imperial Hotel, and the
+market. We mention the market last (as we were taught at school) because
+on account of its importance it ought to come first.
+
+When Dr. Callandar, having been efficiently valeted by Bubble, set out
+to pay his first professional call, he drew in deep breaths of the
+pleasant air with a feeling of well-being to which he had long been a
+stranger. He had slept. In spite of the room, in spite of the chocolate
+cake, in spite of the pie, he had slept. And that alone was enough to
+make the whole world over. It was still hot but with a heat different
+from the heat of yesterday. A little shower had fallen during the night.
+There was a sense of the north in the air, a light freshness, very
+invigorating. He liked the quiet shaded streets; the cannon by the
+courthouse amused him; the number of church steeples left him amazed. He
+felt as if he had stumbled into a dream-town and must walk carefully
+lest he stumble out.
+
+Bubble had given him very complete directions, indeed so minute were
+they that we will omit them lest some day you find the way yourself and
+drop in on Mrs. Sykes when she is not expecting company. But Dr.
+Callandar in his amused absorption had forgotten that he was going to
+Mrs. Sykes at all, when he was recalled to a sense of duty by a sharp
+hail from the corner house of a street he had just passed. Looking back,
+he saw, half-way down the road, a tall, red woman leaning over a gate,
+who, upon attracting his attention, began waving her arms frantically,
+after the manner of an old-fashioned signalman inviting a train to "Come
+on." Callandar's step quickened in spite of himself and he forgot his
+idle musings.
+
+"Land sakes! I thought you'd never get here!" exclaimed the red woman
+fervently. "I suppose that imp of a boy didn't direct you right. Lucky I
+knew you as soon as you passed the corner. Mark Morrison may be as
+useless as they make 'em, but he's got a fine gift for description. Come
+right in. I'm dreadful anxious about Ann. It don't seem like measles,
+and she's had chicken-pox twice, and if she's sickening for anything
+worse I want to know it. I ain't one of them optimists that won't
+believe they're sick till they're dead. Callandar's your name, Mark
+says--any chance of your being a cousin to Dr. Callandar of Montreal
+that cured Mrs. Sowerby?"
+
+"No, I am not that Dr. Callandar's cousin."
+
+"I told Mark 'twasn't likely--or you wouldn't be here. Not if he'd any
+family feeling. I'm a great believer in a man making his own
+stepping-stones anyway," she went on with a friendly smile; "we ought to
+rise up on ourselves, like the poet says, and not on our cousins."
+
+"A noble sentiment," said Callandar gravely, as he followed her up the
+walk, across a veranda so clean that one hesitated to step on it, and
+into a small hall, bare and spotless, where he was invited to hang
+up his hat.
+
+"You're younger than I expected," went on Mrs. Sykes kindly. "I hope you
+ain't entirely dependent on your practice in Coombe?"
+
+The amazed doctor was understood to murmur something about "private
+means."
+
+"That's good. You'd starve if you hadn't. Coombe's a terrible healthy
+place and poor Doc. Simmonds didn't pay a call a week. I just felt like
+some one ought to warn you. I despise folks who hold back from telling
+things because they ain't quite pleasant. Know the worst, I always say;
+it's better in the end. Of course, as Mark says, your being a
+Presbyterian will make considerable diff'rence. Some folks thought Doc.
+Simmonds was pretty nigh an infiddle!"
+
+Too overcome by his feelings to answer, Callandar followed her up the
+narrow stair and into a clean bright room with green-tinted walls and
+yellow matting on the floor.
+
+Mrs. Sykes waved a deprecatory hand, at once exhibiting and apologising
+for so much splendour.
+
+"This is the spare-room," she explained. "And there," pointing to the
+high, old-fashioned bed, "is Ann."
+
+Callandar crossed the immaculate matting gingerly, taking Ann on faith,
+as it were, for, from the door, no; Ann was visible, only a very small
+dent in the big whiteness of the bed.
+
+"Ann! Here's the doctor!"
+
+A small black head and a pair of frightened black eyes appeared for a
+moment as if by conjuration, and instantly vanished.
+
+"Ann!" said Mrs. Sykes more sternly.
+
+There was a squirming somewhere under the bedclothes, but nothing
+happened.
+
+"Great Scott!" exclaimed the doctor, "you've got the child in a
+feather-bed!"
+
+Mrs. Sykes beamed complacently.
+
+"Yes, I have. It may seem like taking a lot of trouble for nothing, but
+you never can tell. I ain't one of them that never prepares for
+anything. Jest as soon as Ann gets sick I move her right into the
+spare-room and put her into the best feathers. Then if she should be
+took sudden I wouldn't have anything to regret. The minister and the
+doctor can come in here any hour and find things as I could wish....
+Ann! what do you mean by wiggling down like that? Ann--come up at once!
+The doctor wants to see your tongue."
+
+This time the note of command was effective. The black head came to the
+surface, again followed by the frightened eyes and plump little cheeks
+stained with feverish red.
+
+"Some cool water, if you please," ordered the doctor in his best
+professional manner. Mrs. Sykes opened her lips to ask why, but
+something caused her to shut them without asking.
+
+When she had left the room, Callandar leaned suddenly over and lifted
+Ann bodily out of the dent and placed her firmly upon a pillow. It was a
+very plump pillow, evidently filled with the "best feathers," but
+compared with the bed it was as a rock in an ocean.
+
+"Now," he said gravely, "you are safe, for the present. You are on an
+island; but be very careful not to slide off for if you do I may never
+be able to look at your tongue."
+
+The child's hands grasped the island convulsively.
+
+"Don't hold on like that," he warned. "You might tip." He leaned close
+so that she might see the smile in his eyes, "And if you tipped ..."
+
+The child gave a sudden delighted giggle. "I'd go right in over my head,
+wouldn't I?"
+
+"Yes. And next time you were rescued you might feel more inclined to
+tell your aunt what you had been eating before you became ill."
+
+Ann stopped giggling.
+
+"You don't need to tell _me_," went on the doctor, "because I know!"
+
+"How d'ye know?"
+
+"Magic. Be careful--you were nearly off that time! Does your aunt know
+anything about those things you ate?"
+
+"No."
+
+"Very well. But you must promise not to eat those particular things
+again. Not even when you get the chance." Then as he saw the woe upon
+her face, "At least, not in quantities!"
+
+"Cross my heart!" said Ann, relieved.
+
+"Here's the water," said Mrs. Sykes, returning. "Ann, get right back
+into bed. Do you want to get your death? Haven't I told you till I'm
+tired to keep your hands in? Is it measles, Doctor? She's subject to
+measles. Perhaps it's the beginning of scarlet fever. But if it's
+smallpox I want to know. No good ever comes of smoothing things over."
+
+The doctor smiled at Ann.
+
+"It isn't smallpox this time, Mrs. Sykes."
+
+"Did you look at them spots on the back of her neck?"
+
+"Yes. A little rash caused by indigestion. I wouldn't worry."
+
+"Don't mind me. I'm used to worrying. I don't dodge my troubles like
+some I know. Indigestion? It looks more like eczema. Eczema is a
+terrible trying thing. But if the child's got it I don't want it called
+indigestion to spare my feelings."
+
+"But it's not eczema! It's indigestion--and prickly heat. I'm afraid
+Ann's stomach has been giving trouble. It has been hotter than is usual
+here, I understand. Heat often upsets children. While I write out a
+prescription, you might bathe her face and hands."
+
+Mrs. Sykes gazed doubtfully at the water. "She was done once last night
+and once this morning just before you came in," she remarked in an
+injured tone. "But if you think she needs it again, this sort of water's
+no good. Nothing's ever any good for Ann except hot water and soap."
+
+The doctor looked up from his writing in surprise. Then as the meaning
+of the thing dawned upon him, he laughed heartily.
+
+"Oh, Ann's as clean as the veranda floor!" he explained. "This is just
+to cool her off. Let me show you--doesn't that feel nice, Ann?"
+
+"Lovely!" blissfully.
+
+Mrs. Sykes sniffed.
+
+"I suppose that's some new-fangled notion? I never heard before of
+cooling people off when they've got a fever. In my time, the hotter you
+were, the hotter you were made to be, till you got cool naturally. I
+suppose," with half-interested sarcasm, "that you'd give her cold water
+to drink if she asked for it?"
+
+"Certainly."
+
+"Well, I expect she knows better than to ask for it!"
+
+Feeling Ann's imploring gaze, Callandar resorted to diplomacy.
+
+"The fact is, Mrs. Sykes," he said pleasantly, "there really isn't very
+much wrong with Ann. You have been letting your forethought and your
+natural anxiety run away with you. There is not the slightest occasion
+for alarm. If there were, I should not dream of hiding it from one so
+well-prepared as yourself. As it is, you have taken a lot of needless
+trouble--this beautiful feather-bed, for example! I feel sure that Ann
+would do very well in her own bed."
+
+The victim of the feathers gave a relieved gasp which her aunt mistook
+for a sigh of regret.
+
+"Her own bed's well enough for anything ordinary," she admitted in a
+mollified tone. "Even if it is a store mattress."
+
+"Quite good enough. Many a little girl would be glad of it." The
+doctor's tone was virtuous. "If you will allow me, I shall carry her in
+now. You see, she is cooler already. By to-morrow, if she takes her
+medicine, she ought to be as well as ever."
+
+Ann's own room turned out to be on the shady side, and though not so
+grand as the spare-room, it was pleasantly cool. The little bed with the
+hard mattress and the snowy counterpane was infinitely to be preferred
+to the ocean of feathers, and the rescued maiden lay back on her smaller
+pillows with a sigh of gratitude.
+
+"Sure you won't tell?" she whispered as he laid her down.
+
+"Honour bright. Cross my heart! But you must take the medicine. It's
+nasty, but not too nasty, and you mustn't squeal--or it will be the
+spare-room again. Red cheeks and prickly heat are consequences, but
+feather-beds and medicine are retribution."
+
+"That's right, Doctor," said Mrs. Sykes, who had heard the last words.
+"There's nothing like a word about retribution when a person's sick. It
+helps 'em to realise their state. I don't hold with the light-minded
+that want to get away from retribution. Depend upon it, they're the very
+folks that's got it coming to them. Yes. No one needs to go around
+denying that there's a hell, if their feet are planted upon a rock and
+they know they're never going there. It's years now since I've looked
+hell in the face and turned my feet the other way. But I do say that if
+I'd decided to go straight ahead in the broad and easy path, I wouldn't
+try to shut my eyes to the end of it, like some folks! Are you putting
+up at the Imperial, Doctor?"
+
+"'Putting up' exactly expresses my condition."
+
+"Well, you may as well know at once that a doctor in a hotel will never
+get any forwarder in Coombe. You'll have to get boarding somewhere. Have
+you looked around yet?"
+
+"No. I--"
+
+"Then I don't mind telling you that the spare-room is to let and the
+little room down below that has a door of its own and seems made exactly
+for a doctor's office. I shouldn't mind letting you have them if you
+feel sure that the smells wouldn't get loose all through the house and
+in the cooking. There's a barn where you could keep your horse."
+
+"I haven't got a horse," protested Callandar feebly.
+
+"But of course you'll be getting one. A doctor has to have a horse. If
+you can't pay for it down, Mark knows some one who'd let you have a good
+one on time. You can trust Mark, if he _is_ mournful. Of course I don't
+say that these rooms are the only rooms to let in Coombe, but I do think
+they're about as good as you can get--being so near to Dr. Coombe's old
+house. People get used to coming for a doctor down this street."
+
+"But that was, over a year ago."
+
+"It takes more 'an a year for Coombe folks to change their ways. Only
+this day week I saw Bill Brooks tearing down this way on account of Mrs.
+Brooks' being took kind of unexpected, and Bill losing his head and
+forgetting all about Dr. Coombe being dead and Dr. Parker living on the
+other side of the town."
+
+"And you think that if I'd been here he would have 'tore' in here?"
+
+"If he hadn't I'd just have called out to him as he went by. He was that
+wild he'd have taken anybody."
+
+"I see," with humility. "I lost a good chance there!"
+
+"Well, if you live here you'll get others. Why, from the spare-room
+windows you can see the corner window down at the Coombe place. I could
+make out to let you have your meals, too. Only I'd expect you to be as
+reg'lar as Providence permitted. I know a doctor is bound to be more
+aggravating in that way than other folks, but if you'd be as regular as
+lay in you, I'd put up with it. 'Tisn't as if I wasn't always prepared.
+When will you want to move in?"
+
+"Really, I--I don't know--" The bewildered Callandar glanced for help to
+Ann, but met only clasped hands and an imploring stare. "I'll--I'll let
+you know," he faltered.
+
+Thinking it over afterwards, he could never understand why he did not
+promptly refuse to be coerced, but at the time surrender seemed the only
+natural thing. Besides, he couldn't stay another day at the Imperial. He
+had to go somewhere. Perhaps it was his destiny to secure Ann against
+further feather-beds. Anyway, he accepted it.
+
+"Oh, goody!" cried Ann, clapping her hands.
+
+"Ann! put your hands under those clothes. How often must I tell you that
+you'll get your death? If you like, Doctor, there's nothing to prevent
+your moving in to-morrow. I'll need a day to air the feather-tick and
+make some pie."
+
+The doctor was at last roused to action.
+
+"There are conditions," he said hastily. "If I come here, there is to be
+no feather-tick and no pie!"
+
+"No feather-bed?" in amazement.
+
+"No pie?" Ann's voice was a sorrowful whisper.
+
+"You see," Callandar explained, "I am here partly for my health. My
+health cannot lie on feather-beds nor eat pie--well, perhaps," with a
+glance at Ann, "an occasional pie may do no harm. But I shall send down
+some springs and a mattress. I have to use a special kind," hastily.
+
+"Oh! it's spinal trouble, is it?" Mrs. Sykes surveyed him
+commiseratingly. "You look straight enough. But land! You never can
+tell. Them spinal troubles are most deceiving. Terrible things they are,
+but they don't shorten life as quickly as some others. Not that that's a
+blessing! Mostly, folks as has them would be glad to go long before they
+are took. Still, it gives them some time to be prepared. I remember--"
+
+"I must go now, Mrs. Sykes. Give Ann some of the medicine as soon as it
+comes. It isn't exactly spinal trouble that is the matter with me, you
+know, but--er--I'll send down the kind of mattress I like. In fact, I
+shall probably wish to furnish my rooms myself. You won't mind,
+I'm sure."
+
+"Land sakes, no, I don't mind! Most doctors are finicky. Don't worry
+about the medicine. I'll see that Ann takes it."
+
+She watched him go with a glance in which satisfaction and foreboding
+mingled. "Poor young feller!" she mused. "He didn't like what I said
+about his spine a mite. Back troubles makes folks terrible touchy."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+
+Two days after the installation of what Mrs. Sykes persisted in calling
+the "spinal mattress," Esther Coombe was late in getting home from
+school. As was usually the case when this happened, Jane, designated by
+mournful Mark as "the Pindling One," was sitting on the gatepost gazing
+disconsolately down the road. There were traces of tears upon her thin
+little face and the warmth of the hug which returned her sister's
+greeting was evidence of an unusually disturbed mind.
+
+"Why aren't you playing with the other children, Jane?"
+
+"I don't want to play, Esther. Timothy's dead."
+
+"Yes, I know, dear. But Fred has promised you a new puppy--"
+
+"I don't want a new puppy. I want Timothy."
+
+"But Timothy is so much happier, Jane. He was old, you know. In the
+Happy Hunting Grounds, he will be able to frisk about just like other
+dogs. Wouldn't you like an apple?"
+
+Jane considered this a moment and decided favourably. But her tale of
+woe was not yet complete. "Mother's ill again," she announced gloomily.
+"I mustn't play band or nail the slats on the rabbits' hutch. Aunt Amy
+gave me my dinner on the back porch. I liked that. I wouldn't go in the
+house, not till you came, Esther."
+
+The straight brows of the elder sister came together in a worried frown.
+
+"You know that is being silly, Jane."
+
+"I don't care."
+
+"You must learn to care. Run now and get the apple and ask Aunt Amy to
+wash your face."
+
+Jane tripped away obediently, her griefs assuaged by the mere telling of
+them, and Esther passed into the house by way of the veranda. It was a
+charming veranda, long and low, opening through French windows directly
+into the living room which, like itself, was long and low, and charming.
+There is a charm in rooms which can be felt but not described. It exists
+apart from the furnishings and even the occupants; it is an essence,
+haunting, intangible--the soul of the room! only there are many rooms
+which have no soul.
+
+Through the living room at the Elms vagrant breezes entered, loitered,
+and drifted out again, leaving behind them scents of sun-warmed flowers.
+The light there was soft and green. The comfortable chairs invited rest;
+the polished rosewood table, the bright piano shining in the brightest
+corner, the smooth old floor in whose rug the colours had long ceased to
+trouble, the general air of much used comfort, satisfied and refreshed.
+
+Esther loved the room. Her first childish memory was of the rosewood
+table shining like a pool in the lamplight and of her own wondering face
+reflected in it, with her father's laughing eyes behind. In every way it
+was associated with the beginnings of things. The magic of all music
+began for her in the sweet, thin notes of the old square piano; the key
+to fairy land lay hidden somewhere in that shelf of well-worn books.
+
+Yet to-night she entered with a hesitating step. It was obvious that she
+felt no pleasure in the cool greenness. The room was the same room but
+it was as if the expression on a well-known face had unaccountably
+changed and become forbidding. The girl sighed as she flung her hat
+upon a chair.
+
+"Esther," Jane's voice, somewhat obscured by the eating of the promised
+apple, came through the open window, "are you sure about Timothy being
+in the Happy Hunting Grounds?"
+
+"Of course, dear."
+
+"But he wasn't what you would call a Christian, Esther?"
+
+"He was a good dog."
+
+"Can Timothy chase chickens there?"
+
+"Probably."
+
+"And cats?"
+
+"Certainly cats."
+
+"Is that what happens to bad cats when they die?"
+
+Esther viewed this logical picture of everlastingly pursued cats with
+some dismay.
+
+"N-o. I don't suppose it would be real cats."
+
+"But Tim wouldn't chase anything but real cats."
+
+"Jane, I wish you wouldn't talk with your mouth full."
+
+Being thus reduced to giving up the argument or the apple, Jane
+abandoned the former. It was clear that Esther was not in the mood for
+argument. The child's quick observation had not failed to note the
+lagging step, nor the quick sigh. She nodded her head as if in answer to
+some spoken word.
+
+"Yes, I know. I feel like that, too. That's why I didn't come in before;
+that's why I'm not really in yet. It catches you by the throat and makes
+you breathe funny. What is it, Esther?"
+
+"Why--I don't know, Jane. It's loneliness I think--missing Dad."
+
+The child shook her head. But whatever her objection might have been it
+was beyond her power of expression. She slid off the veranda step and
+wandered back into the garden. There was another apple in the pocket of
+her apron, and apples are great comforters.
+
+Left alone, Esther with a resolutely cheerful air took down a blue bowl
+and proceeded to arrange therein the day's floral offerings. A sweet and
+crushed mixture they were, pansies, clove-pinks, mignonette, bleeding
+hearts, bachelors' buttons, all short stemmed and minus any saving touch
+of green, but true love offerings for all that. Wordless gifts most of
+them, prim little bunches, hot from tight clasping in chubby hands,
+shyly and swiftly deposited on "Teacher's desk" when the back of that
+divinity was turned. The blue bowl took kindly to them all, and as the
+girl's clever fingers settled and arranged the glowing chaos it seemed
+that with their crushed fragrance something of the lost spirit of the
+room came back. Just so had she arranged hundreds of times the sweet
+smelling miscellanies which had been her father's constant tribute from
+grateful patients.
+
+She had almost finished when the door opened to admit a little, grey
+wisp of a woman with a mild white face and large faded eyes which might
+once have been beautiful. She was dressed entirely in lavender, a
+fondness for this colour being one of the many harmless fancies born of
+a brain not quite normal. The rather expressionless face brightened at
+sight of the girl by the table.
+
+"Why, Esther--I didn't hear you come in. Have you put a mat under the
+bowl? See now! You have marked the table."
+
+Esther good humouredly reached for a table-mat, for the polish of this
+particular article of furniture was the pride of Aunt Amy's life. "It's
+all right, Auntie. It's not really a mark. Look, aren't they sweet? It
+is like one of father's posies. Is mother any better?"
+
+"The children must think a lot of you, Esther!"
+
+"Yes, although I think they would bring flowers to any one, bless 'em!
+Is mother--"
+
+"Your mother hasn't been down all day. I went up with her dinner but she
+didn't take any. She wouldn't answer."
+
+"Auntie, don't you think she ought to do something about these
+headaches?"
+
+"I don't know, Esther. She'll be all right to-morrow. She always is."
+
+"Yes. But they are getting more frequent, and you know--she is so
+different. She can't be well. Haven't you noticed it?"
+
+"No," vaguely.
+
+"Well, Jane has. So it can't just be imagination. She ought to consult a
+doctor."
+
+"She won't."
+
+"But it's absurd! What shall we do if she goes on like this? If there
+were only some one who would talk to her! She won't listen to me because
+she is older and married and--all that. All the same she doesn't seem
+older when she acts like this--like a child!"
+
+"Well, you know, Esther, there isn't any doctor here that your mother
+just fancies."
+
+The girl stooped lower over the blue bowl, perhaps to hide the little
+smile which crinkled up the corner of her mouth. The faint colour on her
+cheek may have been a reflection from the flowers.
+
+"Yes, but haven't you heard? There is a new doctor. He seems quite
+different--I mean they say he is awfully nice. Mrs. Sykes' Ann was
+telling me all about him. He is going to board with Mrs. Sykes. The
+child just worships him already. Perhaps mother might see him."
+
+"I shouldn't worry," said Aunt Amy placidly. "This pepper-grass will be
+very nice for tea. Did you tell Jane she might have two apples, Esther?"
+
+"No. I told her she might have one. But I don't suppose two will hurt
+her." Esther was used to Aunt Amy's inconsequences which made impossible
+the discussion of any subjects save the most trivial. But she sighed a
+little as she realised anew that there was no help here.
+
+"Jane is feeling badly about Timothy," she explained. "Don't you think
+we might have tea in here, Auntie? It is so cool."
+
+Aunt Amy, who had been anxiously rubbing an imaginary spot on the table,
+looked up with a startled air. "Oh, Esther!" she said, in the voice of a
+frightened child. Then with a child's obvious effort to control rising
+tears, "Of course, if you say so, Esther. But--but do you feel like
+risking the round table? Couldn't we have it on the little table in
+the corner?"
+
+The girl settled the last of her flowers and pushed back her hair with a
+worried gesture. A pang of mingled irritation and anxiety lent an edge
+of sharpness to her soft voice.
+
+"Auntie dear! I thought you had quite forgotten that fancy. You know it
+is only a fancy. Round tables are just like other tables. And you
+promised me--"
+
+"Yes, I know, but--"
+
+"Well, then, be sensible, dear. We shall have tea in here." Then seeing
+the real distress on the timid old face, the girl's mood softened. "No,
+we shan't," she declared gaily. "We'll have it as usual in the dining
+room. You will fix the pepper-grass and I shall set the table."
+
+But the end of Aunt Amy's vagaries was not yet. She hesitated, flushed
+and more timidly, yet as one who is compelled, begged for the task of
+setting the table herself. "For you know, Esther, the sprigged tea-set
+is so hurt if any one but me arranges it. Yes, of course, it is only a
+fancy, I know that. But the sprigged tea-set does feel so badly if I
+neglect it. All the pink in it fades quite out. You must have noticed
+it, Esther?"
+
+The girl sighed and gave in. Usually Aunt Amy's vagaries troubled her
+little. Disconcerting at first, they had quickly become a commonplace,
+for the coming of Aunt Amy to the doctor's household had been too great
+a blessing to invite criticism. Esther had soon learned to express no
+surprise when told that the sprigged china had a heart of extreme
+sensitiveness, and that the third step on the front stair disliked to be
+trodden upon, and that it was dangerous to sit with one's back to a
+window facing the east. All these and numberless other strange facts
+were part of Aunt Amy's twilight world. To her they were immensely
+important, but to the family the really important thing seemed that,
+with trifling exceptions, the new inmate of the household was gentle and
+kind; her housekeeping a miracle and her cooking a dream. In the years
+she had lived with them there had been but one serious thrill of
+anxiety, and that came when Dr. Coombe had discovered her endeavouring
+to infect Jane with her delusions. This had been strictly forbidden and
+the child's mind, duly warned, was soon safeguarded by her own growing
+comprehension. Jane quickly understood that it was foolish to shut the
+garden gate three times every time she came through it, and that no one
+save Aunt Amy thought it necessary to count all the boards in the
+sidewalk or to touch all the little posts under the balustrade as one
+came down stairs. Some of the prettier, more elusive fancies she may
+have retained, but, if so, they did her no harm.
+
+As for Aunt Amy herself, she lived her shadow-haunted life not
+unhappily. Dr. Coombe she had worshipped, yet his death had not affected
+her as much as might have been feared. Perhaps it was one of her
+compensations that death to her was not quite what it is to the more
+normal consciousness. It was noticeable that she always spoke of the
+doctor as if he were in the next room. Her devotion to him had been
+caused by his success in partially relieving her of the most distressing
+burden of her disordered brain--the delusion of persecution. Aunt Amy
+knew that somewhere there existed a mysterious power known vaguely as
+"They" who sought unceasingly to injure her. Of course it was only once
+in a while that "They" got a chance, for Aunt Amy was very clever in
+providing no opportunities. More than once had she outwitted "Them."
+Still, one must be always upon one's guard! From this harrowing delusion
+the doctor had done much to deliver her, indeed she had become more
+normal in every way under his care. It was only now, a year after his
+death, that Esther imagined sometimes that there was a slipping back--
+
+The ill effects of sitting at a round table, for instance? It was a long
+time since this particular fancy had been spoken of and Esther had
+considered it gone altogether. Yet here it was, cropping out again and
+just at a time when other problems threatened. Things seemed determined
+to be difficult to-day.
+
+The fact was that Esther was suffering from the need of a confidant.
+Really worried as she felt about her step-mother's health, the burden of
+taking any determined action against the wishes of the patient herself
+was a serious one for a young girl. Yet in whom could she confide? Girl
+friends she had in plenty but not one whose judgment she could trust
+before her own. Had the minister been an older man or a man of different
+calibre she might have gone to him, but the idea of appealing to Mr.
+Macnair was distasteful. Neither among her father's friends was there
+one to whom she cared to go for advice concerning her father's widow.
+They had one and all disapproved, she knew, of the sudden second
+marriage and Dr. Coombe had never quite forgiven their disapproval.
+
+Often she felt like refusing the responsibility altogether. After all,
+her step-mother was a woman quite old enough to manage her own affairs.
+If she wished to foolishly imperil her health why need Esther care? Why
+indeed? But this train of reasoning never lasted long. Always there came
+a counter-question, "If you do not care, who will?" And the dearth of
+any answer settled the burden more firmly upon her rebellious shoulders.
+For one thing there was always the inner knowledge that Mary Coombe was
+weak and that she, Esther, was strong. She had always known this. Even
+when her father had brought home his pretty bride and Esther, a shy,
+silent child of eleven, had welcomed her, she had known that the
+newcomer was the weaker spirit. The bride had known it too. She had
+never attempted to control Esther, leaving the child entirely to her
+father--a bit of unwitting wisdom which did much to smooth daily life
+at the Elms. If the doctor saw his wife's weakness of character it is
+probable that it did not interfere with his love for her. Why need she
+be strong while he was strong enough for two? But he had forgotten one
+thing--the day when she would have to be strong alone!
+
+The realisation came to him upon his death-bed. Esther was sure of this.
+He could not speak, but she had read the message of his eyes, the appeal
+to the strength in her to help the other's weakness. No getting away
+from the solemn charge of that entreating look!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Esther was thinking of that look now, as she sat alone in the dusk of
+the veranda. Tea was over and Aunt Amy was putting Jane to bed. From her
+mother she had had no word. Blank silence had met her when she had taken
+the tea tray upstairs and called softly through the closed door. Mrs.
+Coombe was probably asleep. She would be better to-morrow; but before
+long she would be ill again, and the interval between the attacks was
+becoming shorter.
+
+There was anger as well as anxiety in the girl's mind. Her healthy and
+straightforward youth had little patience with her step-mother's
+unreasonable caprices. For her illness she had every sympathy, but for
+the morbid nervousness which seemed to accompany it, none at all. These
+constant headaches, the increasing nervous irritability from which Mrs.
+Coombe suffered lay like a shadow over the house. Yet the sufferer
+refused to take the obvious way of relief and persisted in her refusal
+with a stubbornness of which no one would have dreamed her light nature
+capable. Still, willing or unwilling, something must be done. Aunt Amy,
+too, was becoming more of an anxiety. Once or twice lately she had
+spoken of "Them," a sign of mental distress which Dr. Coombe had always
+treated with the utmost seriousness. Perhaps if a doctor were called in
+for Aunt Amy, Mrs. Coombe would lose her foolish dread of doctors and
+allow him to prescribe for her also. And if the new doctor were half as
+clever as Mrs. Sykes said he was--Esther's heart began to warm a little
+as her fancy pictured such a pleasant solution of all her problems. The
+little smile curved her lips again as she thought of the maple by the
+schoolhouse steps, and the lettuce sandwiches and--and everything. She
+closed her eyes and tried to recall his face as he had looked up at her.
+Instinctively she knew it for a good face, strong, humorous, kindly, but
+strong above all. And it was strength that Esther needed. When she went
+to bed that night her burden seemed a little lighter.
+
+I believe he can help me, she thought, and it isn't as if he were quite
+a stranger. After all, we had lunch together once!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+
+Undoubtedly Esther slept better that night for the thought of the new
+doctor. It cannot be said that the doctor slept better because of her.
+In fact he lay awake thinking of her. He did not want to think of her;
+he wanted to go to sleep. Twice only had he seen her. Once upon the
+occasion of the red pump and once when casually passing her on the main
+street. There was no reason why her white-rose face with its strange
+blue eyes and its smile-curved lips should float about in the darkness
+of Mrs. Sykes' best room. Yet there it was. It was the eyes, perhaps.
+The doctor admitted that they were peculiar eyes, startlingly blue. Dark
+blue in the shade of the lashes, flashing out light blue fire when the
+lashes lifted. But Mrs. Sykes' boarder did not want to think about eyes.
+He wanted to go to sleep. He did not want to think about hair either.
+Although Miss Coombe had very nice hair--cloudy hair, with little ways
+of growing about the temple and at the curve of the neck which a blind
+man could not help noticing. In the peaceful shadows of the room it
+seemed a still softer shadow framing the vivid girlish face.
+
+Still, on the whole, sleep would have been better company and when at
+last he did drop off he did not relish being wakened by the voice of Ann
+at his door.
+
+"Doc-ter, doc-ter! Are you awake? Can I come in?"
+
+"I am not awake. Go away."
+
+Ann's giggle came clearly through the keyhole.
+
+"You've got a visitor," she whispered piercingly through the same
+medium. "A man. A well man, not a sick one. He came on the train. He
+came on the milk train--"
+
+"You may come in, Ann." The doctor slipped on his dressing gown with a
+resigned sigh. "What man and why milk?"
+
+"I don't know. Aunt Sykes kept him on the veranda till she was sure he
+wasn't an agent. Now he's in the parlour. Aunt hopes you'll hurry, for
+you never can tell. He may be different from what he looks."
+
+"What does he look?"
+
+Ann's small hands made an expressive gesture which seemed to envisage
+something long and lean.
+
+"Queer--like that. He's not old, but he's bald. His eyes screw into you.
+His nose," another formative gesture, "is like that. A nawful big nose.
+He didn't tell his name."
+
+"If he looks like that, perhaps he hasn't any name. Perhaps he is a
+button-moulder. In fact I'm almost certain he is--other name Willits.
+Occupation, professor."
+
+"But if he is a button-maker, he can't be a professor," said Ann
+shrewdly.
+
+"Oh, yes he can. Button-moulding is what he professes. His line is a
+specialty in spoiled buttons. He makes them over."
+
+"Second-hand?"
+
+"Better than new."
+
+Ann fidgeted idly with the doctor's cuff-links and then with a flash of
+her odd childish comprehension, "You love him a lot, don't you?" she
+said jealously.
+
+The doctor adjusted a collar button.
+
+"England expects that every man shall deny the charge of loving
+another," he said, "but between you and me, I do rather like old
+Willits. You see I was rather a worn-out button once and he made me
+over. Where did you say he was?"
+
+"In the parlour--there's Aunt! She said I wasn't to stay. I'll get it."
+
+Indeed the voice of Mrs. Sykes could be heard on the stairs.
+
+"Ann! Where's that child? Doctor, you'd think that child had never been
+taught no manners. You'll have to take a firm stand with Ann, Doctor.
+Land Sakes, I don't want to make her out worse'n she is, but you might
+as well know that your life won't be worth living if you don't set
+on Ann."
+
+"All right, Mrs. Sykes. Painful as it may be, I shall do it. Are you
+sure it's safe to leave a stranger in the parlour?"
+
+Mrs. Sykes looked worried. "I hope to goodness it's all right, Doctor.
+He's been in the parlour half an hour. I don't think he's an agent,
+hasn't got a case or a book anywhere. But agents are getting cuter every
+day. Naturally I didn't like to go so far as to ask his name. And I'm
+not asking it now. Curiosity was never a fault of mine though I do say
+it. Still a woman does like to know who's setting in her front parlour."
+
+"And you shall," declared Callandar kindly. "Just hang on a few moments
+longer, dear Mrs. Sykes, and your non-existent but very justifiable
+curiosity shall be satisfied."
+
+The parlour at Mrs. Sykes opened to the right of the narrow hall. Its
+two windows, distinguished by eternally half-drawn blinds of yellow,
+looked out upon the veranda, permitting a decorous gloom to envelop the
+sacred precincts. Mrs. Sykes was too careful a housekeeper to take risks
+with her carpet and too proud of her possessions to care to hide their
+glories altogether; hence the blinds were never wholly drawn and never
+raised more than half way. In the yellow gloom, one might feast one's
+eyes at leisure upon the centre table, draped in red damask, mystic,
+wonderful, and on its wealth of mathematically arranged books, the
+Bible, the "Indian Mutiny" and "Water Babies" in blue and gold. This
+last had been a gift to Ann and was considered by Mrs. Sykes to be the
+height of foolishness. Still, a book is a book, especially when bound in
+blue and gold.
+
+Upon the gaily papered walls hung a framed silver name-plate and two
+pictures. One a gorgeously coloured print of the lamented Queen Victoria
+in a deep gold frame, and the other a representation of an entrancing
+allegorical theme entitled "The Two Paths," illustrating the ascent of
+the saint into heaven and the descent of the sinner into hell. At the
+top of this picture was the legend, "Which will you choose?"--implying a
+possible but regrettable lack of taste on the part of the chooser.
+
+Into this abode of the arts and muses came Callandar, alert and smiling.
+It was hardly his fault that he stumbled over the visitor who, whether
+in awe or fear of these unveiled splendours, had retreated as far as
+possible toward the door.
+
+"Don't mind me!" said the visitor meekly.
+
+"Willits! by Jove, I thought it would be you! Say, would you mind not
+sitting on that chair? It's just glued!"
+
+The visitor arose with conspicuous alacrity. He was a tall man with a
+domelike head, piercing eyes and formidable nose. Ann's description had
+been terribly accurate. He observed the tail of his coat carefully and
+finding no damage, seemed relieved.
+
+"Sit here," said Callandar affably. "And don't expect me to make you
+welcome, because you aren't. What misfortunate chance has brought you
+to Coombe?"
+
+"Neither fortune nor chance had anything at all to do with it," declared
+the visitor. "I followed your luggage. I wanted to see you."
+
+"Well, take a good look."
+
+"I think you can guess why."
+
+"Yes," with a sigh. "I was always a good guesser. And, frankly, Willits,
+I wish you hadn't."
+
+"I do not doubt it. But, first, is there any other place where we can
+talk?"
+
+"Don't you like this?" innocently.
+
+The Button-Moulder's look of surprised anguish was sufficient answer.
+Callandar laughed.
+
+"You always were a bit narrow in your views, Willits. How often have I
+impressed upon you that beauty depends upon understanding? I don't
+suppose you have even tried to understand this room? No? Will it help
+any if I tell you that Mrs. Sykes went without a spring bonnet that she
+might purchase the deep gold frame which enshrines Victoria the Good, or
+if I explain that Joseph Sykes, deceased, whose name you see yonder upon
+that engraved plate, was the most worthless rogue unhung. Yet the silver
+which displays--"
+
+"Not in the least," interrupted the other hastily. "The place is a
+nightmare. Nothing can excuse it! And you--how you stand it I
+cannot see."
+
+"My dear man, I don't stand it. I am not allowed to. It's only upon
+special occasions that any one is allowed to stand this room. You are a
+special occasion. But as you seem so unappreciative we can adjourn to my
+office if you wish."
+
+"You have an office?"
+
+"Certainly. A doctor has to have an office. This way."
+
+Callandar strode across the room and opened a door in the opposite wall.
+It led into another room, smaller, with no veranda in front of it, yet
+with a window looking toward the road and two side windows through which
+the after flush of sunrise streamed. Its door opened upon a small stone
+stoop set in the grass of the front lawn. The furniture of the room was
+plain, not to say severe. Cool matting covered the painted floor,
+hemstitched curtains of linen scrim hung at the windows. There was a
+businesslike desk, a couch, a reclining chair, a stool by the door;
+another chair, straight and uncompromising, behind the desk. That
+was all.
+
+Willits looked around him in a kind of dazed surprise. "Office!" he kept
+murmuring. "_Office_!"
+
+"All rather plain, you see," said Callandar regretfully. "But for a
+beginner with his way to make, not so bad. My patients, three up to
+date, quite understand and conceal their commiseration with perfect good
+breeding. Also, the room has natural advantages, it is in the nature of
+an annex, you see, with a door of its own. Quite cut off from the rest
+of the house save-for the door by which we entered, the parlour door,
+which Mrs. Sykes informs me I may lock if I choose although she feels
+sure that I know her too well to imagine any undue liberties
+being taken!"
+
+The Button-Moulder with a gesture of despair made as if to sit down upon
+the nearest chair, but was prevented with kindly firmness by his host.
+
+"Not that chair, please. It may not be quite dry. I glued--"
+
+The voice of the visitor suddenly returned. It was a very dry voice;
+threadlike, but determined.
+
+"Then if you will kindly find me a chair which you have not glued I
+shall sit down and dispose of a few burning thoughts. Callandar, as soon
+as you have finished playing the fool--"
+
+"Consider it finished, old man."
+
+"Then what does this, all this"--with a sweeping hand wave--"mean? You
+cannot seriously intend to stay here?"
+
+"Why not?"
+
+"Your question is absurd."
+
+"No, it isn't. Let it sink in. Why should I not stay here? Examine the
+facts. I am ordered change, rest, interest, good air--a year at least
+must elapse before I take up my life again. I must spend that year
+somewhere. Why not here? It is healthy, high, piney, quiet. I had become
+utterly tired of my tramping tour. All the good I can get from it I have
+got. Chance, or whatever you like to call it, leads me to this place. A
+place which needs a doctor and which this particular doctor needs. There
+is nothing absurd about it."
+
+The tall man observed his friend in interested silence. Apparently he
+required time to adjust his mind to the fact that Callandar was in
+earnest. The badinage he brushed aside.
+
+"Then you really intend--but how about this office? If it is not a
+torn-fool office, where does the necessary rest come in?"
+
+"Rest doesn't mean idleness. I should die of loafing. As a matter of
+fact since coming here I have rested as I have not rested for a year.
+Look at me! Can't you see it? Or is the renovation not yet visible to
+the naked eye? Great Scott! I don't need to vegetate in order to
+rest, do I?"
+
+"No." Another pause ensued during which the gimlet eyes of the professor
+were busy. Then he seemed suddenly to leap to the heart of the matter.
+
+"And--Lorna?" He asked crisply.
+
+It was the other's turn to be silent. He flushed, looked embarrassed,
+and drummed with his fingers upon the table.
+
+"Of course I have no right to ask," added Willits primly.
+
+"Yes, you have, old man. Every right. But I knew you had come to ask
+that question and I didn't like it. The answer is not a flattering
+one--to me. Nor is it what you expected. To be brief, Lorna won't have
+me. Refused me--flat!"
+
+Blank surprise portrayed itself upon the professor's face.
+
+"The devil she did!"
+
+"Confess now!" said Callandar, smiling. "You thought I was the one to
+blame? There was retributive justice in your eye, don't deny it!"
+
+"But, I don't understand! I thought--I was sure--"
+
+"I know. But she doesn't! Not in that way. As a sister--"
+
+"That's enough! I--Accept my apology. I feel very sorry, Henry."
+
+Again that look of embarrassment and guilt upon the doctor's face.
+
+"No. Don't feel sorry! See here, let's be frank about the whole thing.
+It was a mistake, from the very beginning, a mistake. Miss Sinnet,
+Lorna, is a girl in a thousand. But--I did not care for her as a man
+should care for the woman he makes his wife. Nor did she care for
+me--wait, I'm not denying that there was a chance. We were very
+congenial. She might have cared if--if I had cared more greatly."
+
+"Henry Callandar! Are you a cad?"
+
+"No. Merely a man speaking the exact truth. I thought I might risk it,
+with you. Lorna Sinnet is not a woman to give her love and take a
+half-love in return. She was more clear-sighted than you or I. We should
+both have been very miserable."
+
+Elliott Willits sighed. He was a very sensible man. He prided himself
+upon being devoid of sentiment, but even the most sensible of men,
+entirely devoid of sentiment, do not like to see their well laid
+plans go wrong.
+
+"Well," he said, "I was mistaken. Let us say no more about it."
+
+Callandar's eyes softened, melted into misty grey. He laid his arm
+affectionately over the other's thin shoulders. "Only this," he said.
+"That no man ever had a better friend! I know you, old Button-Moulder. I
+know your ambition to make of me a 'shining button on the vest of the
+world!' You thought that Lorna might help. But I failed you there. I'm
+sorry. That was really the bitterness of the whole thing---to fail you!"
+
+"You owe me nothing," gruffly.
+
+"Only my life--my sanity."
+
+"I shall doubt the latter if you stay here."
+
+"No, you will see it triumphantly vindicated. I tell you I am better
+already. Look at my hand! Do you remember how it shook the last time I
+held it out for you. A few more months of this and it will be steady as
+a rock. Ah! it's good to be feeling fit again! And it isn't only a
+physical improvement." His smile faded and rising he began to pace the
+room. "I doubt if even you fully understand the mental depression that
+was dragging me down. No wonder Lorna would have none of me! Strange,
+that I cannot understand my own case as I understand the cases of
+others. Do what I would, I could not heal myself, the soul of the matter
+persistently escaped me. I was beginning to be as much the victim of an
+obsession as any of the poor creatures whom I tried to cure."
+
+"You never told me of that."
+
+"No, I was afraid to speak of it. It would have made it seem more real.
+But I can tell you now, if you are sure you will not be bored."
+
+"I shall not be bored," said Willits quietly.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+
+"In order to make you understand, I'll have to go back," said the doctor
+musingly, "a long way back. Some of the story you already know, but now
+I want you to know it all. But first--when you found me in that
+hospital, a useless bit of human wreckage, and forced me back into life
+with your scorn of a coward and your cutting words, what did you think?
+What did I tell you? It is all hazy to me."
+
+"You told me very little. It was plain enough. You had come a bad
+cropper. Some girl, I gathered. You had lost her, you blamed yourself.
+You talked a great deal of nonsense. I inferred--the usual thing!"
+
+"You were mistaken. It was at once better and worse than that. But let's
+begin at the beginning. My father was a fairly wealthy man--but a
+dreamer. He made his money by a clever invention and lost it by an
+investment little short of idiotic. Like many unpractical men he had
+rather fancied himself as a man of business and the disillusion killed
+him. He--shot himself. My mother, my sister and myself were left, with
+nothing save a small sum in the bank and the deed of the modest house we
+lived in. Adela was twenty-one and I was nineteen. We sold the house,
+moved into rooms; Adela learned shorthand and went into an office. I
+wanted to do the same. But mother was adamant. I must finish my college
+course and take my degree; she and Adela could manage until I could make
+it up to them later. It was hard, but it seemed the only sensible
+thing to do--
+
+"I faced the task of working my way through college with a thankful
+heart, for though I pretended that I did not care, it would have been a
+terrible thing to have given up my life's ambition. The thought of Adela
+trudging to the office hurt--it was the touch of the spur. I needn't
+tell you, you can guess how I worked! People were kind. One summer, old
+Doctor Inglis, whose amiable hobby it was to help young medical
+students, engaged me for the holidays as his chauffeur and general
+helper at a wage which would see me through my next term. It seemed an
+unusual piece of luck, for he lived only twenty miles from my mother's
+home and an electric tram connected the towns. One night I went with
+Adela to a Church Social--of all places--and that is where the story
+really begins, for it was at the Social that I met Molly Weston. It
+seemed the most casual of all accidents, for you can imagine that I did
+not frequent churches in those days, and Molly, too, had come there by
+chance. She was dressed in pink, her cheeks were pink, she wore a pink
+rose in her hair. She was the prettiest little fairy that ever smiled
+and pouted her way into a boy's heart. Before I left her I was madly in
+love--a boy's first headlong passion. Adela was amazed, teased me in her
+elderly sister way but never for a moment took it seriously. Molly was a
+mere bird of passage, an American girl staying with friends for a brief
+time, therefore my infatuation was a humorous thing. But it was not so
+simple as that. Molly stayed on, Dr. Inglis was indulgent, we met
+continually. If her friends knew of it they did not care. It was just a
+flirtation of their pretty guest's. As a serious factor I was quite
+beneath the horizon, a young fellow working his way through college, and
+with, later on, a mother and sister to support.
+
+"Molly understood the situation. At least she knew all the facts. I
+doubt if she ever understood them. She was one of those helpless,
+clinging girls who never seem to understand anything clearly. I remember
+well how I used to agonise in explanation, trying to make her see our
+difficulties and to face them with me. But when I had talked myself into
+helpless silence she would ruffle my hair and say, 'But you really do
+love me, don't you, Harry?' or 'I don't care what we have to do, so long
+as mother doesn't know.'
+
+"I soon found out that her one strong emotion was fear of her mother.
+She was fond of her but she feared her as weak natures fear the strong,
+especially when bound to them by ties of blood. I was allowed to see her
+photograph--the picture of a grim hard face instinct with an almost
+terrible strength. No wonder my pretty Molly was her slave. One would
+have deemed it impossible that they were mother and daughter. Molly, it
+appears, was like her father, and he, poor man, had been long dead.
+Molly would do anything, promise anything, if only her mother might not
+know. She had not the faintest scruple in deceiving her, but this I
+laid, and still lay, to the strength of her love for me.
+
+"She did love me. She must have loved me--else how could her timid
+nature have taken the risk it did?
+
+"Summer fled by like a flash. Molly stayed with her friends as long as
+she could find an excuse and then went on for a brief week in Toronto.
+It was the week, of course, that I returned to college. We hoped that
+she could extend her stay, but her mother wrote 'Come home,' and there
+was no appeal from that. Then I did a desperate thing. Without Molly's
+knowledge I wrote to her mother telling her that I loved her daughter
+and begging, as a man begs for his life, to be allowed to ask her to
+wait for me. The letter was a lie in that it concealed the fact that my
+love was already confessed but I felt it necessary to shield Molly. I
+received no answer to the letter, but Molly received a telegram, 'Come
+home at once.'
+
+"I can leave you to imagine the scene--my despair, Molly's tears! Never
+for an instant did she dream of disobeying and I--I felt that if she
+went I should lose her forever.
+
+"Willits, there is something in me, devil or angel, which will not give
+up. Nothing has ever conquered it yet and Molly was like wax in my
+hands--so long as 'Mother' need not know. I do not attempt to excuse
+myself; what I did was dastardly, but it did not seem so then. The night
+before she left, she stole away from home. I had a license and we were
+married by a Methodist minister. He knew neither of us and probably
+forgot the whole incident immediately. It was a marriage only in name
+for we said good-bye at Molly's door. She left next morning. I never saw
+her again."
+
+Into the silence which followed, the professor's words dropped dryly.
+
+"What was your idea in forcing a meaningless marriage?"
+
+"I loved her. I knew that it was the only way. Madly as I loved her, I
+knew that Molly was weak as water. I could not, would not, run the risk
+of letting her leave me without the legal tie. But I justified it to
+myself--I could have justified anything, I fear! I vowed a vow that she
+would be repaid for the waiting as never woman yet was paid. She wept on
+my shoulder and said, 'And you really do love me, Harry--and you'll
+swear mother need never know?'
+
+"I swore it. There were to be no letters. Molly was too terrified to
+write and still more terrified of receiving a letter. She would live in
+constant dread, she said, if there were a possibility of such a thing.
+Weak in everything else she was adamant in this.
+
+"I went back to work. I worked with the strength of ten. Health,
+comfort, pleasure, all were subordinated to the fever of work. I hoped
+that I might steal a glimpse of her sometimes. She promised to try to
+return to Toronto. But my letter must have alarmed the mother. I found
+out, indirectly, that shortly after her return, Mrs. Weston whisked her
+off to Europe. They were gone a year. When they returned I was in the
+far west with a government surveying party, earning something to help me
+with my last year's college expenses. When I was again in Toronto she
+had vanished. Gone, as I afterward learned, to stay with an aunt in
+California. Her mother, alive to danger, was not going to risk a
+meeting, and my vow to Molly left me helpless. But how I worked!
+
+"That last year things began to come my way. Adela married a fine young
+fellow, wealthy and generous. My mother went to live with them in their
+western home, Calgary, where they still are. Then Thomas Callandar, my
+mother's brother, who had never bothered about any of us living, died,
+and left me a handsome property, adding, as you already know, the
+condition that I take the family name. You remember that my father's
+name, the name under which I married Molly, was Chedridge.
+
+"Nothing now held me from Molly--in another month I would have my
+degree, and free and rich I could go to claim her. It seemed like a
+fairy tale! In my great happiness I broke my promise and wrote to her,
+to the California address, hoping to catch her there. In three weeks'
+time the letter came back from the dead letter office. I wrote again,
+this time to the Cleveland address, a short note only, telling her I was
+free at last. Then, next day, I followed the letter to Cleveland, wealth
+in one hand, the assurance of an honourable degree in the other.
+
+"I had no trouble in finding the house. It was one of a row of houses,
+nondescript but comfortable, in a pleasant street. It seemed familiar--I
+had seen Molly's snapshots of it often. I cannot tell you what it felt
+like to be really there--to walk down the street, up the path, up the
+steps to the veranda. I was trembling as with ague, I was chalk-white I
+knew--was I not in another moment to see my wife!
+
+"I could hear the electric bell tingle somewhere inside. Then an awful
+pause. What if they were not at home? What if they lived there no
+longer? I knew with a pang of fear that I could not bear another
+disappointment.
+
+"There was a sound in the hall, the door knob moved--the door opened. I
+gasped in the greatness of my relief for the face in the opening was
+undoubtedly the face of Molly's mother. They were at home. They must
+have had my letter--they must be expecting me--
+
+"Something in the woman's face daunted me. It was deathly and strained.
+Surely she did not intend to continue her opposition? Yet it confused
+me. I forgot all that I had intended to say, I stammered:
+
+"'I am Henry Chedridge. I want to see Molly. I am rich, I have my
+degree--'
+
+"'You cannot see her!' she said. Just that! The door began to close. But
+I had myself in hand now. I laid hold of the door and spoke in a
+different tone. The tone of a master.
+
+"'This is foolish, Mrs. Weston. I thought you understood. I can and I
+will see your daughter. Molly is my wife!'
+
+"She gave way at that. The door opened wide, showing a long empty hall.
+The woman stood aside, made no effort to stop me, but looking me in the
+eyes she said: 'You come too late. Your wife is not here. Molly
+is dead!'
+
+"Then, in one second, it seemed that all the years of overwork, of
+mental strain and bodily deprivation rose up and took their due. I tried
+to speak, stuttered foolishly, and fell like dead over the door-sill of
+the house I was never to enter.
+
+"You know the rest, for you saved me. When I struggled back to life,
+without the will to live, you shamed and stung me into effort. You
+brought the new master-influence into my life, taught me that the old
+ambition, the old work-ardour was not dead. Those months with you in
+Paris, in Germany, in London at the feet of great men saw a veritable
+new birth. I ceased to be Henry Chedridge, lover, and became Henry
+Callandar, scientist. All this I owe to you."
+
+The other raised his hand.
+
+"No, not that. Some impulse I may have given you, but you have made
+yourself what you are. But--you have not told me all yet?"
+
+"No." Again the doctor began his uneasy pacing of the room. "The rest is
+harder to tell. It is not so clear. It has nothing to do with facts at
+all. It is just that when I first began to show signs of overwork this
+last time I became troubled with an idea, an obsession. It had no
+foundation. It persisted without reason. It was fast becoming
+unbearable!"
+
+He paused in his restless pacing and Willits' keen eyes noticed the look
+of strain which had aroused his alarm some months ago. Nevertheless he
+asked in his most matter-of-fact tone, "And the idea was--?"
+
+Callandar hesitated. "I can hardly speak of it yet in the past tense.
+The idea is--that Molly is not dead!"
+
+"Good Heavens!" ejaculated the professor, startled out of his calm. "But
+have you any reason to doubt? To--to base--"
+
+"None whatever. No enquiries which I have made cast doubt upon the
+mother's words. But on the other hand I have been unable to confirm
+them. I cannot find where my wife died--except that there is no record
+of her death in the Cleveland registries. She did not die in Cleveland."
+
+"But you have told me that they were seldom at home. That the mother was
+a great traveller."
+
+"Yes. The want of evidence in Cleveland proves nothing."
+
+"Did you feel any doubt at first?"
+
+"Absolutely none. The gloomy house, the empty hall, the white face and
+black dress of the woman in the door, the look of horror and anger in
+her eyes--yes, and a kind of grim triumph too--all served to drive the
+fatal message home. Dead!--There was death in the air of that house,
+death in the ghastly face--in the cruel, toneless words!--After my
+tedious recovery I made an effort to see Mrs. Weston, although I had
+conceived a horror of the woman, but she was gone. The house had been
+sold. I tried to trace her without result. She seemed to have vanished
+off the face of the earth."
+
+"And how long ago did the whole thing happen?"
+
+"Twelve years. I was twenty-three when I went to claim my bride. I am
+thirty-five now."
+
+"Dear me!" said the little man sincerely, "I have always thought you
+older than that! But twelve years is--twelve years! And you say this
+doubt is a very recent thing?"
+
+"Yes. I have told you the thing is absurd. But I can't help it."
+
+"Have you made any further enquiries?"
+
+"Yes, uselessly. There is a rumour that Mrs. Weston, too, is dead. A
+lady who used to know them tells me that she is certain she heard of her
+death--in England, she thinks, but upon being questioned was quite at
+sea as to where or when or even as to the original source of her
+information. She remembers 'hearing it' and that's all. Then I sought
+for the aunts, the maiden ladies whom Molly visited in California. They
+too are gone, the older died during the time I lay ill in the hospital.
+The younger one was not quite bright, I believe, and was taken away to
+live with some relatives in the East. It was not Molly's mother who
+fetched her. It was a man, a very kind man whom the old lady, my
+informant, had never seen before. She said he had a queer name. She
+could not remember it, but thought he was a physician. I imagine that
+the kind friend was an asylum doctor."
+
+"Very likely. And could your informant tell you nothing of the niece--if
+Molly had visited there?"
+
+"She remembered her last visit very well but her memories were of no
+value. She was a sweet, pretty child, she said, and she often wondered
+how she came to have such a homely mother. She evidently disliked Mrs.
+Weston very much, and when I asked her if she had ever heard of Molly's
+death she said no, but that she was not a bit surprised as she had
+always predicted that the pretty, little, white thing would be worried
+into an early grave. I noticed the word 'white' and asked her about it,
+for the Molly I knew had a lovely colour. Her memory became confused
+when I pressed her, but she seemed quite sure that the girl who came
+that winter with her mother was a very pale girl--looked as if she might
+have come south for her health."
+
+"All of which goes to prove--"
+
+"Yes--I know. Poor Molly! Poor little girl! I believe in my heart that
+our mad marriage killed her. Without me constantly with her, the fear of
+her mother, perhaps the doubt of me, the burden of the whole disastrous
+secret was too much. And it was my fault, Willits--all my fault!" He
+turned to the window to hide his working face. "Do you wonder," he added
+softly, "that her poor little wraith comes back to trouble me?"
+
+"Come, come, no need to be morbid! You made a mistake, but you have
+paid. As for the doubt which troubles you--it is but the figment of a
+tired brain. The mother could have had no possible reason for deceiving
+you. You were no longer an ineligible student--and the girl loved you.
+Besides, there was the legal tie. Would any woman condemn her daughter
+to a false position for life? And without reason? The idea is
+preposterous. Come now, admit it!"
+
+"Oh, I admit it! My reasoning powers are still unimpaired. But reason
+has nothing to do with that kind of mental torture. It is my soul that
+has been sick; it is my soul that must be cured. And to come back to the
+very point from which we started, I believe I shall find that cure
+here--in Coombe."
+
+"With Mrs. Sykes?" dryly.
+
+"Certainly. Mrs. Sykes is part of the cure."
+
+"And the other part?"
+
+"Oh--just everything. I hardly know why I like the place. But I do. Why
+analyse? I can sleep here. I wake in the morning like a man with the
+right to live, and for the first time in a year, Willits, a long
+torturing year, I am beginning to feel free of that oppression, that
+haunting sense that somewhere Molly is alive, that she needs me and that
+I cannot get to her. I had begun to fear that it would drive me mad.
+But, here, it is going. Yesterday I was walking down a country road and
+suddenly I felt free--exquisitely, gloriously free--the past wiped out!
+That--that was why I almost feared to see you, Elliott, you bring the
+past so close."
+
+The hands of the friends met in a firm handclasp.
+
+"Have it your own way," said the professor, smiling his grim smile.
+"Consider me silenced."
+
+The doctor's answer was cut off by the jingling entrance of Mrs. Sykes
+bearing before her a large tray upon which stood tall glasses, a beaded
+pitcher of ice cold lemonade and some cake with white frosting.
+
+"Seeing as it's so hot," said she amiably, "I thought a cold drink might
+cool you off some. Especially as breakfast will be five minutes late
+owing to the chicken. I thought maybe as you had a friend, doctor, a
+chicken--"
+
+"A chicken will be delicious," said the doctor, answering the question
+in her voice. "Mrs. Sykes, let me present Professor Willits; Willits,
+Mrs. Sykes! Let me take the tray."
+
+Mrs. Sykes shook hands cordially. "Land sakes!" she said. "I thought you
+were a priest! Not that I really suspicioned that the doctor, good
+Presbyterian as he is, would know any such. But priests is terrible
+wily. They deceive the very elect--and it's best to be prepared. As it
+is, any friend of the doctor's is a friend of mine. You're kindly
+welcome, I'm sure."
+
+"Thank you," said the professor limply.
+
+The doctor handed them each a glass and raised his own.
+
+"Let us drink," he said, "to Coombe. 'Coombe and the Soul cure!'"
+
+"Amen!" said Willits.
+
+"Land sakes!" said Mrs. Sykes. "I thought it was his spine!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+
+Zerubbabel Burk sat upon his stool of office in the doctor's consulting
+room, swinging his legs. Would-be discoverers of perpetual motion might
+have received many hints from Bubble, though he himself would have
+scorned to consider the swinging of legs as motion. He was under the
+delusion that he was sitting perfectly still. For the doctor was asleep.
+
+Asleep, at four o'clock on a glorious summer day! No wonder his friend
+and partner wore a tragic face.
+
+"Doesn't seem to care a hang if he never gets any patients!" mused
+Bubble, resentfully, stealing a half fond, half angry glance at the
+placid face of the sleeper. "Only two folks in all day and one a kid
+with a pin in its throat. And all he says is, 'Don't worry, son, we're
+getting on fine!' We'll go smash one of these days, that's what we'll
+do--just smash!"
+
+"Tap-tap" sounded the blinds which were drawn over the western windows.
+A pleasant little breeze was trying to come in. "Buzz" sounded a fly on
+the wall. Bubble arose noisily and killed it with a resounding "thwack."
+
+"Wake the doctor, would you?" he said. "Take that!"
+
+But even the pistol-like report which accompanied the fly's demise
+failed to ruffle the sleeper. Bubble returned disconsolate to
+his stool.
+
+"Smash," he repeated, "smash is the word. I see our finish."
+
+The pronoun which Bubble used nowadays was always "we." He belonged to
+the doctor body and soul, but it was no servile giving. The doctor also
+belonged to him, and it was with this privilege of ownership that he now
+found fault with his idol. Had any one else objected to the doctor's
+afternoon rest he would have found reason and excuse enough; but in his
+own heart he was puzzled. Such indifference to the appearances, such
+wilful disregard of "business" could hardly, he thought, be real; yet,
+for an imitation, it was remarkably well done. Bubble admired even while
+he deprecated.
+
+Why, he did not even go to church so that the minister might introduce
+him around as "Dr. Callandar, the new brother who has come amongst us."
+Neither did he walk down Main Street, nor show himself in public places.
+When he went walking he went early in the morning and directed his steps
+toward the country. About all the usual means of harmless and necessary
+advertising he did not seem to know Beans! Bubble looked disconsolately
+out of the window. There was Ann, now, coming across the yard. School
+must be out, and still the doctor slept.
+
+"Anybody in?" asked Ann in a stage whisper.
+
+"Not just now. Been very busy though. Doctor's resting. Stop that
+noise."
+
+"I'm not making any noise! He's part my doctor anyway. I'll make a noise
+if I like--"
+
+"No you won't, miss!"
+
+"But I don't _like_," added Ann with her impish smile. "If he's asleep
+what are you staying here for? Come on out."
+
+Bubble regarded the tempter with scornful amazement.
+
+"That's it!" he exclaimed, "jest like I always said, women haven't any
+sense of honour. What d'ye suppose I'm here for?"
+
+"Not just to swing your legs," placidly. "He doesn't need you when he's
+asleep, does he? Come on and let's get some water-cress. He'd like some
+for his tea--dinner I mean. Say, Bubble, why does he call it dinner?"
+
+"Because he comes from the city, Silly! They don't have any tea in the
+city. They have breakfast when they get up and lunch at noon and dinner
+about seven or eight or nine at night. Then if they get hungry before
+bed-time they have supper. The doctor says he never gets hungry after
+dinner so he don't have that."
+
+Ann considered this a moment.
+
+"They do so have tea!" she declared. "I heard Mrs. Andrew West telling
+about it. She said her sister in Toronto had a tea specially for her."
+
+"Oh," with superb disdain, "that's just for women. If they can't wait
+for dinner they get bread and butter and tea in the afternoon. But they
+have to eat it walking around and they only get it when they go out
+to call."
+
+Ann sighed. "I'd like to live in the city," she murmured. "Say, don't
+you feel as if you'd like a cookie right now?"
+
+Bubble squirmed. But his Spartan fortitude held.
+
+"In business hours? No, thank you. 'Tisn't professional. Look silly,
+wouldn't I, if one of our patients caught me eating?"
+
+"How many to-day?"
+
+"That'd be telling. 'Tisn't professional to tell. Doctor says if a man
+wants to succeed, he's got to be as dumb as a noyster in business!"
+
+"Pshaw!" said Ann, "Aunty'll tell. She always counts. Then you don't
+want a cookie?"
+
+"Well--later on--Cricky! here's some one coming! You scoot--pike it!"
+
+"I won't!" Ann stood her ground, peering eagerly around the rose bush.
+"It's only Esther Coombe. She'll be coming to see Aunt--no--she's coming
+here! Hi, Bubble, wake him up--quick!"
+
+"Hum, Hum!" said Bubble in a loud voice, rattling a chair. The sleeper
+made no movement.
+
+Ann, brave through anxiety, flew across the room and shook him with all
+the strength of her small hands. The heavy lids lifted and still
+Ann shook.
+
+"Is it an earthquake?" asked the victim politely.
+
+"No--it's a patient! Oh, do get up. Oh, goodness gracious, look at your
+hair!"
+
+The doctor passed his hand absently over a disordered head. "Yes," he
+said, "I have always thought that shaking is not good for hair. Dear me!
+I believe I have been asleep!"
+
+Ann threw him a glance of mingled admiration and reproach and vanished
+through the parlour door just as the step of the patient sounded upon
+the stone steps.
+
+"Why, Bubble Burk!" said a voice. "What are you doing here?"
+
+At the sound of the voice, sleep fled from the doctor's eyes. He arose
+precipitately.
+
+"I'm workin'," Bubble's voice was not as confident as usual. "This here
+is Dr. Callandar's office. Mrs. Sykes' visitors go round to the
+front door."
+
+"Oh! But it's the doctor I wish to see. Is he in?"
+
+Bubble was now plainly agitated.
+
+"If you'll just wait a moment, I'll--I'll see."
+
+Leaving Esther smiling upon the steps he disappeared into the shaded
+office and pulled up the blinds. The couch had been decorously
+straightened. The office was empty! Bubble gave a sigh of relief and his
+professional manner returned.
+
+"He isn't just what you might call in," he explained affably to Esther.
+"But he'll be down directly. Walk in."
+
+Esther walked in and took the seat which Bubble indicated.
+
+"Somebody sick over at your house?" with ill-concealed hope.
+
+Esther dimpled. "Not dangerously, thank you."
+
+"Then it's just tickets for the choir concert. I might have known. But
+you're too late. Doctor's got half a dozen already. He--"
+
+Further revelations were cut short by the entrance of the doctor
+himself. A doctor with sleep-cleared eyes, fresh collar, and newly
+brushed hair. A doctor who shook hands with his caller in a manner which
+even the professional Bubble felt to be irreproachable.
+
+"Bubble, you may go."
+
+With a grin of satisfied pride the junior partner departed, but once
+outside the gloomy expression returned.
+
+"It's only choir-tickets!" he told Ann, who was waiting around the
+corner of the house. "Come on--let's go fishin'."
+
+Inside the office Esther and the doctor looked at each other and smiled.
+He, because he felt like smiling; she, because she felt nervous. Yet it
+was not going to be as awkward as she had feared. With a decided sense
+of relief she realised that Dr. Callandar looked exactly like a doctor
+after all! Convention, even in clothes, has a calming effect. There was
+little of the weary tramp who had quenched his throat at the school
+pump in the well groomed and quietly capable looking doctor. With a
+notable decrease of tension Esther saw that the man before her was a
+stranger, a pleasant, professional stranger, with whom no embarrassment
+was possible.
+
+As for him he realised nothing except that Coombe was really a
+delightful place. He felt glad that he had stayed.
+
+"No one ill, I hope, Miss Coombe?" His tone, even, seemed to have lost
+the whimsical inflection of the tramp.
+
+"No, Doctor. Not ill exactly. It is Aunt Amy. We cannot understand just
+what is the matter. You see, Aunty imagines things. She is not quite
+like other people. Perhaps," with a quick smile as she thought of Mrs.
+Sykes, "perhaps you may have heard of her--of her fantastic ideas? They
+are really quite harmless and apart from them she is the most sensible
+person I know. But lately, just the other day, something happened--"
+
+He checked her with an almost imperceptible gesture. "Could you tell me
+about it from the beginning?"
+
+Esther looked troubled. "I do not know much about the beginning. You
+see, Aunt Amy is my step-mother's aunt, and I have only known her since
+she came to live with us shortly after my father's second marriage. But
+I know that she has been subject to delusions since she was a young
+girl. She was to have been married and on the wedding day her lover
+became ill with scarlet fever, a most malignant type. She also sickened
+with it a little later; it killed him and left her mentally twisted--as
+she is now. Her health is good and the--strangeness--is not very
+noticeable. It has usually to do with unimportant things. She is
+really," with a little burst of enthusiasm, "a Perfect Dear!"
+
+The doctor smiled. "And the new development?"
+
+"It is not exactly new. She has always had one delusion more serious
+than the others. She believes that she has enemies somewhere who would
+do her harm if they got the chance. She is quite vague as to who or what
+they are. She refers to them as 'They.' Once, when she came to us first,
+she was frightened of poison and, although my father, who had great
+influence over her, seemed to cure her of any active fear, for years she
+has persisted in a curious habit of drinking her coffee without setting
+down the cup. The idea seemed to be that if she let it out of her hands
+'They,' the mysterious persecutors, might avail themselves of the
+opportunity to drug it. Does it sound too fantastic?"
+
+"No. It is not unusual--a fairly common delusion, in fact. There is a
+distinct type of brain trouble, one of whose symptoms is a conviction of
+persecution. The results are fantastic to a degree."
+
+Well, the day before yesterday Aunt Amy was drinking her coffee as
+usual, when she heard Jane scream in the garden. She is very fond of
+Jane, and it startled her so that she jumped up at once, forgetting all
+about the coffee, and ran out to see what was the matter. Jane had cut
+her finger and the tiniest scratch upsets poor Auntie terribly. She is
+terrified of blood. When she came back she felt faint and at once picked
+up the cup and drank the remaining coffee. I hoped she had not noticed
+the slip but she must have done so, subconsciously, for when I was
+helping her with the dishes she turned suddenly white--ghastly. She had
+just remembered!
+
+'They've got me at last, Esther!' she said with a kind of proud
+despair. 'I've been pretty smart, but not quite smart enough.'
+
+I pretended not to understand and she explained quite seriously that
+while she had been absent in the garden 'They' had seen her half-filled
+cup and seized their opportunity. It was quite useless to point out that
+there was no one in the house but ourselves. She only said, 'Oh, "They"
+would not let me see them "They" are too smart for that.' Overwhelming
+smartness is one of the attributes of the mysterious 'They.'
+
+"I hoped that the idea would wear away but it didn't; it strengthened.
+In vain I pointed out that she was perfectly well, with no symptom of
+poisoning. She merely answered that naturally 'They' would be too smart
+to use ordinary poisons with symptoms. 'I shall just grow weaker and
+weaker,' she said, 'and in a week or a month I shall die!' I tried to
+laugh but I was frightened. Mother advised taking no notice at all and I
+have tried not to, but I can't keep it up. She is certainly weaker and
+so strange and hopeless. I am terrified. Can mind really affect matter,
+Doctor Callandar?"
+
+"No. As a scientific fact, it cannot. But it is true that certain states
+of mind and certain conditions of matter always correspond. Why this is
+so, no one knows, when we do know we shall hold the key to many
+mysteries. The understanding, even partial, of this correspondence will
+be a long step in a long new road. Meanwhile we speak loosely of mind
+influencing matter, ignoring the impossibility. And, however it happens,
+it is undoubtedly true that if we can, by mental suggestion, influence
+your Aunt's mind into a more healthy attitude the corresponding change
+will take place physically."
+
+"But I have tried to reason with her."
+
+"You can't reason with her. She is beyond mere reason. I might as well
+try to reason you out of your conviction that the sun is shining. A
+delusion like hers has all the stability of a perfectly sane belief."
+
+"Then what can we do?"
+
+"Since that delusion is a fact for her we must treat it as if it were a
+fact for us."
+
+"You mean we must pretend to believe that the danger is real?"
+
+"It is real. People have died before now of nothing save a fixed idea of
+death."
+
+"Oh!"
+
+"But don't worry. Aunt Amy is not going to die. When may I see her? If I
+come over in a half an hour will that be convenient?"
+
+Esther rose with relief. How kind he had been! How completely he had
+understood! She had been right, perfectly right, in coming to him. In
+spite of Mrs. Coombe's ridicule, Aunt Amy's need had been no fancy. And
+there was another thing; he was coming to the house. Her mother would
+see him--and presto! her prejudice against doctors would vanish--he
+would cure the headaches, and everything would be happy again.
+
+The doctor, watching keenly, thought that she must have been troubled
+greatly to show such evident relief.
+
+"One thing more," he said. "Was there, do you know, any history of
+insanity in your aunt's family?"
+
+The girl paled. The idea was a disturbing one.
+
+"Why--no--I think not. I never heard. You see, she is not my Aunt,
+really, but my step-mother's aunt. There was a brother, I think, who
+died in--in an institution. He was not quite responsible, but in his
+case it was drink. That is different, isn't it? Does it make any
+difference?"
+
+"No--only it may help me to understand the case. Good-afternoon."
+
+He watched her go, through a peep-hole made by Bubble in the blind.
+
+"Pretty, isn't she?" said a reflective voice below him.
+
+The doctor started. But it was only Mrs. Sykes who had stepped around
+the house corner to pluck some flowers from the bed beneath the window.
+As he did not answer, the voice continued, "That boy Burk has gone
+fishing. I told you you'd regret putting that new suit on to him, brass
+buttons and all! Not that I want to say anything against the lad and his
+mother a widow, but when a person's dealing with a limb of mischief a
+person ought to know what to expect. Anybody sick over at
+Esther's house?"
+
+The doctor, leaning against the door in deep reverie, did not seem to
+hear. Mrs. Sykes, after a suspicious glance, decided that perhaps he
+really had not heard, and proceeded.
+
+"Not that I'm asking out of curiosity, Land sakes! But I've got some
+black currant jelly that sick folks fancy. I could spare a jar as
+well as not."
+
+A pause.
+
+The flower picker bunched her flowers into a tight round knot which she
+surveyed with pride. "That step-mother of Esther's now," she said. "I
+don't hold much with her. Flighty, I call her. Delicate, too, if looks
+don't lie. Men are queer. The only thing queerer is women. What d'ye
+suppose a sensible middle-aged man like Doctor Coombe ever saw in that
+pretty doll? And what did she see in him--old enough to be her father? A
+queer match, I call it. But they do say that her side of it is easy
+explained. Anyway it must have been a trying thing when the doctor's
+gold mine didn't--"
+
+Mrs. Sykes' flow of words ceased abruptly, for rising from a last
+descent upon the rose bush she saw that her audience had vanished.
+
+"Dear me! I hope he didn't think I was trying to be curious," said Mrs.
+Sykes.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+
+It required some persuasion to induce Aunt Amy to consent to see the
+doctor. Doctors, she had found (with the single exception of Dr.
+Coombe), were terribly unreasonable. They asked all kinds of questions,
+and never believed a word of the answers.
+
+"And if I have a doctor," she declared tearfully, "I shall have to go to
+bed. And if I go to bed who will get supper? The sprigged tea-set--"
+
+"But you won't need to go to bed, Auntie. You aren't ill, you know; just
+a little bit upset. If you feel like lying down why not use the sofa in
+my room? And even if you do not wish to see the doctor for yourself,"
+Esther's tone was reproachful, "think what a good opportunity it is for
+us to get an opinion about mother. Don't you remember saying just the
+other day that you thought mother was foolish to be so nervous
+about doctors?"
+
+"Yes, but she needn't stay in the room, need she, Esther? I don't want
+her in the room. She laughs. But I would like to lie on your sofa and if
+I must see him I had better wear my lavender cap."
+
+"Yes, dear, and you will not mind mother staying--"
+
+"But I do mind, Esther. And anyway she can't," triumphantly, "because
+she has gone out."
+
+"Gone out? Mother? But she knew the doctor was coming and she
+promised--"
+
+"Yes, I know. She said to tell you she had fully intended staying in
+until the doctor had been, but she had forgotten about the Ladies' Aid
+Meeting. She simply had to go to that. She said you could attend to the
+doctor quite as well as she could and that it was all nonsense anyway,
+because there was nothing whatever the matter with me." The faded eyes
+filled with tears again and Esther had much ado to prevent their
+imminent overflow.
+
+She settled Aunt Amy upon the couch and adjusted the lavender cap
+without further betrayal of her own feelings, but in her heart she was
+both angry and hurt. Her mother had known of the doctor's intended visit
+and had distinctly promised to remain in to receive him. What would Dr.
+Callandar think? It was most humiliating.
+
+The Ladies' Aid Meeting was plainly an excuse for a deliberate shirking
+of responsibility. Or, worse still, Mrs. Coombe, divining Esther's
+double motive, may have left the house purposely to escape seeing the
+doctor on her own account. Esther well knew the stubbornness of which
+she was capable upon this one question, and the cunningness of it was
+like her. She had made no objections; she had not troubled to refuse or
+to argue--she had simply gone out.
+
+Well, it was something to feel that she, Esther, had done what she
+could. At any rate, there was no time to worry, for the doctor was
+already coming up the walk.
+
+Esther hurried to the door. It relieved her to find that he seemed to
+expect her, and showed no offence on realising that the patient's
+nearest relative was not at home to receive him. Indeed, he seemed to
+think of no one save the patient herself. His manner, Esther thought,
+was perfect. Had she been a little older she might have suspected such
+perfection, deducing from it that Callandar, like herself, was
+subconsciously aware of an interest in the situation not altogether
+professional. But the girl made no deductions and certainly there was no
+trace of any embarrassment in the doctor's way with his patient. It took
+only a moment for Esther to decide that here, at least, she had done the
+right thing. She waited only long enough to see the frightened look in
+Aunt Amy's eyes replaced by one of timid confidence and then, murmuring
+an excuse, slipped away, leaving them together.
+
+Callandar also waited while the startled eyes grew quiet and then lifted
+the fluttering hand into his own firm one.
+
+"Creatures of habit, we doctors, aren't we?" he said, smiling. "Always
+taking people's temperatures."
+
+Aunt Amy ventured upon a vague answering smile.
+
+"I understand," continued the doctor, "that you have reason to fear that
+you have been poisoned?"
+
+The hand began to flutter again, but quieted as the pleasant, confident
+voice went on:
+
+"Your niece has told me something of the case but no details. Perhaps
+you can supply them for me. When exactly did it happen and what kind of
+poison was it?"
+
+The fluttering hand became quite still and the eyes of Aunt Amy slowly
+filled with a great amazement. Here was an unbelievable thing--a doctor
+who did not argue or deny or playfully scold her for "fancies." A doctor
+who took her seriously and showed every intention of believing what she
+said. No one, save Dr. Coombe, had ever done that--
+
+"It is always best in these cases to get the details from the patient
+herself," went on the doctor, encouragingly.
+
+No, he was not laughing! Aunt Amy could detect nothing save the gravest
+of interest in his kindly eyes. An immense relief stole over her. A
+relief so great that Callandar, watching, felt his heart grow hot
+with pity.
+
+"Oh, doctor!" she cried feebly, "I--" a rush of easy tears drowned the
+rest of the sentence.
+
+Callandar let her cry. He knew the value of those tears. Presently when
+she grew more quiet he exchanged her soaking bit of cambric for his own
+more serviceable square. Aunt Amy dried her eyes on it and handed it
+back as simply as a child.
+
+"Pray excuse me," she begged, "but--the relief! I might have died if you
+had not come." She went on brokenly. "You see," dropping her voice, "my
+relatives are _queer_. They have strange ideas. When I know things quite
+well they tell me I am mistaken. Mary, my niece, laughs. Even Esther,
+who tries to help me, thinks I do not know what I am talking about. They
+all argue in the most absurd manner. If I do not pretend always that I
+agree with them I have no peace. Sometimes when I tell some of the
+things I know, Esther looks frightened and says I am not to tell Jane.
+So I try to keep everything to myself. I don't want the children to be
+frightened. They are young and ought to be happy. I was happy when I was
+young--at least, I think it was I. Sometimes I'm not sure whether it
+wasn't some other girl--I get confused--"
+
+"Don't worry about it," said the doctor calmly. "Or about Miss Esther
+either. I want to hear all about the poison."
+
+Aunt Amy remembered her precarious condition with a start. Her eyes grew
+vague.
+
+"I don't know how They put it in," she said. "I didn't see Them, you
+know. I left my cup of coffee standing while I went to find Jane. I
+heard her crying. She had cut her finger and when I had bound it up I
+felt faint, so I foolishly forgot and picked up the coffee and drank it.
+I wasn't quite myself or I should never have been so careless."
+
+The doctor seemed to appreciate this point. "Did you taste anything in
+the coffee?" he asked.
+
+"No. Of course They would be too clever for that!"
+
+"And when did you begin to feel ill?"
+
+"Just as soon as I remembered that I had forgotten to pour out a fresh
+cup." The naïveté of this statement was quite lost upon the
+eager speaker.
+
+Esther, who had re-entered the room, opened her lips to improve this
+opportunity for argument but, meeting the doctor's eye, refrained.
+Callandar took no notice of the significant admission.
+
+"Where do you feel the pain now?" he asked.
+
+Aunt Amy appeared disturbed.
+
+"Mostly in my head--I--I think." She moved restlessly.
+
+Callandar appeared to consider this.
+
+"But I suppose," he said thoughtfully, "that you really feel very little
+actual pain. None at all perhaps?"
+
+Aunt Amy admitted that she could not locate any particular pain.
+
+"Weakness is the predominating symptom," went on the doctor. "It is, in
+fact, a very simple case. All the more serious, of course, for being so
+simple, _if_ we did not understand it. But now that we know exactly what
+is wrong we need have no fear."
+
+Aunt Amy's vague eyes began to shine.
+
+"Shall we get the better of them again?" she asked eagerly.
+
+"We certainly shall," kindly. "Miss Esther, I am going to leave some
+medicine for your aunt; these little pink tablets. She must have one
+every two hours and two at bedtime. When she has taken them for two days
+I shall send something else. You will notice an improvement almost at
+once. Even in an hour or two, perhaps. By the end of the week all
+medicine may be discontinued."
+
+He crushed a little pink tablet in a spoon, mixed it with water, and
+watched the old lady while she eagerly swallowed it.
+
+"There!" he exclaimed. "That is the beginning! All we need now is a
+little rest and quiet. Nothing to excite the patient and a tablet
+regularly every two hours." He arose, affecting not to see Aunt Amy's
+grateful tears. "And of course," he added as if by an afterthought,
+"_They_ won't know anything about this. They will think that, having
+taken the coffee, the result is certain. They will take for granted that
+They have finished you, in fact! So cheer up, it is worth a little
+illness to be rid of the fear of Them forever."
+
+A lightning flash of hope lit up the worn face upon the pillow. "Oh,
+Doctor! Do you really think I am free?"
+
+"Sure of it."
+
+Aunt Amy sank back with a long sigh; her lined face grew suddenly
+peaceful. Esther, who had observed the little scene with wonder, said
+nothing, but taking the tablets, kissed her Aunt, and led the way out
+in silence.
+
+"Well?"
+
+As they stood together in the hall she could see the amused twinkle in
+the doctor's eye.
+
+"I don't like it! You lied to her!"
+
+"So I did," cheerfully.
+
+"These tablets," holding up the glass vial, "what are they?"
+
+"Tonic."
+
+"And the medicine which you are going to send later?"
+
+"More tonic."
+
+"But she thinks--you gave her to understand that they are the antidote
+for the poison which you know does not exist."
+
+"No. They are the antidote for a poison which does exist--medicine for a
+mind diseased."
+
+"It's--it's like taking advantage of a child."
+
+"So it is, exactly. I suppose you have never taken advantage of a child,
+for the child's good?"
+
+"Certainly not."
+
+"Never told one, gave one to understand, so to speak, that a kiss will
+cure a bumped head?"
+
+"That's different!"
+
+"Never told your school class during a thunderstorm that lightning never
+hurts good children?"
+
+"That's very different."
+
+"And yet all the time you know that lightning falls upon the just and
+unjust equally."
+
+Esther was silent. The doctor laughed.
+
+"I fear we are both sad story-tellers," he said gaily. "But in Aunt
+Amy's case the fibbing will all be charged to my account, you are merely
+the nurse. A nurse's duty is to obey orders and not frown (as you are
+doing now) upon the doctor. You will find that I shall effect a cure.
+Seriously, I do not believe that you have any idea of what that poor
+woman has been suffering. If the delusion of living in continual danger
+can be lifted in any way even for a time, it will make life over for
+her. You would not really allow a scruple to prevent some alleviation of
+your Aunt's condition, would you?"
+
+The girl's downcast eyes flashed up to his, startlingly blue.
+
+"No. I would not. I love her. I would tell all the fibs in the world to
+help her. But all the time I should have a queer idea that _I_ was doing
+wrong. It would be common sense against instinct."
+
+"Against prejudice," he corrected. "The prejudice which always insists
+that truth consists in a form of words."
+
+They were now in the cool green light of the living room. Esther stood
+with her back to the table, leaning slightly backward, supporting
+herself by one hand. She looked tired. There were shadows under her
+eyes. The doctor felt an impulse of irritation against the absent mother
+who let the girl outwear her strength.
+
+"My advice to you is not to worry," he said abruptly. "You are tired.
+More tired than a young girl of your age ought to be. You cannot teach
+those imps of Satan--I mean those charming children--all day and come
+back to home cares at night. Will it be possible for me to speak to Mrs.
+Coombe before I go?"
+
+Watching her keenly he saw that now he had touched the real cause of the
+trouble.
+
+"I am sorry," began Esther, but meeting his look, the prim words of
+conventional excuse halted. A little smile curled the end of her lips
+and she added, "Since she went out purposely to escape you, it is
+not likely."
+
+"Your mother went out to escape me?" in surprise.
+
+"In your capacity of doctor only. You see," with a certain childish
+naïveté, "she hasn't seen you yet. And mother dislikes doctors very
+much. Oh!" with a hot blush, "you will think we are a queer family,
+all of us!"
+
+"It is not at all queer to dislike doctors," he answered her cheerfully.
+"I dislike them myself. At the very best they are necessary evils."
+
+"Indeed no! And when one is ill it seems so foolish--"
+
+"Is Mrs. Coombe ill?"
+
+"I don't know. I think so. She has headaches. She is not at all like
+herself. I hoped so much that you would meet her this afternoon, and
+then she--she went out!"
+
+"And this is really what is troubling you, and not Aunt Amy?"
+
+"Yes. You see, Aunt Amy has been quite all right until the last two
+days. But mother--that has been troubling us a long time."
+
+"How long?"
+
+"Almost since father died--a year ago."
+
+"But--don't you think that if Mrs. Coombe were really ill her prejudice
+would disappear? People do not suffer from choice, usually."
+
+"No. That is just what puzzles me!" She did indeed look puzzled, very
+puzzled and very young.
+
+"If I could help you in any way?" suggested Callandar. "You may be
+worrying quite needlessly."
+
+"Do people ever consult you about their mothers behind their mother's
+back?"
+
+"Often. Why not?"
+
+"Only that it doesn't seem natural. Grown-up people--"
+
+"Are often just as foolish as anybody else!"
+
+"Besides, I doubt if I can make you understand." Now that the ice was
+broken Esther's voice was eager. "I know very little of the real trouble
+myself. It seems to be just a general state of health. But it varies so.
+Sometimes she seems quite well, bright, cheerful, ready for anything!
+Then again she is depressed, nervous, irritable. She has desperate
+headaches which come on at intervals. They are nervous headaches, she
+says, and are so bad that she shuts herself up in her room and will not
+let any of us in. She will not eat. I--I don't know very much about
+it, you see."
+
+"You know a little more than that, I think, perhaps when you know me
+better?--It is, after all, a matter of trusting one's doctor."
+
+"I do trust you. But feelings are so difficult to put into words. And
+the greatest dread I have about mother's illness is only a feeling, a
+feeling as if I knew, without quite knowing, that the trouble is deeper
+than appears. Jane feels it too, so it can't be all imagination. It is
+caused, I think, by a change in mother herself. She seems to be growing
+into another person--don't laugh!"
+
+"I am not laughing. Please go on."
+
+"Well, one thing more tangible is that the headaches, which seem to mark
+a kind of nervous crisis, are becoming more frequent. And the
+medicine--"
+
+"But you told me that she took no medicine!"
+
+"Did I? Then I am telling my story very badly. She has some medicine
+which she always takes. It is a prescription which my father gave her a
+few months before he died. She had a bad attack of some nervous trouble
+then which seems to have been the beginning of everything. But that time
+she recovered and it was not until after father's death that the
+headaches began again. Father's prescription must, long ago, have lost
+all effect, or why should the trouble get worse rather than better? But
+mother will not hear a word on the subject. She will take that medicine
+and nothing else."
+
+"Do you know what the medicine is?"
+
+"No. Father used to fill it for her himself. She says it is a very
+difficult prescription and she never has it filled in town, always in
+the city."
+
+"But why? Taylor, here, is quite capable of filling any prescription. He
+is a most capable dispenser."
+
+"Yes--I know. But mother will not believe it."
+
+"And you say it does her no good whatever?"
+
+"She thinks that it does. She has a wonderful belief in it. But she gets
+no better."
+
+The doctor looked very thoughtful.
+
+"She will not allow you to try any kind of compress for her head?"
+
+"No. She locks her door. And I am sure she suffers, for sometimes when I
+have gone up hoping to help I have heard such strange sounds, as if she
+were delirious. It frightens me!"
+
+"Does she talk of her illness?"
+
+"Never, and she is furious if I do. She says she is quite well and
+indeed no one would think that anything serious was wrong unless they
+lived in the house. Any one outside would be sure that I am worrying
+needlessly. Am I, do you think?"
+
+"I can't think until I know more. But from what you tell me, it looks as
+if this medicine she is taking might have something to do with it. If it
+does no good, it probably does harm. Perhaps it was never intended to
+be used as she is using it. Otherwise, as you say, the attacks would
+diminish. At the same time a blind faith in a certain medicine is not at
+all uncommon. One meets it constantly. Also the prejudice against
+consulting a physician. It is probable that Mrs. Coombe does not realise
+that she is steadily growing worse. Could you let me examine the
+medicine?"
+
+Esther hesitated.
+
+"It is kept locked up. But, I might manage it. If I asked her for it she
+would certainly refuse. I--I should hate to steal it," miserably.
+
+"I see. Well, try asking first. It is just a question of how far one has
+the right to interfere with another's deliberately chosen course of
+action. The medicine is probably injurious, even dangerous. I should
+warn her, at least. If she will do nothing and you still feel
+responsible I should say that you have a moral right to have your own
+mind reassured upon the matter."
+
+Esther smiled. "I believe I feel reassured already. Perhaps I have been
+foolishly apprehensive and it never occurred to me that the medicine
+might be at fault; at the worst I thought it might be useless, not
+harmful. If I could only manage to have you see it without _taking_ it!
+There must be a way. I'll think of something and let you know."
+
+"Do." The doctor picked up his hat for the second time. He was genuinely
+interested. He had not expected to find a problem of any complexity in
+sleepy Coombe. The cases of Aunt Amy and the peculiar Mrs. Coombe seemed
+to justify his staying on. It was pleasant also to help this charming
+young girl--although that, naturally, was a secondary consideration!
+
+Esther ran upstairs with a lightened heart.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+
+"I really could not help being late, Esther! I tried to hurry them but
+Mrs. Lewis was there. You know what _she_ is!"
+
+Mrs. Coombe sank gracefully into a veranda chair. Out of the corners of
+her eyes she cast a swift glance at the face of her step-daughter and,
+as the girl was not looking, permitted herself a tiny smile of malicious
+amusement. She was a small woman but one in whom smallness was charm and
+not defect. Once she had been exceedingly pretty; she was moderately
+pretty still. The narrow oval of her face remained unspoiled but the
+small features, once delicately clear, appeared in some strange way to
+be blurred and coarsened. The fine grained skin which should have been
+delicate and firm had coarsened also and upon close inspection showed
+multitudes of tiny lines. Her fluffy hair was very fair, ashy fair
+almost, and would have been startlingly lovely only that it, too, was
+spoiled by a dryness and lack of gloss which spoke of careless treatment
+or ill health, or both. Still, at a little distance, Mary Coombe
+appeared a young and attractive woman. The surprise came when one looked
+into her eyes. Her eyes did not fit the face at all; they were old eyes,
+tired yet restless, and clouded with a peculiar film which robbed them
+of all depth. Curiously disturbing eyes they were, like windows with
+the blinds down!
+
+If her eyes were restless, her hands were restless too and she kept
+snapping the catch of her hand-bag with an irritating click as
+she spoke.
+
+"I know I ought to have been here when the doctor called to see Amy,"
+she went on, "but I could not get away. Mrs. Lewis talked and talked.
+That woman is worse than Tennyson's brook. She makes me want to scream!
+I wonder," musingly, "what would happen if I should jump up some day and
+scream and scream? I think I'll try it."
+
+"Do!"
+
+"What did Doctor Paragon-what's-his-name say about Amy?"
+
+"He thinks we have been treating Aunt Amy wrongly. He thinks she should
+be humoured more. His name is Callandar."
+
+"Callandar? What an odd name! It sounds half-familiar. I must have heard
+it somewhere. There is a Dr. Callandar in Montreal, isn't there? A
+specialist or something."
+
+"I think this is the same man. But if it is he, doesn't want it known.
+He is here for his health, and he has never taken the trouble to correct
+the impression that he is a beginner working up a practice. I thought so
+myself at first."
+
+"At first?"
+
+"When I first saw him. I have met him several times."
+
+Mrs. Coombe was evidently not sufficiently interested to pursue the
+subject. "Whoever he is," she said fretfully, "I hope he is not going to
+allow Amy to fancy herself an invalid."
+
+"He is going to cure the fancy."
+
+"Oh!" dubiously. "Well, I hope he does! I find I must run over to
+Detroit for a few days."
+
+"What?"
+
+"It would be provoking to have her ill while I'm away. No one else can
+manage Jane properly while you're at school. Where is Jane?"
+
+"I don't know. You are not speaking seriously, are you?"
+
+"I certainly am. At a pinch I suppose I could take Jane with me. She
+needs new clothes. But I'd rather not bother with her. Her measure will
+do quite as well. I wish you would call her. I've got some butterscotch
+somewhere. Here it is." The restless hands fumbled in the hand-bag. "No,
+it isn't here, how odd! I promised Jane--"
+
+"Mother, when did you decide to go away?"
+
+"Some time ago. It doesn't matter, does it? I had a letter from Jessica
+Bremner to-day. She asks me to come at once. It's in this bag somewhere.
+I declare I never can find anything! Anyway, she wants me to come."
+
+"When did you get the letter?"
+
+"On the noon mail, of course."
+
+Esther turned away. She knew very well that there had been no letter
+from Detroit on the noon mail. But there seemed no use in saying so.
+These little "inaccuracies" were becoming common enough. At first Esther
+had exposed and laughed at them as merely humorous mistakes; but that
+attitude had long been replaced by a cold disgust which did not scruple
+to call things by their right names. She knew very well that Mary Coombe
+had developed the habit of lying.
+
+"You see," went on the prevaricator cheerfully, "it would be necessary
+to run down to Toronto soon anyway. I haven't a rag fit to wear and
+neither has Jane. But Detroit is better. Things are much cheaper across
+the line. And easy as anything to smuggle. All you need to do is to wear
+them once and swear they're old."
+
+"An oath is nothing? But where is the money coming from?"
+
+Mrs. Coombe shrugged her shoulders. "One can't get along without
+clothes! And even if I could, there is another reason for the trip. My
+medicine is almost finished. I can't risk being without that."
+
+It was the opportunity for which Esther had waited. She spoke eagerly.
+
+"Why not try getting it filled here? I'm sure they are as careful as
+possible at Taylor's."
+
+The hand-bag shut with a particularly emphatic click. Mrs. Coombe rose.
+
+"We have discussed that before," she said coldly. "It is a very
+particular prescription and hard to fill. As it means so much to me in
+my wretched health to have it exactly right, I am surprised at
+you, Esther!"
+
+Esther put the surprise aside.
+
+"You could get it by mail, couldn't you?"
+
+"I shall not try to get it by mail."
+
+"But Taylor's are absolutely reliable. Why not give them a chance? If it
+is not satisfactory I shall never say another word. It seems so
+senseless going to Detroit for a few drugs which may be had around the
+corner. Perhaps it is not as difficult to fill as you think. Let me show
+the prescription to Dr. Callandar--" She stopped suddenly for Mrs.
+Coombe had grown white, a pasty white, and she broke in upon the girl's
+suggestion with a little inarticulate cry of rage, so uncalled for, so
+utterly unexpected, that Esther was frightened. For a moment the film
+seemed brushed from the hazel eyes--the blinds were raised and angry
+fear peeped out.
+
+"You wouldn't dare!" The words were a mere breath. Then meeting the
+girl's look of blank amazement she caught herself from the brink of
+hysteria and added more calmly, "What an impossible suggestion! I need
+no second opinion upon the remedy which your father prescribed for me
+and I shall take none. As for the journey, I shall ask your advice when
+I wish it. At present I am capable of managing my own affairs. I shall
+come and go as I like."
+
+The would-be firm voice wavered wrathed badly toward the end of this
+defiance, but the widely opened eyes were still shining and as she
+turned to enter the house, Esther caught a look in them, a gleam of
+something very like hate.
+
+"So that is what comes of asking," said Esther sombrely.
+
+She did not follow her step-mother into the house but remained for a
+while on the veranda, thinking. It was clearly useless to reopen the
+subject of the prescription. For some reason Mrs. Coombe regarded it as
+a fetish. She would not trust it to Taylor's. She would not allow a
+doctor to see it; there remained only the suggestion of Dr. Callandar
+that it be inspected without her consent. Esther knew where the
+prescription was kept, but--
+
+Women are supposed, by men, to have a defective sense of loyalty and it
+is a belief fairly well established, also among men, that there is a
+fundamental difference in the attitude of the sexes to that high thing
+called honour. Esther was both loyal and honourable. To deceive her
+step-mother, however good the motive, could not but be horrible to her
+and just now, being angry with a very young and healthy anger, she was
+less willing than ever to lose her own self-respect in the service of
+Mary Coombe.
+
+"I won't!" said Esther firmly, and went in to prepare Aunt Amy's supper.
+
+"I don't feel like I ought to be eating upstairs this way," fussed the
+invalid as Esther came in with the tray. "I am so much better. That
+medicine the doctor gave me helped me right away. He must be a very
+smart man, Esther."
+
+"It looks like it, Auntie."
+
+"I don't doubt I'll be around to-morrow just like he said. So I don't
+want you staying home from school. That girl you get to take your place
+is kind of cross with the children, isn't she?"
+
+"She is strict."
+
+"Well, don't get her. I don't like to think about the children being
+scared out of their lives on my account. So I'll just get up as usual. I
+could get up now if necessary. And my mind feels better."
+
+"Your _mind_?" Never before had Esther heard Aunt Amy refer to "her"
+mind as being in any way troublesome.
+
+"Yes. I suppose you never knew, but sometimes I have felt a little
+worried about my mind."
+
+"Whatever for?" The surprise which still lingered on the girl's voice
+was balm to Aunt Amy's soul. She laughed nervously.
+
+"Of course it was foolish," she said, "but really there have been times
+when I have felt--felt, I can hardly express it, but as if there were a
+little something _wrong_, you know. Did you ever guess that I felt like
+that, Esther?"
+
+"No, Auntie."
+
+Aunt Amy shivered. For a moment her faded eyes grew large and dark. "I'm
+glad you did not guess it. It is a dreadful feeling, like night and
+thunder and no place to go. A black feeling! I used to be afraid I might
+get caught in the blackness and never find a way out and then--"
+
+"And then what, dear?"
+
+"Why, then--I'd be mad, Esther!"
+
+"Oh, darling, how awful!" Esther's warm young arms clasped the trembling
+old creature close. "You must never, never be afraid again! Why didn't
+you tell me and let me help?"
+
+"I couldn't. You would not have believed me. And it would have
+frightened you. And you might have told Mary. If Mary knew of it she
+would be certain to be frightened and if she was frightened she would
+send me away. Then the darkness would get me."
+
+"It never shall, Auntie. No one shall ever send you away! And you won't
+be afraid any more, will you?"
+
+"No, not if you don't keep telling me that things I know aren't true. I
+know they are true, you see, but when you say they aren't it makes my
+head go round."
+
+"We'll be more careful, dear! And here is your medicine before you have
+your supper."
+
+Aunt Amy turned cheerfully to the supper tray.
+
+"Your mother need not be told about it," she observed. "She wouldn't
+understand. She was in a while ago to say she hoped I'd be better in the
+morning. She is going to the city. What she came for was to ask me to
+lend her my ruby ring. She never understands why I can't lend it to her.
+I told her she might have the string of pearls and the pearl brooch and
+the ring with the little diamonds and anything else except the ruby.
+You see, I might die before she got back, and I couldn't die without the
+ruby ring on my finger. I promised somebody--I can't remember whom--"
+
+"I know, dear, don't try to remember."
+
+"Mary says it is shameful waste to leave it lying shut up in the box in
+my drawer. But it has to lie there. If I took it out now it would stop
+shining immediately. And it must be all red and bright when I die, like
+a shining star in the dark. Then, afterwards, you can have it, Esther.
+You don't mind waiting, do you?"
+
+"Gracious! I hope I'll be an old woman before then! So old that I shan't
+care for ruby rings at all."
+
+Aunt Amy looked at the girl's pretty hand wistfully. "I'd like to give
+it to you right now, Esther. But you know how it is. I can't. If the red
+star did not shine I might lose my way. Some one told me--"
+
+"I know, Auntie. I quite understand. And you have given me so many
+pretty things that I don't need the ruby."
+
+"You may have anything else you want. But of course the ruby is the
+loveliest of all. If I could only remember who gave it to me--"
+
+"Perhaps you always had it," suggested Esther, hastily, for she knew
+quite well the tragic history of the ruby.
+
+"Perhaps. But I don't think so. I love it but I never dare to look at
+it. It makes the blackness come so near. Does it make you feel
+that way?"
+
+"No--I don't know--large jewels often give people strange feelings they
+say."
+
+"Do they?" hopefully. "Go and look at it now. Don't lift it out of the
+box. Just open the lid and look in. Perhaps you will feel something."
+
+Esther went obediently to the drawer where the beautiful jewel had lain
+ever since Aunt Amy's arrival. As no one outside knew of its existence
+it was considered quite safe to keep it in the house. The box lay in a
+corner under a spotless pile of sweet smelling handkerchiefs. Esther
+snapped open the lid of the case and looked in. She looked close, closer
+still, bending over the open drawer--
+
+"Do you feel anything, Esther?"
+
+The girl's answer came, after a second's pause, in a strained voice.
+"The drawer is so dark, I can't tell!"
+
+"Take it to the window," said Aunt Amy.
+
+Esther lifted the case from the drawer and carried it into a better
+light. Her eyes were panic-stricken. For her indecision had been only a
+ruse to give herself time to think. She had known the moment she opened
+the case that the ruby was gone!
+
+"It does make me feel queer," she said, closing the case. "I'll put it
+away."
+
+"Is it a black feeling?" with interest.
+
+"I think it is."
+
+"Then you are kin to it," said Aunt Amy sagely. "Your mother never has
+any feeling about it at all. Except that she would like to wear it. She
+was looking at it when she was in. She was as cross as possible when I
+told her she could not take it with her."
+
+Esther gathered up the tea things without a word. Her curved mouth was
+set in a hard red line. At the door she paused and turning back as if
+upon impulse, said: "If it makes you feel like that, I would advise you
+not to look at it, Auntie. It will be quite safe. I'll see to that. I'll
+appoint myself 'Guardian of the Ring.'"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+
+Esther carried the tea-tray into the kitchen and stood for a moment
+beside the open window letting the sweet air from the garden cool the
+colour in her cheeks. Through the doorway into the hall she could see
+into the living room where Jane sat at the table in a little yellow pool
+of lamplight, busy with her school home work. Farther back, near the
+dusk of one of the veranda windows, Mrs. Coombe reclined in an easy
+chair. Her eyes were closed; in the half light she looked very pretty,
+very fragile; her relaxed pose suggested helplessness. Unconsciously
+Esther's innate strength answered to the call; her hard gaze softened.
+To apply the terms liar and thief to that dainty figure in the chair
+seemed little short of brutality. Mary was weak, that was
+all--just weak!
+
+At the sound of the girl's step in the doorway Mrs. Coombe opened her
+eyes. They were very filmy to-night, blank, contented. Her nervousness
+seemed to have left her. Perhaps she was half asleep, for she yawned, an
+open, ugly yawn, which she did not trouble to raise her hand to hide.
+
+"I have decided to take Jane with me, Esther."
+
+"I don't want to go," said Jane.
+
+"Well, you are going--that's enough."
+
+"If you have really decided to go," began Esther slowly, "I think you
+are wise to take Jane. We cannot tell yet just how Aunt Amy may be."
+
+The child returned to her book with a discontented sigh. Esther came
+nearer and spoke in a lower tone. "But before you go," she said, "please
+don't forget to replace Aunt Amy's ring. If she were to find it gone it
+would be no joke but a serious shock, as I suppose you know."
+
+Mrs. Coombe laughed. And Esther realised that a laugh was the last thing
+she had expected. For anger, evasion, denial, she had been prepared.
+Mary would probably storm and bluster in her ineffective way--and return
+the ring. Instead--
+
+"How did you know I had it?" she asked good humouredly.
+
+"I saw that it was gone."
+
+"And the deduction was obvious? Well, this time you are right. I did
+take it. I expect I have a right to borrow my own Aunt's things if she
+is too mean to lend them. It's a shame of her to want to keep the only
+decent jewel we have shut up. Amy gets more selfish every day."
+
+"But you will put it back before she misses it?"
+
+Mrs. Coombe could see her step-daughter's face quite plainly and its
+expression made her wince, but she was reckless to-night. After all, why
+pretend? If Esther intended to eternally interfere with her affairs the
+sooner an open break came, the better.
+
+"Perhaps, perhaps not. Certainly not until I return from my visit."
+
+Esther fought down her rising dismay.
+
+"Mother, don't you understand what you are doing? The ring is Aunt Amy's
+You have no right to take it!"
+
+"I've a right if I choose to make one."
+
+"If Auntie finds out it is not in its box, we cannot tell what the
+effect may be!"
+
+"She needn't find out. What she doesn't know won't hurt her!"
+
+"But--it is stealing!"
+
+Mrs. Coombe laughed. "What a baby you are, Esther, for all your solemn
+eyes and grown-up airs. Stealing--the idea! Anyway you need not worry
+since you are not the thief." She yawned again, rose, and declared that
+she felt quite tired enough to go to bed.
+
+When she had gone, Jane left her lessons and came to her sister's side.
+
+"Esther, do I really have to go away with Mother?"
+
+"It looks like it, Janie. But you'll like it. Mrs. Bremner has a little
+girl."
+
+"I don't like little girls."
+
+"Then you ought to! The change will probably do you good."
+
+Jane looked dubious. "Things that I don't want never do me any good.
+Will you help me with my 'rithmetic?"
+
+"I will when I come back."
+
+"Where're you going?"
+
+"Out. I'll not be long. Answer Aunt Amy's bell if it rings, like a dear
+child."
+
+Esther's decision had been made, as many important decisions are,
+suddenly, and without conscious thought. All the puzzling over what was
+right and wrong seemed no longer necessary. Without knowing why, she
+knew that it had become imperative to get some good advice and get it at
+once. If she had been disturbed and uneasy before, she was frightened
+now. Something must be done, if not for Mary's sake at least for the
+sake of the honoured name she bore, and for Jane's sake!
+
+"Mother doesn't seem to _know_ when a thing is wrong any more!" was the
+burden of the girl's thought as she hurried upstairs.
+
+She knew where the prescription was kept--in a little drawer of her
+father's old desk, a drawer supposed to be secret. To-morrow Mary would
+take it away with her. Esther opened the drawer without allowing herself
+a moment for thought or regret. The paper was there, folded, in its
+usual place.
+
+With a sigh of relief she seized it, hurried to her own room for her hat
+and then out into the summer night. A brisk five minute walk brought her
+to Mrs. Sykes' gate, and there, for the first time, she hesitated.
+
+"Evening, Esther!" called Mrs. Sykes cheerfully from the veranda. "Come
+right along in. Mrs. Coombe told Ann you might be over to borrow the
+telescope valise if she decided to take Jane. Rather sudden, her going
+away, isn't it? Hadn't heard a word about it until the Ladies' Aid--come
+up and sit on the veranda and I'll get it."
+
+"I didn't come for the telescope," said Esther. "I came to see Dr.
+Callandar."
+
+"Oh," with renewed interest. "Well, he's in. At least he's in unless he
+went out while I was upstairs putting Ann to bed. That's his consulting
+room where the light is. It's got a door of its own so folks won't be
+tramping up the hall--but of course you know. You were here this
+afternoon. Funny, Mrs. Coombe going away with your poor Auntie sick and
+all! I suppose it _is_ your Auntie, since it can't be Jane or
+Mrs. Coombe?"
+
+"Yes, it is Aunt Amy. She has not been very well."
+
+"The heat, likely. Heat is hard on folks with weak heads. Not that your
+Auntie's head ever seems weaker than lots of other folks. Won't you come
+up and sit awhile?--Well, ring the bell."
+
+Mrs. Sykes voice trailed off indistinctly as Esther rounded the veranda
+corner and stood by the rose bush before the doctor's door. She pushed
+the new electric bell timidly.
+
+"You'll have to push harder than that!" called Mrs. Sykes. "It sticks
+some!"
+
+But the door had opened at once, letting out a flood of yellow light.
+
+"Miss Coombe--you?"
+
+"It's Esther Coombe come about her Aunt Amy," called the voice from the
+veranda.
+
+Hastily the doctor drew her in and closed the door with an emphatic
+bang. Then for the second time that day they looked into each other's
+eyes and laughed.
+
+"Do you think my patients will stand that?" he asked her ruefully.
+
+"Oh, we are used to Mrs. Sykes, we don't mind."
+
+"That's good! Ah, I see you have the mysterious prescription. It wasn't
+so hard after all, was it? Probably your mother was quite as anxious
+as you."
+
+"No, she refused to let me show it you. I took it. To-night was the only
+chance, for she is going away to-morrow and will take it with her."
+
+"And how about your Presbyterian conscience?" Still with a twinkle.
+
+"Silenced, for the present. But look at it quickly for the silence may
+not last. It seemed that I simply had to help mother, in spite of
+herself. And there was no other way. All the same I shall despise myself
+when I get time to think."
+
+The doctor took the paper with a smile. "When that time comes I shall
+argue with you, though argument rarely affects feeling. To my mind you
+are doing an eminently sensible thing."
+
+He opened the paper and peered at it under the lamp; looked quickly up
+at the girl's eager face and then from her to the paper again.
+
+"What is it?" she asked anxiously.
+
+"Why--I don't know. Where did you get this?"
+
+"In the secret drawer of father's desk."
+
+"Was the prescription always kept there?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+The doctor folded the paper again and handed it to her. "Does this look
+like the prescription?"
+
+"Yes, of course. It is the prescription."
+
+"I'm afraid not. Come and look."
+
+Esther seized the paper eagerly and saw--a neatly written recipe for
+salad dressing!
+
+Hot and cold with mortification, she stared at it blankly. "I have been
+nicely fooled," she said in a low voice.
+
+"Am I permitted to smile, or would it hurt your feelings?"
+
+"It is not at all funny! Of course the real prescription has been
+removed. She must have suspected. You see, I asked her to let me have
+it. Oh!" with sudden shame and anger. "She guessed that I might take it,
+don't you see?"
+
+"I am afraid you are right. But now at least I should think that you
+have done your whole duty. It would look as if Mrs. Coombe was herself
+aware of the inadvisability of continuing this prescription. Why else
+should she be so careful to prevent you showing it to me? At the same
+time she is determined to go on using it. We cannot prevent her."
+
+"Can we do nothing?"
+
+"When I see her I shall be better able to judge."
+
+"But she is going away."
+
+"Then we must wait. If it is, as I suspect, a case of disordered nerves
+aggravated by improper treatment, the instinct is strongly for
+concealment. Do you find, for instance, that Mrs. Coombe is not as frank
+in other matters as she used to be?"
+
+A shamed blush crimsoned the girl's cheek, but the doctor's tone was
+compelling and she answered in a low voice: "Yes, I think so."
+
+"Don't look like that. It is only a symptom of something rotten in the
+nervous system."
+
+"Isn't there such a thing as character?" bluntly.
+
+"As distinct from the nervous system? Some say not. But we do not need
+to venture such a devastating belief to know, well, that a dyspeptic is
+usually disagreeable. In potential character he may be equal to the
+cheeriest man who ever ate a hearty dinner. Think of Carlyle."
+
+"I don't like Carlyle."
+
+"But don't you admire him?"
+
+"No. Do you remember the story of the beggar who picked up his hat one
+day and instead of giving him sixpence, Carlyle said, 'Mon, ye may say
+ye hae picked up the hat of Thomas Carlyle.'"
+
+The doctor laughed. "Oh he had a guid conceit o' himself--must you go?"
+For Esther had risen.
+
+"Yes, thank you. Oh, please do not come with me. It is only a step. I'd
+much rather not. Mrs. Sykes would conclude that the whole family were in
+danger of immediate extinction."
+
+She was so evidently perturbed that the doctor laid down his hat, but
+for the first time it occurred to him that Mrs. Sykes was not an
+unmixed blessing.
+
+Esther was holding out her hand.
+
+"Then you think we can safely leave it until mother returns?"
+
+"I think we shall have to, and if things have been going on as long as
+you think, a week more or less will make no very material difference. In
+any case we cannot examine a lady by force or prevent her from getting a
+prescription until one knows it to be dangerous."
+
+"No, of course not. Good-night, and--thank you, Doctor!"
+
+"And I am not to be allowed to walk home with you?"
+
+"Truly, I would rather not."
+
+"Then good-night, and don't worry."
+
+He watched her flit down the dusky path, heard the click of the gate
+latch, and turned back into the office to wonder why it seemed suddenly
+bare and empty!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+
+Mrs. Coombe had been in the city a week when one morning Ann, who was
+feeling lonely without Jane, sat swinging upon the five-barred gate and
+whistling intermittently for Bubble. She had become very tired of
+waiting. She knew that Bubble could hear. The five-barred gate was
+within easy hearing distance of the house, and both doors and windows of
+the office were open. Therefore it became each moment more evident that
+the whistles were being deliberately ignored.
+
+"Horrid, nasty boy!" exclaimed Ann, climbing to a precarious seat on the
+highest of the five bars. "Well, if he waits until I come to get him,
+he'll--just wait!"
+
+It was very hot on the gate. The vacant field on the other side, where
+the Widow Peel pastured her cow, was hot, too, but if one cut across the
+field and circled the back of the Widow Peel's cottage one substantially
+lessened the distance between oneself and the cool deliciousness of the
+river. The Widow Peel was near-sighted and hardly ever noticed one
+rushing over her beds of lettuce and carrots and onions, or if she did,
+she could not "fit a name to 'em."
+
+Ann sighed and swung her brown legs. Should she or should she not go in
+search of Bubble? Going would mean a distasteful swallowing of proper
+pride; not going would mean--no Bubble. It would be a case of cutting
+off one's nose--Ann's small white teeth came together with a
+little click.
+
+"I'll go. But I'll pay him out afterwards."
+
+With this thoroughly feminine decision she tumbled off the gate, raced
+across the orchard and, having paused a moment to regain breath and
+poise, appeared casually at the office door. The office looked cool and
+empty; Bubble was not upon his official stool. Perhaps, after all, he
+had not heard the whistles! Perhaps--
+
+"What d'ye want?" asked a gruff voice from behind the desk.
+
+Ann jumped, and then tried to look as if she hadn't.
+
+"I knew you were there!" she said. "But just you wait till the doctor
+catches you at it!" Mounting the step she frowned across at Bubble who,
+in the doctor's favourite attitude, was reclining in the doctor's chair.
+"I suppose you think you look like him, but you don't, nor act like him
+either. If he was sitting there and a lady came in, he'd be up too quick
+for anything. And if the lady was polite and stayed on the doorstep
+(just like I am) he would say, 'Pray come in, madam,' and then he'd set
+a chair and--"
+
+"Oh, cut it out!" Bubble's dignity collapsed with his attitude. The
+tilted chair came down with a bang and its occupant settled himself more
+naturally upon a corner of the desk. "Don't bother me! I can't come out.
+Doctor's away. Some one's got to attend to business. See those
+medicines? Well, don't you go handling them! This here is for Lizzie
+Stephens (measles), and that there is for Mrs. Nixon (twins). If they
+got mixed I'd be responsible. Run away!"
+
+"Where's the doctor?" asked Ann, ignoring.
+
+"The doctor is out. You needn't wait. He won't be back all day."
+
+"Where'd he go?"
+
+"Little girls mustn't ask questions!"
+
+Ann's small face wrinkled into an elfish grin. "I know where he's gone,"
+she said slyly.
+
+"Yes, you do!" This sarcastic comment was Bubble's most emphatic
+negative.
+
+"Very well, then, I don't."
+
+Not to be outdone, Ann volunteered no further information. She sat down
+on the step and waited.
+
+Bubble busied himself with tying up the bottles. Presently he stepped
+out from behind the desk.
+
+"Think you can mind the office while I run around with these medicines?"
+he asked sternly.
+
+"Sure!" Ann's assent was placid.
+
+"What'll you say if any one comes and asks for the doctor--or me?"
+
+"You're out delivering medicines and the doctor's been called away very
+sudden."
+
+"What'll you tell them if they ask you what he's been called away to?"
+
+"Oh, I'll just say they needn't worry, 'tisn't anything catching."
+
+Bubble allowed his face to relax. He even displayed a grudging
+admiration for this feminine diplomacy.
+
+"And you wouldn't be telling lies, either," he remarked approvingly.
+"All the same," with a return to gloom, "we can't keep it a secret.
+Folks are bound to find out. You can bet your eyes on that!"
+
+Ann nodded. "I expect most of them know by now. Any one that wanted to
+could see them. _He_ didn't seem to care. They drove right down the main
+street and you could see the picnic basket sticking out at the side!"
+
+"O cricky! Isn't that just like him? You'd think he wanted the whole
+town to know he'd gone off picnicking with a girl. But I'd have thought
+Esther Coombe would have better sense!"
+
+"It wasn't Esther's fault. She couldn't act as if she was ashamed of
+him, could she? When a gentleman asks a lady to go out in his automobile
+she can't ask him to drive down the back streets."
+
+"If he had only taken her at night!" groaned the harassed junior
+partner. "But no, he must take a whole day off and him with two patients
+on his hands. Look at me! Have I ever asked off to go on any picnics?
+Not on your tintype. Business is business. Doctors can't fool round like
+other folks."
+
+Ann nodded agreement. Things were coming her way very nicely. She
+glanced at the wrathy Bubble out of the corners of her eyes. "I didn't
+think he'd be mean like that," she remarked craftily.
+
+"Like what? He isn't mean!"
+
+"To make you stay in all day."
+
+"He didn't. Not him! He gave me fifty cents and told me to take a day
+off. 'Just run around with the medicine, Bubble,' says he, 'and then you
+can hike it. I have a feeling in my bones,' he says, 'that nobody's
+going to die to-day.'"
+
+"Well, then--"
+
+"A man has a sense of duty for all that."
+
+"Well," rising with a dejected air, "if you're not coming, good-bye. It
+will be lovely paddling! Aunt's given me some lettuce sandwiches and two
+apple turnovers. One was for you, but I suppose I can eat them both. The
+sugar's leaked all round the edge--lovely!"
+
+The stern disciple of business watched her tie on her sun-bonnet with
+mingled feelings. It began to look as if she was really going!
+
+"Good-bye," said Ann.
+
+Bubble's red face grew a shade redder.
+
+"Just like a girl!" he said bitterly. "Because a man's got to deliver
+two medicine bottles, off she goes and won't wait for him. And the
+farthest I've got to go is over to Mrs. Nixon's. The whole thing won't
+take five minutes."
+
+Sun-bonnets are splendid things for hiding the face! Had Bubble seen
+that slow smile of victory there is no telling what might have happened.
+But he did not see it. And Ann was too good a general to exult openly.
+Her answer was carefully careless. "I'll wait--if you'll hurry up!"
+
+But the look which she threw after his hastily retreating figure was as
+old as Eve.
+
+Meanwhile the doctor and Esther, who had been so criminally careless of
+professional appearances as to drive down Main Street with a picnic
+basket protruding, were enjoying themselves with an enjoyment peculiar
+to careless people. Esther had forgotten about the pile of uncorrected
+school exercises which were supposed to form her Saturday's work; the
+doctor had forgotten about the measles and the twins. Rain had fallen in
+the night and the dust was laid, the trees were intensely green.
+
+Neither of them knew exactly how this pleasant thing had come about,
+although, as a matter of crude fact, Mrs. Sykes had played the part of
+the god from the machine. This energetic lady had made the doctor's
+professional career her peculiar care and it had occurred to her that,
+as a resident physician, he was disgracefully ignorant of the
+surrounding country. At the same moment she had remembered that
+to-morrow was Saturday, and that for trapesing the country and
+meandering around in outlandish places there was no one in town equal to
+Esther Coombe.
+
+"But," objected the doctor, "I hardly know Miss Coombe well enough to
+ask a favour of her."
+
+Mrs. Sykes opined that that didn't matter. "Land sakes," she declared,
+"it would be a nice state of affairs if one huming-being couldn't do a
+kindness to another without being acquainted a year or two." Besides,
+Esther, as the old doctor's daughter, might almost be said to have a
+duty toward the newcomer. Mrs. Sykes felt sure that Dr. Coombe would
+have insisted upon proper attentions being shown, since he was always
+"the politest man you ever saw, and terrible nice to strangers."
+
+Mrs. Sykes also, with the assistance of Aunt Amy, had provided the large
+basket. They might not need it all, but then again they might. It was
+best to be prepared. And, anyway, no one should ever say that she, Mrs.
+Sykes, "skimped" her boarders' meals. As for the big shawl, once
+belonging to a venerated ancestress, it is always safe to take a big
+shawl on a country trip even in June heat with the thermometer going up.
+
+The doctor agreed to everything, even the shawl. Whether one is taking a
+rest cure or not, it is distinctly pleasant to look forward to a day in
+the country with a lovely girl. Esther had taken his request quite
+simply. It seemed only natural to her that he should wish to explore,
+while the invitation to act as guide was frankly welcomed. Indeed her
+girlish gaiety in the prospect had shown very plainly that such holidays
+had been rare of late. School did not "keep" on Saturday, Jane was away,
+and Aunt Amy was so much better that she could leave her without
+misgiving. Bubble alone prophesied disaster, and at him they
+all laughed.
+
+There is a little folder published by the Town Council which gives a
+very good idea of the country around Coombe. We might quote this, but it
+will be much better for you to go some time and see things for yourself.
+Dr. Callandar saw a great deal that day, but was never very clear
+afterwards in his descriptions. It was rocky in spots, he knew, and wild
+and sweet and piney. And there were little lakes. He remembered the
+lakes particularly because--well, because of what came later.
+
+They had their lunch on the shores of a jewel-like bay, sitting upon the
+shawl of Mrs. Sykes' grandmother. Esther had many memories of the place.
+She had often camped there with her father. But it had been wilder then.
+Once a bear had come right up to the door of her tent.
+
+"By Jove!" said the doctor enviously, "what did you do?"
+
+"I said 'shoo'!"
+
+"And did he?"
+
+"Yes, he did. He was a nice bear, very obedient. Some days later father
+and I saw Mrs. Bear trot across the clearing with two baby bears behind.
+They were moving. I think Mr. Bear was looking for a house when he
+called on me."
+
+Altogether it was a magic day. There is an erroneous belief that magic
+has died out of the world. But in our hearts we all know better. Which
+of us has not lived through the magic hours of a magic day? Which of us
+does not know that land, unmapped, unnamed, a land whose sun is
+brighter, whose grass is greener, whose sky is bluer, and whose every
+road runs into a golden mist? Magic land it must be, for much seeking
+cannot find it. No one, not the wisest nor the best, may enter it at
+will; but for every one at some time the unseen gate swings open, birds
+sing, flowers bloom, the glory and the dream descend! Poor indeed,
+unutterably poor and cheated of his heritage is he who has not
+passed that way.
+
+They were not in love, of course. They were too happy for that. Love is
+the greatest thing in the world, but it is seldom quite happy. Esther
+and the doctor were not lovers but lingered in that deliciously
+unconscious state of "going-to-be-in-love-presently" which is nothing
+less than heavenly. Therefore they ate their lunch with appetite and
+laughed about the story of the bear. Both were surprised when the
+doctor's watch told them it was time to think of home.
+
+They came back very slowly along the shaded trail to where the car stood
+waiting in the brilliant light of the declining sun.
+
+"Just a moment," said the doctor, and cranked vigorously. A confusion of
+odd noises ensued, from which, somehow, the right noise did not emerge.
+
+"Just a moment," he repeated. "There appears to be something loose--or
+tight--or something. If you'll just sit out on the grass a moment, Miss
+Esther, I'll see what it is."
+
+Esther descended. The grass was just as pleasant to sit upon as the car
+seat and she knew nothing whatever about the tricky ways of motors.
+
+"Just a moment," said Callandar for the third time, and disappeared
+behind the bonnet. Fifteen minutes after, he reappeared with a very hot
+face decorated fantastically with black.
+
+"She's sulking," he announced gloomily.
+
+"Is she?" Esther's tone held nothing save placid amusement.
+
+"Just a moment." The doctor banged down the bonnet and effaced himself
+once more. This time under the body of the car.
+
+Motors are mysterious things. Why a well-treated, not to say pampered,
+car which some hours before had been left in perfect condition and
+excellent temper should abruptly turn stubborn and refuse to fulfil its
+chief end is a problem which we shall not attempt to solve. Every one
+who has ever owned a motor knows that these things be.
+
+The doctor, a modest man, considered himself a fair mechanician. In
+expansive moments he, who made nothing of his undoubted excellence in
+his own profession, was wont to boast that you couldn't teach him much
+about motors! He had laughed to scorn the remark of his Scotch chauffeur
+that "they things need a deal o' humourin'!" Humour a thing of cogs and
+screws? Absurd! One must master a motor, not humour her.
+
+Half an hour later he emerged from the car's eclipse and sank, a
+pitiable figure, upon the grass beside Esther.
+
+"Won't it go?" asked Esther dreamily. It had been very pleasant sitting
+there watching the sun set.
+
+The master of motors made a tragic gesture. "No," he said, "she won't."
+
+"Shake her," said Esther.
+
+Dr. Callandar pushed back his sweat-bedewed hair with fingers which left
+a fearsome streak above his left eyebrow. The girl laughed. But the
+doctor's decorated face was rueful.
+
+"Do you know, Miss Esther, I'm afraid it isn't a bit funny." His tone,
+too, was sober; and Esther, suddenly more fully alive to the situation,
+noticed that the hands clasped recklessly about the knees of once
+spotless trousers were shaking, just a little. He must be awfully tired!
+
+"That's because you can't see yourself. Give the motor a rest. There is
+plenty of time. Let's have tea here instead of on the way home. There is
+cold tea and chicken-loaf, bread and butter, and half a tart."
+
+The doctor brightened. "You may have the half-tart," he concluded
+generously. "And in return you will forgive me my pessimism. I believe I
+am hungry and thirsty and--if I could only swear I should be all right
+presently."
+
+Esther put her small fingers in her ears and directed an absorbed gaze
+toward the sunset.
+
+Callandar laughed.
+
+"All over!" he called. "Richard is himself again. And now we have got to
+be serious. Painful as it is, I admit defeat. I can't make that car
+budge an inch. It won't move. We can't push it. We have no other means
+of conveyance. Deduction--we must walk!"
+
+"Yes, only like most deductions, it doesn't get us anywhere. We _can't_
+walk."
+
+"Not to Coombe of course. Merely to the nearest farm house."
+
+"There isn't any nearest farm house."
+
+"Then to the nearest common or garden house."
+
+"I thought we were going to be serious. Really, there is no house within
+reasonable walking distance. We are quite in the wilds here. Don't you
+remember the long stretches of waste land we came through? No one builds
+on useless ground. The nearest houses of any kind are over on the other
+side of the lake. The beach is good there and there are a few summer
+cottages and a boarding house. Farther in is the little railway station
+of Pine Lake--"
+
+"Jove! That's what we want! Why did you try to frighten me? Once let us
+reach the station and our troubles are over. There is probably an
+evening train into Coombe."
+
+"There is. But we shall never catch it. We are on the wrong side of the
+lake. We have no boat. There is a trail around but it is absolutely out
+of the question, too far and too rough, even if we knew it, which we do
+not. It would take a woodsman to follow it even in daylight."
+
+"But--" The doctor hesitated. He was beginning to feel seriously
+disturbed. It seemed impossible that they could be as isolated as Esther
+seemed to think. Distance is a small thing to a powerful motor eating up
+space with an effortless appetite, which deceives novice and expert
+alike. It is only when one looks back that one counts the miles. He
+remembered vaguely that the nearest house was a long way back.
+
+"I'll have another try," he answered soberly, "and in the meantime,
+think--think hard! There may be some place you have forgotten. If not,
+we are in rather a serious fix."
+
+"There are no bears now," said Esther.
+
+"There are gossips!" briefly.
+
+The girl laughed. The thought of possible gossip seemed to disturb her
+not at all. "Oh, it will be all right as soon as we explain,"
+confidently. "But Aunt Amy will be terrified. If we could only get word
+to Aunt Amy! I don't mind so much about Mrs. Sykes, for she is always
+prepared for everything. She will comfort herself with remembering how
+she said when she saw it was going to be a lovely day: 'It may be a fine
+enough morning, Esther, but I have a feeling that something will happen
+before night. I have put in an umbrella in case of rain and a pair of
+rubbers and a rug and you'd better take my smelling salts. I hope you
+won't have an accident, I'm sure, but it's best to be forewarned.'"
+
+The doctor glanced up from his tinkering to join in her laugh. He felt
+ashamed of himself. The possibility of evil tongues making capital of
+their enforced position had certainly never entered into the thought of
+this smiling girl. Yet that such a possibility might exist in Coombe as
+well as in other places he did not doubt. And she was in his charge. The
+thought of her clear eyes looking upon the thing which she did not know
+enough to dread made him feel positively sick!
+
+When he spoke to her again there was a subtle change in his manner. He
+had become at once her senior, the physician, and man of the world.
+
+"Miss Esther," he said, leaving his futile tampering with the machine,
+"I can see no way out of this but one. I am a good walker and a fast
+one. I shall leave you here with the car and the rugs and a revolver
+(there is one in the tool box), and go back along the road. I shall walk
+until I come to somewhere and then get a carriage or wagon--also a
+chaperone--and come back for you. It is positively the only thing
+to do."
+
+Esther's charming mouth drooped delicately at the corners. "Oh no!
+That's not at all a nice plan. I'm afraid to stay here. Not of bears,
+but of tramps--or--or something."
+
+"Where there are no houses there will be no tramps."
+
+"There may be. You never can tell about tramps. And I couldn't shoot a
+tramp. The very best I could do would be to shoot myself--"
+
+"But--"
+
+"And I might bungle even that!" pathetically.
+
+"But, my dear girl--"
+
+"And anyway, I've thought of another plan. There is a place on the lake,
+on this side. Not a house exactly, but a log cabin, where old Prue
+lives. Did you ever hear of old Prue? She is a man-hater and a recluse
+and lives all by herself in the bush. It is a dreadful place and she
+keeps a fierce dog! But perhaps she keeps a boat, too. She must keep a
+boat," cheerfully, "because she lives right by the water and I know she
+fishes. If she would only let us have the boat! But I warn you she may
+refuse. She is like the witch in 'Hansel and Gretel.' Do you remember--"
+
+But at the first mention of the boat, the doctor had sprung to action
+and was now standing ready laden with the basket and the rug. With the
+air of a man who has never heard of "Hansel and Gretel" he slipped a
+most businesslike revolver into a pocket of his coat. "For the dog, if
+necessary," he said. "We must have that boat! Is it far?"
+
+"Quite a walk. About two miles through the bush. But I know the way and
+the trail is fairly good, or should be. It branches off from the one we
+took this morning."
+
+The sun was gone when they turned back into the woods but the wonderful
+after-light of the long Canadian sunset would be with them for a good
+time yet. There was no breeze to stir the trees, but the air had cooled.
+It was not unpleasantly hot, now, even in the thickest places. The
+doctor stepped out briskly.
+
+"Listen!" Esther paused with uplifted finger. The trees were very still
+but in the undergrowth the life of the woods was beginning to stir.
+Startled squirrels raced up the fallen logs, glancing backward with
+curious but resentful eyes. Hidden skirmishings and rustlings were
+everywhere and something brown and furry darted across the path with a
+faint cry.
+
+"Don't you feel as if you were in some fairy country?" asked the girl.
+"You can feel and hear them all about you though they keep well hidden.
+A million eager eyes are watching, Lilliputian armies lie in ambush
+beneath the leaves. How quiet they are now that we have stopped moving,
+but as soon as we go on the hurry and skurry will break out afresh! We
+are the invading army and the fairies fly to help the wood-folk protect
+their homes."
+
+As they branched into the deeper path the light grew dimmer. Outside, it
+would still be clear golden twilight but here the grey had come. And now
+the trees grew closer together and a whispering began--a weird and
+wonderful sighing from the soul of the forest; the old, primeval cry to
+the night and to the stars.
+
+It was almost dark when they reached the tiny clearing by the lake.
+Across the cleared space the water could be seen, faintly luminous, with
+the black square of the cabin outlined against it. There was no sign of
+life or light from the dark windows. A dog began to bark sharply.
+
+"He is chained!" said Callandar. "We are fortunate."
+
+"How can you tell?"
+
+"A free dog never barks in that tone. I think he has been a bad dog
+to-day. Killing chickens, perhaps, or chasing cats. A man-hater, like
+your old witch, is certain to have cats! I wonder where she is? Does she
+count going to bed at sundown as one of her endearing peculiarities?"
+
+"Quite the contrary, I imagine. Let's knock."
+
+They raced up the path to the door like children and struck some lusty
+blows. No one answered. The door was locked and every window was blank.
+
+"Knock again!"
+
+They knocked again, banged in fact, and then rattled the windows.
+
+"She could never sleep through all that racket!" said Callandar with
+conviction. "She must be out. Well, out or in, we've got to get that
+boat. Let's explore--this path ought to lead to the lake."
+
+"Shall we steal it?" in a delighted whisper.
+
+"We probably shall. You won't mind going to jail, I hope?"
+
+"Not at all!" The doctor was walking so rapidly that Esther was a little
+out of breath. "Only, the oars--are certain--to be locked--in the
+house!" she warned jerkily.
+
+"Then we shall serve sentence for house breaking also."
+
+"Oh, gracious!" Esther stumbled over the root of a tree and nearly fell.
+But the doctor only walked the faster. They scrambled together down the
+steep path and over the stretch of rocky beach to where the tiny float
+lay a black oblong on the water. The boat house was beside it.
+
+"Eureka!" cried the doctor, springing forward.
+
+But the door of the boat house was open and the boat was gone.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+
+It is a fact infinitely to be regretted, but the doctor swore!
+
+"Well, did you _ever!_" exclaimed Esther. She was a little tired and
+more than a little excited, a condition which conduces to hysteria, and
+collapsing upon the end of the float she began to laugh.
+
+"I wish," said the doctor judicially, "that I knew exactly what you find
+to laugh at."
+
+"Oh, nothing! Your face--I think you looked so very murderous. And you
+did swear--didn't you?"
+
+"Beg your pardon, I'm sure," stiffly.
+
+For an instant they gazed resentfully at each other. The doctor was
+seriously worried. Esther felt extremely frivolous. But if he wanted to
+be stiff and horrid,--let him be stiff and horrid.
+
+"I declare you act as if it were my fault the old boat is gone!" she
+remarked aggrievedly.
+
+"Don't be silly!"
+
+An uncomfortable silence followed. Esther began to realise how tired she
+was. Callandar stared out gloomily over the darkening lake.
+
+"Anyway it's bad enough without your being cross," said Esther in a
+small voice.
+
+"Cross--my dear child! Did I seem cross? What a brute you must think me.
+But to get you into this infernal tangle!--If this old woman is out in
+the boat she'll have to come back some time. She can't stay out on the
+lake all night."
+
+Esther, who thought privately that this was exactly what the old woman
+might do, made no reply. She rather liked the tone of his apology and
+was feeling better.
+
+"Then there is the dog. If she is anywhere near, she will be sure to
+hear the dog. From the noise he is making she will deduce burglars and
+return to protect her property. As a man-hater she will have no fear of
+a mere burglar. Luckily for us, that dog has a carrying voice!"
+
+Scarcely had he spoken than the dog ceased to bark.
+
+"Shall I go and throw sticks at it?" asked Esther helpfully.
+
+"Hush! The dog must have heard something. Let's listen!"
+
+In the silence they listened intently. Certainly there was something, a
+faint indeterminate sound, a sound not in the bush but in the lake, a
+sound of disturbed water.
+
+"The dip of a paddle," whispered Callandar. "Some one is coming in a
+canoe. The dog heard it before we did--recognised it, too, probably. It
+must be the witch!"
+
+The dipping sound came nearer and presently there slipped from the
+shadow of the trees a darker shadow, moving. A canoe with one paddle was
+coming toward them.
+
+Esther with undignified haste scrambled up from the float, abandoning
+her position in the line of battle in favour of the doctor. The dog
+broke into a chorus of ear-splitting yelps of warning and welcome. The
+moving shadow loomed larger and a calm though harsh voice demanded, "Be
+quiet, General! Who is there?"
+
+"We are!" answered Callandar, stepping as far from the tree shadow as
+possible. "Picnickers from Coombe, in an unfortunate predicament. Our
+motor has broken down, and we want the loan of a boat to get over to
+Pine Lake station."
+
+As he spoke he was vividly conscious of Esther close behind. So near was
+she that he felt her warm breath on his neck. She was breathing quickly.
+Was the child really frightened? Instinctively he put out his hand,
+backward, and thrilled through every nerve when something cool and small
+and tremulous slipped into it.
+
+The canoe shot up to the float.
+
+"You can't get any boat here."
+
+There was no surprise or resentment in the harsh level voice. Only
+determination, final and unshakable.
+
+Esther felt the doctor's hand close around her own. Its clasp meant
+everything, reassurance, protection, strength. In the darkness she
+exulted and even ventured to frown belligerently in the direction of the
+disagreeable canoeist. They could see her plainly now. A tall woman in a
+man's coat with the sleeves rolled up displaying muscular arms. Her
+face, even in the half-light, looked harsh and gaunt. With a skill,
+which spoke of long practice, she sprang from the canoe, scarcely
+rocking it, and proceeded to tie the painter securely to a heavy ring in
+the float. Then she straightened herself and turned.
+
+"I'll loose the dog!" she announced calmly.
+
+Just that and no more! No arguments, no revilings, no display of any
+human quality. There was something uncanny in her ruthlessness.
+
+"If you do, it will be bad for the dog," said Callandar coldly. "Who
+are you who threaten decent people?"
+
+It was the tone of authority and for an instant she answered to it. Her
+harsh voice held a faint Scotch accent.
+
+"There'll be no decent people here at this hour o' the nicht. Be off.
+You'll get no boat. Nor the hussy either. The dog's well used to
+guarding it."
+
+"How dare you!" Esther was so angry at being called a hussy that she
+forgot how frightened she was and faced the woman boldly. But the old
+hard eyes stared straight into her young indignant ones and showed no
+softening. Next moment old Prue had pushed the girl aside and
+disappeared in the darkness of the wooded path.
+
+"Quick!" The doctor's tone was crisp and steady. "The canoe is our
+chance. Jump in, while I hold it--in the bow, anywhere!"
+
+"But the paddle! She has taken the paddle!" Even as she objected she
+obeyed. The frail craft rocked as she slid into it, careful only not to
+overbalance; next moment it rocked more dangerously and then settled
+evenly into the water under the doctor's added weight.
+
+"Sit tight!" Carefully he leaned over her, steadying the canoe with one
+hand on the float. In the other she saw the glint of a knife, felt the
+confining rope sever, felt the strong push which separated them from the
+float and then, just as a great dog, fiercely silent now, bounded from
+the path above, a paddle rose and dipped and they shot out into
+the lake.
+
+"If he follows and tries to overturn us I'll have to shoot him," said
+the doctor cheerfully. "But he won't. Hark to him!"
+
+The long bay of the baffled dog rose to the stars.
+
+"There was an extra paddle in the boat-house," he explained. "I
+took it out when we first came down--in case of accident. Old
+She-who-must-be-obeyed must have forgotten it. It is a spliced paddle
+but we shall manage excellently. Luckily I know how to use it. All I
+need now is direction. Lady, 'where lies the land to which this ship
+must go?'"
+
+"'Far, far away is all the seamen know,'" capped Esther, laughing. "But
+if you will keep on around that next point and then straight across I
+think we ought to get there--Oh, look! there is the moon! We had
+forgotten about the moon!"
+
+They had indeed forgotten the moon. And the moon had been part of their
+programme too. Both remembered at the same moment that, according to
+schedule, they were now supposed to be almost home, running down Coombe
+hill by moonlight.
+
+"This is much nicer," said Esther, comfortably.
+
+"But--" he did not finish his sentence. Why disturb her? Besides it
+certainly was much nicer! The forgotten moon bore them no malice. A soft
+radiance grew and spread around them, the whole sky and lake were
+faintly shining though the goddess herself had not yet topped the trees.
+The shadows were becoming blacker and more sharply defined. In front of
+them the point loomed, inky black. Like a bird of the night the little
+canoe shot towards it, skimmed its darkness and then slipped,
+effortless, into shining silver space. The smile of the moon! Pleasing
+old hypocrite! Always she smiles the same upon two in a canoe!
+
+They were paddling toward her so that her light fell full on the
+doctor's face--a clean cut, virile face, manly, stern, yet with a
+whimsical sweetness hidden somewhere.
+
+"How handsome he is!" thought Esther, exactly as the moon intended.
+
+"Strong, too," her thought added as the light picked out his well-set
+shoulders and the sweep of the arm which sped the paddle so lightly yet
+so strongly up and down. Clear, yet soft, the moon showed no touch of
+grey in the hair (although the grey was there) nor did she point out the
+markings which were the legacy of strenuous years. Seen so, he appeared
+no older than she who watched shyly from girlish eyes.
+
+With a little shiver of utmost content Esther settled herself against
+the thwart of the canoe.
+
+Manlike he did not know the meaning of that shiver.
+
+"Fool that I am!" he exclaimed. "You are cold, and behold we have left
+behind the shawl of Mrs. Sykes' grandmother!"
+
+"Indeed we have not! The dog would have torn it to bits. I assure you
+the shawl of the venerated ancestress was in the canoe before I was."
+
+"Then wrap yourself up. It is wonderful how cool the nights are."
+
+Esther was not cold. But it is sometimes pleasant to be commanded. This
+is what enables man to persist in a certain pleasing delusion regarding
+woman's natural attitude. When she occasionally pleases herself by a
+simulation of subjection he immediately thrills with pride, crying,
+"Aha! I have her mastered!" Of course he finds out his mistake later.
+
+It pleased Esther, though not cold, to wrap herself in the shawl and it
+pleased Callandar to see her do it. I assure you it left the whole
+question of the subjection of women quite untouched.
+
+The moon knew all about it but, feminine herself, she favoured the
+deception. Around the girl's dark head she drew a circle of light. The
+branching tendrils of her hair, all alive and fanlike now in the
+coolness of the night, made a nimbus of black and silver from which her
+shadowed face shone like a faint pure pearl. As he seemed younger, so
+did she seem older; under the moon she was no longer a child, but a
+woman with mysterious eyes.
+
+An impulse came to him--the rare impulse of confidence! Suddenly it
+seemed that what he had mistaken for self-sufficiency had been in
+reality loneliness. He had learned to live to himself not because he was
+of himself sufficient but because no one else, save the Button Moulder,
+had ever come within speaking distance. Lorna Sinnet, for all his
+admiration of her, had established no claim upon his confidence, yet
+now, with this young girl, whom he had known but a few weeks, a new need
+developed--a need to talk of himself! A primitive need indeed, but, like
+all primitive needs, compelling.
+
+We need not follow the history. Perhaps, reported, it would not seem
+very lucid. There were blanks, unsaid things, twists of phrase, eloquent
+nothings which, wonderfully understandable in themselves, do not report
+well. Somehow he must have made it plain, for Esther understood it and
+understood him, too, in a way which we, who have never sailed with him
+under the moon, cannot hope to do. Faults of expression are no hindrance
+to this kind of understanding. He did not talk well, was clumsy, not at
+all eloquent, but magically she reconstructed the hopes and dreams of
+his ambitious youth. From a few bald phrases she fashioned the
+thunderbolt which shattered them, saw him stunned, then alive again,
+struggling. With every ready imagination she leaped full upon the fires
+of an ambition which accepted no check but fed upon difficulty and
+overleapt obstacles. Between stories of his early college life, her
+sympathy sensed the deadly strain which his narrative missed and, long
+before he mentioned it, her foresight had descried the coming of hard
+won success.
+
+But the really vital thing, the core of the short history, she followed
+slowly word by word, anxiously. It told of wonders which she did not
+know--love, passion, despair! Now indeed he seemed to be speaking in a
+strange language--yet not strange entirely. She hid each broken phrase
+in her heart, knowing them rare, and wondering at the treasure entrusted
+to her. Some of her girlhood she left behind her as she listened.
+Something new, yet surely old, stirred faintly. What was this love he
+spoke of? The breath of bygone passion brushed across her untouched soul
+and left it trembling!
+
+Into the long silence which followed the story her voice drifted like a
+sigh.
+
+"If she could only have lived until you came!"
+
+It was of the girl wife she thought. Her heart was full of an aching
+pity for that other girl whom life had cheated of her sweetest gift.
+More than the man who had lived out a bitter expiation, did she pity her
+who had missed the fight, slipped out of the struggle. Death seemed to
+Esther such a terrible thing. The new life stirring in her shuddered at
+the thought of mortality. That breath of the divine which we name Love
+began already to proclaim itself immortal.
+
+Yet Molly, that other girl, had loved--and died.
+
+The doctor, too, was lost in self communings. Already, with the words
+not cold upon his lips, he was surprised that he had told the story. How
+could he? Why had he? That pitiful little story of Molly which had been
+too sacred for the touch of a word. Above all, why had the telling been
+a relief? It was a relief, he knew that. Somewhere, in the silver waters
+of Pine Lake he had buried a burden. He felt lighter, younger. Had his
+very love for Molly become a load whose proper name was remorse? Had his
+heart harboured regret and fear under the name of sorrow? Or had he
+never loved at all, never really sorrowed? Had the thing he called love
+been but a boy's hot passion caught in the grip of a man's awakening
+will, a mistake made irrevocable by a stubbornness of purpose which
+could not face defeat? Whatever it had been, it had come to be a burden.
+And the burden had lightened--it pressed no longer. In a word, he was
+free! He was his own man again, unafraid, able to look into his heart,
+to open all the windows--no dark corners, no haunting ghosts! He could
+enter now without the dread of echoing footsteps or wistful, half-heard
+whisperings. The shade of pretty, childish Molly would vex no more.
+
+The relief of it--the pain of it! It was like a new birth.
+
+Meanwhile the strong, sure strokes were bringing them swiftly nearer the
+opposite shore where yellow dots of light proclaimed the position of the
+summer cottages. One dot, larger, detached itself from the others and
+indicated the flare on the end of the landing float. Outlines began to
+be darkly discernible, the moon's silver mirror was shivered by lances
+of gold. Very soon their journey would be ended.
+
+The paddle dipped more slowly. Esther sighed, and sat up straighter.
+Considering all the trouble they had taken, neither of them seemed
+overjoyed to be so near the desired haven.
+
+"We are nearly there," said Callandar obviously.
+
+Esther looked backward over their shining wake. Something precious
+seemed to be slipping away on those fairy ripples. Yet all she could
+find to say was--
+
+"We have come very fast. You must be tired."
+
+Strange little commonplaces, how they take their due of all the
+wonderful hours of life! Esther wriggled out of the shawl, smoothed her
+hair, arranged her ruffled collar. Callandar shipped his paddle and
+resumed his coat.
+
+"Where to, now?" he asked practically.
+
+"There is only one landing, we shall be right on it in a moment.
+Then--there are several of the cottagers whom I know. But I think Mrs.
+Burton will be the best. She has often asked me to visit her and is such
+a dear that the present unexpected arrival will not make me
+less welcome."
+
+"That's good! As for me, I'll make for the station and send the
+telegrams. They won't be seriously anxious yet, do you think?
+Then--there is a train I think you said?"
+
+"You have missed that. But there is a very early morning train, a milk
+train--O gracious!" Esther broke off with a start of genuine
+consternation. "To-morrow is Sunday!"
+
+"Naturally!" in surprise.
+
+"How horribly unfortunate! The milk train doesn't run on Sunday!"
+
+"Does the milk object to Sunday travelling?"
+
+"Don't joke!" forlornly. "It's dreadful that it should be Sunday. People
+will talk!"
+
+"Oh, will they?" The doctor was immensely surprised. "Why?"
+
+"Because it's Sunday."
+
+"What has Sunday got to do with it? They can't talk. Here you are safe
+and sound with your friend Mrs. Burton by 9 o'clock, an intensely
+respectable hour even in Coombe. What can they say?"
+
+"But it's Sunday! You will return home, by rail, on Sunday. Every one
+will know. Your breaking of the Sabbath will be put down to careless
+pleasuring. It will hurt your practice terribly!"
+
+Callandar laughed heartily. But before he could reply the quick bursting
+out of a blaze upon the shore startled them both. "What is it?" he asked
+apprehensively.
+
+"Only a bonfire! Some one is giving a bonfire party. It is quite the
+fashionable thing. There will be songs and speeches with lemonade and
+cake. Oh, hurry! We shall be in time for the programme."
+
+The mysterious woman, born of the moon, was gone. In her place was a
+rumple-haired, bright-eyed child. Callandar took up the paddle with a
+whimsical smile.
+
+"Sit still or you'll overturn the canoe!" he said warningly. And across
+the narrowing stretch of water floated the opening sentiments of the
+patriotic cottagers.
+
+"O Cana_dah_, our heritage, our love--"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+
+Henry Callandar, resting neck-deep in the cool green swimming pool,
+tossed the wet hair out of his eyes and whistled ingratiatingly to a
+watching robin. A delightful sense of guilt enveloped him, for it was
+Sunday morning and, since his experience at Pine Lake a week ago, he had
+learned a little of what Sunday means in Coombe. Esther had been quite
+right in fearing that his return by train upon that sacred day might
+deal a severe blow to his prestige--at least until Mrs. Sykes had had
+time to explain to every one how unavoidable it had been--and he knew
+that if he were to be caught in his present delightful occupation his
+Presbyterian reputation might be considered lost forever.
+
+The robin twittered at him prettily but refused to be beguiled. Sunday
+bathing was not among its weaknesses. Presently it flew away.
+
+"Gone to tell the minister, I'll be bound!" murmured Callandar. "'Twill
+be a scandal in the kirk. I'll lose all my five patients. Horrid
+little bird!"
+
+Smiling, he drew himself from the embrace of the faintly shining water
+and retiring to the willow screen began to dress with that virtuous
+leisureliness which characterises those who rise before their fellows.
+He had the world to himself; a world of cool, sweet scents, pure light
+and Sabbath quiet--that wonderful quiet which seems a living thing with
+a personality of its own, so different is it from the ordinary quiet of
+work-a-day mornings.
+
+The primrose sky gave promise of a beautiful day. The blue grey vault
+overhead was already filling with shimmering golden light, the drooping
+willows and the dew-wet grass were stirring in the breeze of dawn, the
+voice of the water sang in the stillness.
+
+Callandar slipped his blue tie snugly under the collar of his white
+flannel shirt and sighed with the ecstasy of health renewed. A
+half-forgotten couplet hummed through his brain.
+
+ "Sweet day, so cool, so calm, so bright!
+ The bridal of the earth and sky--"
+
+"And it's a hymn, too, or I'm a Dutchman," he declared, much edified.
+"That proves that swimming on Sunday is quite compatible with proper
+orthodoxy of mind. Shouldn't wonder if the Johnnie who wrote that wrote
+it on Sunday morning after a dip. I'll tell Mrs. Sykes he did
+anyway--where in thunder did I put my boots?"
+
+The missing articles had apparently fulfilled the purpose of their being
+by walking away, or else the robin had collected them as evidence!
+Callandar chuckled at a whimsical vision of them in a church court,
+damningly marked "Exhibit 1." But as he searched for them the utter
+peace of the morning fled and suddenly he became conscious that he and
+the willows no longer divided the world between them. Some one was near.
+He felt eyes watching. The curious half-lost instinct which warns man of
+the approach of his kind, told him that he was no longer alone. The
+doctor fixed a stern eye on the screening willows.
+
+"Zerubbabel!" he commanded, "come out of there at once, sir!"
+
+A stirring in the bushes was the only answer.
+
+The doctor glanced at his bootless feet.
+
+"Bubble," more mildly, "if you want a swim--"
+
+"It isn't Bubble," said a meek voice, "it's me. Are you dressed enough
+for me to come out?" Without waiting for an answer the elfish face of
+Ann appeared through the willow tangle. "If you're looking for your
+boots," she remarked kindly, "they're hanging on that limb behind you."
+
+But boots no longer absorbed the doctor.
+
+"Come out of those willows, both of you!"
+
+"There's only me," still meekly. "And I didn't come to swim. I came for
+you. Honour bright! The Button Man's here."
+
+"What?"
+
+"Yes, he is. He came in a big grey car and was sitting on the doorstep
+when Aunt got up. He told her not to disturb you, but of course Aunt
+thought that you ought to know at once and when she found that you were
+gone"--a poignant pause!
+
+"Yes, when she found me gone--"
+
+"When she found you gone," slowly, "she said you must have been called
+up in the night to a patient!"
+
+"Did she really?" The doctor's laugh rang out.
+
+"And I hope the Lord will forgive her for such a nawful lie!" finished
+Ann piously.
+
+"He will, Ann, He will! You can depend on that. He has a proper respect
+for loyalty between friends. Did I understand you to say that you had
+seen my boots? Oh, yes, thanks! Now I wonder what can have brought our
+Button Man back so soon? He didn't by any chance say, I suppose?"
+
+"Him?" with scorn. "Not much fear! I'll do up your boots if you like."
+
+"Thanks, no. That would be using unseemly haste. Button-men who go
+visiting on Sunday must learn to wait. Don't you want to have a splash,
+Ann? I'll walk on slowly, you can easily catch me up!"
+
+The child looked enviously at the now sparkling water, but shook her
+head.
+
+"I'd love to. But I dasn't. Aunt always knows when I've been in. Even if
+I go and muddy myself afterwards, she knows. She says a little bird
+tells her."
+
+"A robin, I'll bet. I know that bird! Sanctimonious thing! He was
+watching me this morning and went off as fast as he knew how, to spread
+the news. Ann, you have lived in this remarkable town all your life. Can
+you tell me just why it is wicked to go swimming on Sunday?"
+
+Ann looked blank. "No. But it is. You're likely to get drowned any
+minute! Not but what I'd risk it if it wasn't for Aunt. I'm far more
+scared of Aunt than I am of God," she added reflectively.
+
+"Why, Ann! What do you mean?"
+
+"Well, you never can tell about God, but Aunt's a dead sure thing! If
+she says you'll get a smack for going in the river you'll get it--but
+God only drowns a few here and there, for examples like."
+
+"Look here!" Callandar paused in his stride and fixed her dark eyes by
+the sudden seriousness in his own. "You've got the thing all wrong. God
+doesn't drown people for swimming on Sunday. He isn't that sort at all.
+He--He--" the unaccustomed teacher of youth faltered hopelessly in his
+effort to instruct the budding mind, but Ann's eyes were questioning and
+at their bidding the essential truth of his own childhood came back to
+him. "God is Love," he declared firmly. "Great Scott! a person would
+think that we lived in the Dark Ages! Don't you let 'em frighten you,
+Ann. What are you allowed to do on Sunday anyway?"
+
+"Church," succinctly. "And Sunday-school and church and the 'Pilgrim's
+Progress.'"
+
+"Well, that's something. Jolly good book, the 'Pilgrim's Progress'!"
+
+"Yes," dubiously. "If it didn't use such a nawful lot of big words. And
+if he'd only get on a little faster. He was terrible slow."
+
+"So he was. Well, let us be merry while we can. I'll race you to the
+orchard gate."
+
+At the gate they paused to regain their lost breath and sense of decorum
+for, across the orchard, the veranda could be plainly seen with the trim
+figure of Professor Willits in close proximity to the taller and gaunter
+outline of Mrs. Sykes. With one of her shy quick gestures, the child
+slipped her fingers from the doctor's hold and sped away through the
+trees. Her friendship with Callandar was the most wonderful thing that
+had ever happened to Ann, but she was not of the kind which
+parades intimacy.
+
+"Patient dead?" asked Willits dryly after they had shaken hands.
+
+"Patient?" Then, catching sight of the flaming red in the cheeks of his
+landlady, "Dead? Certainly not. Even my patients know better than to die
+on a morning like this. But whatever possessed you to disturb a
+righteous household? Mrs. Sykes, he doesn't deserve breakfast, but I do.
+When do you think--"
+
+"In just about five minutes, Doctor. Soon's I get the coffee boiling and
+the cream skimmed. I didn't know," with an anxiously reproving glance,
+"but what you might want to get washed up after you got in."
+
+"I--no, I think I'm quite clean enough, Mrs. Sykes. But it was very
+thoughtful of you to wait--"
+
+"Aunt, the coffee's boiling over!" The warning was distinctly audible
+and, with a gesture of one who abandons an untenable position, Mrs.
+Sykes retreated upon the kitchen.
+
+The visitor watched her flight with mild amaze.
+
+"I suppose I should seem curious if I were to ask why the excellent Mrs.
+Sykes imperils her immortal soul in your behalf? But why in the name of
+common sense is the peril necessary? It isn't a crime, is it, for a
+medical man to get up early and go for a swim?"
+
+"You forget what day it is," said Callandar solemnly. "Or rather, you
+never knew. I myself was not properly acquainted with Sunday until I
+came to this place. Your presence here is in itself a scandal. People do
+not visit upon the Seventh day in Coombe."
+
+"No? You should have informed me of the town's eccentricities. As it is,
+if my presence imperils your social standing you can seclude me until
+the next train."
+
+"Better than that," cheerfully, "I can take you to church."
+
+The alarmed look upon the professor's face was so enticing that
+Callandar continued with glee:
+
+"Why not? I have always thought your objection to church-going a blot
+upon an otherwise estimable character. Hitherto I have been too busy to
+attend to it, but now--"
+
+"Quit chaffing, Harry! I came up because I had to see you. You pay no
+attention to my letters. I never dreamed that you would stay a month in
+this backwater. What is wrong? What is the matter with you?"
+
+"Look at me--and ask those questions again."
+
+The keen eyes of the Button-Moulder looked deep into the doctor's steady
+ones. There was a slight pause. Then--
+
+"Yes, I see what you mean. I saw it as you came across the orchard." The
+sharp voice softened. "My anxiety for your health could hardly survive
+the way in which you leaped that fence! But all this makes it only the
+more mysterious. Have you found the fountain of youth or--or what?"
+
+Callandar threw an affectionate arm over the other man's shoulders.
+
+"I _am_ young, amn't I! Trouble is, I didn't know it." He ruffled his
+hair at the side so that the grey showed plainly. "Terrible thing when
+one loses the realisation of youth! But I've had my lesson. I'll never
+be old again, never!"
+
+In spite of himself the professor's straight mouth curved a little. A
+spark of pride glowed in his cool eyes as he bent them upon the smiling
+face of his friend. Yet his tone was mocking as he said, "Then it is the
+fountain of youth? One is never too old to find that chimera."
+
+"It's not something that I've found, old cynic. It's something that I've
+lost. Look at me hard! Don't you notice something missing? Did you ever
+read the 'Pilgrim's Progress'?"
+
+"The Pilgrim's--"
+
+"Breakfast is ready!" called Ann, teetering on her toes in the doorway.
+
+"The Pil--"
+
+"And Aunt--says--will--you--please--come--at--once--so's--the
+coff--ee--won't--be--cold!" chanted Ann.
+
+"Yes, Ann. We're coming."
+
+"But I want to know--"
+
+"Old man, I'll tell you after breakfast. I want you to see me eat. I
+wish to demonstrate that there is no deception. A miracle has really
+happened. No one could observe me breakfasting and doubt it!"
+
+When they were seated he looked guilelessly into the still disapproving
+face of Mrs. Sykes. "Perhaps you are wondering, as I did, what has
+brought Professor Willits back to Coombe," he said, "but time and space
+mean little to professors, and the fact is that Willits has long wished
+to hear a sermon by the Reverend Mr. Macnair. He is coming with me this
+morning. Perhaps you hadn't better mention it, though. It might disturb
+Mr. Macnair to know that so eminent a critic was listening to him."
+
+The eminent critic frowned grimly and took a fourth cream biscuit
+without noticing it.
+
+"Not a mite!" declared Mrs. Sykes. "The man ain't born that can fluster
+Mr. Macnair. Nor yet the woman, unless it's Esther Coombe--Land sakes,
+Doctor! I forgot to tell you how that cup tips! Ann, get a clean table
+napkin. I hope your nice white pants ain't ruined, Doctor? I really
+ought to put that cup away but it's a good cup if it's held steady and I
+hate to waste good things. Last time it tipped was when the Ladies' Aid
+met here. Mrs. Coombe had it and the whole cup spilled right over her
+dress. I was that mortified! But she didn't seem to care. I can't
+imagine what's the matter with that woman. She's getting dreadful
+careless about her clothes. Next time I met her she wore that same
+dress, splash an' all! 'Tisn't as if she hadn't plenty of new
+things,--more than they can afford, if what folks say is true. You
+haven't met Mrs. Coombe yet, have you, Doctor?"
+
+"She is away from home."
+
+"Well, when you do meet her you'll see what I mean, or like as not you
+won't, being a man. Men never seem to see anything wrong with Mary
+Coombe. But Esther must feel dreadful mortified sometimes when her Ma
+forgets to get hooked up behind. Esther's as neat as a pin. Always was.
+Why, even when she got home last week after that awful time you and she
+had up at Pine Lake, and her having to stay overnight without so much as
+a clean collar, she walked in here as fresh as a daisy--won't you let me
+give you some more coffee, Professor?"
+
+"Thank you, yes. You were saying--"
+
+"Willits, do you think so much coffee is good for you?"
+
+"Land sakes, Doctor, my coffee won't hurt him! It never seems to trouble
+you any. As I was saying, one would almost have thought that what with
+picnicking in the bush all day and trapesing around in a canoe half the
+night and having to stay where she wasn't expected and wouldn't like to
+ask the loan of the flat-irons--"
+
+"Please, Mrs. Sykes, don't let Ann eat another biscuit. I don't want her
+to be ill just when I want a day off to take Willits to church. Willits,
+as your medical adviser, I forbid more coffee. He will really injure
+himself, Mrs. Sykes, if I do not take him away. He isn't used to
+breakfasts like this and his constitution won't stand it."
+
+Mrs. Sykes beamed graciously under this delicate compliment and
+confiscated Ann's latest biscuit with a ruthless hand. "If you gentlemen
+would like to sit in the parlour--" she offered graciously. But
+Callandar with equal graciousness declined. The office would do quite
+well enough. Willits might want to smoke. "And as it-seems that my watch
+has stopped," he added, "perhaps you would be so kind as to tell us
+when it is time to change for church."
+
+The professor settled himself primly upon the hardest chair which the
+office contained and refused a cigar.
+
+"You seem to have acquired a reprehensible habit of fooling, Henry," he
+said. "Your language also is strange. When, for instance, you say
+'change for church,' to what sort of transformation do you refer?"
+
+Callandar chuckled.
+
+"Only to your clothes, old chap. Don't worry. You wouldn't expect me to
+go to church in flannels?"
+
+"I should not expect you to go to church at all."
+
+"Well, the fact is, old man, you are painfully ignorant. I do go to
+church, and the proper church costume for a professional man is a frock
+coat and silk hat. But as you are a traveller, and as you are not
+exactly a professional man, I shall not lose caste by taking you as
+you are."
+
+The imperturbable Willits waived the point. "I understood you to say,
+also, that your watch had stopped. Was that a joke?"
+
+"No such luck!" The doctor took out his watch and shook it. "Mainspring
+gone, I'm afraid!"
+
+"A month ago," said the professor, "if your watch had stopped you would
+have had a fit."
+
+"Really! Was I ever such an ass? Well, I'm not the slave of my watch any
+longer. Time goes softly in Coombe. Aren't you glad I'm not taking
+a fit?"
+
+"I am glad. But I want to understand."
+
+"Then let's return to the 'Pilgrim's Progress.' Ann and I were talking
+about it this morning. Do you remember the man with the pack on his back
+and how when he reached a certain spot the pack, seemingly without
+effort of his own, fell off and was seen no more?"
+
+Willits reflected. The doctor was thoroughly in earnest now. "I seem to
+recollect the incident to which you refer," he said after a pause. "If I
+remember rightly it is an allegory and is used in a definitely religious
+sense. The man with the pack meets a certain spiritual crisis. Do I
+understand that you--er--that you have experienced conversion? I am not
+guilty of speaking lightly of so important a matter, but I hardly know
+how to frame my question."
+
+The doctor tilted back his chair and looked dreamily out of the window.
+"I did not mean you to take my illustration literally. My religious
+beliefs are very much the same as they have always been. To a
+materialist like you they seem, I know, absurdly orthodox; to a church
+member in good standing they might seem fatally lax; but such as they
+are I have not changed them. Still, I was, as you know, a man with a
+burden. You may call the burden consequence or what you will, the name
+doesn't matter. The weight of that youthful, selfish, unpardonable act
+which bound a young girl to me without giving her the protection which
+that bond demanded, was always upon me, crushing out the joy of life.
+The news of her death made no difference, except to render me hopeless
+of ever making up to her for the wrong I had done. Her death did not set
+me free, it bound me closer.
+
+"I seemed like one caught in the tow of some swift tide, always fighting
+to get back, yet eternally being drawn away. The tide still flows out,
+for the tide of human life is the only tide which never returns, but I
+have ceased to struggle. I no longer look back. It is not that God has
+forgiven me (I have never been able to think of God as otherwise than
+forgiving), it is that I have forgiven myself."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+
+"It amounts to this, then," said Willits presently. "You are cured. The
+balance is swinging true again. It has taken a long time, but the cure
+is all the more complete for that. Now, when are you coming back to us?"
+
+Callandar did not answer.
+
+"You are needed. Not a day passes that your absence is not felt. You
+used to have a strong sense of responsibility toward your work. What has
+become of it?"
+
+"I have it still. I am not slighting my work by taking time to build
+myself into better shape for it."
+
+"But you will simply stagnate here!" querulously. "You are becoming
+slack already. You let your watch run down."
+
+The doctor laughed.
+
+"If many of my patients could do the same without worry they would not
+need a doctor. Half of the nervous trouble of the age can be ultimately
+traced to watches which won't run down. Leisure--unhurried leisure--that
+is what we want. We've got to have it!"
+
+"Piffle! I shall hear you talk about inviting your soul next."
+
+"Well, if I do he is in better shape to accept the invitation than he
+used to be."
+
+The professor's gesture was sufficiently expressive.
+
+"Very well. I give up. Remember, I advise against it. I think you are
+making a mistake!--I'll have that cigar now. I suppose one is allowed to
+smoke in the garden?"
+
+"Yes, do, that's a good fellow! I must run up and make myself
+presentable. I suppose you haven't seen Lorna lately?"
+
+"I have seen her very lately. She asked to be remembered."
+
+"Oh, you old prevaricator! Lorna never asked to be remembered in her
+life. What she really said was, 'If you see Harry give him my love!'"
+
+"If she did, you don't deserve it! Oh, boy," with sudden earnestness,
+"why will you make a fool of yourself? She's a woman in a thousand.
+Others see it if you don't. Since you've been away, MacGregor is paying
+her marked attention."
+
+"Good old Gregor!" The doctor's exclamation was one of pure pleasure.
+"And yet you say my absence isn't doing any good? Go along with you!
+Take your cigar and wait for me underneath the Bough. I'll not be long."
+
+He was long, however. The professor's cigar and his cogitations came to
+an end together without the promised reappearance. Even when he returned
+to the office it was empty except for Ann, who in the stiffest of
+starched muslin and whitest of stockings was spread out carefully upon
+the widest chair. Her black hair was parted as if by a razor blade and
+plastered tightly in slablike masses while the tension of the braids was
+such that they stuck out on either side of the small head like decorated
+sign posts. Weariness, disgust and defiance were painted visibly upon
+the elfish face.
+
+"This is the best chair!" said Ann politely, "but if you'll excuse me I
+shan't get up. Every time I sit down it makes a crease in a fresh place.
+By the time church is over I look like I was crumpled all over. It's the
+starch!" she added in sullen explanation.
+
+Willits, who liked children but did not understand them, essayed a mild
+joke.
+
+"Did you put some starch in your hair too?"
+
+Ann flushed scarlet with anger and mortification and made no answer.
+
+"It looked much nicer at breakfast," blundered on the professor
+genially. "If I were you I should unstarch it--" he paused abashed by
+the glare in Ann's black eyes and turned helplessly to Callandar, who
+had just come in, resplendent in faultless church attire.
+
+"Don't listen to him, Ann!" said the doctor. "Button moulders are so
+ignorant. They know absolutely nothing about hair or the necessity for
+special tidiness on Sundays. All the same, I'm afraid we shall have a
+headache if we don't let a reef out somewhere. Sit still a moment, Ann.
+I was always intended for a barber."
+
+To the fresh astonishment of Willits his friend's skilful hands busied
+themselves with the tightly drawn hair which, only too eager for
+freedom, soon fell into some of its usual curves. With a quick, shy
+gesture the child drew the adored hand to her lips and kissed it.
+Callandar turned a deep red. The professor chuckled, and Ann, furious at
+betraying herself before him, fled precipitately, the crackling starch
+of her stiff skirts rattling as she ran.
+
+For a moment Willits enjoyed his friend's embarrassment and then, as the
+probable meaning of the frock coat began to dawn upon him, his
+expression changed to one of apprehension.
+
+"You weren't in earnest about that church nonsense, were you?"
+
+"Certainly. If you need a clean collar take one of mine, and hurry up.
+The first bell has stopped ringing."
+
+"But I'm not going!"
+
+"Not if I ask you nicely?"
+
+"But why? What are you going for?"
+
+"Come and see."
+
+The shrewd eyes of the professor grew coldly thoughtful.
+
+"That is exactly what I shall do," he decided.
+
+From the home of Mrs. Sykes upon Duke Street to the First Presbyterian
+Church upon Oliver's Hill is a brisk walk of fifteen minutes. As Coombe
+lies in a valley, Oliver's Hill is not a hill, really, but a gentle
+eminence. It is a charming, tree-lined street bordered by the homes and
+gardens of the well-to-do. It is, in fact, _the_ street of Coombe, and
+to live upon Oliver's Hill is a social passport seldom mentioned but
+never ignored.
+
+As if social prominence were not enough, it had another claim upon the
+affections and memories of many, for up this hill every Sunday in a long
+and goodly stream poured the first Presbyterians who were not only the
+elect but also the elite of Coombe. To see Knox Church "come out" was
+one of the sights of the town and, decorously hidden behind a muslin
+curtain, a stranger might feast his eyes upon greatness unrebuked. It
+was said at one time that every silk hat in Coombe attended Knox Church,
+but this was vainglory, for it was afterwards proved that several
+repaired to St. Michael's and at least one to the Baptist tabernacle.
+With this explanation you will at once understand why the sidewalk was a
+few feet broader upon the church side of Oliver's Hill, and if this
+circumstance savours to you of ecclesiastical privilege we can only
+conclude that you are not Presbyterian, and request you not to be so
+narrow-minded.
+
+As the doctor and his half-reluctant friend turned at the foot of the
+hill they were immediately absorbed by the stream pressing upwards, for
+the last bell had already begun to ring.
+
+"We're all right," whispered Callandar encouragingly. "It rings for five
+minutes."
+
+The professor opened his lips to say something, but shut them with a
+snap. There was probably method in the doctor's madness but it was
+method which would never be disclosed through much questioning. With an
+expression of intense solemnity he fixed his eyes, gimlet-like, upon the
+middle button of the Sunday blouse of the lady in front of him and
+followed up the hill. To the absurdly low-toned remarks of his companion
+he vouchsafed no reply whatever.
+
+They entered the church to the subdued rustle of Sunday silks and the
+whisper of Sunday voices. At the door some one shook hands with
+Callandar and remarked in a ghostly whisper that it was a fine day. A
+grave young man, in black, led them to a pew half way down the aisle.
+Most of the pews were already full, the latest comers showing slight
+signs of hurry; and as they seated themselves the bell stopped and the
+organ began.
+
+There was a moment's expectant interval and then two doors, one at
+either side of the pulpit, opened simultaneously and the minister
+entered from one side, the choir from the other. Before the minister
+walked a very solemn man with abnormally long upper lip. This was Elder
+John MacTavish, a man of large substance, of great piety and poor
+digestion. It was upon this latter account that the doctor always
+observed him with peculiar interest, for had not Mrs. Sykes declared
+that if he should only be called in once to prescribe for John
+MacTavish's stomach his future in Coombe was secure?
+
+"Doctor Parker is doing him just no good at all," she reported. "So keep
+an eye on him. If he looks especially dour it's a good sign."
+
+"Would you say that he looks especially 'dour'?" whispered Callandar to
+Willits.
+
+"I should. Why?"
+
+"Oh, nothing--only it's a good sign! Hush!"
+
+When the minister has entered the pulpit at Knox Church there is a
+moment during which you may bow your head, or, if you consider this
+popish, you may cover your face with your gloved hand. It is a moment of
+severe quiet. One does not dare even to cough. Hence the doctor's
+warning "hush!"
+
+But this morning the quiet was rudely broken. Somewhere, just outside
+the open windows, sounded a laugh; a young, clear, unrestrained laugh,
+then the call of a sharp whistle, and next moment, through the doors not
+yet closed, hurtled something yellow and long-legged! With a joyous bark
+it rushed along the nearest aisle, across the front of the pulpit, down
+the other aisle and out at the door again.
+
+The congregation was amazed and grieved. Its serenity was shaken, even
+the minister seemed disturbed. Some younger members of the choir
+giggled. It was most unseemly.
+
+"Naughty dog!" said the voice outside the window. "Go home! Don't dare
+to lick my hand!"
+
+One of the choir members grew red in the face and choked. It was
+outrageous! And then, as if nothing at all had happened, the girl who
+had been the cause of the whole unfortunate incident entered and walked
+down the aisle. She appeared to be quite undisturbed; was, in fact,
+smiling. Every eye in the church followed her as, a little out of
+breath, a little flushed, with dark hair slightly disarranged as if from
+an exciting chase, she took her seat, unconscious, or careless, of them
+all. The minister, who had paused with almost reproachful obviousness,
+gave out the opening psalm and the congregation freed itself from
+embarrassment with an accustomed flutter of hymn-books.
+
+Going to church was somewhat interesting after all, thought Professor
+Willits. Then, in common with the rest of the congregation, he detached
+his eyes from the girl's exquisite profile and focused them upon
+the minister.
+
+Friends of the Rev. Angus Macnair asserted that he was a man in a
+thousand. For that matter he was a man in any number of thousands; for
+his was a personality, true to type, yet not likely to be duplicated.
+Born of a Highland Scotch father and a Lowland Scotch mother, he
+developed almost exclusively in his father's vein. Loyal in the extreme,
+narrow to fanaticism, passionate, emotional, yet trained to the cold
+control of a red Indian, he was a man of power, at once the victim and
+the triumph of his creed.
+
+Early in life he had come under a conviction of sin, had received
+assurance of forgiveness and of election and, before he had left the
+Public School, his Call had come. From that time forward he had burnt
+with a fierce fire of godliness which, together with a natural
+incapacity for seeing two sides to anything, had carried him safely
+through the manifold temptations to unbelief and heresy which beset a
+modern college education. Many wondered that a man so gifted should
+remain in Coombe, but the explanation is simple. He suited Coombe; the
+larger churches of the larger cities he did not suit. Lax opinions,
+heretical doctrines, outlooks appallingly wide were creeping in
+everywhere. It is safe to say that in most of the churches of his own
+faith he would have seemed bravely but hopelessly behind the times. But
+in Coombe he had found his place. Coombe was conservative. Coombe
+Presbyterians were still content to do without frills in the matter of
+doctrine. Coombe could still listen to hell fire and, if not unduly
+disturbed, did not at least smile behind its hand.
+
+Something of all this the Button-Moulder, student of men, felt as he
+watched the sombre yet glowing face of the preacher.
+
+The sermon that morning was one of a series dealing with the
+Commandments and the text was, "Thou shalt not bear false witness
+against thy neighbour." The speaker had the scholar's power of
+concentration, the orator's power of delivery. He was both poignant and
+personal. He seemed to do everything save mention names. Some sinners in
+that congregation, thought Willits, had undoubtedly been bearing false
+witness, and were now listening to a few plain words! Cautiously he
+glanced around, almost expecting to see the tale of guilt and sorrow
+legibly imprinted upon some culprit's face. But no one seemed at all
+disturbed, save one old lady who glared back at him an unmistakable
+"Thou art the man!" The congregation sat, serenely, soberly attentive,
+testifying their entire agreement with the speaker by an occasional sigh
+or nod. The more fiery the preacher's denunciations, the more complacent
+his hearers. In astonishment Willits realised that, if appearances go
+for anything, no one in Knox Presbyterian Church had ever borne false
+witness against anybody!
+
+The collecting of the offering was somewhat of an anti-climax, as was
+also the anthem by the choir, the latter consisting of a complicated
+arrangement of the question, "If a man die shall he live again?"
+reiterated singly by all parts in succession, by duets and quartets and
+finally by the whole choir, without so much as a shadow of an answer
+appearing anywhere.
+
+Willits gave a long sigh as they stepped into the summer day again. It
+had not been uninteresting, but he was quite ready for lunch. The
+doctor, on the contrary, seemed unaccountably to linger. He even paused
+to talk to a fat lady in mauve velvet who had mauve cheeks to match.
+
+"So glad to see you in church, Doctor! Young men, you know, are inclined
+to be young men! And these nice days--very tempting, I'm sure! Is your
+friend a stranger?"
+
+Callandar gravely introduced Willits, who became immediately convinced
+that this mauve lady was the most unpleasant person he had ever seen and
+doubtless the very person to whom the minister had spoken in his sermon.
+
+Why had Callandar let him in for this? Why was he waiting around for
+anyway? There he was, shaking hands with some one else--this time it was
+the girl who had laughed.
+
+"May I present my friend, Professor Willits, Miss Coombe?"
+
+The girl extended a graceful hand and for an instant the professor was
+permitted a look into eyes which caused him to set his firm lips
+somewhat grimly.
+
+"And I know, Willits, you will be delighted to meet our pastor, Mr.
+Macnair."
+
+A spark began to glow in the professor's eye, but Callandar's face was
+guileless. The minister shook hands with professional heartiness, but
+his gaze, Willits thought, was wandering. He began to feel interested.
+
+"Very fine day," he remarked imperturbably.
+
+"Lovely, lovely," agreed the minister, still heartily. The mauve lady
+was waiting for the pastoral handshake, but he did not notice her. He
+was watching the dark girl talking to Callandar.
+
+"What is so rare as a day in June?" said Willits, with deliberate
+malice.
+
+"Ah, yes, very much so. Delighted to have met you. You will excuse me,
+I'm sure. Annabel," with an impatient glance toward a stout, awkward
+woman in the background, "if you are not quite ready I think Miss Coombe
+and I will walk on." He moved toward the dark girl as he spoke and
+Willits followed.
+
+"Then I'll have to come some other day to get the roses," they heard
+Callandar say. "But remember I haven't a single flower in the office. So
+it will have to be soon."
+
+"At any time," answered the girl, flushing slightly.
+
+"No flowers?" repeated the minister, a little fussily, "dear me, I will
+speak to my sister. Annabel will be delighted to send you any quantity,
+Doctor. You must really drop in to see our garden, some day. Sunday, of
+course, is a busy day with me. Come, Miss Esther. Good morning, Doctor.
+Good morning, Professor. Glad to see you at our services any time--"
+
+Bowing courteously, the minister moved away, followed perforce by Miss
+Coombe. (An invitation to lunch at the manse is an honour not to be
+trifled with.) Perforce also the doctor stood aside and Willits caught
+the look, half shy, half merry, which the girl threw him from the depths
+of her remarkable eyes. It was really quite interesting, and rather
+funny. Not often had he seen fair ladies carried off from under the nose
+of Henry Callandar. Transferring his glance quickly to the face of his
+friend, he hoped to surprise a look of chagrin upon his abashed
+countenance, but the countenance was not abashed, and the look which he
+did surprise there startled him considerably. Henry Callandar, of all
+men, to be looking after any girl with a look like that!
+
+Well, he had been invited to come and see. And he had seen.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+
+As Esther walked away, demurely acquiescent, by the side of the Rev. Mr.
+Macnair she was conscious of a conflict of emotions. The sight of the
+doctor's disappointed face as he stood hat in hand, awoke regret and
+perhaps a trifle of girlish gratification. She had been sorry herself to
+miss that half hour among the roses but she was still too young and too
+happy to know how few are such hours, how irrevocable such losses. Also,
+it had seemed good to her maidenly pride that Dr. Callandar should
+know--well, that he should see--just exactly what he should know and see
+she did not formulate. But underneath her temporary disappointment she
+felt as light and glad as a bird in springtime.
+
+The minister was speaking, but he had been speaking for several moments
+before Esther's delighted flutter would permit of her listening to him.
+When at last her thoughts came back she noticed, with a happy-guilty
+start, that his tone was one of dignified reproof.
+
+"Naturally we all understand," he was saying, "at least I hope we all
+understand, that you are not primarily to blame. At the worst one can
+only impute carelessness--"
+
+"Oh, but it wasn't carelessness! You don't know Buster. He's the
+_cleverest_ dog! He hid. I had no idea that he was with me until he
+bounded past me at the church door. And though I whistled and tried to
+grab him he was in before I knew it. I'll make him sit up meekly and beg
+your pardon."
+
+A flush of what in a layman might have been anger crimsoned the
+minister's cheek.
+
+"You are well aware," stiffly, "that I am not referring to the incident
+of the dog."
+
+"To what then? I am sorry I wasn't listening but you seemed to be
+scolding and I couldn't think of anything else." Even the abstruse Mr.
+Macnair saw that her surprise was genuine. His tone grew gentler.
+
+"You are very young, Miss Esther. But since I must speak more plainly, I
+was referring to that mad escapade of a week ago. Don't misunderstand
+me, the blame undoubtedly rests upon the man who was thoughtless enough,
+selfish enough, to put you in such a position."
+
+"Whatever do you mean?" Esther was torn between anger and a desire to
+laugh. But seeing the earnestness in his face, anger predominated. "Can
+you possibly be referring to the breakdown of Dr. Callandar's motor?"
+she asked coldly.
+
+"I refer to the whole unfortunate adventure. If your step-mother had
+been at home I feel sure it would not have happened. She would never
+have permitted the excursion to take place."
+
+The girl's dark brows drew together in their own peculiar manner.
+
+"Let us be honest," she suggested. "You know quite well that my
+step-mother would not have bothered about it in the least."
+
+"I feel it my duty," went on the minister, "to tell you that there were
+some peculiar features in connection with the disablement of the motor.
+I understand from the mechanician who accompanied Dr. Callandar to the
+spot for the recovery of the machine that there was really very little
+the matter. A short ten minutes completed the necessary repairs."
+
+"Ten minutes? Oh, how silly he must have felt--the doctor I mean. After
+all the hours he spent and the things he said." She laughed with
+reminiscent amusement. "He threw the monkey wrench at it, too. And he
+thought he knew so much about motors!"
+
+Her companion observed her with sombre eyes. Was it possible that she
+had actually missed the point of his remark?
+
+"Can you understand," he said slowly, "how a man used to driving a motor
+car can have been entirely baffled by so slight an accident? To me it
+seems--odd!"
+
+"So Dr. Callandar thought, only he expressed it more forcibly."
+
+"And you?"
+
+"Well, I suppose I was heartless. But it was the funniest thing I ever
+saw!" Esther's laughter bubbled again.
+
+They were now at the manse gate. He saw that he must hasten.
+
+"My dear Miss Esther, let us be serious. I do not like to
+disturb your mind but I have a duty in this matter. Has it never
+occurred to you that this so-called accident may not have been
+so--so--er--entirely--er--irremediable, so to speak, as it was made
+to appear?"
+
+"Do you mean that he did it on purpose?" The tone was one of blank
+amazement. Esther's hand was upon the gate but forgot to press the
+latch. She was a quick brained girl and the insinuation in the
+minister's words had been patent. Yet that he should be capable of such
+an idea seemed incredible! Had he been looking at her he would have seen
+the clear red surge over her face from neck to brow and then recede, but
+not before it had lighted a danger spark in her eyes.
+
+"You did mean that!" She went on before he could answer. The scorn in
+her voice stung. But the Reverend Angus was not a coward.
+
+"That was my meaning. You are a young and inexperienced girl. You go
+upon an excursion with a man whom none of us know. An accident, a very
+peculiar accident, happens. You are led to believe that the damage is
+serious, but later, when the matter is investigated, it is found to have
+been trifling. What is the natural inference? What have you to say?"
+
+"It has been said before," calmly.
+
+"Well--"
+
+"Thou shalt not bear false witness against thy neighbor."
+
+They faced each other, the man and the girl. And the man's eyes fell.
+
+"God forbid that I should do so," he murmured.
+
+Esther's face softened. Her anger was not proof against humility.
+
+"If you are really disturbed about it," she said slowly, "I can reassure
+you. You say that you do not know Dr. Callandar. But I do know him. The
+whole situation rests upon that. He is a man incapable of the caddish
+villainy you impute. Why he could not repair the car, I cannot say. I
+think," with a smile, "that he does not know quite as much about cars as
+he thinks he does. But he did his best, I know that! When we found his
+efforts useless we took the only course possible and made at once for
+the canoe. We had to steal it, you remember, but the doctor showed no
+faltering in that. He was also prepared to shoot the dog. And you have
+my word for it that he made no attempt to swamp the canoe or to
+otherwise complicate matters. I arrived at Mrs. Burton's by ten minutes
+past nine. She was delighted to see me. Dr. Callandar walked over to the
+station and sent telegrams to Aunt Amy and Mrs. Sykes. He returned to
+Coombe upon the morning train. I remained with Mrs. Burton and came back
+in time for school on the milk train Monday morning. That is the whole
+story of the adventure and, to be frank, I enjoyed it immensely."
+
+The minister shook his head, but he could say no more. His attitude had
+not changed, yet he felt a sense of shame before the straightforward
+honesty of Esther's outlook. She had no sense of the evil of the world.
+That very fact seemed to make the world less evil.
+
+"When will Mrs. Coombe be back?" he asked abruptly.
+
+Immediately the girl's frank look clouded. "I do not know," she said.
+"She hardly ever tells me when she is returning. She may be at home any
+day now. You know how impulsively she acts."
+
+"Yes--just so." The minister's manner was absent. "The fact is I wish
+very much to speak with your mother regarding a certain matter. Not the
+matter we have been discussing, we will say no more of that, but a
+matter of great importance to--er--to me. The importance is such indeed
+that I doubt if I am justified in delaying longer if you have no idea of
+when I may expect to see her."
+
+Had Esther been noticing she must have remarked the unusual agitation of
+his manner, but Esther was not noticing.
+
+"Is it anything you could discuss with me?" she asked innocently.
+"Mother cares less and less for business. Unless it is something quite
+private she will probably turn it over to me in any case."
+
+"But this is not--er--a matter of business. Not exactly. Not a business
+matter at all, in fact. It is a matter which--"
+
+"Oh, there you are!" Miss Annabel's voice was breathless but gratified
+and free from the faintest suspicion of having arrived, as usual, at
+exactly the wrong moment. "Are you showing Esther the new rose, Angus?
+Such a disappointment, Esther, my dear! I had quite made up my mind that
+it was to be red. It came out pink, and such a beautifully strong
+plant--such a waste! I simply can't make myself care for pink roses.
+They are so common. Was I very long? You must both be starved. I know I
+am. Won't you come upstairs, Esther, and put off your hat?"
+
+Esther intimated that she would. Just now, she had no desire for the
+further company of Mr. Macnair. She was conscious even of a faint
+stirring of dislike. Therefore the eagerness with which she followed
+Miss Annabel filled that good lady with hospitable reproach.
+
+"I didn't intend to be so long," she apologised, "but you know what
+choir-leaders are? And Angus won't speak to him. I can't make Angus out
+lately. Tell me," abruptly, as they stood in the cool front room with
+its closed green shutters, "did _you_ notice anything peculiar
+about Angus?"
+
+"No," in surprise, "is he peculiar?"
+
+"Quite. He's getting fussy. He never used to be fussy. The trouble was
+to induce him to be fussy enough. Except over church matters. But this
+morning he was just like an ordinary man. About his collar" (Miss
+Annabel had a fascinating habit of disjointing her sentences anywhere)
+"nothing suited him. And you know, Esther, what care I always take with
+his collars. He said they were too shiny. Of course they're shiny. Why
+not? He said he noticed that men weren't wearing shine on their collars
+now. Fancy that!"
+
+"Not really?" Esther's fresh laugh rang out.
+
+"Well, words to that effect. He asked me if I wanted to make him a
+laughing stock before the congregation. Did you ever? And he _banged
+the door_!"
+
+"Does he not bang doors usually?"
+
+"Never. And he banged it hard. It shook the house."
+
+"But people have to bang doors, hard, sometimes, even ministers. I
+wouldn't worry if I were you. It probably did him the world of good. As
+for the collars--he may have been noticing Dr. Callandar's. Mrs. Sykes
+says the doctor sends all his laundry to the city."
+
+"You don't say? And is it different from ours?"
+
+"I--yes, I think it does look different."
+
+"How did you happen to notice it? Oh, Esther, you aren't really carrying
+on with that strange young man, are you?"
+
+The girl's cheek flamed. The question, she knew, was void of offence.
+"Carrying on" meant nothing, but the homely phrase seemed suddenly very
+displeasing--horribly vulgar! Her very ears burned. What if, some time,
+he should hear a like phrase used to describe their wonderful
+friendship? The thought was acute discomfort. Oh, how mean and small and
+misunderstanding people were!
+
+She took off her hat and smoothed her hair without answering. But Miss
+Annabel was so used to having her anxious queries unanswered that she
+did not notice the lack.
+
+"I know you haven't, of course," she went on. "But Coombe is such a
+place for gossip. Ever since you and he had that smash-up with the
+automobile, people have kind of got it into their heads that you're
+keeping company. But I said to Mrs. Miller, 'I know Esther Coombe better
+than you do and it isn't at all likely that a girl who can pick and
+choose will go off with a stranger--even if he is a doctor. And,' I
+said, 'how do we know he is a doctor anyway?' Goodness knows he came
+into the place like a tramp. You've heard, haven't you, Esther, how he
+came into the Imperial with nothing but a knapsack and riding in
+Mournful Mark's democrat?"
+
+This time she did pause for an answer and Esther said "Yes," shortly.
+
+"Then that settles it. I knew you had some sense. Just like I said to
+Mrs. Miller. Next time I see her I'll tell her what you say. 'Tisn't as
+if we knew anything about the man. No wonder you feel vexed about it."
+
+"I hope you will not mention the subject at all."
+
+"Of course not. Except to tell them how silly they are. You're sure you
+didn't notice anything queer about Angus when you were walking home
+from church?"
+
+"Nothing at all." Yet, as she said it, it occurred to her that she had
+noticed something unusual in the minister's manner--an agitation, a lack
+of poise! "Perhaps he is disturbed about church matters," she suggested,
+thinking of the interrupted conversation about the important matter
+which was not business. "Why don't you ask him?"
+
+Miss Annabel shook her head. "Oh, I never ask him anything! But,"
+cheerfully, "I almost always manage to find out. I'm rather good at
+finding out things. But this isn't a church matter. I know all the
+symptoms of that. This is different. It's--it's more human!"
+
+"Liver?" suggested Esther.
+
+"No. I know the symptoms of liver too, Esther! What if it should be
+_Love_!"
+
+The idea was so daring that Miss Macnair justly spoke it in italics. But
+the attitude of her listener was disappointing. Esther looked as if it
+might be quite a natural thing for the minister of Knox Church to
+fall in love.
+
+"Love!" she said the word caressingly. "Perhaps it is. They say love is
+a disturbing thing. But--does it usually make a man bang doors?"
+
+"It often turns a sensible man into a fool." Miss Annabel's tone held
+bitterness. "But what I can't discover is this! If Angus is in love,
+whom is he in love with?" The question was delivered with such force
+that Esther jumped.
+
+"I'm sure I don't know!"
+
+"Nor do I. And that is what I must find out. I have my suspicions. My
+dear, don't let me startle you, but have you ever thought that it might
+possibly be--your mother?"
+
+"Gracious! So it might! I never thought of it."
+
+"I have not been blind," went on Miss Annabel complacently. "I have
+noticed how often he calls at the Elms and how long he stays. Also how
+very considerate he is of Mrs. Coombe, how patient with Jane, how
+indulgent with you--"
+
+"Indulgent with me!" indignantly. "Why should he be 'indulgent' with
+me?"
+
+"Why, indeed," asked Miss Macnair pointedly, "unless on account of your
+mother?"
+
+Esther subdued a desire to laugh. Many little things, half-observed,
+seemed to fit in with Miss Annabel's theory. Yet, somehow, instinct told
+her that the theory was wrong.
+
+"I don't believe it," she declared finally. "At first I thought it
+possible but now I seem to know that we're on the wrong track. Mr.
+Macnair is not in love with mother, and as for mother--Oh, the thing is
+absurd! Aren't you awfully hungry, Miss Annabel?"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+
+It was a curious luncheon party. The host was abstracted, nervous, far
+from being his usual bland self. The guest was subdued, silent, uneasy
+for no reason at all. The hostess, usually an ever-springing well of
+comment and question, had decided upon quiet dignity as the most fitting
+expression of sensibilities ignored by the banging of doors.
+
+"I think, Angus," she ventured once, "that you ought to remonstrate with
+Mr. McCandless in regard to 'If a man die.' An Easter Anthem is an
+Easter Anthem, but after five renderings it is hardly fair to expect the
+congregation to behave as if they had never heard it before."
+
+"Quite so," said the minister absently.
+
+"Then may I tell him myself that it is your special request--"
+
+"Certainly not. I wish you would not interfere, Annabel. The choir does
+very well. I think I have told you before that your continual desire for
+something novel in music has not my sympathy. I am not sure that I
+approve of this growing craze for anthems. They seem to me, sometimes,
+wholly unconnected with worship. We do not ask for new hymns every
+Sunday, nor do we ever become weary of the psalms. Indeed, familiarity
+seems often the measure of our affection."
+
+"Net with anthems," firmly. "Anthems are different. Aren't anthems
+different, Esther?"
+
+"I have known familiarity to breed something besides affection in the
+case of anthems," agreed Esther.
+
+In the ordinary course of things this remark would have aroused her host
+into delivering a neat and timely discourse upon the proper relation of
+music to the service of the Protestant Church and the tendency of the
+present age to unduly exalt the former at the expense of the latter. But
+to-day he merely upset the salt and looked things at the innocent
+salt-cellar which his conscience, or his cloth, did not allow him
+to utter.
+
+Miss Annabel raised her eyebrows at Esther in a significant way,
+telegraphing, "What did I tell you?" And Esther signaled back, "You were
+right. He is certainly not himself."
+
+Several other topics were introduced with no better result and every one
+felt relieved when lunch was over.
+
+"I think," said the Reverend Angus, as they arose, "that it is probably
+pleasanter in the garden."
+
+Esther glanced at Miss Annabel. She wanted very much to go home. Yet in
+Coombe it was distinctly bad mannered to leave hurriedly, after a meal.
+She thought of pleading a headache, but the excuse seemed too
+transparent and she could think of nothing better. Miss Annabel was
+unresponsive. Her host was already moving toward the door. Now he held
+it open for her. There was nothing to do but go. If she were clever she
+could keep the conversation in Miss Annabel's hands.
+
+But Miss Annabel's brother had other ideas. "I think," he suggested with
+the soft authority which in that house was law, "that as you are taking
+Mrs. Miller's class, Annabel, it might be well for you to look over the
+Sabbath School lesson. Our guest will excuse you, I know."
+
+"Why, I've hardly seen her at all, Angus."
+
+"There will be time later. I am sure Miss Esther understands."
+
+Esther understood very well and her heart sank. She was probably in for
+another scolding. However, as politeness required, she murmured that on
+no account would she wish to interfere with the proper religious
+instruction of Mrs. Miller's class. Miss Annabel looked rebellious, but
+as usual found discretion the better part and contented herself with
+another facial telegram to Esther: "Find out what is the matter with
+him." And Esther smiled and nodded: "I'll try."
+
+"Perhaps you would like to see the rose bush to which my sister
+referred," began the minister nervously as they stepped out upon the
+lawn. "It is a very fine rose, but pink, I regret to say, pink. It is
+unfortunate that Annabel should dislike pink so much. I think myself
+that a pink rose is very pretty. Something a little different from the
+red and white varieties."
+
+Esther murmured, "Naturally," and opened her strange eyes widely so
+that he could see the mischief which was like a blue flash in the depths
+of them. He coloured faintly.
+
+"I fear I am talking nonsense! The fact is that I am thinking of
+something else. Something so important that it occupies my mind
+completely. That is why, Esther, I wished to speak with you alone."
+
+The girl was thoroughly interested now. She was flattered also. Miss
+Annabel had been right. Something was troubling the minister. And she,
+Esther, was to be his confidant. To her untroubled, girlish conceit
+(girls are very wise!) it seemed natural enough. She had no doubt of
+her ability to help him. Therefore her face and her answering "Yes?"
+were warmly encouraging.
+
+It is a general belief that a woman always knows, instinctively, when a
+man is going to propose to her. She cannot be taken unawares; her
+flutter, her surprise, her hesitancy are assumed as being artistically
+suitable, but her unpreparedness is never bona fide. If this be the true
+psychology of the matter then Esther's case was the exception which
+proves the rule. No warning came to her, no intuition. She was still
+looking at the minister with that warm expression of impersonal
+interest, when, without further preliminaries, he began his halting
+avowal of love.
+
+Had the poor pink rose-bush suddenly flamed into crimson she could
+scarcely have been more surprised. She caught her breath with the shock
+of it! But shocks are quickly over. One adjusts one's self with
+incredible swiftness. A moment--and it seemed to Esther that she ought
+to have been expecting this. That she ought to have known it all along.
+Thousands of trifles mocked at her for her blindness, thousands of
+unheeded voices shrieked the truth into her opened ears. She felt
+miserably guilty. Not yet had she arrived at the stage when she could
+justify her blindness and deafness to herself. Later, she would
+understand how custom, the life-long habit of regarding the minister as
+a man apart, had helped to dull her perception. Later, common sense
+would prove her innocent of any wilful blunder. But just now, in her
+first bewilderment, it seemed that nothing could ever excuse that lack
+of understanding which had made this declaration possible!
+
+"I love you, Esther! I have loved you for two years." (It was like the
+Reverend Angus to refer to the exact period.) "You must have seen it.
+This can be no surprise to you. You may blame me in your heart for not
+speaking sooner. But you were young. There seemed time enough. Then,
+lately, when I saw that you were no longer a child, I decided to speak
+as soon as your mother should have returned. But to-day I felt that I
+could not wait longer. I must know at once--now! I must hear you say
+that you love me. That you will be my wife. You will--Esther?"
+
+His impassioned tones lingered on the name with ecstasy.
+
+The startled girl forced herself to look at him, a look swift as a
+swallow's dart, but in it she saw everything--the light on his face--the
+love in his eyes! And something else she saw, something of which she did
+not know the name but from which, not loving him, she shrank with an
+instinctive shiver of revolt. He seemed a different man. The minister,
+the teacher, was gone, and in his place stood the lover, the claimer.
+Yes--that was it. He claimed her, his glance, his voice--somewhere in
+the girl's heart a red spark of anger began to glow.
+
+She tried to speak, but he silenced her by a gesture. "No, do not answer
+yet. Although you must have known what I have felt for you, you are
+startled by my suddenness, I can see that. I have told you that it was
+not my intention to speak so soon. Circumstances have hurried me. I felt
+that I must have this settled. That--that episode of last week alone
+would have determined me. Things like that must not recur. I must have
+the right to advise, to--to protect you. You are so young. You do not
+know the world, its wickedness, its incredible vileness." His face was
+white with intense inward passion. "With me you will be safe. My God!
+to think of you at the mercy of that man--of any man! It stirs a madness
+of hate in me. Hate is a sin, I know, but God will understand--it is
+born of love, of my love for you."
+
+Again the girl tried to force some words from her trembling lips. And
+again he stopped her.
+
+"Do not speak yet. I apologise for my violence. Forgive it. We need not
+refer to this aspect of the matter again. Let us dwell only upon the
+sweeter idea of our love--for you do love me? You will love me--Esther?"
+
+But the time for speech had gone. To her own intense surprise and to the
+minister's consternation, Esther burst into tears.
+
+She was frightened, angry, stung with pity and a kind of horror. She
+felt herself honoured and insulted at the same time; and with this
+strange medley of emotions was a consciousness of youth and inexperience
+very different from the calm, untried confidence of a few
+minutes before.
+
+"Forgive me, forgive me!" pleaded the conscience stricken suitor. "I
+have been too sudden! I should have prepared you. I should have allowed
+you to see more plainly." With a lover's first, fond air of possession
+he attempted to take her hand.
+
+"Don't!" The word was sharp as a pistol shot. Esther's tears were
+suddenly stayed. Furtively she slipped the hand he had touched behind
+her. With the other she felt for her handkerchief and frankly wiped
+her eyes.
+
+"You startled me," she explained presently. "And I am so sorry, so very
+sorry! I never dreamed that you thought of me at all--in that way, any
+more than I have thought of you. You honour me very much. But it is
+impossible. Quite, quite impossible."
+
+"You mean my position here, as minister? Believe me, I have thought of
+all that. There may be difficulties but we will conquer them together.
+Nothing is impossible if you love me, dear."
+
+"Oh!" She turned wide blue eyes upon him. "That is just it. I do not
+love you."
+
+The blow fell swift, unerring, dealt by the mercilessly honest hand of
+youth. Esther's eyes were quite dry now. Her nervousness was passing.
+Regret and pity were merged in one overpowering, instinctive desire: the
+desire to show him beyond all manner of doubt that she repudiated that
+possessive touch upon her hand. "I could not ever possibly marry you,"
+she said, as calmly as if she had been accustomed to dismissing suitors
+all her life.
+
+They were still standing by the rose-bush whose desperate fate it was to
+produce pink roses. With incredulous dismay, the minister saw her turn
+from him and take a step toward the house.
+
+She had refused him! She was leaving him! At any moment Annabel might
+finish her Sunday School lesson and come out upon the lawn--all his
+self-possession vanished like a puff of smoke.
+
+"Esther!" he cried, "Esther! wait. Give me a moment."
+
+She paused, but did not turn.
+
+"I think there is nothing more to say--I am very sorry."
+
+Sorry! She was sorry. This young girl upon whom he had set his desire,
+of whom he had felt so sure, to whom his love should have come as a
+crown, was sorry. King Cophetua, flouted by the beggar maid, could not
+have been more astonished, more deeply humiliated!
+
+But the greater wound was not to his pride. At any cost to his dignity
+and self-respect he could not let her go like this. His ministerial
+manner fell away, his readiness deserted him. In a moment he became all
+lover, pleading, entreating, with the one great abandon of his life,
+with the stammering eloquence of unspeakable desire!
+
+Slowly the girl turned to him. He saw her pure profile, then the full
+charm of her changing face. The blue eyes, widely open, were darker,
+lovelier than ever--Surely there was softening in their depths....
+
+"Es--ther, Es--ther!" Miss Annabel's voice broke upon the tense moment
+with cheerful insistence, and Miss Annabel herself appeared at the turn
+of the walk, waving a slip of paper. She saw them at once.
+
+"You're wanted at home, Esther. Your mother's come back. To-day! Think
+of that! On the noon train. In face of the whole town. And all she said
+when Elder MacTavish met her coming up from the station was that she had
+forgotten it was Sunday. Fancy!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+
+Perhaps never, in all her life of inopportune arrivals, had Miss Annabel
+been so truly welcome--or so bitterly resented! Esther turned to her
+with a heart-sob of relief, the minister walked away without a word.
+
+"Dear me! What's the matter?" said the good lady. "You seem all excited.
+Perhaps I shouldn't have shouted out the news so abruptly. But it never
+occurred to me that you might be startled. 'Tisn't as if your mother had
+been away a year. Jane's waiting for you down by the gate. Such a
+peculiar child! Nothing I could say will induce her to come in. Don't
+you find Jane is a peculiar child, Esther?"
+
+"Only a little shy," said Esther, quickening her steps.
+
+"Shy! Mercy, I shouldn't call her shy. That child has the
+self-possession of a Chinee! I hope you won't mind me saying it, but a
+little shyness is exactly what Jane needs."
+
+Esther, whose shaken nerves threatened hysterical laughter, made no
+reply to this, but hurried toward the small figure by the garden gate.
+
+"Oh, Jane!" she called, somewhat shakily.
+
+At her voice, the Shy One stopped kicking holes in the turf with the
+toes of her new boots and executing a bearlike rush, threw herself into
+her sister's arms.
+
+"I'm home, Esther! So's mother! And she says I don't have to go to
+Sunday School. That's why I didn't want to come in. Let's hurry before
+the minister comes."
+
+"Listen to that!" said Miss Annabel in indignation. "Any one would
+think my brother was an ogre. Angus! Why, he's gone! I thought he was
+following us."
+
+"I think Mr. Macnair went into the house."
+
+"Did he? What did I tell you? Perhaps my news surprised him as well as
+you. I thought he looked as pale as a plate. What do you think?"
+
+"I think it is none of our business."
+
+Miss Annabel gave her a shrewd look. "Perhaps not your business. You
+don't have to live with him. But I do. Well, good-bye, my dear. Tell
+your mother," significantly, "that I'll be over to see her soon."
+
+Both girls were relieved that the minister did not leave his study to
+say good-bye. They breathed more freely and their steps slackened as
+soon as the corner which hid the manse had been safely passed.
+
+"I've got new boots," began Jane. "See them? And Fred's new dog has got
+puppies! He calls her Pickles. She got the puppies this morning. Oh!
+they're darlings! But Fred is horrid. He says he is going to give me one
+for my own, to make up for Timothy. Just as if anything ever could! I
+never knew any one so heartless as Fred--except Job."
+
+"Job who?" It was a relief to Esther to let the childish chatter run on.
+
+"Why, _Job_. Job was just like Fred. When all his wives died and his
+little children and his cows, he felt bad, but when God gave him more
+wives and more children and lots of cows he was pleased as Punch. I
+always thought that so strange of God," in a reflective tone, "but I
+expect he knew what kind of man Job was and that he didn't have any real
+feelings. Do you think I ought to take the puppy, Esther? I shouldn't
+like to be like Job."
+
+"I think there is no danger, dear. But how is mother? Better?"
+
+"Was she sick?" in surprise.
+
+"Her headaches, you know."
+
+"Oh, yes. I don't know whether they are better or not," carelessly. "I
+didn't see much of mother while we were away. I played all day with Mrs.
+Bremner's little girl. Except when we went shopping. I think she must be
+better, for she did such lots of shopping."
+
+Esther smiled. "Not very much, I think, Janie. Shopping takes money."
+
+"But she did! I have lots and lots of new clothes. Only,"
+discontentedly, "most of them don't fit. Mother could never be bothered
+trying them on. She's got some lovely things, too. Dresses and hats and
+piles of new shoes and heaps of silk stockings--"
+
+"Jane, why do you say 'lots' and 'piles' and 'heaps' when you know you
+are exaggerating?"
+
+But there was a note of anxiety in the reproof nevertheless.
+
+"I'm not exaggerating, Esther! She did. Even Miss Bremner asked her what
+she was going to do with them all."
+
+The elder girl's fingers tightened upon the small hand she held. Her red
+lips set themselves in a firm line. In face of a danger which she could
+see and measure Esther had courage enough. And she had faced this
+particular danger before.
+
+"Mother will tell me all about it, no doubt," she said calmly. "Did she
+get me something pretty, too?"
+
+"Yes. It's a surprise."
+
+"And when she got all the pretty things I suppose she told the clerks to
+charge them?"
+
+"Oh, no. She paid for them out of her purse."
+
+Esther was conscious of a swift reaction. The things were paid for. Of
+course Jane had exaggerated. Children have no sense of value. Some
+dainty things, Mrs. Coombe was sure to buy; but, as Esther well knew,
+her slender stock of money would hardly have run to "piles" and "heaps."
+And of course she had been unjust in fearing that Mary had gone into
+debt. They had one experience of that kind, an experience which had
+ended in a solemn promise that it would never happen again. Mary
+understood the position as well as she did.
+
+As the girl's thought trailed naturally into the problem paths of every
+day, her weeks of freedom, her new interests, the strange experience in
+the manse garden seemed already remote. With the little frown of
+accustomed perplexity slipping in between her straight, black brows, her
+deeper agitation quieted. The unusual has no antidote so effective as
+the commonplace.
+
+They found Mrs. Coombe waiting for them on the veranda. Lying back in
+the shade, in her white dress she looked very much at her ease. Yet a
+quick observer might have noticed a certain anxiety in the glance she
+tried to render merely welcoming. She was thinner than she had been;
+tired lines dragged at the corners of the pouting mouth and dark circles
+showed plainly through their dusting of pearl powder. Changes which
+creep in unnoticed when one sees a person every day are startlingly
+apparent when absence has forced a clearer focus. Esther had known that
+her step-mother had changed, was changing, but as she bent over her now,
+the extent of the change shocked her. With a tightening at her heart
+she wondered what her father would say if he could see the difference
+wrought by one short year. Pearl powder, lavishly used, is not becoming,
+especially when it sifts into multitudes of fine lines; nor can powder
+or anything else brighten a dull, yellowing skin which in health would
+still be delicately clear and firm.
+
+But the dulled eyes and the faded face were only the symptoms of the
+real change in Mary Coombe. The thing itself lay deeper. Striving to
+express a subtlety which would not lend itself to words, Esther had more
+than once told herself that her mother was "not the same woman." Yet it
+was only to-day, as she stooped to kiss her, that the startling, literal
+truth of the phrase struck home. The outside changes were nothing--it
+was the woman herself who had changed.
+
+"Well, Esther!" The sweet high voice with its impatient note was the
+same as ever. "Here we are home again. Fancy me forgetting it was
+Sunday! Wasn't it funny? We met old MacTavish coming up from the station
+(not a single cab down to meet the train, of course!) and he looked so
+shocked. Really, this place grows more insufferable every day. It seems
+to agree with you, though, you're looking awfully well. Amy looks well,
+too. The new doctor must be something of a wonder."
+
+"He is considered very clever. Aunt Amy is certainly better. Now that
+you are home you must let him see what he can do for you."
+
+Mrs. Coombe's pouting lips lengthened into a hard line.
+
+"I won't see a doctor. And that's flat."
+
+"Are you feeling better, then?"
+
+As was always the case, her mother's perversity dissipated Esther's
+sympathy and left her tone cold. It was all the colder probably because
+just at that moment she had noticed that the simple white frock Mrs.
+Coombe was wearing was not simple at all. The delicate embroidery on it
+was all hand work. And French embroidery is no inexpensive trifle. It
+was probably a new "best" gown; but if so, why had it been worn on the
+train, why was it soiled in places and carelessly put on? The skirt was
+not even, the collar, having lost a support, sagged at one side and just
+below the girdle belt there was a small, jagged rent. Esther noticed
+these details with vexation and discomfort, for it was part of the
+change in Mary Coombe that from being one of the most carefully gowned
+women in town she had become one of the most slovenly. All her natty,
+pretty, American "style" which the plainer Canadians had sometimes
+envied was gone. But this--this was worse than usual! The girl's quick
+eyes travelled downward, noting the increased signs of deterioration
+with something like distress.
+
+"Why, mother," she exclaimed involuntarily, "there is a hole in your
+stocking!"
+
+"Is there?" Mary Coombe thrust out a small and elegant foot clad in
+thinnest silk and shod with pretty slippers not very clean and turning
+over at the heel.
+
+"Dear me!" she said. "So there is. I need new slippers too. I quite
+forgot to get any."
+
+"Oh, mother!" Jane's cry was instant. "You got heaps. Tan ones and brown
+ones and white ones and black ones with silver buckles--"
+
+"Jane!" interrupted Esther, laughing. "Give your imagination a rest."
+
+"But you did, didn't you, mother?"
+
+"Did I? Why, yes--I did buy a few shoes. I had forgotten. The Customs
+man didn't find them either. Run and fetch me a clean white pair, Jane,
+and bring down the surprise we got for Esther--see how disapproving she
+looks. I declare, Esther, it would be just like you to make things
+disagreeable the moment I get home. I didn't charge a cent, if that's
+what you're afraid of."
+
+"I knew you wouldn't do that," gravely. "And of course I'm glad you got
+the things. But I can't see how you managed."
+
+"Oh, sales," vaguely. "Things are so cheap in Detroit and Jessica
+Bremner is a born shopper. She gets wonderful bargains. Anyway, I got
+them, and I'm not a cent in debt."
+
+"What's debt?" asked Jane.
+
+"Buying what you can't pay for, Janie."
+
+"Oh, mother paid for everything. I saw her. It's Mrs. Bremner that's in
+debt, isn't she, mother?"
+
+"Don't be silly, Jane, of course not. Jessica is far better off than we
+are."
+
+"But she only gave you half the money for the ring. I heard her say--"
+
+"Jane, get those slippers at once."
+
+"I'm going. But Mrs. Bremner said--"
+
+Mrs. Coombe's hand came down with stinging force upon the child's ear.
+
+"Will you obey me--or will you not?"
+
+Jane retired wailing and her mother sank back into her veranda chair,
+red spots burning through the powder on her cheeks.
+
+Esther sat very still for a moment, and then, without looking at the
+other, she asked in a low voice:
+
+"What did she mean?"
+
+"How should I know?" fretfully.
+
+"What ring did Mrs. Bremner give you money for? Did--you have to sell
+one of your rings?"
+
+"Yes, I did."
+
+"Which one?"
+
+"Oh, don't bother me, Esther."
+
+"But I want to know which one."
+
+"It was the big red one!" called Jane from the hallway, where she had
+waited, safely out of reach.
+
+Mary Coombe sprang up, fury blazing in her eyes, but Jane had fled, and
+Esther, cool and capable, was blocking the doorway.
+
+"Sit down, mother. I've got to know about this. What ring does she
+mean?"
+
+For an instant the older woman hesitated, then with a little shrug she
+turned back to the chair. The fury had died away as quickly as it
+had arisen.
+
+"I knew you would be disagreeable," she said. "And you were bound to
+hear about the ring some time. Jane is the most ungrateful child, and a
+little tell-tale; the makings of a regular little cat! I'm sure I spent
+her full share on her, and I've brought you something nice, too. Not
+that I expect to be thanked for it. Of course I had to have some money.
+I hadn't a rag to wear, not a rag. And I got everything ready made. It's
+cheaper. Anyway, I can't stand dressmakers any more. They paw one so. I
+can't bear to be touched, my wretched nerves! And I remembered the fuss
+you made about the bills last time. You know you did make a fuss,
+Esther, as if all your dear father left belonged to you and not to me--"
+
+"But what did you _do_?"
+
+"I'm telling you, amn't I? I sold the ring, of course."
+
+"Which ring?"
+
+"The ruby ring. It's the only one that is worth anything!"
+
+"You sold Aunt Amy's ring?"
+
+"If you wish to put it that way, yes. I consider it is as much my ring
+as hers. She is my aunt and it is understood that all her things will
+come to me. She has lived here ever since I was married and I think it's
+a funny thing if she can't help me out occasionally. I simply had to
+have money and the ruby was the only thing worth selling. Good Heavens!
+Don't look so crazy. One would think I had stolen it!"
+
+"You have."
+
+Again Mrs. Coombe arose; this time without flurry. The little excitement
+had done her good. The dull eyes were actually sparkling, the sallow
+cheeks were flushed. She looked just as she used to look in one of her
+little rages before the great change came.
+
+"That's enough, Esther. I'll take no more from you. I did what seemed to
+me right. If Amy were in her right mind I should not have had to take
+the ring, she would have offered it. Under the circumstances I did the
+only sensible thing. Amy will never discover the loss. I am getting a
+very good price for it from Jessica Bremner. It is a valuable jewel. She
+snatched at the chance of getting it."
+
+Behind its whiteness Esther's face seemed to glow with pale flame. "Is
+it possible that you have forgotten the history of that ring?" she
+asked. "That it was poor Auntie's engagement ring and that, although she
+can't remember anything about it, she knows it means something more than
+life to her. And that she always says that she cannot die without the
+ruby on her finger?"
+
+Mrs. Coombe looked uncomfortable, but kept her poise.
+
+"It's all rubbish. She'll forget all about it. Dying people don't think
+of ruby rings. And anyway, she will probably outlive all of us. If
+not--we can easily divert her attention."
+
+The girl looked at her step-mother in horror, half believing that this
+must be some cruel joke. The callousness of the words seemed
+unbelievable. But the reality of them could no longer be doubted and the
+pale glow died out of her face, leaving it white and hard.
+
+"I do not understand you," she said slowly. "Somehow you do not seem
+quite--human. But be sure of this, Aunt Amy shall have back her lover's
+ring. Jane says it has not all been paid for. How much did you receive?"
+
+"I shall not tell you. And I warn you, Esther, not to waste your money.
+If you buy it back, I shall sell it again."
+
+They were standing now facing each other. Esther took a step forward and
+looked down steadily into her step-mother's face. Her own curious eyes
+were wide open, they looked like blue stars, bright, cold and
+powerful as flame.
+
+"No! You shall not."
+
+For a space Mary Coombe met that sword-like look, then her weaker will
+gave way. Her eyes shifted and fell. Her hands began to pluck nervously
+at the embroidery of her dress. She laughed, a little, affected laugh
+with no mirth in it, turned and entered the house.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX
+
+
+We have stated elsewhere that Coombe was conservative, but by this we do
+not mean to imply that it was benighted. Far from it! True, it talked a
+great deal before it ventured upon anything strange or new, referred
+constantly to the tax rate and ran no risks, but at the time of which we
+write it had decided to take a plebescite upon the matter of Local
+Option and, a little later, the council wished to go so far as to
+present Andrew MacCandless, who had served them five times as mayor,
+with an address and a purse of fifty dollars.
+
+The Presbyterian church, too, although still clinging to solid doctrine,
+was far removed from the tuning-fork stage. Through throes of terrible
+convulsion it had come to possess an organ, a paid soloist, and a
+Ladies' Aid, that insidious first thing in women's clubs.
+
+The first meeting of the Knox Church Ladies' Aid, after the return of
+Mrs. Coombe and Jane, was held for the purpose of putting together a
+quilt, not the old-fashioned kind, of course, but something quite
+new--an autograph quilt, very chaste.
+
+It was a large meeting and, providentially, Mrs. Coombe was late. I say
+providentially because, had she been early, it is difficult to imagine
+how her fellow members would have eased their minds of the load of
+comment justified by her indiscreet home-coming, and several other
+things equally painful but interesting. The Ladies' Aid had its printed
+constitution but it also had its unwritten laws and one of these laws
+was that strictest courtesy must always be observed. No member, whatever
+her failings, was ever discussed in meeting--when she was present.
+
+"What I cannot excuse," said Mrs. Bartley Simson, "is the tone of levity
+in which she answered Mr. MacTavish when he met her on the way from the
+station. It is possible that she had some good reason for coming on that
+particular train. I am not one of those who hold that nothing can ever
+justify Sunday travel. Exceptional cases must be allowed for. But the
+frivolity of her excuse nothing can justify."
+
+"Besides," said Miss Atkins, the secretary, "it was a--it sounded
+like--what I mean to say is that she could not possibly, _no one_ could
+possibly, have forgotten what day of the week it was."
+
+A subdued chorus of "Certainly not" and "Absurd" showed the trend of
+public opinion upon this point.
+
+"I once forgot that Wednesday was Thursday," said the youngest Miss
+Sinclair, who always stood for peace at any price.
+
+"Don't be silly, Jessie!" The elder Miss Sinclair, who believed in war
+with honour, jogged her sister's elbow none too gently. "That's a
+different thing altogether. For my own part," raising her voice, "I
+think that as a society we cannot be too careful how we minimise the
+fact itself. To us, as a society, it is the fact itself that matters,
+and not what Mrs. Coombe said about it. That, to a certain extent, may
+be her own affair. But I hold, and I say it without fear of successful
+contradiction, that no member of a community can disregard the Sabbath
+in a public way without affecting the community at large. That is why I
+feel justified in criticising Mrs. Coombe's behaviour. And I hope," here
+she raised a piercing eye and let it range triumphantly over the circle,
+"I sincerely hope that the minister has been told of this occurrence!"
+
+The meeting rustled with approbation. This, it felt, was something like
+a proper spirit. There was no compromise here. A thrill of conscious
+virtue, raised to the _n_th power, shot through the circle.
+
+"You think that Mr. Macnair ought to take cognizance of it officially?"
+asked Miss Atkins. (Being the secretary she used many beautiful words.)
+
+"I do."
+
+"But he and Mrs. Coombe are such friends!" objected the younger Miss
+Sinclair, who was a kindly creature.
+
+An electric silence fell upon the quilters. Every one looked toward the
+president.
+
+"I cannot allow such insinuations to be made at this meeting," said the
+President firmly.
+
+"But--but I did not insinuate anything!" stammered poor Miss Jessie who,
+severely jogged by her sister and transfixed by the President's eye, had
+turned the colour of the crimson square before her.
+
+"We all know," went on the President more mildly, "that Mr. Macnair
+calls fairly often at the Elms. We may even have heard rumours to the
+effect that he intends--I hardly know how to phrase it, but as our
+minister is unmarried and Mrs. Coombe is a widow you will understand
+what I mean. But, ladies, I may state on no less an authority than Miss
+Annabel that Mr. Macnair has no such intentions. There is absolutely
+nothing in it. His calls no doubt may be accounted for by the presence
+of--er--affliction in the house."
+
+"Do you mean Aunt Amy?" A younger woman with a clever and rather pretty
+face looked up. "Why, can't you see that there is a much simpler
+explanation than that?"
+
+It was certainly unfortunate that Mrs. Coombe should have chosen this
+moment to arrive. But the Ladies' Aid were used to interrupted
+statements. It was felt to be very convenient that one of the windows
+looked out directly upon the steps so that the meeting was never quite
+taken by surprise. A sudden pause there might be, but late arrivals had
+learned to expect that. It was the penalty for being late.
+
+"Dear Mrs. Coombe, so glad you have come!" said the hostess pleasantly.
+"No, you are not very late. We are only just beginning."
+
+Every one nodded and smiled. Chairs were moved and sewing shifted to
+provide space for the newcomer. A few left their work in order to shake
+hands and there was a general readjustment of everything, including
+topics of conversation. In the space of a few seconds it was noticed
+that Mrs. Coombe wore a new hat, a new gown, new slippers and silk
+stockings and that in spite of all these advantages they had never seen
+her look worse.
+
+"Dear Mrs. Coombe, I think your belt-pin has become--allow me!" Miss
+Milligan, dressmaker in private life, with a discreet swiftness,
+twitched the blouse and skirt into place and deftly fastened it. At the
+same time she closed a gap in the fastening of the blouse itself.
+
+Mary Coombe laughed. "Dear me! Am I undone? I must have forgotten to
+ask Amy to fix me. These blouses that fasten in the back are such a
+nuisance!"
+
+The President smiled politely, but with evident effort. Mrs. Coombe was
+a prominent member. Still, on principle, she, a president, could not be
+expected to approve of people who forgot to have themselves done up.
+Supposing the minister had been present!
+
+"What are we doing this afternoon?" asked the unconscious delinquent
+languidly. "Autograph quilts? I've got a lot of blocks for you--friends
+of mine in the city." She began to fumble in the pretty workbag she
+carried. "Gracious, I was sure I had them with me! Isn't that odd? I
+can't find them."
+
+"Let me look," suggested Miss Jessie Sinclair kindly.
+
+But the other snatched back the open bag with a gesture which was almost
+rude.
+
+"Oh, no--they are not there! I can't imagine what I have done with
+them." She looked up in a bewildered way. Indeed the perturbation was so
+out of proportion to the size of the calamity that the ladies questioned
+each other with their eyes.
+
+The President tapped with her thimble upon the quilting frame and every
+one became very busy. "I hope," she said, taking the conversation into
+her own hands for safe keeping, "that you found all well upon your
+return, Mrs. Coombe? I hardly ever seem to see Esther now. Did you know
+that we have been talking of changing our meeting to Saturday afternoon
+so that Esther and some more of our younger folk may join us? We thought
+that it would be so nice for them--and for us too," she finished
+graciously.
+
+Mrs. Coombe looked surprised. "I can hardly see Esther at a Ladies' Aid
+Meeting," she said. "Did she tell you she would come?"
+
+"No. We have not yet told any one of the proposed change. But we all
+felt--"
+
+"We all felt," interrupted Miss Sinclair, who was fairly sniffing the
+air with the spirit of glorious war, "that the less time our young girls
+have to go off philandering with young fools whom no one knows anything
+about, the better it will be for everybody concerned!"
+
+Mary looked up with an air of pleased surprise.
+
+"Has Esther been philandering?" she asked eagerly.
+
+The President frowned. This was hardly according to Hoyle.
+
+"I really think," began Miss Jessie Sinclair indignantly, "that Esther
+ought to be allowed to tell her mother--"
+
+"Gracious! Esther never tells me anything. And I'm dying to know. Who is
+the 'young fool'?--do tell me, somebody."
+
+Strangely enough, now that the way was open, no one seemed to have
+anything to say.
+
+"You've simply got to tell me now," urged Mary delightedly. "Unless it's
+only a silly bit of gossip."
+
+This fillip had the desired effect. Everybody began to talk at once and
+in five minutes Esther's step-mother knew all about the new doctor and
+the broken motor. When they paused for breath, she laughed softly.
+
+"It's the most amusing thing I've heard in ages. Fancy--Esther! Oh, it's
+delicious." She looked around the circle of surprised and disappointed
+faces and laughed again. "Oh, don't pretend! You know very well that
+you're not a bit shocked, really. And surely you don't think that I
+ought to scold Esther? Why," with a little flare of her old-time
+loyalty, "Esther is worth a dozen ordinary girls. I'd trust Esther with
+Apollo on a desert island. But I'll admit I'm rather anxious to see the
+young man. He must be rather nice if Esther agreed to show him around.
+As for the accident," she shrugged her shoulders, "I know enough about
+motors to know that that might happen any time."
+
+"You are right, of course," the President's tone was more cordial. "And
+anyway we have no right to discuss Esther's affairs. The reference to it
+grew out of the proposed change of meeting. And the change of meeting
+was thought of chiefly because when Mr. Macnair heard about the escapade
+he seemed much worried. Naturally, as he says, he carries all his young
+people on his heart, and Dr. Callandar being such a newcomer--"
+
+"Oh, yes, naturally." Mary Coombe's little gurgle of amusement had a
+note of cruelty in it, for she alone of all these women had guessed why
+the Rev. Angus Macnair should have taken Esther's escapade so much to
+heart. She knew, too, that the minister had no chance, but the idea of a
+rival was novel--and entertaining. Could Esther really have taken a
+fancy to this young doctor? Mary knew the Coombe gossips too well to
+take their chatter seriously, but there might be something in it. At any
+rate, there was enough to use as a conversational weapon against Esther.
+She was becoming a little nervous of Esther lately. The girl was
+positively growing up. Somehow, almost overnight it seemed, a new
+strength had come to her, a strength which her step-mother's weakness
+felt and resented. But now with this nice little story in reserve,
+things might be more even. Mary's eyes sparkled as she thought of some
+of the smart things she could say the next time Esther began to make a
+fuss about--about the matter of the ruby ring, for instance. Esther had
+been most disagreeable about that. Just as if any one could have
+foreseen that Amy would miss it so soon, or indeed at all, since it had
+been her fancy to keep it shut up in a stupid box.
+
+As a matter of fact, the affair of the ring had assumed the proportions
+of a small catastrophe. Aunt Amy had been feeling so much better that it
+had occurred to her to see if the ring were feeling better too. Only one
+peep she would take, hopeful that at last its strange enchantment might
+be past. If she could look into its depths without the blackness coming
+close she would know, with utter certainty, that Dr. Callandar's
+cleverness had circumvented the power of her old enemies. "They" would
+trouble her no more.
+
+But when, flushed with hope, she looked--the ring was gone!
+
+Esther, reading in the sitting room, was startled beyond words by the
+scream which rang through the house. She seemed to know at once what had
+happened and her gaze flew to her step-mother, laden with bitter
+reproach, before she sped up the stairs to Aunt Amy's room. The door was
+open and the tragedy was plain to see. Aunt Amy stood by the bureau with
+the empty box in her hand and on her face an expression so dreadful, so
+hopeless that, with a sob, the girl tried to crush it out against
+her breast.
+
+"What is it, dear? Don't look like that."
+
+"The ring, Esther! 'They' have taken the ring!"
+
+For an instant the girl hesitated, but common justice demanded that the
+sordid truth be told.
+
+"No, dear. The ring is safe. It was taken from the box, but in quite an
+ordinary, simple way. Don't tremble so! It is not lost. It is just as if
+I had gone to the box and borrowed it--"
+
+As she faltered, the poor woman raised her head in an agony of hope.
+"Have you got it, Esther? Oh, Esther, give it to me! I love you, Esther!
+You shall have it when I am dead. But I can't die without it. I promised
+somebody--I--I can't remember. Oh, Esther, don't keep it away from
+me--give it to me now!"
+
+Bitter, angry tears filled the girl's eyes as she took the pleading,
+fluttering hands in hers.
+
+"Don't, dear! Listen. It is quite safe. But I haven't got it. I promise
+you solemnly I will get it back. You'll believe me, won't you? You know
+I would not deceive you. And you won't be frightened? No one had
+anything to do with taking it but ourselves. I am going to tell you just
+how it happened--"
+
+"Don't bother. I'll tell her myself."
+
+In the doorway stood Mrs. Coombe, her eyes venomous with the anger of
+tortured nerves. Her high voice trembled on the verge of hysteria, yet
+she tried to speak with her usual mocking lightness.
+
+"There is no need to make a mystery of the thing, I'm sure. I took the
+ring because I was hard up--needed money at once. You understand what
+that means, I suppose, Amy? You never wore the ring, nor would you allow
+me to wear it. It was simply wasted lying in that silly box. My own
+jewelry is of much less value. Besides, I use it. One would have thought
+that you would be glad to assist in some way with the--er--household
+expenses. In any case, no such fuss is necessary, and I should advise
+you," her voice grew suddenly cold and menacing, "not to scream like
+that again. A few more such shrieks and--people will begin to wonder."
+Without so much as a glance at Esther she passed on to her own room.
+
+"Don't mind her!" The indignant girl tried to draw the trembling woman
+close. But Aunt Amy cowered away. Five minutes had undone the work of
+weeks. All the doctor's carefully laid foundations were crumbling.
+Esther, wrung with pity and remorse, stroked the grey hair in silence.
+She expected an outbreak of childish tears, but it did not come. Rather,
+the shivering grew less and presently Aunt Amy raised her head.
+
+"It was she--Mary--who took it?" she asked in a whisper.
+
+"Yes. But remember I have promised to get it back."
+
+Aunt Amy looked at her blankly. She did not seem to hear.
+
+"I never guessed it was Mary. Never! But now I know. I'll never be
+fooled again."
+
+"Know what?" asked Esther uneasily. There was a look in Aunt Amy's eyes
+which she disliked, a sly, cool look--more nearly mad than any look she
+had ever surprised there. "Tell me what it is that you know," she
+repeated coaxingly.
+
+But Aunt Amy would not tell. It was just as well, she thought, that
+Esther should not know that at last, after many years, she had found out
+the agent employed by "they" for her undoing. Ah, if she had only found
+out sooner. The ruby ring might still be shining in its box. But of
+course "they" knew that she would never suspect Mary, her own niece.
+They were so clever! But now she could be as clever as they--oh, very,
+very clever!
+
+"What did she mean about my screaming?" she asked, looking at Esther
+cunningly.
+
+"Nothing, nothing at all! Don't think of it."
+
+"But she did. I know what she meant. She meant that if I
+get--troublesome--she will shut me up!"
+
+"Nonsense!" declared Esther, thrilled to the heart with pity. "You must
+never think such a thought, dear. You shall never live anywhere but here
+with us. Why, you are our good angel, Auntie. We could never get on
+without you--you know that."
+
+Aunt Amy nodded, stroking the girl's soft hand with her work-worn one.
+"You are good and kind, Esther. I know you will take care of me, if you
+can. And I'm not afraid just now. It will be all right if I am clever. I
+must not be troublesome. If I am, she will put me away with the mad
+people. The people that make faces and scream. I never scream. Until
+to-day I haven't screamed for a long time. And I'll be more careful. Oh,
+I can be very careful, now that I know!"
+
+Again the strange mad look. It flitted across her lifted eyes like a
+dark shadow behind a window shade. And again Esther tried gently to
+question her, but Aunt Amy was "clever." She didn't intend that Esther
+should find out.
+
+The girl left her at last feeling both troubled and sad, but Mary Coombe
+laughed at her fears. She was in one of her most difficult moods.
+
+"It was all a tempest in a tea cup, as usual," she declared pettishly.
+"I do wish, Esther, that you would not be so disagreeable. She will have
+forgotten all about the ring by to-morrow. All she needs is a little
+plain speaking, and firmness."
+
+"Firmness! Cruelty, you mean. You terrified her."
+
+"Well, it had a good effect. She quieted down at once."
+
+"She is too quiet. It's that which troubles me. Surely you can see the
+damage that has been done? All her new cheerfulness is gone. She is back
+to where she was before the doctor helped her."
+
+"I never believed that any real improvement was possible. Insane people
+never recover."
+
+"She is not insane! How can you say so? But how shall we explain the
+change in her to Dr. Callandar? We can't tell him that--that you--"
+
+"Oh, don't mind me!" flippantly.
+
+"Anyway, the ring will soon be back, thank heaven! I have written to
+Mrs. Bremner."
+
+"You wrote to Jessica?"
+
+"Certainly. I told you I should. It was the only thing to do."
+
+Mary Coombe's rage flickered and sank before the quiet force in the
+girl's face and voice. With all the will in the world she was too weak
+to oppose this new strength in Esther. And before her mortified pride
+could frame a retort, the girl had left the room.
+
+It was of this quiet exit of Esther's that Mary was thinking as she
+sewed on the autograph quilt. Better than anything else it typified the
+change in the girl. It meant decision, and decision meant action. Mary
+shrugged her shoulders and frowned over the quilt. Yes, undoubtedly,
+Esther was getting troublesome. It might be well if she were married.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX
+
+
+Meanwhile, unconscious of her step-mother's troubled musings, Esther was
+loitering delightfully on her way from school. Aunt Amy, who never
+looked at a clock, but who always knew the time by what Jane called
+"magic," was beginning to wonder what had kept her. Strain her eyes as
+she would, there was no glint of a blue dress upon the long straight
+road, and Dr. Callandar, who in passing had stopped by the gate,
+declared that he had noticed a similar absence of that delectable colour
+between the cross roads and the school house.
+
+"I thought that I might meet her," he confessed ingenuously, "but when
+she was not in sight, I concluded that I was too late. Some of those
+angel children have probably had to be kept in. Could you make use of me
+instead? I run errands very nicely."
+
+"Oh, it isn't an errand." Aunt Amy smiled, for she liked Dr. Callandar
+and was always as simple as a child with him. His easy, courteous
+manner, which was the same to her as to every one else, helped her to be
+at once more like other people and more like herself. "It's a letter. I
+wanted Esther to read it to me. Of course I can read myself," as she saw
+his look of surprise, "but sometimes I do not read exactly what is
+written. My imagination bothers me. Do you ever have any trouble with
+your imagination, Doctor?"
+
+"I have known it to play me tricks."
+
+"But you can read a letter just as it's written, can't you?"
+
+"Yes. I can do that."
+
+"Then your imagination cannot be as large as mine. Mine is very large.
+It interferes with everything, even letters. When I read a letter myself
+I sometimes read things which aren't there. At least," with a faint show
+of doubt, "people say they aren't there."
+
+"In other words," said Callandar, "you read between the lines."
+
+Aunt Amy's plain face brightened. It was so seldom that any one
+understood.
+
+"Yes, that's it! You won't laugh at me when I tell you that everything,
+letters, handkerchiefs, dresses and everything belonging to people have
+a feeling in them--something that tells secrets? I can't quite explain."
+
+"I have heard very sensitive people express some such idea. It sounds
+very fascinating. I should like very much to hear about it."
+
+"Would you? You are sure you won't think me queer? My niece, Mary
+Coombe, does not like me to tell people about it. She has no imagination
+herself, none at all. She says it is all nonsense. But I think,"
+shrewdly, "that she would like to know some of the things that I know.
+Won't you come in, Doctor? Come in and sit under the tree where it
+is cooler."
+
+The doctor's hesitation was but momentary. He was keenly interested. And
+at the back of his mind was the thought that Esther must certainly be
+along presently. Fate had not favoured him of late. He had not seen her
+for five days. It is foolish to leave meetings to fate anyway. Then, if
+another reason were needed it was probable that if he stayed he would
+meet Esther's mother. He was beginning to feel quite curious about
+Mrs. Coombe.
+
+"Thanks. I think I will come in. All the trees in Coombe are cool, but
+your elm is the coolest of them all. Let me arrange this cushion for
+you. Is that right?"
+
+He settled Aunt Amy comfortably upon the least sloping portion of the
+old circular bench and, not wishing to trust it with his own weight, sat
+down upon the grass at her feet.
+
+"Now," he said cheerfully, "let us have a regular psychic research
+meeting. Tell me all about it."
+
+"What's that?" suspiciously.
+
+"Psychic research? Oh, just finding out all about the queer things that
+happen to people."
+
+"Do queer things happen to other people besides me?"
+
+"Why, of course! Queer things happen to everybody."
+
+Aunt Amy seemed glad to know this.
+
+"They never talk about them," she said wistfully. "But, then, neither do
+I. Except to you. What was it you wanted me to tell you?"
+
+"Tell me what you mean when you say that you read in a letter what is
+not written there. You see I haven't much imagination myself and I don't
+understand it."
+
+"Neither do I," naively. "But it seems to be like this--take this
+letter, for instance, when I found it in--well, it doesn't matter where
+I found it--but as soon as I picked it up, I knew that it was a love
+letter. I felt it. It is an old letter, I think. And some one has been
+angry with it. See, it is all crumpled. But it is a real love letter.
+All the love is there yet. When I took it in my hands it all came out
+to me, sweet and strong. Like--like the scent of something keen,
+fragrant, on a swift wind. I can't explain it!"
+
+"You explain it very beautifully," gravely. "I can quite understand that
+love might be like that."
+
+"Can you?" with a pleased smile. "And can you understand how I feel it?
+I can feel things in people, too. Love and hate and envy and all kinds
+of things. I never say so. I used to, but people did not like it. They
+always looked queer, or got angry. They seemed to think I had no right
+to see inside of them. So I soon pretended not to see anything. But a
+letter doesn't mind. This one," swinging the crumpled paper swiftly
+close to his face, "is glad I found it. Can't you feel it yourself?"
+
+Callandar shook his head. "I am far too dull and commonplace for that!"
+He smiled. "But I have no doubt it is all there, just as you say. Why
+not? Our knowledge of such things is in its infancy."
+
+Aunt Amy stroked the paper with gentle fingers. "Yes, yes, it is all
+there," she murmured. "But I may have read it wrongly for all that. The
+written words I mean. I can't help reading what I feel. Once I felt a
+letter that was full of hate, dreadful! And I read quite shocking things
+in it. But when Esther read it, it was just a polite note, beginning
+'Dear' and ending 'Your affectionate friend."'
+
+"It might have been very hateful for all that."
+
+"But no one knew it. That is why I am so anxious always to know if I
+read things right. Will you read this letter to me?"
+
+"With pleasure--if I may."
+
+"Oh, it doesn't belong to any one. It isn't Esther's because it's too
+old and it begins 'Dearest wife' and it isn't Mary's because it isn't
+Doctor Coombe's writing; so you see I thought it might not hurt anybody
+if I pretended it was mine."
+
+"No," gently, "I do not see why it would."
+
+"I never had a love letter of my own. Or if I did I cannot find it. The
+only thing I ever had with love in it was the ruby ring, and that--"
+
+She checked herself suddenly; her small face freezing into such a mask
+of tragedy that Callandar was alarmed. But to his quick "What is it?"
+she returned no answer and the expression passed as quickly as it
+had come.
+
+When he held out his hand for the letter, she seemed to have forgotten
+it. Her gaze had again grown restless and vague. It would do no good to
+question further, the rare hour of confession was past.
+
+"You both look very comfortable, I'm sure!" It was Esther's laughing
+voice. She had come so quietly that neither of them had heard her. Aunt
+Amy's vagueness vanished in a pleased smile and Callandar, as he sprang
+to open the gate, forgot all about the unread letter and everything
+else, save that she had come.
+
+Why was it, he wondered, that he could never recall her, save in dulled
+tints. Lovely as she had lingered in his memory, her living beauty was
+so much lovelier. There, in the shade of the elm, her blue dress flecked
+with gold, the warm pallor of heat upon her face, her hair lying close
+and heavy, a little pulse beating where the low collar softly disclosed
+the slim roundness of her white throat, she was not only beautiful, she
+was Beauty. She was not only Beauty, she was Herself, the one woman in
+the world! He acknowledged it now, with all humility.
+
+The girl greeted him quietly. She did not, as was her custom, look up
+at him with that sweet widening of the eyes which he had learned to
+hunger for. The truth was that she, too, was moving slowly toward her
+awakening. The days in which they had not met had been full of thoughts
+of him. Dreams had come to her, vague, delicious bits of fancy which had
+whispered in her ear and passed, leaving a new softness in her eyes, a
+new flush upon her cheek. There was about her a dewy freshness which
+seemed to brighten up the world. Vaguely her girl friends wondered what
+had "come over" Esther Coombe, and at home Aunt Amy's pathetic eyes
+followed her, dim with a half-memory of long past joy. But it was Mrs.
+Sykes' Ann who best expressed the change in her beauty when, one day,
+she said to Bubble: "Esther Coombe looks like she was all lighted up
+inside and when she walks you'd think the wind was blowing her."
+
+So it happened that while yesterday she might still have smiled into the
+doctor's eyes as she greeted him, to-day she shook hands without looking
+at his face at all.
+
+Callandar found himself remarking that it was a fine day. Esther said
+that it was beautiful--but dusty. A little rain would do good. She
+fanned herself with her broad hat, and stopped fanning to examine
+closely a tiny stain on the hem of her frock.
+
+"Dear me," she said, "I'm afraid it's axle grease! Mournful Mark gave me
+a lift this morning."
+
+"Oh, I hope not!" anxiously from Aunt Amy, and referring, presumably, to
+the grease.
+
+The doctor looked at the little stray curl on the nape of the graceful
+neck and wished--all the foolish things that lovers have wished since
+the world began. But he had a great longing to see her eyes. If he were
+to say sharply, "Look at me!" would she look up? Absurd idea! And
+anyway he couldn't say it, or anything else, for the first time in his
+life Henry Callandar was tongue-tied.
+
+Did she, too, feel strange? Was that why she kept her eyes so
+persistently lowered? No, it could hardly be that. She laughed and
+talked quite naturally--seemed entire mistress of herself.
+
+"I know I am late, Auntie. It's Friday, you know, and I walked slowly. I
+forgot that I had promised to help Jane wash the new pup. But there is
+time yet. Supposing we have tea, English fashion, out here. I'll
+tell mother--"
+
+"She is at the Ladies Aid, Esther."
+
+"Oh, yes. I forgot. Well, then you must entertain Dr. Callandar while I
+see about tea."
+
+"No tea for me, thanks," said the doctor hastily. He didn't know why he
+said it except that he wanted to say something, something which might
+make her look at him.
+
+But she did not look. His refusal lost him a cup of tea and gained him
+nothing whatever.
+
+"No tea?" Her tone was mildly wondering, but she was looking at Aunt Amy
+while she spoke. "I'm sorry you are in a hurry. Bubble said you
+were busy."
+
+"Not busy exactly. But it's office hours, you know. My partner grows
+quite waxy if I'm late, and I'm late now."
+
+"Another day, then?" Esther's tone was charmingly gracious, but she
+seemed to be addressing the gate post, as far as he could judge from the
+direction of her gaze.
+
+Callandar picked up his hat, gloomily. There was nothing to do now but
+take his leave. And if he had had any sense he might have been going to
+stay for tea. Office hours be hanged!
+
+"Thank you, another day I shall be delighted." He took the hand she
+offered and bowed over it. Delightful custom this of shaking hands!
+Esther's hand was cool as a wind-blown leaf. Would she actually say
+good-bye without looking at him? He held the hand firmly but she did not
+seem to be conscious that he held it. She was smiling at some children
+who were going by on the sidewalk.
+
+"Good-bye," said Callandar in a subdued voice.
+
+"Good-bye," said Esther sweetly.
+
+He dropped her hand, they bowed formally, and the foolish, poignant
+little tragedy of parting was over. Not once had they looked into each
+other's eyes.
+
+When he had gone Esther sank down upon the elm tree seat.
+
+"Oh, Auntie!" she said with a little sob in her voice. "I want--some
+tea!"
+
+Aunt Amy glanced irresolutely from the open letter in her hand to the
+girl's face, and decided to postpone the matter of the letter. "I'll get
+it, Esther. You sit here and rest."
+
+When she returned the girl seemed herself again. She took the tea-tray
+and kissed the bearer with a fervour born of remorse. "I am a Pig," she
+declared, "and you are a darling! Never mind, we'll even up some day."
+
+"When you have had your tea, Esther, I've got a letter I want you to
+read."
+
+"A letter? Who from? I mean, from whom? Gracious! I'll have to be more
+careful of the King's English, now that I'm a school teacher."
+
+"I don't know. It is signed just 'H' and it's written to 'Dearest wife.'
+You don't know who that could be, do you?"
+
+"Mother, perhaps?"
+
+"No. It's not in your father's writing and his name did not begin with
+'H.'"
+
+"Where did you find it, dear?"
+
+"Up in an old trunk of your grandma's--I mean of Mary's mother's. One of
+the trunks that were sent here after she died. Mary asked me to put moth
+balls in it. This letter was all crushed up in a corner. I took it out
+to smooth it, because I knew it was a love letter. You don't think any
+one would mind?"
+
+"N--o." Esther, who knew Aunt Amy's feeling about love letters, could
+not find it in her heart to disagree. "I think we may fairly call it
+treasure-trove. It's only a note anyway." Her eyes ran swiftly over the
+two short paragraphs upon the open sheet.
+
+"Dearest wife:--
+
+"At last I can call you 'wife' without fear. Our waiting is over. Brave
+girl! If it has been as long to you as to me, you have been brave
+indeed. But it is our day now. Even your mother cannot object any
+longer. I am coming for you to-morrow. Only one more day!
+
+"Dear, I think that in my wild impatience I did you wrong. But love does
+not blame love. No wife shall ever be so loved as you. May God forget me
+if I forget what you have done for me...."
+
+"What a strange letter!" Esther looked up wonderingly.
+
+"Is that all, Esther?" Aunt Amy's face was vaguely disappointed. "The
+one I read was much longer than that."
+
+"That is all that is written here, Auntie. But it is a beautiful letter.
+They had been separated, you see, and she had been brave and waited. One
+can imagine--"
+
+The click of the garden gate interrupted her.
+
+"Here's your mother," said Aunt Amy, in a flurried tone. "Don't let
+her--"
+
+"Is that the mail, Esther?" Mrs. Coombe's high voice held a fretful
+intonation. Aunt Amy seized the letter and hid it in her dress. "She
+shan't see it," she whispered childishly.
+
+"Is that the mail?" repeated Mrs. Coombe, coming up the walk.
+
+"No, there is no mail," said Esther, "No one has been to the post
+office. Perhaps Jane had better run down now."
+
+"But you had a letter," suspiciously. "I'm sure I saw it. Where is it?"
+
+"Don't be absurd, mother. I have no letter. Nor would I think it
+necessary to show it to you if I had. I am not a child."
+
+"You are a child. And let me tell you, a clandestine correspondence is
+something which I shall not tolerate. Let me see the letter."
+
+Esther was feeling too happy to be cross. Besides it was rather funny to
+be accused of clandestine correspondence.
+
+"I think I'll go and help Jane with the pup," she said cheerfully. "Too
+bad you didn't come in sooner, mother. Dr. Callandar was here."
+
+"Then you do refuse to show me the letter?"
+
+"If I had one I should certainly refuse to show it. Why do you let
+yourself get so excited, mother? You never used to act like this. It
+must be nerves. Every one notices how changed you are." She paused,
+arrested by the frightened look which replaced the futile anger on her
+step-mother's face.
+
+"I'm not different. Who says I am different? It is you who are trying
+to make a fuss. I'm sure I do not care about your letter. Why should I?
+Your father always seemed to think you needed no advice from any one.
+Only don't imagine that I am blind. I _saw_ you with a letter."
+
+Having triumphantly secured the last word, she turned to busy herself
+with the tea-tray, and Esther, knowing the uselessness of argument, went
+on toward the house. Aunt Amy attempted to follow but was stopped
+by Mary.
+
+"Amy, what did that doctor want here?"
+
+"He came to see me."
+
+Mary laughed. "Likely!" she said. "This tea is quite cold. Was it he who
+left the letter for Esther?"
+
+"Esther didn't have a letter. I had one."
+
+Again the incredulous laugh, and the dull red mounted into Aunt Amy's
+faded cheeks. She clutched the treasured letter tightly under her dress.
+This mocking woman should never see it! But as she turned again to leave
+her, another consideration appealed to her unstable mind. Mary suspected
+Esther--and nothing would annoy her more than to find herself mistaken.
+On impulse Aunt Amy flung the letter upon the tea-tray.
+
+"There it is. Read it, if you like. It has nothing to do with Esther. Or
+any one else. I found it in one of your mother's old trunks."
+
+Left alone, Mary Coombe drank her tea, which after all was not very
+cold. She was not really interested in the letter, now that she had got
+it. Had not a vagrant breeze tossed it, obtrusively, upon her lap, she
+would probably not have looked at it.
+
+Listlessly she picked it up, opened it, glanced at the firm, clear
+writing....
+
+A sharp, tingling shock ran through her. It was as if some one had
+knocked, loudly, at dead of night at a closed door! That writing--how
+absurdly fanciful she was getting!
+
+"Dearest wife," she read, "at last I can call you 'wife' without
+fear"--the vagrant breeze, which had tossed the letter into her lap,
+tossed it off again. Her glance followed it, fascinated!
+
+Of course she had dreamed the writing? She had been terribly troubled by
+dreams of late. But what had Amy said about finding the paper in her
+mother's trunk? The whole thing was a fantastic nightmare. She had but
+to lean forward, pick up the letter, read it properly and laugh at her
+foolishness.
+
+But it was a long time before she found the strength to pick it up. When
+she did, she read it quietly to the end with its scrawled "H." Then she
+read it over again, word by word. Her expression was one of terror
+and amaze.
+
+When she had finished she looked up, over the pleasant garden, with
+blank eyes. Her face was ashen.
+
+"He came," she said aloud. "He came! But--_what did she tell him when he
+came_?"
+
+The garden had no answer to the question. Somewhere could be heard a
+girl's laugh and the sharp bark of a protesting puppy. Mary Coombe drew
+her hand across her eyes as if to clear them of film and, trying to
+rise, slipped down beside the elm-tree seat, a soft blot of whiteness on
+the green.
+
+They found her there when they had finished washing the puppy, but
+though she came quickly to herself under their eager ministrations, she
+would not tell them what had caused her sudden illness. To all their
+questionings she answered pettishly, "Nothing! Nothing but the heat."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI
+
+
+When a man of thirty-five has at last shaken himself free from the
+burden of an unhappy love affair, he is not particularly disposed to
+welcome an emotional reawakening. He knows the pains and penalties too
+well; the fire of Spring, he has learned, can burn as well as brighten.
+Callandar thought that he had done with love, and a growing suspicion
+that love had not done with him brought little less than panic. Upon the
+occasion of Willits' second visit he had begun to realise his danger and
+the professor never guessed how nearly he had persuaded him to leave
+Coombe. Some deep instinct was urging flight, but the impulse had come
+just a little bit too late. He could not go, because he wanted so very
+much to stay.
+
+After Willits' departure he had deliberately tested himself. For five
+days he did not try to see Esther and upon the sixth he realised finally
+that seeing Esther was the only thing that mattered. Then had come the
+short interview under the elm tree--an interview which had shown him a
+new Esther, demure, adorable, with eyes which refused to look at him. He
+had come away from that meeting with a new pulse beating in his heart.
+
+To doubt was no longer possible. He loved her.
+
+But she? Lovers are proverbially modest, but their modesty is fear
+disguised. They hope so much that they fear to hope at all; it seemed
+impossible to Callandar that Esther should not love him and yet it
+seemed impossible that she should. Only one thing emerged clearly from
+the chaos--the immediate necessity of finding out.
+
+"Why don't you ask her?" demanded Common Sense in that wearily patient
+way with which Common Sense meets the vagaries of lovers.
+
+"But it is so soon," objected Caution, while Fear, aroused, whispered,
+"Be careful. Give her time." Even Mrs. Grundy made herself heard with
+her usual references to what people, represented by Mrs. Sykes, might
+say, adding scornfully, "Why, you haven't met the girl's mother yet.
+Don't make a fool of yourself, please."
+
+But over all these voices rose another voice, insistent, demanding to be
+satisfied. It might be premature, it might be all that was rash and
+foolish but he simply had to find out at once whether or not Esther
+Coombe loved him.
+
+His final decision came one morning when driving slowly home from an all
+night fight with death. He was tired but exultant, because he had won
+the fight, and life, which slips so easily away, seemed doubly precious.
+After all, he was no longer a boy. If life still held something
+beautiful for him, why should he wait? He had waited so many
+years already.
+
+Guiding the car with one hand, he slipped the other into his pocket and
+opening a small locket which he found there, gazed long and earnestly at
+the picture it contained. The face it showed him was a young face, fair,
+rounded, childish. Dear Molly! his thought of her was infinitely tender.
+He loved her all the more for the knowledge that he had not loved her
+enough. Well, he could never atone now. She was gone--slipped away, he
+thought, with but little more knowledge of living than the tiny baby he
+had just helped to bring into the world. Brushing away the mist which
+for a moment blurred his sight, Callandar kissed the picture gently and
+shut the case.
+
+The dawn was golden now. The motor began to gather speed. An early
+farmer getting into market with a load of hay, drew amiably to one side
+to let it pass. From a, wayside house came the cheerful noise of opening
+shutters; a milk cart rattled out of a nearby gate; the motor sped still
+faster--the new day was fairly begun.
+
+Early as it was, Mrs. Sykes was busy washing the veranda. This was a
+ritual, rigorously observed twice every day; in the morning with a pail
+and broom, in the evening with the hose. Par be it from us to malign the
+excellent Mrs. Sykes or to suggest that her opportune presence on the
+front steps was due to anything save the virtue of cleanliness. Mrs.
+Sykes, as she often said, couldn't abide curiosity. Still, it would be
+very interesting to know whether Amelia Hill's latest was a boy or a
+girl. Mrs. Hill had already been blessed with nine olive branches, all
+girls, and had confided to Mrs. Sykes that if the tenth presented no
+variation, she didn't know what on earth Hill would do--he having acted
+so kind of wild-like last time. Mrs. Sykes, unable to resist the trend
+of her nature, had advised that no variation could be looked for. "It
+may be," she had said, "but after a run of nine, it isn't to be
+expected. There's no denying that girls run in some families. I know
+jest how you feel, Mrs. Hill, and, if I could, I'd encourage you, for
+I'm a great believer in speaking the truth in kindness. But it's best to
+be prepared, and a girl it will be, you may be sure."
+
+"You are up early, Mrs. Sykes," said the doctor cheerfully. "Wait till I
+take the car around and I'll finish up those steps for you."
+
+"Land no! I won't let you, Doctor. You're clean tired out. I've got a
+cup of hot coffee waiting. I don't suppose, with Amelia laid aside, any
+of them Hills would think to give you so much as a bite. All girls too."
+
+"Not all girls now, Mrs. Sykes," said the doctor cheerfully. "A son and
+heir arrived this morning. Fine little fellow. They appear to be
+delighted."
+
+The discomfited prophet leaned against the door-post for support.
+
+"A boy? It can't be a boy! It doesn't stand to reason!"
+
+"It never does, Mrs. Sykes."
+
+"And I was so sure 'twould be another girl!" There was an infinitesimal
+pause during which Mrs. Sykes' whole outlook readjusted itself, and then
+with a heavy sigh she continued, "Poor Amelia Hill! She'll certainly
+have her troubles now. I shouldn't wonder a mite if it didn't live.
+Miracles like that seldom do. And if it does, it will be spoiled to
+death. No boy can come along after nine sisters and not be made a sissy
+of. Far better if it had been a girl in the first place. And yet I
+suppose Amelia's just as chirpy as possible? She never was one to look
+ahead to see what's coming."
+
+"Lucky for her!" murmured Callandar, as he picked his way over the
+shining wetness of the veranda. "And now, Mrs. Sykes, I want you to do
+me a favour. Don't go predicting to my patient that her boy baby will
+die, or if he doesn't it would be better for him if he did. A woman who
+has mothered nine children is entitled to a little peace of mind with
+the tenth. Don't you think so?"
+
+"Land sakes, yes. If you put it that way. But the shock will be all the
+worse when it comes. Still, if you want the poor thing left in a fool's
+paradise I don't object. Perhaps it would be a good thing to have the
+three littlest Hills over here to spend a week with Ann. I can stand
+them if you can."
+
+"Good idea!" Callandar smiled at her, but attempted no thanks. He had
+learned early that she was as shy about doing a kindness as a child who
+hides its face, while offering you half of its lolly-pop. "I'll fetch
+them. But some one will have to pick them out. Likely as not I'd bring
+the middle three instead."
+
+"They are dreadful similar," assented Mrs. Sykes, pouring coffee. "I
+don't know but what it was them Hill children that made me a
+suffragette!"
+
+"What?"
+
+Mrs. Sykes did not notice the unflattering (or flattering) surprise in
+the doctor's voice.
+
+"Yes. I think it was the Hill children as much as anything. There they
+are, nine of them, like as peas in a pod, and all healthy. I shouldn't
+wonder if the whole nine grows up--and what then? Amelia Hill just can't
+hope to marry nine of them. Three out of the bunch would be about her
+limit. And what are the others going to get? I say, give them the vote.
+Land sakes! Why not? I ain't one to refuse to others what I don't
+want myself."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII
+
+
+Tired though he must have been, the doctor had never felt less like
+sleep. There was a fever in his blood which the cool quietness of the
+spare room could not soothe. The lavendered freshness of the bed invited
+in vain. Crossing to the western window, he threw up the blind and
+looked out to where, peeping out between roofs and trees, the gable
+window of the Elms glittered in the early sun. The morning breeze blew
+softly on his face, sweet with the scent of flowering pinks and
+mignonette. In the orchard all the birds were up and singing. Every
+blade of grass was gemmed with dew, sparkling through the yellow glory
+of dawn like diamonds through a primrose veil. But Callandar, usually so
+alive to every manifestation of beauty, saw nothing save the distant
+glitter of the gable window. The morning, in which he could hardly hope
+to see Esther, stretched before him intolerably long.
+
+Upon impulse he drew his desk to the window and, sitting down, began to
+write:
+
+"Dear Old Button-Moulder--
+
+"Behold the faulty button about to be recast! This is to be a big day. I
+am writing you now because if she refuses me, I shan't be able to tell
+you of it, and if she accepts me I shan't have time. I fancy you know
+who she is, old man. I saw enlightenment grow in your eyes that day
+after church. I hardly knew it myself, then, but now I am sure. Do you
+remember that house we looked at one day? I have forgotten even the
+street, but we can find it again. It had a long sloping lawn, you
+remember, and stone steps and a beautiful panelled hall running straight
+through to a walled garden which might well have fallen there by some
+Arabian Nights enchantment. That is the house I mean to have for Esther.
+I can see her there quite plainly, in her blue dress, filling the rose
+bowl which stands upon the round table in a dusky corner of the hall.
+Over her shoulder, through the open door, glows the riotous colour of
+the garden. Her pure profile gleams like mother-o'-pearl against the
+dark panelling--say, Willits, just go and look up that house, will you?
+I am going to ask her to marry me. And I never knew before what a coward
+I am. Was there ever a chap named Callandar who quoted uppish remarks
+about being Captain of his Soul? If so, let me apologise for him. I
+think the chap who wrote those verses could never have been in love--or
+perhaps he wrote them after she said 'yes.' I'll telegraph the news.
+Don't expect me to write. And don't dare to come down to see me. H.C.
+
+"P.S.--I came upon a good thing the other day. It is by Galsworthy, the
+chap who writes English problem novels:
+
+ "'If on a spring night I went by
+ And God were standing there,
+ What is the prayer that I would cry
+ To Him? This is the prayer:
+ O Lord of courage grave,
+ O Master of this night of spring,
+ Make firm in me a heart too brave
+ To ask Thee anything!'"
+
+"Rather fine, don't you think? Or is it just a madness of pride? On
+second thought, I don't believe that I have arrived at the stage when I
+can do without God. H."
+
+He folded the letter, stamped and addressed it and placed it upon the
+table in the hall where Ann would find and post it. Then, lighting a
+cigar, he sat down beside the open window and began to wonder how the
+momentous meeting with Esther could be best arranged. Perhaps if he
+walked out to the schoolhouse and waited until lunch time? No, it was
+Saturday morning and there was no school. The obvious thing was to call
+at the house, but this, the doctor felt, was sure to be unsatisfactory.
+Not only was there Jane to think of and Aunt Amy--but there was also the
+as-yet-unknown Mrs. Coombe. The visit would almost certainly end in a
+formal call upon the family. He might perhaps send Bubble over with an
+invitation to go fishing. No, that was too risky. Esther might refuse to
+go fishing and that would be a bad omen.
+
+In a sudden spasm of nervousness Callandar threw the half-burned cigar
+out of the window and, following it with his eyes, was not sorry to be
+distracted by the sight of Ann in her night-dress, crying under the pear
+tree. Ann crying was an unusual sight, but Ann in a night-dress was
+almost unbelievable. The doctor knew at once that something serious must
+have happened and went down to see.
+
+The child looked up at his approach, all the natural impishness of her
+small face drowned in sorrow. In her open hand she held the body of a
+tiny bird, all that was left of a fledgling which had tried its
+wings too soon.
+
+"It toppled off and died," said Ann. "All its brothers and sisters
+flewed away."
+
+"Heartless things!" said Callandar, and then seeing that comfort was
+imperative he sat down beside the mourner and tried to do the proper
+thing. He explained to her that the dead bird was only one of a
+nest-full and that the dew was wet and that she was getting green stains
+on her nightie. He reminded her that birds' lives, for all their seeming
+brightness, are full of danger and trouble. Perhaps the baby bird was
+just as well out of it. At least it would never know the lack of a worm
+in season, nor the bitterness of early snow. This particular style of
+comfort he had found very effective in cases other than baby birds, but
+it didn't work with Ann.
+
+"I don't care," she sobbed, "it might have lived anyway. It never had a
+chance to live."
+
+Living, just living, was with Ann clearly the great thing to be desired.
+
+Callandar stopped comforting and took the child on his knee.
+
+"I believe you've got the right idea, little Ann," he said. "It isn't so
+much the sorrow that counts or the joy either, but just the living
+through it. We're bound to get somewhere if we keep on. Don't cry any
+more and we'll bury the little bird all done up in nice white fluffy
+cotton. As Mrs. Burns says when any one dies: 'It's such a comfort to
+have 'em put away proper.' And then after a while you and Bubble might
+go fishing."
+
+"I can't." Ann showed signs of returning tears. "If Aunt lets me go
+anywhere, I promised to go and help Esther Coombe pick daisies to fix
+the church for to-morrow."
+
+Here was chance being kind indeed! But the doctor dissembled his
+exultation.
+
+"Hum! too bad. Where did Miss Esther tell you to go?" he asked
+guilelessly.
+
+"To the meadow over against the school."
+
+"What time?"
+
+"Half past two."
+
+"Well, cheer up, I'll tell you what--I'll go and help Miss Esther pick
+the daisies. I can pick quite as fast as you. And I'll speak to Aunt
+Sykes and make it right with her. So if you run now and get dressed you
+and Bubble may go just as soon as you've had breakfast. And stay all
+day. Be sure you stay all day, mind."
+
+A good sound hug was the natural answer to this and when the
+conspirators met at breakfast everything had been satisfactorily
+arranged. Ann had her holiday and the doctor's way lay clear before him.
+For all his apparent ignorance Callandar knew that daisy field quite as
+well as Ann. It was wild and lonely, yet full of cosy nooks and hollows.
+Mild-eyed cows sometimes pastured there. It was a perfect paradise for
+meadow-larks. Could any man ask better than to meet the girl he loved in
+a field like that?
+
+"You're not eating a mite, Doctor."
+
+With a start, Callandar helped himself to marmalade.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+So much for the morning of the eventful day. We have given it in detail
+because it was so commonplace, so empty of any incident which might have
+foreshadowed the happenings of the afternoon. Callandar was restless,
+but any man is restless under such circumstances. He found the morning
+long, but that was natural. Long afterwards he thought of its slow
+moving hours, lost in wonder that he should have caught no glimpse,
+heard no whisper, while all the time, through the beauty of the scented,
+summer day, the footsteps of inescapable fate drew so swiftly near.
+Fortunate indeed for us that the fragile house we dwell in is provided
+with no windows on the future side, and that the veil of the next moment
+is as impenetrable as the veil of years.
+
+What are they, anyway, these curious combinations of unforeseen
+incidents which under the name of "coincidence" startle us out of our
+dull acceptance of things? Can it be that, after all, space and
+circumstance are but pieces in a puzzle to which the key is lost, so
+that, playing blindly, we are startled by the _click_ which announces
+the falling of some corner of the puzzle into place? Or is it merely
+that we are all more closely linked than we know, and is "coincidence"
+but the flashing of one of numberless invisible links into the light of
+common day? Some day we shall know all about it; in the meantime a
+little wonder will do us good.
+
+It was, of course, coincidence that this afternoon Mary Coombe should
+offer to gather the marguerites for Esther and that, the Saturday help
+having failed to materialise, Esther was glad of the offer which left
+her free to help Aunt Amy in the kitchen. It was also coincidence that
+Mary should choose to wear her one blue dress and her shady hat which
+looked a little like Esther's. But, given these coincidences, it is easy
+to understand why the doctor, passing slowly by the field of
+marguerites, felt his heart bound at the supposed sight of Esther among
+the flowers.
+
+Now that the moment had really come, his restlessness fell from him. He
+felt cool, confident, happy! The world, the beautiful world, was gay in
+gold and green. Over the rise, half hidden by its gentle undulation, he
+caught the glint of a blue gown--
+
+Running his car under the shade of some nearby trees, the doctor leapt
+the pasture fence in one fine bound. The blue figure among the daisies
+was stooping, her face hidden by a shady hat. No one else was in
+sight--just he and she in all the lovely, sunny, breeze-swept earth! He
+came towards her softly; called her name, but so low that she did not
+hear. Then a meadow-lark, disturbed, flew up with his piercing "sweet!"
+the stooping figure turned and he saw, in the clear sunlight, the face
+under the shady hat--
+
+Had something in his brain snapped? Or was he living through a nightmare
+from which he would awake presently? The world, the daisy field, the
+figure in blue, himself, all seemed but baseless fabrics of some
+fantastic vision!
+
+For, by a strange enchantment, the face which should have been Esther's
+face was the face of Molly Weston, his lost wife!
+
+It could not be! But it was.
+
+Incredible the swiftness with which nature rights herself after a
+stunning shock. Only for a moment was Callandar left in his paradise of
+uncertainty. The next moment, he knew that he beheld no vision, knew it
+and accepted it as certainly and completely as if all his life had been
+but a preparation for the revelation.
+
+"You!" he said. It was only a whisper but it seemed to fill the
+universe. "You--Molly!"
+
+At the name, the hazel eyes which had met his so blankly sprang suddenly
+alive--recognition, knowledge, fear, entreaty, flashed across them in
+one moment's breathless space--then they grew blank again and Mary
+Coombe fell senseless beside her sheaf of daisies.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII
+
+
+Bending over the form of his lost wife, Henry Callandar forgot Esther.
+His mind, careful of its sanity, removed her instantly from the
+possibility of thought. She was gone--whisked away by some swift genie
+and, with her, vanished the world of blue and gold inhabited by lovers.
+
+There remained only that white, faded face among the daisies. With
+careful hands he removed the crushed hat and loosened the collar at the
+neck. It was Molly. Not a doubt of that. Not Molly as he remembered her
+but Molly from whom the years had taken more than their toll, giving but
+little in return. He could not think beyond this fact, as yet. And he
+felt nothing, nothing at all. Both heart and mind lay mercifully numb
+under the anaesthetic of the shock.
+
+Deftly he did the few things necessary to restore the swooning woman,
+noting with a doctor's eye the first faint flush of pink under the dead
+white nails, then the flutter of breath through the parted lips and the
+slow unclosing of the hazel eyes which, at sight of him, sprang widely,
+vividly into life.
+
+"Harry!" The name was the merest whisper and held a quiver of fear. He
+remembered, stolidly, that just so had she whispered it upon the evening
+of their hurried marriage.
+
+"Yes, Molly. It is all right. Don't be frightened!"--Just so had he
+soothed her.
+
+She closed her eyes a moment while strength came back and then, raising
+herself, slipped out of his arms with a little breathless movement of
+avoidance. She seemed indeed to cower away and the fear in her eyes hurt
+him with a physical pang. Instinctively he put out his hand to reassure
+her, repeating his entreaty that she should not be frightened.
+
+"But I am frightened!" Her voice was hoarse. "You terrified me! You had
+no right to come like that. You should have let me know--sent
+word--or--or something."
+
+"Sent word?" He repeated the words, in a dazed way. "How could I? How
+could I know?"
+
+"How could you come if you didn't know?" Already the miracle of
+readjustment which in women is so marvellously quick, had given back to
+Mary Coombe something of her natural manner. Besides, she had always
+known that some day he might find her--if he cared to look.
+
+"Why should you come at all?" she flashed, raising defiant eyes. "The
+time to come was long ago."
+
+"I did come." Callandar spoke slowly. "I came--" he paused, for how
+could he tell her that his coming had been to a house of death.
+
+The bald answer, the strangeness of his gaze stirred her fear again. For
+a moment they stared at each other, each busy with the shifting puzzle.
+Then her quicker intuition abandoned the mystery of the present meeting
+to straighten out the past.
+
+"Then you followed the letter?"
+
+"Yes, I followed the letter."
+
+"And you saw her--my mother?"
+
+"Yes, I saw your mother."
+
+Impulsively he moved toward her but she shrank back, plainly terrified.
+
+"Don't! I didn't know. I swear I did not know. I never saw the
+letter--until last night. And I don't understand. What--what did my
+mother tell you when you came?"
+
+"There was only one thing which would have kept me from you, Molly."
+
+"Only one thing? What?" she almost whispered.
+
+"She told me you were dead."
+
+The flash of understanding on her face showed that she, at least, had
+shifted part of the puzzle into place.
+
+"I see now," she said slowly, "I have wondered ever since I saw the
+letter. But I did not think she would go that far. Yet it was the
+simplest way. There was no date on the letter--but I guessed that it
+must have come too late."
+
+"Too late?"
+
+"Yes, or she would never have dared. Besides she might not have wanted
+to. She didn't know. I never had the courage to tell her. But if the
+letter had come in time--"
+
+She faltered, growing confused under his intense gaze.
+
+"In time for what?" he prompted patiently.
+
+She brushed the question aside.
+
+"Did you believe her when she said that?"
+
+"Yes. Why should I have doubted? It seemed to be the end. I fainted on
+the doorstep. A long illness followed, when it was at its worst a friend
+came--helped me to pull out. When I was well again, I searched for your
+mother, employed detectives, but we never found her. Neither did we find
+anything upon which to hang a doubt of what she had told me."
+
+"No. She was very clever."
+
+"But _why?_ For God's sake, why? Why should she lie to me? I had never
+harmed her. We were married. I could give you a home. She knew it. I
+told her. Why should she do this senseless, horrible thing?"
+
+She looked at him with wide eyes and stammered,
+
+"Don't--don't you know?"
+
+A sense of some hitherto undreamed horror came to him with that
+stammering whisper. The spur of it brought some of his firmness back.
+
+"I do not know. There must have been a reason. You must tell me."
+
+He forced her, through sheer will, to lift her eyes to his. They were
+startled and sullen. With a start he saw, what he had missed before,
+that this woman, his wife, was a stranger. But he had himself well in
+hand now and his gaze did not falter. There was no escaping its demands.
+Her answer came in a little burst of defiance.
+
+"Yes, there was a reason. You may as well know it. Your letter and your
+coming were both too late. I was married."
+
+The doctor was not quick enough for this--
+
+"Yes, of course you were, but--"
+
+"Oh, not to you! Can't you understand? I was married to another man....
+You need not look like that! What did you expect? I warned you. I knew I
+could never defy mother. I told you so. But you said it wouldn't be
+long--that she need never know. And I waited and waited. I could have
+married more than once but I wouldn't. I faced mother and said I
+wouldn't. But every time it was harder. I couldn't keep it up. And you
+didn't come. Then when he came and we thought he was so rich she made me
+marry him. She _made_ me. I thought you were never coming back anyway. I
+wrote you once telling you to come. You didn't answer."
+
+She paused breathless but he could find nothing to say. It seemed a
+small thing that the letter must have missed him somewhere, his whole
+mind was absorbed in trying to comprehend one stupendous fact. The
+puzzle had shifted into place indeed.
+
+"I thought you didn't care any more," her words raced as if eager to be
+done, "and mother gave me no peace. You will never understand how
+terrified I was of mother. And he seemed so kind and was going to be
+rich. He owned part of a gold mine--mother was sure it would mean
+millions. But it didn't. Mother was fooled there!" with a gleam of
+malice. "The mine turned out to be worthless--after we were married."
+
+Callandar drew a sharp breath and shook himself as if to throw off the
+horror of some enthralling nightmare.
+
+"You married him--this man--knowing that you were a wife already?"
+
+"A fine sort of wife!" He quivered at the coarseness of meaning in her
+tone. "We were never really married."
+
+"What do you mean?"
+
+"I mean that it was all a farce. What's a ceremony? For all I knew it
+wasn't even legal. When you did not answer my letter I thought that was
+what your silence meant. I asked a girl to ask her father who was a
+lawyer if a marriage was legal when the girl was under age and the
+parents didn't know about it. He said sometimes it wasn't."
+
+Callandar groaned. "And you married again--on that?"
+
+"Yes. I had to, anyway. I couldn't hold out against mother. I daren't
+tell her. She left us after the wedding, when the mine failed, and went
+back to Cleveland. It was there she must have got your letter, and the
+note I found last night. And when you came, she told you I was dead--to
+save the scandal. She was always different after that, though I never
+guessed why. It was a lie, you see, and mother was terrified of telling
+lies. It was the only thing she was afraid of. She believed that liars
+go to hell."
+
+The tone in which she spoke of the probable torment of her mother was
+quite without feeling. Callandar listened in fascinated wonder. Was this
+Molly?--Pretty, kind-hearted Molly?
+
+"I cannot understand," he said in a stifled voice. "It is all too
+horrible! This man you married--"
+
+"He is dead. He died a year ago. I thought at first that you must have
+found out and that was why you came. I should have died of fright if you
+had come while he was alive. He would never have understood--never! He
+didn't like mother but he wasn't afraid of her. And I think that at last
+he suspected that she had made me marry him for his money. But he was
+always good. At first I was afraid all the time--oh, it was dreadful! I
+think I have always been afraid--all my life--" Without warning she
+threw her hands out wildly and broke into choking sobs, crying with the
+abandon of a frightened child. Yet no one could have mistaken the
+impulse of her grief. It was for herself she wept.
+
+Was it possible that she was a child still? A child in spite of her
+woman's knowledge, and the dulled lustre of her hair? Callandar
+remembered grimly that Molly's views of right and wrong had always been
+peculiarly simple. She had never wished to do wrong, but when she had
+done it, it had never seemed so very wrong to her. Her greatest dread
+had always been the dread of other people's censure.
+
+"Don't cry," he said gently.
+
+She must have felt the change in his voice, for although her sobs
+redoubled she did not again shrink from the hand he laid upon her hair.
+It was all over. She had told him the truth. Surely he must see that he
+was the one to blame, not she.
+
+After a while she dried her eyes and looked up at him timidly but with
+restored confidence.
+
+"People need never know now!" she said more calmly.
+
+"People? Do people matter?"
+
+She picked a daisy and began nervously to strip it of its petals--a pang
+of agony caught at the man's heart. So, only that morning, had he
+imagined himself consulting the daisy oracle. "She loves me, she loves
+me not." Absolutely he put the memory from him. Molly was speaking.
+
+"People do matter. They make things so unpleasant. Not that I care as
+much about them as I used to; but still, one has to be careful. People
+are so prying, always wanting to know things," she glanced around
+nervously, "but let's not talk about them. I don't understand things
+yet. How did you find me, if you thought I was--dead?"
+
+"Accident, if there be such a thing. I was driving down the road. I am
+living in the town near here--in Coombe!"
+
+"But you can't! I live in Coombe. It is my home. There isn't a Chedridge
+in the place."
+
+"My name is not Chedridge now. I took my uncle's name when I inherited
+his money. I am called Henry Callandar."
+
+"Callandar!" Her voice rose shrilly on the word. "And you are living in
+Coombe? Why you are--you must be--Esther's Dr. Callandar!"
+
+The man went deathly white, yet his enormous self-control, the fruit of
+years, held him steady.
+
+Mary Coombe began to laugh weakly. "Why, of course, that explains it
+all, don't you see? Haven't you placed me yet? Esther is my
+step-daughter. The man I married was Doctor Coombe."
+
+"Good God!" The exclamation was revelation enough had Mary Coombe heard
+it. But she did not hear it; this new aspect of the situation had seemed
+to her so farcical that her laughter threatened to become hysterical.
+"Oh, it's so funny!" she gasped.
+
+It was certainly funny--such a good joke! The Doctor thought he might as
+well laugh too. But at the sound of his laughter, hers abruptly ceased.
+
+"Don't do that!"
+
+He tried to control himself. It was hard. He wanted to shriek with
+laughter. Esther's step-mother, the mysterious Mrs. Coombe, was
+Molly--his wife! Some mocking demon shouted into his ears the words he
+had intended to say to her when he came to tell her that he and Esther
+loved each other. He thought of his own high mood of the morning, of the
+tender regret which he had laid away with the dead of the dead past. It
+seemed as if all the world were rocking with diabolic laughter--Fate
+plans such amusing things!
+
+He caught himself up--madness lay that way.
+
+"Please don't laugh!" said Mrs. Coombe a trifle fretfully. "At least not
+so loudly. You startle me. My nerves are so wretched. And anyway it's
+more serious than you seem to think. We shall have to discuss ways of
+managing so that people will not know. Your being already acquainted
+with Esther will help. It will make your coming to the house quite
+natural. But it will be better to admit that we knew each other years
+ago, were boy and girl friends or something like that. Your change of
+name and my marriage will explain perfectly why we did not know each
+other until we met. Nobody will go behind that. They will think it quite
+romantic. The only one we need be afraid of is Esther. She is so quick
+to notice--"
+
+She did not know about Esther then? She had never guessed that the girl
+was more to him than a mere acquaintance. Thank God for that! And thank
+God, above all, that the worst had not happened--Esther herself did not
+know, would never know now--
+
+"I believe it can come quite naturally after all," Mary went on more
+cheerfully. "No one will wonder at anything if we say we are old
+friends. And we can be specially careful with Esther. I wouldn't have
+her know for anything. She is like her father. She would never
+understand. She doesn't know what it is to be afraid, as I was afraid of
+my mother. Do you think it is wicked that sometimes I'm glad she is
+dead, mother, I mean?"
+
+He answered with an effort. "You used to be fond of your mother, Molly."
+
+"Oh, don't call me Molly. Call me Mary. It will sound much better. No
+one has ever heard me called Molly here. If Esther heard it she would
+wonder at once. You will be careful, won't you?"
+
+"Yes. I shall be careful." He had not heard what she said, save that she
+had mentioned Esther's name. Rather he was thinking with a gratitude
+which shook his very soul that fate had at least spared the innocent.
+Esther was safe. She did not love him. He felt sure of that now. Strange
+irony, that his deepest thankfulness should be that Esther did not
+love him.
+
+A small hand fell like a feather upon his arm.
+
+"Harry!"
+
+"Yes, Molly!"
+
+He looked down into her quivering face and saw in it, dimly, the face of
+the girl in his locket, not a mere outward semblance this time but the
+soul of Molly Weston, reaching out to him across the years. Her light
+touch on his arm was the very shackle of fate. Her glance claimed him.
+Nothing that she had done could modify that claim--the terrible claim of
+weakness upon the strength which has misled it.
+
+Vaguely he felt that this was the test, the ultimate test. If he failed
+now he was lost indeed. Something within him reached out blindly for the
+strength he had dreamed was his, found it, clutched it desperately--knew
+that it held firm.
+
+He took the slight figure in his arms, felt that it still trembled and
+said the most comforting thing he could think of. "Don't worry, Molly.
+No one will ever know."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV
+
+
+Ester was sitting upon the back porch, hulling strawberries and watching
+with absent amusement the tireless efforts of Jane to induce a very fat
+and entirely brainless pup to shake hands. It had been a busy day, for
+owing to the absence of the free and independent "Saturday Help" Esther
+had insisted upon helping Aunt Amy in the kitchen. Now the Saturday pies
+and cakes were accomplished and only the strawberries lay between Esther
+and freedom.
+
+She had intended, a little later, to walk out along the river road in
+search of marguerites, but when Mary, more than usually restless after
+her fainting spell of yesterday, had offered to go instead, she had not
+demurred. It would be quite as pleasant to take a book and sit out under
+the big elm. Esther was at that stage when everything seems to be for
+the best in this "best of all possible worlds." She was living through
+those suspended moments when life stands tiptoe, breathless with
+expectancy, yet calm with an assurance of joy to come.
+
+With the knowledge that Henry Callandar was not quite as other men, had
+come an intense, delicious shyness; the aloofness of the maiden who
+feels love near yet cannot, through her very nature, take one step
+to meet it.
+
+There was no hurry. She was surrounded with a roseate haze, lapped in
+deep content; for, while the doctor had learned nothing from their last
+meeting under the elm, Esther had learned everything. She had not seemed
+to look at him as they parted, yet she had known, oh, she had known very
+well, how he had looked at her! All she wanted, now, was to be alone
+with that look; to hold it there in her memory, not to analyse or
+question, but to glance at it shyly now and again, feeding with quick
+glimpses the new strange joy at the heart.
+
+"D'ye think He ever forgets to put brains into dogs?" asked Jane
+suddenly. "Oh, you silly thing, don't roll over like that! Stop
+wriggling and give me your paw!"
+
+"He, who?" vaguely.
+
+Jane made a disgusted gesture. "You're not listening, Esther! You know
+there is only one Person who puts brains into dogs!"
+
+"But Pickles is such a puppy, Jane. Give him time."
+
+"It's not age," gloomily. "It's stupidness. All puppies are stupid, but
+Pickles is the most abnormously stupid puppy I ever saw."
+
+Esther laughed. "Where did you get the word, ducky?"
+
+"From the doctor. It was something he said about Aunt Amy. Say, Esther,
+isn't he going to take you driving any more? I saw him going past this
+very afternoon. He turned down towards the river road. There was lots of
+room. Next time he takes you, may Pickles and me go too?"
+
+"Pickles and I, Jane."
+
+"Well, may we?"
+
+"I don't know. Perhaps. When did the doctor go past?"
+
+"Nearly two hours ago. I wonder if there's some one kick down there?
+Bubble says they're getting a tremenjous practice. I don't like Bubble
+any more. He thinks he's smart. I don't like Ann, either. I shan't ask
+her to my birthday party."
+
+"I thought you loved Ann."
+
+"Well, I don't. She thinks she's smart!"
+
+"Ann, too? Smartness must be epidemic."
+
+"It's all on account of the doctor," gloomily. "They can't get over
+having him boarding at their place. I told Ann that my own father was a
+doctor, but she said dead ones didn't count. Then I told her that my
+mother didn't have to keep boarders anyway."
+
+"That was a naughty, snobbish thing to say. I'm ashamed of you!"
+
+"What's 'snobbish'?"
+
+"What you said was snobbish. Think it over and find out."
+
+Jane was silent, apparently thinking it over. The fat pup, tired with
+unwonted mental exertions, curled up and went to sleep. Esther returned
+to her dreams. Then, into the warm hush of the late afternoon came the
+quick panting of a motor car.
+
+"There he is!" cried Jane excitedly. "Let's both run down to the gate to
+see him."
+
+"Jane!" Esther's cheeks were the colour of her ripest berry. "Jane, come
+here! I forbid you--Jane!"
+
+"He's stopping anyway. He'll be coming in. You had better take off that
+apron.--Oh, look! Some one's with him. Why," with some disappointment,
+"it's mother! He is letting her out. I don't believe he is coming in at
+all--let go! Esther, you pig, let me go!"
+
+She wriggled out of her sister's firm hold but not before the motor had
+started again; when she reached the gate it was out of sight.
+
+Mrs. Coombe surveyed her daughter coldly. "You are a very ill-mannered
+child," she said, and putting her aside walked slowly up the path and
+around the house to where Esther sat on the back porch.
+
+"Where are the daisies?" asked Esther, looking up from her berries.
+
+"The daisies?" vaguely. "Good gracious! I forgot all about the daisies."
+
+"Didn't you get any?"
+
+"Heaps, but the fact is I didn't bring them home. I felt so tired. I
+don't know how I should have managed to get home myself if Dr. Callandar
+hadn't picked me up."
+
+"Dr. Callandar?" Esther's voice was mildly questioning.
+
+"Yes, why not?"
+
+"I thought you had not met him."
+
+"Neither I had--at least I hadn't met him for a good many years." Mary
+gave a little excited laugh. "But that's the funny part of it--he is an
+old friend."
+
+Esther looked up with her characteristic widening of the eyes. The news
+was genuinely surprising. And how agitated her mother seemed!
+
+"It is really quite a remarkable coincidence," went on Mary nervously.
+"I was so surprised, startled indeed. Although it's pleasant, of course,
+to meet an old schoolmate."
+
+"You and Doctor Callandar schoolmates?" The eyes were very wide now.
+
+Mary grew more and more confused.
+
+"Yes--that is, not exactly. I mean his name wasn't Callandar then. His
+name was Chedridge. Did you never hear me speak of Harry Chedridge?"
+
+"Never."
+
+"Well, you never listen to half I say. And how was I to know that Doctor
+Callandar was the Harry Chedridge I used to know? He took the name of
+Callandar from an uncle--or something. Anyway it isn't his own."
+
+Esther hulled a particularly fine berry and carefully putting the hull
+in the pan, threw the berry away.
+
+"Curiouser and curiouser!" she said, quoting the immortal Alice. "Did
+you recognise him at once?"
+
+If it be possible for a lady of this enlightened age to simper, Mrs.
+Coombe simpered. "He recognised me at once!" with faint emphasis on
+the pronouns.
+
+The girl choked down a rising inclination to laugh.
+
+"Why shouldn't he? I suppose you haven't changed very much."
+
+"Hardly at all, he says; at least he says he would have known me
+anywhere. But it's quite a long time, you know, terribly long. I was a
+young girl then. Naturally, he was much older."
+
+"I should have thought so. That's why it seems queer--your having been
+schoolmates."
+
+Mrs. Coombe looked cross. "I did not mean schoolmates in that sense."
+
+"Oh, merely in a Pickwickian sense!" Esther's laugh bubbled out.
+
+Mary arose. She was afraid to risk more at present, until she had been
+to her room and--rested awhile. "You are rude, as usual," she said with
+dignity. "When I said that Dr. Callandar and I were schoolmates I meant
+simply that we were old friends, that we knew each other when we were
+both younger. I do not see anything at all humorous in the statement."
+
+"No, of course not!" with quick compunction. "It's quite lovely. Just
+like a book. Why didn't he come in?"
+
+The question was so cleverly casual that no one could have guessed the
+girl's consuming interest in the answer. But its cleverness had overshot
+the mark, for so colourless was the tone in which it was asked that Mary
+did not notice it at all. Instead she retreated steadily along her
+own line.
+
+"I hope I always treat your friends with proper courtesy, Esther. And I
+shall expect you to do the same with mine. Dr. Callandar is a very old
+friend indeed. Should he call to-night I wish you to receive him
+as such."
+
+"I'll try," said the girl demurely.
+
+The way of escape was now open, but Mrs. Coombe hesitated. She seemed to
+have something else to say. Something which did not come easily. "It's
+horrid living in a town like Coombe," she burst out. "People always want
+to know everything. We met the elder Miss Sinclair on the river
+road--you know what that means! If people ask you any question--or
+anything--you had better tell them at once that Dr. Callandar is not a
+stranger."
+
+"I should not dream of suppressing the fact."
+
+"You see," again that odd hesitation, "he may call--rather often.
+And--people talk so easily."
+
+Despite her care, Esther's sensitive face flamed in answer to the
+quickened beat of her heart. What an odd thing for her mother to say!
+What did she mean? Was it possible that he had already told her--asked
+her? Or had she merely guessed? There was a moment's pause, and then,
+"Let them talk!" said the girl softly. "It can't make any difference, to
+them, how often Dr. Callandar calls."
+
+Mrs. Coombe looked doubtful, hesitated once more, but finally turned
+away without speaking. As she went, she cast a careless glance at Aunt
+Amy, who stood just within the kitchen doorway, a curiously watchful
+look in her usually expressionless eyes.
+
+"Berries all ready, Auntie," said Esther cheerfully. "What's the matter
+with me as a Saturday Help?"
+
+But Aunt Amy did not smile as she usually did.
+
+"She's gone to get dressed," she said abruptly, indicating with a
+backward gesture Mrs. Coombe's retiring figure.
+
+"Well?"
+
+"For him. She's gone to get dressed for him."
+
+Esther was puzzled. "Why shouldn't she? Oh, I forget you didn't know!
+It's quite a romance. Mother used to know Dr. Callandar when she was a
+girl. 'We twa hae rin aboot the braes,' you know. Only it seems so
+funny. Fancy, Dr. Callandar and mother! But we shan't have to worry any
+more about her health. She can't possibly avoid him now."
+
+Aunt Amy was not listening. The curiously watchful look was still in her
+eyes and suddenly, apropos of nothing, she began to wring her hands in
+the strange, dumb way which always preceded one of her characteristic
+mental agonies,--agonies which, far beyond her understanding as they
+were, never failed to awake profound compassion in Esther.
+
+"What is it, dear?" she asked gently. "Are you not so well?"
+
+"Don't you ever feel things, Esther? Don't you ever sense
+things--coming?"
+
+"No, dear. And neither do you, when you are well. You are tired." She
+placed her hands firmly upon the locked hands of Aunt Amy and with
+tender force attempted to separate them. But Jane, who had been a silent
+but interested spectator, spoke eagerly.
+
+"Don't, Esther! Do let her tell us what is coming. You know she always
+tells right when she wrings her hands. Go on, Auntie--"
+
+"Jane, be quiet! I'll tell you why afterwards. Auntie dear, sit down."
+
+'Aunt Amy's hands relaxed and the strange look faded. "It's nothing,"
+she said. "It's gone! I must be more careful. Do not mention it to your
+mother, children. She might think me queer again, and I am not at all
+queer any more. You have noticed that I'm not, haven't you, Esther? I'll
+do anything you say, my dear."
+
+"Then lie out in the hammock while I get supper. The berries are all
+ready. Then we'll all get dressed. Jane may wear one of her new frocks
+and you shall wear your grey voile. It will be quite a party."
+
+"Will there be ice cream? Because if there isn't I don't want to get
+dressed," sighed Jane. "My new things don't fit. They look like bags."
+
+"It will soon be holidays and then I'll fix them for you."
+
+Jane laid a childish cheek to her sister's hand.
+
+"Nice Esther," she cooed. "I'm sorry I called you a pig." Then, in a
+change of tone as they left Aunt Amy resting in the hammock, "Esther,
+why is Auntie so afraid of mother lately? She says such queer things I
+don't know what she means."
+
+"Neither do I, dear. But I think it is just a passing fancy. She was
+very much hurt about the ring being sold. When she gets it back she will
+forget about it."
+
+"She looks at mother as if she hates her."
+
+"Oh, no!" in a startled tone. "How can you say such a thing, Jane?"
+
+"But she does. I've seen her. I don't blame her. I think it was
+horrid--"
+
+"That's enough. You know nothing about it. Little girls who do not
+understand have no right to criticise."
+
+"Fred says it was the most underhan--"
+
+"Jane, one word more and you shall have no berries to-night. Duck, don't
+you realise that you are speaking in a very unkind way of your
+own mother."
+
+The child's eyes filled with ready tears, but her little mouth was
+stubborn. "Auntie's more my mother, Esther, and so are you. And it was
+mean to take the ring and I don't care whether I have any berries
+or not."
+
+Supper was a very quiet meal that night. Mrs. Coombe, interrupted in the
+process of dressing, came down in an old kimono, but ate almost nothing,
+Jane was sullen, Aunt Amy silent and Esther happily oblivious to
+everything save her own happy thoughts.
+
+As soon as she could, she slipped away to her own room, and, choosing
+everything with care, began to dress herself as a maiden dresses for the
+eye of her lover. She was to be all in white, her dainty dress, her
+petticoats, stockings and shoes. White made her look younger than ever,
+absurdly young. He had never seen her all in white and she knew quite
+well how soft it made the shadows of her hair, how startlingly blue her
+eyes, how warm and living the ivory of her lovely neck.
+
+"Oh, I am glad I am pretty!" she whispered to her mirror. "Glad, glad!"
+Then with a laugh at her own childishness she "touched wood" to
+propitiate the jealous fates and ran down stairs to hide herself in the
+duskiest corner of the veranda.
+
+It was delightful there. The cooling air was sweet with the mingled
+perfumes of the garden border below, an early star had fallen,
+sparkling, upon the blue-grey train of departing day, a whispering
+breeze crept, soft-footed, through the shrubbery. Esther lay back in the
+long chair and closed her eyes. For thirty perfect moments she waited
+until the click of the garden gate announced his coming. Then she sprang
+up, smiling, blushing,--peering through the screen of vines--
+
+A man was coming up the path. At first sight he seemed a stranger, some
+one who walked heavily, slowly--the doctor's step was quick and
+springing. Yet it was he! She drew back, shyly, yet looked again. Some
+one, in a pretty green silk gown, had slipped out from under the big elm
+and was meeting him with outstretched hands.
+
+"Mother," thought Esther, "how strange!"
+
+They had paused and were talking together. Mary's high, sweet laugh
+floated over the flowers, then her voice, a mere murmur. His voice,
+lower still. Then silence. They had turned back, together, down the
+lilac walk.
+
+Esther sat down again. She felt numb. She closed her eyes as she had
+done before. But all the dreams, all the happy thoughts were gone. She
+opened them abruptly to find Aunt Amy staring down upon her, dumbly,
+wringing her hands. In the warm summer air the girl shivered.
+
+"What is it?" she asked a little sharply. But Aunt Amy seemed neither to
+see nor hear her. She flitted by like some wandering grey moth into the
+dim garden, still wringing her hands.
+
+Esther sat up. "How utterly absurd," she said aloud. Indeed she felt
+heartily ashamed of herself. To behave like a foolish child, to startle
+Aunt Amy into a fit and all because her mother and Dr. Callandar had
+gone for a stroll down the lilac walk--the most natural thing in the
+world. They would return presently. She had only to wait. But the
+waiting was not quite the same. Those golden moments already sparkled in
+the past. Nothing could ever be quite the same as if he had come
+straight up the path to where she waited for him in the dusk.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In the living-room, Jane who had small patience with twilight, had
+lighted the lamp. Its shaded beams fell in golden bars across the
+veranda floor. The sky was full of stars, now, but the voice of the
+breeze was growing shrill, as if whistling up the rain.
+
+They were coming back along the side of the house. Esther rose quickly
+and slipped into the safety of the commonplace with Jane and the lighted
+lamp. Mrs. Coombe entered first, there was an instant to observe and
+wonder at her. She seemed a different woman, young, pretty, sparkling;
+even her hair seemed brighter. Behind her came Callandar and when Esther
+saw his face her heart seemed to stop. It was the face, almost, of a man
+of middle age, a firm, quiet face with cold eyes.
+
+"Esther!" Mrs. Coombe's voice held incipient reproof.
+
+The girl came forward and offered her hand. The doctor, this new doctor,
+took it, let it drop and said, "Good evening, Miss Esther," then turned
+to Jane with a politely worded message from Ann and Bubble.
+
+"You can tell them I won't go," said Jane crossly. "They think they are
+smart. Just because--"
+
+Esther slipped quietly from the room. In the hall outside she paused,
+breathless. She felt as if she had run a long way. Shame enveloped her,
+a shame whose cause she could not put into words. She only knew that she
+had, in the few seconds of that cold greeting, been profoundly
+humiliated. She quivered with the sting of unwarranted expectancy. But
+if this had been all, it would have been well. There was something else,
+some deeper pain surging through the smart of wounded pride, something
+which led her with blind steps into a dark corner of the stairs where
+she sat very quiet and still.
+
+Through the open front door, she could see the bars of lamplight on the
+deserted veranda, and hear from the open windows of the living-room a
+hum of conversation in which Jane seemed to be taking a leading part.
+Then came the tinkle of the old piano and Mary's voice, singing, or
+attempting to sing, for it was soon apparent that her voice sagged
+pitifully on the high notes.
+
+Presently Jane came out, banging the door. Jane's manners, Esther
+thought, were really very bad. She had probably banged the door because
+she had been sent to bed and she had probably been sent to bed because
+she had been saucy. Esther wondered what particular form her sauciness
+had taken, but when Jane called softly, "Esther!" she did not answer.
+She did not want to put Jane to bed to-night. The child flashed past her
+up the stairs and soon could be heard from an upstair window calling
+imperatively for Aunt Amy. But Aunt Amy, flitting through the dim garden
+wringing her hands, did not hear. Jane, much injured, went to bed by
+herself that night.
+
+In the lamp-lit room there was no more music. The murmur of voices grew
+less distinct. There were intervals of silence. (Only very old friends
+can support a silence gracefully--but of course these two were very old
+friends.) Esther wondered, idly, how it would be best to explain her
+absence to her mother. Toothache, perhaps? Not that the excuse mattered.
+Mary never listened to excuses. She would be cross and fretful anyway
+and complain that Esther never treated her friends with proper courtesy.
+The best thing she could do would be to go to bed. But she made no
+movement to go; the moments ticked by on the hall clock unnoticed.
+
+After a time, which might have been long or short, there was a stir in
+the room and her mother's voice called "Esther! Esther!"
+
+The girl stood up, smoothed her white dress, slipped out on to the
+veranda and into the garden. From there she answered the call.
+"Yes, Mother?"
+
+"Where are you? You sound as if you had been asleep. Doctor Callandar is
+going."
+
+Esther came lightly up the steps.
+
+"So soon?"
+
+"It is early," agreed Mrs. Coombe playfully, "but I can't keep him."
+
+Esther, herself in shadow, could see the doctor's face as he stood
+quietly beside his hostess. It was full of an endless weariness. Her
+pride melted. Impulsively she put out a warm hand--
+
+"Good night, Miss Esther. How very sweet your garden is at night. But it
+feels as if our fine weather were over. The wind begins to blow
+like rain."
+
+Esther's hand dropped to her side. Perhaps he had not seen it in the
+dusk.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV
+
+
+We all know that strange remoteness into which one wakes from out deep
+sleep. Though the eye be open, the Ego is not there to use it. For an
+immeasurable second, the awakener knows not who he is, nor why, nor
+where. Only there is, faintly perceptible, a reminiscent consciousness
+whether of joy or sorrow, a certain flavour of the soul, sweet or
+bitter, into which the Ego, slipping back, announces, "I am happy" or "I
+am miserable."
+
+Esther had not hoped to sleep that night but she did sleep and heavily.
+When she awoke it was to blankness, a cold throbbing blankness of
+undefined ill being. Then her Ego, with a sigh, came back from far
+places; the busy brain shot into focus; all the memories, fears,
+humiliation of the night before stood forth clear and poignant. She
+buried her face in the pillow.
+
+Yet, after the first rush of consciousness, there came a difference.
+There always is a difference between night and day thoughts. Fresh from
+its wonder-journey, the soul is braver in the morning, the brain is
+calmer, the spirit more hopeful. After a half-hour's self-examination
+with her face in the pillow Esther began to wonder if she had not been
+foolishly apprehensive and whether it were not possible that half her
+fears were bogies. The weight began to lighten, she breathed more
+freely. Looking over the rim of the sheltering pillow the morning seemed
+no longer hateful.
+
+Foremost of all comforting thoughts was the conviction that instinct
+must still be trusted against evidence. Through all her speculations as
+to the unexplained happenings of the previous day, she found that
+instinct held firmly to its former belief regarding the doctor's
+feelings toward herself. There are some things which one knows
+absolutely and Esther knew that Henry Callandar had looked upon her as a
+man looks upon the woman he loves. He had loved her that night when they
+paddled through the moonlight; he had loved her when he watched for her
+coming along the road, but most of all he had loved her when, under the
+eye of Aunt Amy, they had said good-bye at the garden gate. This much
+was sure, else all her instincts were foresworn.
+
+After this came chaos. She could not in any way read the riddle of his
+manner of last night. Had the sudden resumption of his old friendship
+with her mother absorbed his mind to the exclusion of everything else?
+Impossible, if he loved her. Had purely physical weariness or mental
+worry blotted her out completely for the time being? Impossible, if he
+loved her. Then what had happened?
+
+Doubtless it would all be simple enough when she understood. She sighed
+and raised her head from the pillow. At any rate it was morning. The day
+must be faced and lived through. Any one of its hours might bring
+happiness again.
+
+The rainstorm which had swept up during the night had passed, leaving
+the morning clean. She needed no recollection to tell her that it was
+Sunday. The Sabbath hush was on everything; no milkman's cans jingled
+down the street; no playing children called or shouted; there was a bell
+ringing somewhere for early service. Esther sighed again. She was sorry
+it was Sunday. Work-a-day times are easiest.
+
+A rich odour of coffee, insinuating itself through the half open door,
+testified mutely to the fact that Aunt Amy was getting breakfast. It was
+later than usual. After breakfast it would be time to dress for church.
+Every one in Coombe dressed for church. It was a sacred rite. One and
+all, they had clothes which were strictly Sabbatarian, known indeed by
+the name of Sunday Best.
+
+Esther's Sunday best was a blue, voile, a lovely blue, the colour of her
+eyes when in soft shadow. It was made with a long straight skirt
+slightly high at the waist, round neck and elbow sleeves and with it
+went soft, wrinkly gloves and a wide hat trimmed with cornflowers. She
+knew that she looked well in it--and the doctor would be in church.
+
+On this thought which flew into her mind like a swift swallow through an
+open window, her lethargy fled and in its place came nervous haste; a
+feverish impatience which brought her with a bound out of bed, flushed
+and eager. Philosophy is all very well but it never yet stilled the
+heart-beat of the young.
+
+Aunt Amy looked up in mild surprise as she hurried into the kitchen in
+time to butter toast and poach the eggs.
+
+"Why, Esther!" she said in her bewildered way. "I thought--I didn't
+think that you would get up this morning."
+
+"Why? I am perfectly well, Auntie. Where is mother?"
+
+"Oh, she's up! Picking flowers."
+
+Esther looked slightly surprised. It was not Mrs. Coombe's habit to rise
+early or to pick flowers, but before she had time to comment, Mary
+herself entered the kitchen with an armful of roses.
+
+"Hurry with your breakfast, Jane," she said, "I want you to take these
+over to the doctor's office. I wonder you have not sent some to the poor
+man before this, Esther. Mrs. Sykes' roses never amount to anything.
+Shall I pour the coffee? I suppose you felt that you did not know him
+well enough. But flowers sent in a neighbourly way would have been quite
+all right. If you weren't always so stiff, people would like you better.
+I felt quite ashamed of your behaviour last night. Of course it wasn't
+necessary for you to stay in the room _all_ the evening, but it was
+simply rude to run away as you did. You needn't make Jane an excuse.
+Jane could put herself to bed, for once."
+
+"I did--" began Jane, but catching sight of her sister's face, went no
+further. And Mrs. Coombe, who was always talkative when airing a
+grievance, paid no attention.
+
+"If you are feeling huffy about the motor breaking down, you'll just
+have to get over it," she went on. "It couldn't possibly have been Dr.
+Callandar's fault anyway."
+
+"I am quite sure that it wasn't."
+
+"Then don't sulk. He is rather fine looking, don't you think? Though as
+a boy he was almost ugly. It doesn't seem to matter in men--ugliness, I
+mean. And of course in those days he could not afford to dress; dress
+makes such a difference. I shouldn't be a bit surprised if his clothes
+are English made. That baggy look that isn't really baggy, you know.
+When I knew him his people were quite poor. Only a mother and sister.
+The father shot himself. People said suicide ran in that family. But
+Harry--Henry said that if it did, it was going to stop running. He said
+such odd things. I was staying with friends when I met him, at a church
+social. One meets all kinds at an affair like that. My friends didn't
+ask him to the party they gave for me. For although they were a very
+good family, the Chedridges, Henry was almost a hired man at that time,
+working for old Dr. Inglis, to put himself through college. His mother
+and sister never went out."
+
+"Were they both invalids?"
+
+"Don't be clever, Esther! I mean socially, of course. Jane, run up to my
+dresser and look in the second drawer on the right hand side and bring
+down my small photo case. I think I have a photo somewhere, not a very
+good one, but enough to show how homely he was.... Amy, aren't you going
+to eat any breakfast this morning?"
+
+Aunt Amy, who had been following her niece's unusual flow of talk with
+fascinated attention, returned with a start to her untasted egg. Esther
+tried to eat some toast and choked. In spite of all her resolutions she
+felt coldly and bitterly angry. That her mother should dare to gossip
+about him like that! That she should call him "ugly," that she should
+speak with that air of almost insolent proprietorship of those wonderful
+early years long, long before she, Esther, had come into his life at
+all, it was unendurable!
+
+Do not smile, sophisticated young person. When you are in love you will
+know, only too well, this jealousy of youless years; this tenderness for
+photos and trifling remembrances of the youth of the one you love. You
+will envy his very mother, who, presumably, knew him fairly well in the
+nursery, and that first dreadful picture of him in plaid dress and
+plastered hair will seem a sacred relic.
+
+In the meantime you may take my word for it, and try to understand how
+Esther felt as she bent, perforce, over the photo of a dark-browed lad
+whose very expression was in itself a valid protest against photography.
+
+"Ugly, wasn't he?" asked Mrs. Coombe.
+
+"Very," said Esther.
+
+"Perfectly fierce," said Jane, peering over her shoulder. "Really
+fierce, I mean, not slang. He looks as if he would love to bite
+somebody."
+
+"The photographer, probably."
+
+Esther shrugged her shoulders and laid the photo carelessly upon the
+table. So careless was she, in fact, that a sharp "Look out!" from Jane
+did not prevent a sudden jerk of her elbow upsetting her steaming cup of
+coffee right over the pictured face.
+
+With an angry exclamation, Mary sprang forward to rescue her property
+but Esther had already picked it up and was endeavouring to repair the
+damage with her table napkin.
+
+"Oh, do take care!" said Mary irritably. "Don't rub so _hard_--you'll
+rub all the film off--there! What did I tell you?"
+
+"Dear me! who would ever have dreamed it would rub off that easily?"
+Esther surveyed the crumpled bits of photo with convincing dismay.
+
+"Any one, with sense. It's ruined--how utterly stupid of you, Esther."
+Mary's voice quivered with anger. "You provoking thing! I believe you
+did it on purpose."
+
+The cold stare from the girl's eyes stopped her, but she added
+fretfully, "You are always doing things to annoy me. I can't think why,
+I'm sure."
+
+"She was trying to dry it," declared Jane, belligerently. "She didn't
+mean to hurt the old photo. Did you, darling?"
+
+"I can hardly see what my motive could have been," said Esther politely,
+rising from the table. She had deliberately tried to destroy the
+photograph and was exultantly glad that she had succeeded, yet, so
+quickly does the actress instinct develop under the spur of necessity,
+that her face and manner showed only amused tolerance of such a foolish
+suspicion.
+
+Later, the culprit smiled understandingly at her image in the mirror as
+she dressed for church. "I did not know I could be so catty," she told
+her reflection, "but I don't care. She hadn't any right to have that
+darling picture. Ugly, indeed!" The blue eyes snapped and then became
+reflective. "Only she didn't think it ugly any more than I did. It was
+just talk. She was certainly furious when the film rubbed off. I
+wonder--" She fastened the last dark tress of hair, still wondering.
+
+All the way to church she wondered, walking demurely with Jane up
+Oliver's Hill, while Mary, nervously gay, fluttered on a step or two
+ahead. Jane found her unresponsive that morning. The acquaintances they
+passed found her distant. They wondered if Esther Coombe were becoming
+"stuck up" since she had a school of her own? For although, as Miss
+Agnes Smith said, it is not quite the thing to do more than nod and
+smile on the way to church, one doesn't need to pass one's friends
+looking like an absent-minded funeral.
+
+Poor Esther! She saw nobody because she looked for only one.
+
+"Oh, Esther, Mrs. Sykes has a new bonnet. There she is, Esther, look!"
+
+"Very pretty," murmured Esther absently.
+
+Jane dropped her hand. "You're blind as well as deaf, Esther. It's
+perfectly, dreadfully awful, and you know it!"
+
+Thus abjured, Esther managed to look at Mrs. Sykes' bonnet. And, having
+looked, she laughed. Mrs. Sykes had certainly surpassed herself in
+bonnets. And poor Ann, her skirts were stiffer, her pig-tails tighter
+and her small face more mutinous than ever. The doctor was not of the
+party. Esther had known that, long before Jane had noticed the bonnet.
+
+Still, there was nothing in that. He did not always walk with Ann to
+church. He might not come up Oliver's Hill at all. He might come from
+the opposite direction. He might be in church already. Esther's step
+quickened. But she had no excuse for hurry. Unless one sang in the choir
+or were threatened with lateness it was not etiquette to push ahead of
+any one on Oliver's Hill. Decently and in order was the motto, so Esther
+was sharply reminded when she had almost trodden on the unhastening
+heels of Mrs. Elder MacTavish.
+
+Mrs. MacTavish turned in surprise but, seeing Esther, relaxed into the
+usual Sunday smile and bow.
+
+"Good morning, Esther. Good morning, Mrs. Coombe. Good morning, Jane.
+What perfect weather we are having. You are all well, I hope?"
+
+"Very well, thank you."
+
+"And dear Miss Amy?"
+
+"Very well indeed."
+
+"So sad that she never cares to come to church. But of course one
+understands. And it must be a satisfaction to you all that she keeps so
+well. I said to Mr. MacTavish only last night that I felt sure Dr.
+Callandar was not being called in professionally. That is the worst of
+being a doctor. One can hardly attend to one's social duties without
+arousing fear for the health of one's friends. Not that Dr. Callandar is
+overly sociable, usually."
+
+The last word, delivered as if by an afterthought, said everything which
+she wished it to say. Esther's lips shut tightly. Mary Coombe flushed.
+But she was quick to seize the opening nevertheless.
+
+"Such an odd thing, dear Mrs. MacTavish! Dr. Callandar turns out to be
+quite an old friend of--of my family. We knew each other as boy and
+girl. In his college days, you know."
+
+"How very pleasant. But I always understood your family lived in
+Cleveland. Did Dr. Callandar take his degree in the States?"
+
+"Oh, no, of course not, but I was visiting in Canada when we knew each
+other. Mutual friends and--and all that, you know."
+
+"Very romantic," said Mrs. MacTavish. Her tone was pleasantly cordial,
+yet there was a something, a tinge--her quick glance took in Mrs.
+Coombe's pretty dress and flowered hat, and the beginning of a smile
+moved her thin lips. She said nothing. But then she did not need to say
+anything. Mind reading is common with women.
+
+Mrs. Coombe was furious. Esther laughed suddenly, a bubbling, girlish
+laugh, and then pretended that she had laughed because Jane had stubbed
+her toe. Jane looked hurt, Mrs. Coombe suspicious and Mrs. MacTavish
+amused. So in anything but a properly Sabbatical frame of mind the
+little party arrived at the church door.
+
+Who does not know, if only in memory, that exquisite thrill of fear and
+expectation with which Esther entered the place which might contain the
+man she loved? Another moment, a breath, and she might see him!... And
+who has not known that stab of pain, that awful darkness of the spirit,
+which came upon her as, instantly, she knew that he was not there?
+
+He was not in the church. Mental telepathy is recognised as well by its
+absence as by its presence. Esther knew that the church was empty of her
+lover and that it would remain empty. He was not coming to church
+to-day. Fortunate indeed that Mrs. MacTavish was not looking, for the
+girl's lip quivered, an unnatural darkness deepened the blue of her
+eyes. Then, smiling, she followed her mother up the aisle. Girls are
+wonderfully brave and if language is given us to conceal our thoughts
+smiles are very convenient also.
+
+Mary Coombe settled herself with a flutter and a rustle, and then,
+behind the decorous shield of a hymn book, she whispered,
+
+"Did you see Dr. Callandar as we came in?"
+
+"No."
+
+"Look and see if he is here."
+
+The girl glanced perfunctorily around.
+
+"No," she said.
+
+Mrs. Coombe frowned. She was patiently annoyed and Esther felt cold
+anger stir again. What difference could the doctor's absence possibly
+make to Mary Coombe?
+
+The singing of the psalm and the reading were long drawn out
+wearinesses. Esther had not come to church to worship that morning. We
+do not comment upon her attitude. We merely state it. To-day, church,
+the service and all that it stood for had been absolutely outside of
+her emotions. Yet with the prayer came the thought of God and with the
+thought a thrill of angry fear--a fear which was an inevitable after
+effect of her very orthodox training. God, she felt dimly, did not like
+people to be very happy. He was a jealous God. He was probably angry now
+because she had come to church thinking more of Dr. Callandar than of
+Him. "Thou shalt have no other Gods before me!" Awful, mystical words!
+Did they mean that one couldn't have any human god at all? Not even a
+near, kind protecting god--like the doctor? It frightened her.
+
+She found herself explaining to God that her lover was not really a
+rival. That although she loved him so terribly it was in quite a
+different way and would never interfere with her religious duties. Then,
+feeling the futility of this, she pretended carelessness, trying to
+deceive God into the belief that she didn't think so very much of the
+doctor anyway.
+
+This was in the prayer, while she sat with her eyes decorously shaded by
+her hand. Above her in the pulpit, the minister in an ecstasy of
+petition set forth the needs of the church, the state and the
+individual. Esther did not hear a word until a sudden dropping of his
+voice forced a certain phrase upon her attention. He was praying, with
+an especial poignancy for "that blessing which maketh rich and addeth
+no sorrow."
+
+Was there such a blessing? A blessing which would make rich and add no
+sorrow? No wonder the minister prayed for it. To Esther, whose mind was
+saturated with the idea of God as the author of chastenings, the
+possibility came with a shock of joy. She, too, began to pray, and she
+prayed for one thing only, over and over--the blessing that maketh rich
+and addeth no sorrow. There was no need, she felt, to specify further.
+God was sure to guess what blessing she meant.
+
+A subdued rustle, a swaying as of barley in a gentle breeze and the
+prayer was over. Esther removed her hand from her eyes and looked up at
+the minister. For a tiny second his glance met hers. A thrill shot
+through her, a thrill of dismay. With all the force of a new idea, it
+came to her that she and he were in the same parlous case. He loved her,
+as she loved--somebody else.
+
+And that meant that he must suffer, suffer as she had suffered last
+night. Last week when he had told her of his love she had been
+surprised, sorry and a little angry. But last week he had spoken of
+unknown things. Love and suffering had been words to her then, now they
+were realities.
+
+Then, for she was learning quickly now, came another flash of
+enlightenment. They had been praying for the same thing. He, too, had
+prayed for the blessing which maketh rich--and he had meant _her_. She
+knew it. He had been asking God to give her to him. Horrible!
+
+Common sense shrank back before the invading flood of fear. What if God
+had listened? What if He had answered? Ministers, she knew, have great
+influence with God. What if He had said, "Yes"? What if all the trouble
+of last night, the blankness of to-day, were part of the answer?
+
+"Never! Never!" she said. She almost said it aloud, so real had her fear
+been. Her eyes, fixed upon the minister's face, were terrified, but her
+soul was strong. Fearful of blasphemy, yet brave, she faced the bogie of
+a God her thought had evoked, saying, "I make my own choice. Take my
+lover from me if you will--I shall never give myself to another."
+
+All this was very wrong, shocking even, especially in church. But it
+really happened and is apt to happen any Sunday in any church so long as
+human love rebels at the idea of a Divine love less tender than itself.
+
+Gradually the panic fear died down. Esther's sane and well-balanced
+nature began to assert itself. Some voice, small but insistent, began to
+say, "God is not like that," and she listened and was comforted. She had
+not yet come to the love which casts out fear, but she was done with the
+fear which casts out love.
+
+So that when on the church steps in the sunshine she felt Angus
+Macnair's hand tremble in hers, she was able to meet his eyes,
+straightly, understandingly, but unafraid.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVI
+
+
+The manner in which Dr. Callandar spent that tragic Sunday is not
+clearly on record. We have watched Esther so closely that he has been
+permitted to escape our observation, and it would be manifestly unfair
+to expect any coherent account of the day from him. He knows that he
+went for a walk, early, and that he walked all day. He remembers once
+resting by the willow-fringed pool which had seen his introduction into
+Coombe, but he could not stay there. Between him and that hot June day
+lay the wreck of a world. Once he stumbled upon the Pine Lake road and
+followed it a little way. But here, too, memory came too close and drove
+him aside into the fields. There he tried to face his future fairly,
+under the calm sky. But it was hard work. With such a riot of feeling,
+it was difficult to think. His mind continually fell away into the
+contemplation of his own misery. It was a bad day, a day which left an
+ineffaceable mark.
+
+With night came the first sign of peace, or rather of capitulation. He
+fought no more because he realised that there was nothing for which to
+fight. There had never been, from the very first moment, a possibility
+of escape, the smallest ray of hope. Fate had met him squarely and the
+issue had never been in doubt.
+
+It was a "wonderful clear night of stars" when, having circled the town
+in his aimless wandering, he found himself opposite the schoolhouse gate
+and calm enough to allow his thoughts to dwell definitely upon Esther.
+She, at least, was safe, and the knowledge brought pure thankfulness.
+Not for anything in the world would he have had her entangled in this
+tragic coil. Leaning over the gate he saw the school steps, faintly
+white in the starlight. It needed small effort of imagination to see her
+there as he had seen her that first day--a happy girl, looking at him
+with the long, straight glance of unawakened youth. A great wave of
+protecting love went out to meet that vision. Self was lost in its
+immensity. As he had found her, so, please God, she was still and so he
+would leave her.
+
+Then, somewhere in the back of his brain, a question sprang to vivid
+life. Was she the same? He knew that all day he had been fighting back
+that question. Last night something had frightened him--something
+glimpsed for a moment in Esther's face when she had come in from the
+garden to say good-night. Fancy, perhaps, or a trick of the lamplight.
+She could not really have changed. He would not allow himself even to
+dream that she had changed.
+
+By this time she would know about himself and Mary--know all that any
+one was to know. He had insisted upon that. Mary had promised to tell
+her to-day that they were to be married soon. Next time he saw her she
+would look upon him with different eyes; eyes which would see not her
+sometime friend and companion but her step-mother's future husband. He
+must steel himself for this. Probably she would laugh a little. He hoped
+she would laugh. Last night she had looked so--she had not looked like
+laughter. If she should laugh it would answer the last doubt in his
+heart. He would know that she was free.
+
+Presently he felt himself to be unbearably weary. Physical needs,
+ignored all day, began to clamour. He must get home at once. No _outré_
+proceedings must raise the easy breath of gossip. He must not flinch, he
+dared not run away, all must be done decently and in order. Let him only
+keep his head now--the bravest man need not look too far into
+the morrow.
+
+It must be late, he knew. The road into Coombe was deserted. All the
+buggies of the country folk returning from evening service had passed
+long ago and even the happy young couples indulging in a Sunday night
+"after church" flirtation had decorously sought their homes. He looked
+at his watch by the clear starlight. It was later even than he had
+thought. No need to avoid passing the Elms, now; they would all be
+asleep--he might perhaps be able to sleep himself if he knew that no
+light burned in Esther's window.
+
+There was no light in the house anywhere. It stood black in the shadow
+of its trees. The doctor found himself walking softly. His steps grew
+slower, paused. Irresistibly the "spirit in his feet" drew him to the
+closed gate from where he could see the black oblong of her window.
+
+"She is asleep," he thought. "Of course she is asleep. Thank God!"
+
+Then, on the instant of dropping his eyes from the window, he saw her.
+She was standing quite near, in the shadow of the elm.
+
+"Esther!" The one word leaped from his lips like a cry.
+
+"Yes, it is I," she said.
+
+She offered no word of explanation nor did any need of one occur to
+him. Moving from the shadow into the soft starlight she came toward him
+like the spirit of the night. But when she paused, so close that only
+the gate divided them, he saw that her eyes were wide and dark
+with trouble.
+
+"I am so glad you came. I wanted to see you. I--I could not sleep." She
+spoke with the direct simplicity of a child, yet nothing could have
+shown more plainly that she was a child no longer. All her pretty
+girlish hesitation, all her happy shyness had passed away on the breath
+of the great awakening. It was a woman who stood there, pale, remote,
+with a woman's question in her eyes.
+
+The keen shock of the change in her filled Callandar with rebellious
+joy; it would be pain presently, but, just for the moment, love exulted
+shamelessly, claiming her own. He tried to answer her but no words came.
+
+"You look very tired." She seemed not to notice his silence. "I must not
+keep you. But there is a question I want to ask. Mother told me to-night
+that you and she are to be married. Is it true?"
+
+How incredible she was, he thought. How perfect in her direct and simple
+dignity. Yet there had crept into her tone a wistfulness which broke
+his heart.
+
+"Yes. It is true." He could do no less than meet her on her own high
+ground.
+
+"She said," the girl's sweet, remote voice went on, "that you had loved
+each other all your lives. Is that true, too?"
+
+He had hoped that he might be spared the bitterness of this, but since
+only one answer was possible, "It is true," he said hoarsely, "it is
+true that we loved each other--long ago."
+
+"Long ago--and now?" He was to be spared nothing, it seemed. Her wide
+eyes searched his face. Lest she should read it too plainly, he
+bowed his head.
+
+Then suddenly, even as she drew back from him, hurt to the heart, some
+trick of moonlight on his half-hidden face, linked to swift memory,
+showed her another moonlight night, a canoe, a story told--and in a
+flash the miracle had happened. Intuition had leaped the gulf of his
+enforced silence--Esther knew.
+
+A great wonder grew in her eyes, an immense relief.
+
+"Why," she spoke whisperingly, "I see, I know! She, my mother, is the
+girl you told me of. The girl you married--"
+
+She did not need the confirmation of his miserable eyes. It was all
+quite plain. With a little broken sigh of understanding, she leaned her
+head against the gate post and, all child again, began to cry softly
+behind the shelter of her hands.
+
+"Esther!"
+
+He could say nothing, do nothing. He dared not even touch the dark, bent
+head. But we may well pity him as he watched her.
+
+The girl's sobbing wore itself out and presently she lifted
+tear-drenched eyes, like the blue of the sky after rain. Her tragic,
+unnatural composure had all been wept away.
+
+"I understand--now," she faltered. "Before, I didn't. I thought dreadful
+things. I thought that I--that you--oh, I couldn't bear the things I
+thought! But it's better now. You did love me--didn't you?"
+
+"Before God--yes!"
+
+She went on dreamily. "It would have been too terrible if you hadn't--if
+you had just pretended--had been amusing yourself--been false and base.
+But I felt all along that you were never that. I knew there must be
+some explanation and it didn't seem wrong to ask. Instead of pretending
+that I didn't know all the things you had not time to say. Forgive me
+for ever doubting that you were brave and good."
+
+"Spare me--"
+
+She was not yet old enough to understand the tragic appeal. For she
+leaned nearer, laying her soft hand over his clenched ones.
+
+"It is all so very, very sad," she said with quaint simplicity which was
+part of her, "but not so bad--oh, not nearly so bad as if you had been
+pretending--or I mistaken. Think!--How terrible to give one's love
+unworthily or unasked!"
+
+"But you do not love me," he burst out, "you cannot! You must not!"
+
+Never had he seen her eyes so sweet, so dark.
+
+"I do love you. And I honour you above all men."
+
+Before he could prevent her, she had stooped--her lips brushed his hand.
+
+"Oh, my Dear!"--He had reached the limit of his strength--instant flight
+alone remained if he would keep the precious flower of her trust. And
+she, too, was trembling. But in the soft starlight they looked into each
+other's eyes, and what they saw there helped. Their hands clasped, but
+in that moment of parting neither thought of self, so both were strong.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVII
+
+
+Mrs. Sykes thought much about her boarder in those days and, for a
+wonder, said very little. Gossip as she was, she could, in the service
+of one she liked, be both wise and reticent. Perhaps she knew that
+oracles are valued partly for their silences. At any rate her prestige
+suffered nothing, for the less she said, the more certain Coombe became
+that she could, if she would, say a great deal. Of course her pretence
+of seeing nothing unusual in the doctor's engagement was simply absurd.
+Coombe felt sure that like the pig-baby in "Alice," she only did it "to
+annoy because she knows it teases."
+
+One by one the most expert gossips of the town charged down upon the
+doctor's landlady and one by one they returned defeated.
+
+"True about the doctor and Mary Coombe? Why, yes of course it's true.
+Land sakes, it's no secret." Mrs. Sykes would look at her visitor in
+innocent astonishment. "Queer? No. I don't see anything queer about it.
+Mary Coombe's a nice looking woman, if she is sloppy, and I guess she
+ain't any older than the doctor, if it comes to that. No, the doctor
+doesn't say much about it. He ain't a talking man. Sudden? Oh, I don't
+know. 'Tisn't as if they'd met like strangers. As you say, they _might_
+have kept company before. But I never heard of it. I always forget,
+Mrs. MacTavish, if you take sugar? One spoon or two? As you say, old
+friends sometimes take up with old friends. But sometimes they don't. My
+Aunt Susan found her second in a man who used to weed their garden. But
+it's not safe to judge by that. Ann, hand Mrs. MacTavish this cup, and
+go tell Bubble Burk that if he doesn't stop aggravating that dog, it'll
+bite him some day, and nobody sorry."
+
+In this manner did Mrs. Sykes hold the fort. Not from her would Coombe
+hear of those "blue things of the soul" which her quick eye divined
+behind the quiet front of her favourite. But with the doctor himself she
+had no reserves, it being one of her many maxims that "what you up and
+say to a person's face doesn't hurt them any." The doctor was made well
+aware that her unvarnished opinion of his prospective marriage was at
+his disposal at any time.
+
+"I'm not one as gives advice that ain't asked," declared Mrs. Sykes with
+sincere self-deception. "But what sensible folks see in Mary Coombe I
+can't imagine. I may be biased, not having ever liked her from the very
+first, but being always willing to give her a chance--which I may say
+she never took. There's a verse in the Bible she reminds me of,
+'Unstable as water'--Ann, what tribe was it that the Lord addressed them
+words to?"
+
+"I don't know, Aunt."
+
+"There, you see! She doesn't know! That's what happens along of all
+these Sunday Schools. In my day I'd be spanked and sent to bed if I
+didn't know every last thing about the tribes."
+
+"Ann and I will go and look it up," said the doctor hastily, hoping to
+escape; "it will be good discipline for both of us."
+
+"Land sakes! I'm not blaming you, Doctor. Naturally you haven't got your
+mind on texts, and I don't blame you about the other thing either. Men
+are awful easy taken in. My Aunt Susan used to say that the cleverer a
+man was the more he didn't understand a woman. Dr. Coombe was what you'd
+call clever, too, but it didn't help him any. Mind you, I'm not
+criticising, far from it, but I suppose a person may wonder what a man's
+eyes are for, without offence. No one knows better than you, Doctor,
+that I'm not an interfering woman and I'd never dream of saying a word
+against Mary Coombe to the face of her intended husband, but if I did
+say anything it would have to be the truth and the truth is that a more
+thorough-paced bit of uselessness I never saw."
+
+"Mrs. Sykes," the doctor's voice was dangerously quiet, "am I to
+understand that you are tired of your boarder?"
+
+Mrs. Sykes jumped.
+
+"Land, Doctor, don't get ruffled! I'm real sorry if I've hurt your
+feelings. I didn't mean to say a word when I set out. My tongue just
+runs away. And naturally you have to stand up for Mrs. Coombe. I see
+that. That'll be the last you'll hear from me and 'tisn't as if I'd ever
+turn around and say 'I told you so' afterwards."
+
+This was _amende honorable_ and the doctor received it as such; but when
+he had gone into his office leaving his breakfast almost untouched, Mrs.
+Sykes shook her head gloomily.
+
+"You needn't tell me!" she murmured, oblivious of the fact that no one
+was telling her anything. "You needn't tell me!" Then, with rare
+self-reproach, "Perhaps I hadn't ought to have said so much, but such
+blindness is enough to provoke a saint. If he'd any eyes--couldn't he
+see Esther?" Mrs. Sykes sighed as she emptied the doctor's untasted cup.
+
+More frankly disconsolate, though not so outspoken, were Ann and Bubble.
+Not only did they dislike the bride elect but they objected to marriage
+in general. "A honeymoon will put the kibosh on this here practice,
+sure," moaned Bubble.
+
+"Look at me. I'm not thinking of getting married, am I? No, and I'm
+never going to get married either."
+
+"I am," said Ann, "and I'm going to have ten sons and the first one is
+going to be called 'Henry' after the doctor."
+
+"Huh!" said Bubble, "bet you it isn't. Bet you go and call it after its
+father. They all do."
+
+"No chance! Bet you I won't. I wouldn't call it 'Zerubbabel' for
+anything."
+
+For an instant they glared at each other, and then as the awful
+implication dawned upon Bubble his round face grew crimson and his voice
+thrilled with just resentment.
+
+"Well, if you think you're going to marry me, Miss Ann, you're jolly
+well mistaken."
+
+"Will if I like," said Ann, retiring into her sun-bonnet.
+
+Upon the whole, however, their affection for the doctor kept them
+friendly. Both children felt that something was wrong somewhere. Their
+idol was not happy. Bubble whispered to Ann of long hours when the
+doctor sat in his office with an open book before him, a book the pages
+of which were never turned. Ann told of weary walks when she trotted
+along by his side, wholly forgotten. Only between themselves did they
+ever speak of the change in him, and Henry Callandar was well repaid
+for the careless kindness of his brighter hours by a faithful
+guardianship, a quick-eyed consideration and a stout line of defence
+which protected his privacy and ignored his moods without his ever being
+aware of such a service.
+
+Esther he seldom saw. She was remarkably clever, he thought, with a
+tinge of bitterness, in arranging duties and pleasures which would take
+her out of his way. It was better so, of course. It was the worst of
+injustice to feel hurt with her for doing what of all things he would
+have had her do. But one doesn't reason about these things, one feels.
+
+Sometimes he wondered if that midnight interview with her at the gate
+had ever really taken place--or had it been midsummer madness, too sweet
+to exist even in memory? Certainly, in the Esther he saw now there was
+nothing of the Esther of the stars. She wore her mask well. School had
+closed for the holidays and the summer gaieties of Coombe were in full
+swing. Esther boated, picnicked, played croquet and tennis. If there was
+any change in her at all it showed only in a kind of feverish gaiety
+which seemed to wear her strength. She was certainly thinner. Callandar
+ventured to suggest to Mary that she was looking far from well. But Mary
+laughed at the idea. She was very much annoyed with Esther. The girl
+appeared to care nothing at all for the great event, refused to discuss
+it, declined absolutely to put herself out in the slightest for the
+entertainment of her mother's prospective husband, seemed to avoid him
+in fact. Moreover, she openly expressed her intention of leaving home
+immediately after the wedding. Mrs. Coombe was afraid people would talk.
+
+Of them all, Aunt Amy was the only one who understood. How her poor,
+unsound brain arrived at the knowledge we cannot say. Perhaps Esther was
+more careless in her presence, dropping her mask almost as if alone, or
+perhaps Aunt Amy's strange psychic insight took no note of masks, or
+perhaps--account for it as you will, Aunt Amy knew! Esther and Dr.
+Callandar loved each other, and Mary stood between. This latter fact was
+not at all surprising to Aunt Amy. Was it not the special delight of the
+mysterious "They" to bring misery to all Aunt Amy loved, and was not
+Mary their accredited agent? The affair of the ruby ring had proved her
+that, though no one else must guess it. What would come of it all, Aunt
+Amy could not tell. Wring her hands as she might she could not see into
+the future. Often she would mutter a little as she went about her work,
+or stand still staring, straining into the dark. No one noted any
+difference in her save Jane, for Jane was as yet happily free to
+observe. The others, caught up in the whirl of their own destinies, saw
+nothing save the problems in their own anxious hearts.
+
+"Esther," said Jane one evening, "Aunt Amy is odder and odder and you
+don't seem to care a bit."
+
+Esther, who was preparing to go to a garden party, turned back, a little
+startled.
+
+"What do you mean, Jane?"
+
+"I don't know. Can't you see that she isn't happy?"
+
+"But she is better. She never complains. She almost never fancies things
+now."
+
+"She goes into corners and stares--and she wrings her hands."
+
+"But she always did that, duck."
+
+Jane was not equal to a more lucid explanation.
+
+"It's not the same," she insisted. "I know it isn't. Esther, when you
+go away, will you take Aunt Amy and me?"
+
+"How could I, dear? Your home is here. And you like Dr. Callandar, don't
+you?"
+
+"I used to. But he never plays with the pup any more. He's different.
+And you're different and mother's different. I don't want to live with
+mother. That was a fib I told you the other day about the cut on my
+head. I didn't fall and hurt it. It was mother She threw her clothes
+brush at me."
+
+"Jane!" There was pure horror in her sister's voice.
+
+"Yes, she did. I went into her room when she was taking some medicine in
+a glass and I asked her what it was. Honest, Esther, that is all I did.
+And she screamed at me--and threw the brush."
+
+Esther came back into the room and sat down.
+
+"When was this?" in businesslike tones.
+
+Jane considered. "It was that day she wasn't down stairs at all, and
+sent word to Dr. Callandar not to come--three days ago I think."
+
+"Yes, I remember. O Janie dear, it looks as if things were going to be
+bad again! It must have been one of her very bad headaches. She was
+probably in great pain. Of course she did not mean to throw the brush
+Are you sure it was medicine she was taking?"
+
+"It was something in a glass," vaguely, "she was mixing it--look out,
+Esther! You are spoiling your new gloves."
+
+The girl threw the crumpled gloves aside and drawing the child to her
+knee kissed her gently.
+
+"It seems to me," she said slowly, "that big sister has been losing her
+eyes lately. She must find them again; it isn't going to help to be a
+selfish pig."
+
+"Help what, Esther?"
+
+Esther's only answer was another kiss, but when she had hurried out of
+the room, Jane found something round and wet upon her hand.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVIII
+
+
+Jane was still looking at the wet place on her hand when the doctor
+entered.
+
+"Esther's been crying," she told him. In her voice was the awe which
+children feel at the phenomenon of tears in grown-ups.
+
+Callandar felt his heart contract--Esther crying! But he could not
+question the child.
+
+"I don't know why," went on Jane obligingly. "Esther's so strange
+lately. Every one is strange. You are strange too. Am I strange?"
+
+"A little," said Callandar gravely.
+
+"Perhaps it's catching? Do you want mother? She is upstairs and her door
+is locked. Perhaps she'll be down in a little while. She said Esther was
+to stay in and entertain you, but Esther wouldn't. She has gone to a
+garden party. I'll entertain you if you like."
+
+"That will be very nice."
+
+"Shall I play for you on the piano?"
+
+"Thanks. And you won't mind if I sit in the corner here and close my
+eyes, until your mother comes?"
+
+"No. You may go quite to sleep if you wish. I'm not sensitive about my
+playing. Bubble says you are nearly always tired now. He says you have
+such a 'normous practice that you hardly ever get a wink of sleep.
+That's what makes you look so kind of hollow-eyed, Bubble says."
+
+"So Bubble has been diagnosing my case, has he?"
+
+"Oh, he doesn't talk about professional cases usually. He said that
+about you because Mrs. Atkins said that being engaged didn't seem to
+agree with you. She said she was just as glad you didn't take a fancy to
+her Gracie if prospective matteromony made you look like the dead
+march in Saul."
+
+"Observing woman!"
+
+"What," resumed Jane, "is a dead march in Saul?"
+
+"It is a musical composition."
+
+Jane considered this and then dismissed it with a shrug. "It sounded as
+if it was something horrid. Mrs. Atkins thinks she's smart. Anyway, I
+didn't tell mother."
+
+"Well, suppose you run now and tell her that I am here."
+
+"Can't. The door is locked."
+
+"Then let us have some of the music you promised. I'll sit here and
+wait."
+
+Strange to say, Jane's music was not unsoothing. She had a smooth, light
+touch and the little airs she played tinkled sweetly enough from the old
+piano. The weary, nerve-wrung man was more than half asleep when she
+grew tired of playing and slipped off to bed without disturbing him. The
+moments ticked themselves away on the big hall clock. Mrs. Coombe did
+not come, nor did the doctor waken.
+
+He was aroused an hour later by a voice upon the veranda. It was
+Esther's voice and in response to it he heard a deeper murmur, a man's
+voice without doubt. There was a moment or two of low-toned talk, then
+"Good-night," and the girl came in alone.
+
+She did not see him as she came slowly across to the table. He thought
+she looked grave and sad, older too--but, so dear! With a weary gesture
+she began to pull off her long gloves.
+
+"Who was it with you, Esther?" He tried hard to make the inquiry, so
+devouringly eager, sound carelessly casual.
+
+She looked up with a start.
+
+"Oh--I didn't see you, Doctor! Mr. Macnair was with me. Did you wish to
+see him?" She could play at the game of carelessness better than he.
+"Where is mother?" she added quickly.
+
+"In her room, I think. Esther, are you going to marry Macnair?"
+
+The girl slipped off her second glove, blew gently into its fingers,
+smoothed them and laid it with nice care upon the table beside
+its fellow.
+
+"I do not know."
+
+He realised with a shock that he had expected an indignant denial.
+
+"You do not love him!"
+
+"No. Not now. He knows that. And I do not expect ever to love him. But
+perhaps, after a long while, if I could make him happy--it is so
+terrible not to be happy," she finished pathetically.
+
+Callandar could have groaned aloud; the danger was so clear. And how
+could he, of all men, warn her. Yet he must try. He came quickly across
+to where she stood and compelled her gaze to his.
+
+"Do not make that mistake, Esther! It is fatal. Try to believe that in
+spite of--of everything, I am speaking disinterestedly. You are young
+and the young hate suffering. You would marry him, out of pity. But I
+tell you that no man's happiness comes to him that way. You will have
+sacrificed yourself to no purpose. The risk is too awful. Wait. Time is
+kind. You will know it, some day. But even though you do not believe it
+now--wait. Wait forever, rather than marry a man to whom you cannot give
+your heart."
+
+"That is your advice?" She spoke heavily. "You would like some day to
+see me marry a man I could--love?"
+
+"Yes, a thousand times yes!"
+
+"I shall think over what you say." She was still gravely controlled but
+it was a control which would not last much longer. She glanced around
+the empty room with a quick caught breath. "Why are you left all alone?"
+
+"Is a keeper necessary?" Then, ashamed of his irritation and willing to
+end a scene which threatened to make things harder for both of them, he
+added in his ordinary tone, "I really do not know who is responsible for
+such unparalleled neglect. Jane played me to sleep, I fancy. She said
+her mother was upstairs but would be down presently. It must be late. I
+had better go."
+
+"Wait a moment, I will see if there is any message from mother."
+
+As she left the room her light scarf slipped from her shoulders and fell
+softly across his arm. Callandar crushed it passionately to his lips and
+then, folding it carefully, laid it beside the gloves upon the table.
+Even the scarf was not for him. Aunt Amy, passing through the hall on
+her way upstairs, saw the dumb caress and shivered anew at the
+mysterious power of "They" which could tear such a man as Callandar from
+the woman he loved.
+
+Esther was gone only a moment and when she returned she brought with her
+a change of atmosphere. Something had banished every trace of
+self-consciousness from her manner. She looked anxious but it was an
+anxiety with which no embarrassment mingled.
+
+"Doctor," she said at once, "mother seems to be ill. The door is locked
+and she did not answer my knocking. Yet she is not asleep. I could hear
+her talking. I think you ought to come up."
+
+An indescribable look flitted across the doctor's face. He looked at the
+girl a moment in measuring silence and then pointed to a chair.
+
+"Sit down," he said briefly, "I thought that this would come. I have
+been afraid of it for some time. Is it possible that you have no
+suspicion at all in regard to these peculiar--illnesses--of your
+mother's?"
+
+The startled wonder in her eyes was answer enough even without the
+quick, "What do you mean?"
+
+Callandar's face grew gravely compassionate. "I think you ought to
+know," he said. "I have put off saying anything because I was not
+absolutely sure myself. And I have never had quite the right opportunity
+of finding out. But I have had fears for some time now that your mother
+is in the habit of taking some drug which--well, which is certainly not
+good for her. Do not look so frightened. It may not be serious. Do you
+remember when you first consulted me about your mother and how we both
+agreed that the medicine she was taking for her nervous attacks might be
+harmful? I was suspicious then, but there was little to go on, only her
+fear of any one seeing the prescription, and a few general symptoms
+which might be due to various causes. Since then I--I have noticed
+things which have made me anxious. I think for her own sake as well as
+yours and mine, the sooner the truth is known the better. Are you sure
+the door is locked?"
+
+"Yes," the girl's voice was tense, "but the window is open. It opens on
+the top of the veranda. You could enter there."
+
+"If that is the only way, I must take it. I thought, I hoped that if
+things were as I feared she would tell me herself, but she never has. It
+is useless, now, to hope for her confidence. The instinct is so strongly
+for concealment. We must help her in spite of herself."
+
+"Hurry then! I shall wait here. You will call me if necessary?"
+
+She did not ask him exactly what it was that he feared nor did he tell
+her, but for the first time in many weeks they were able to look at each
+other as comrades look. The eruption of the old trouble into the new
+obscured the latter so that, for the time at least, the sick woman
+behind the locked door held first place in both their thoughts.
+
+It seemed to Esther that she waited a long time before the summons came.
+Then she heard him call, "Esther!" It was a doctor's call, cool,
+passionless, commanding. She flew up the stairs, closing Jane's door as
+she hurried by. The door to her mother's room was open. It was brightly
+lighted. The shade of the lamp had been removed and its garish yellow
+fell full upon the bed and the strange figure which lay there.
+
+Mary Coombe had apparently thrown herself down fully dressed--but in
+what a costume! Surely no nightmare held anything more bizarre. Esther
+had no time to notice details but she remembered afterwards how the feet
+were clothed in different coloured stockings and that while one
+displayed a gaily buckled slipper, the other was carefully laced into a
+tan walking boot. Just now she could see nothing but the face, for the
+greatest shock was there. It did not look like Mary's face at all--it
+was strange, old, yellow and repulsive. Her unbrushed, lustreless hair
+hung about it in a dull mat, one of her hands was clutched in it--the
+hand was dirty.
+
+A terrible thought struck every vestige of colour from Esther's cheek.
+Her terrified gaze swept over the disordered room, up to the face of the
+man who stood there so silently, then down again to the inert woman upon
+the bed. Once, not long ago, she had seen a drunken man asleep upon the
+roadside grass--like this.
+
+"Is it--is it drink?" The words were a whisper of horror.
+
+The doctor shook his head.
+
+"I wish it were. I wish it were only that. Have you never heard of the
+drug habit--morphia, opium? That is what we have to fight--and it is
+what I feared."
+
+"Oh!" It was a breath of relief. To Esther, who knew nothing of drugs,
+or drug habits, the truth seemed less awful than the thing she
+had imagined.
+
+"Is--is it serious?" she asked timidly.
+
+The doctor smiled grimly. "You will see. No need to frighten you now.
+But it will be a fight from this on." He threw a light coverlet over the
+helpless figure and replacing the shade on the lamp, turned down the
+flaring wick. "I will tell you what I can, but at present it is very
+little. Probably this began long ago, before your father's death. In the
+first place there may have been a prescription--I think you said she had
+had an illness in which she suffered greatly. The drug, opium in some
+form probably, may have been given to reduce the pain--and continued
+after need for it was gone without knowledge of its dangerous qualities.
+Nervous people form the habit very quickly. Then--I am only
+guessing--as the amount contained in the original prescription ceased to
+produce the desired effect, she may have found out what drug it was that
+her appetite craved. If she saw the danger then, it was already too
+late. She could not give up voluntarily and was compelled to go on,
+shutting her eyes to the inevitable consequences, if indeed she ever
+clearly knew them."
+
+"But now that you know? It ought not to be hard to help her now that you
+know. There are other drugs--"
+
+"Yes. There is a frying-pan and a fire. In fact I fear that she has
+already tried that expedient herself. Some of the symptoms point to
+cocaine. No, our best hope is in the decreasing dose with proper
+auxiliary treatment. I cannot tell yet how serious the case may be. At
+any rate there must be an end of the mystery. Every one in the house
+must know, even Jane; for in this fight ignorance means danger. But," he
+hesitated and his face grew dark, "you cannot realise what this is going
+to mean. It is my burden, not yours. At least I have the right to save
+you that. We must have a nurse--"
+
+A little eager cry burst from her. "Oh, no! Not that! You wouldn't do
+that. You can't mean not to let me help."
+
+"You do not know--"
+
+"I do not care what it means. But if you won't let me help, if you shut
+me out--" Her voice quivered dangerously, but with a spark of her old
+fire she recovered herself. "You cannot," she added more firmly,
+"because it is my burden as well as yours. Whatever she is to you, she
+was my father's wife and I am responsible to him. Unless extra help is
+really needed, no nurse shall take my place."
+
+"Very well," quietly. "Call Aunt Amy, then, and search the room. She
+will sleep for a long time yet. When she wakes there must be no more of
+the drug within her reach. I must find out the amount to which she has
+been accustomed and arrange a decreasing dose. But if you are to be a
+nurse, you know, you must expect a bad time. It will not be easy."
+
+Esther's reply was to call Aunt Amy and while the doctor explained to
+the bewildered old lady the danger in which her niece stood and the
+absolute importance of keeping all "medicine" away from her, Esther
+quietly and swiftly searched the room. Boxes and drawers she unlocked
+and opened, the dresser, the writing-table, the bureau, the long unused
+sewing basket, all were examined without success. But in the locked box
+which contained her father's portrait, she made another discovery which
+woke a little throb of angry pity in her heart. There, still wrapped in
+its carelessly torn off postal wrappings, lay the box containing the
+ruby ring which Jessica Bremner had returned. Mary must have got it from
+the post herself and had immediately hidden it, careless of the fact
+that all Esther's careful savings had been necessary to make the return
+possible. Without comment she slipped the ring into the bosom of
+her dress.
+
+"Have you found anything?"
+
+"Nothing yet."
+
+Aunt Amy took a fascinated step nearer the figure on the bed. If
+Callandar could have intercepted the look she cast upon it he might have
+been warned of the subtle change which had taken place in her of late,
+but the doctor had turned to help Esther. Aunt Amy could gaze
+undisturbed.
+
+"She looks like Richard," said Aunt Amy suddenly. "Do you remember
+Richard?" She brushed her hand over her eyes in a painful effort of
+memory. "He was a bad man, a very bad man."
+
+"She means her brother Richard," explained Esther. "He has been dead for
+ages. I believe he was not a family ornament."
+
+"Just like Richard," murmured Aunt Amy again with a quickly checked
+chuckle. "But you ought to be glad of that. You won't have to marry her
+now. You can marry Esther."
+
+If a shell had burst in the quiet room, it could scarcely have caused
+more consternation. The doctor's stern face quivered, Esther's searching
+hand dropped paralysed. Here was a danger indeed! Was their secret
+really so patent? Or had it been but a vagrant guess of a clouded mind?
+
+Callandar recovered himself first. Without glancing at the girl he
+walked quietly over to the bed and placing his hand upon Aunt Amy's
+shoulder compelled wavering eyes to his.
+
+"Aunt Amy, you must never say that again." He spoke with the crisp
+incisiveness of a master, but for once his subject did not immediately
+respond. With a sulky look she tried to wrench herself free.
+
+"Why?" she questioned. But Callandar knew his business too
+well to argue. "You must never say it again," he repeated.
+"You--must--never--say--it--again!"
+
+The poor, weak lips began to quiver. Her own boldness had frightened her
+quite as much as his vehemence. Her eyes fluttered and fell.
+
+"Very well, Doctor," she answered meekly.
+
+They searched now in silence and presently Esther emerged from the
+closet with a pair of dainty slippers in her hand.
+
+"I think I have found something," she said. "There are three pairs of
+party slippers and the toes of them are all stuffed with these." She
+handed the doctor a package of innocent looking tablets done up in
+purplish blue paper.
+
+Callandar glanced at them, shook them out and counted their number.
+
+"You are sure you have them all?"
+
+"I can find no trace of more."
+
+"Then I think we have a strong fight coming--but a good hope, too."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIX
+
+
+Miss A. Milligan stood before the door of her select dressmaking
+parlours, meditatively picking her teeth with a needle. We hasten to
+observe that her teeth were quite clean and that this was merely a
+harmless habit denoting intense mental concentration. Miss Milligan was
+tall and full of figure with an elegant waist and a bust so like a
+pin-cushion that it fulfilled the duties of that article admirably. Her
+small bright eyes set in a wide expanse of face suggested nothing so
+much as currants in an underdone bun, and just now, as she watched the
+graceful figure of Mrs. Coombe, bride to be, disappear around the
+corner, they gave the impression of having been poked too far in while
+the bun was soft.
+
+The door of Miss Milligan's select parlours did not open upon the main
+street, it being far from her desire to attract promiscuous trade. The
+parlours, indeed, were situated upon one of the "nicest" streets in
+Coombe and occupied a corner lot, so that a splendid view down two of
+the most genteel residential streets was obtainable from their windows.
+The only sign of business anywhere was a board of chaste design over the
+doorway, bearing the simple legend, "A. MILLIGAN." Even the word
+"Dressmaker" was considered superfluous. Also there was one window, near
+the door, which from time to time displayed wonderfully coloured plates
+of terribly twisting and elegantly elongated females purporting to be
+the very latest from Paris (_France_).
+
+Mrs. Coombe was getting some "things" made at Miss Milligan's. It had
+been rumoured at first that she had contemplated running down to Toronto
+and Detroit, buying most of her trousseau there, but for some
+unexplained reason the plan had been given up. Doctor Callandar, it
+appeared, believed in patronising local tradesmen and had been
+sufficiently ungallant to veto the Detroit visit altogether. Everybody
+wondered why Mary Coombe stood it. Surely it was bad enough when a man
+sets up to be a domestic tyrant after marriage. They were surprised at
+Dr. Callandar--they hadn't thought it of him.
+
+"It is women like Mary Coombe who submit tamely to such indignities,"
+declared the eldest Miss Sinclair, "who have held back the emancipation
+of women from the beginning of time."
+
+"She looks so poorly, too," agreed Miss Jessie. "I am sure she needs a
+change. I should think that Esther would insist upon it."
+
+But Esther appeared in all things to back up Dr. Callandar. People
+admitted that they were disappointed in Esther and only hoped that the
+day would never come when she would be sorry. For if all the world loves
+a lover, all the world is indulgent to a prospective bride and any one
+could see that this particular bride was being denied her proper
+privileges. Any one would think she was a child and not to be trusted
+alone. Esther went with her everywhere, simply everywhere. Of course it
+was sweet of Esther to be so attentive, but people didn't wonder that
+her mother didn't like it.
+
+Such were the current comments of the town, sent out somewhat in the
+nature of feelers, for behind them all, Coombe, having a very sensitive
+nose for gossip, was uneasily aware that their cleverest investigators
+were not yet in possession of the root of the matter. Every one seemed
+to know everything, and yet--no wonder that Miss Milligan picked her
+teeth in agonies of mental tumult at finding herself sole possessor of a
+satisfactory explanation which she was bound in honour not to disclose.
+
+Mrs. Coombe had just been in. She had been having a "first fitting" and
+in the privacy of the fitting room she had been perfectly frank with
+Miss Milligan. She had told Miss Milligan "things." She had told her
+things which would move a heart of stone, regardless of the fact that
+Miss Milligan's heart was made of the softest of soft materials and beat
+warmly under her spiky pin cushion. The fact that her eyes were hard and
+black had nothing to do with it; mistakes in eyes occur constantly in
+the best regulated families. At this very moment when her eyes were more
+like currants than ever she was making up her mind that, come what
+might, doctors or no doctors, she was not going to see a fellow
+creature put upon.
+
+For, you see, Mrs. Coombe, poor little thing, had confided in Miss
+Milligan. She had told her all about it, and like most mysteries, it had
+turned out to be very simple. It seemed that Dr. Callandar, such a
+perfectly charming man in most respects, had a most absurd prejudice
+against patent medicines. This prejudice, common to the medical
+profession on account of patents interfering with profits, was, in Dr.
+Callandar's case, almost an obsession. Miss Milligan, being a sensible
+person, knew very well that there are patents _and_ patents. Some of
+them are frauds, of course, but there are others which are better than
+any prescription that any doctor ever wrote. Miss Milligan did not speak
+from hearsay, she had had an extensive experience the results of which
+lent themselves to conversational effort. Therefore it is easy to see
+how she understood and sympathised at once when Mrs. Coombe told her of
+a remedy which she had found to be quite excellent but which the doctor
+absolutely forbade her to use.
+
+"Not that he means to be inconsiderate, dear Miss Milligan, only he is
+so very sure of his own point of view. Doctors have to be firm of
+course. But you can see it is rather hard on me. The trouble is that I
+cannot obtain the remedy I need in Coombe. It is a remedy very little
+known and useful only in obscure nerve troubles. I have been in the
+habit of getting it from a certain firm in Detroit, not a very
+well-known firm, and now, of course, that is impossible--without
+upsetting the doctor, which I hesitate to do."
+
+Miss Milligan was of the opinion that a little upsetting was just what
+the doctor required.
+
+"No--o." The visitor shook her head. She could not bring her mind to it.
+She would prefer to suffer herself. But did not Miss Milligan think
+that, in face of such an unreasonable and violent prejudice, a little
+innocent strategy might be justified?
+
+Miss Milligan thought so, very emphatically.
+
+Mrs. Coombe sighed. "I do so want to look well for the wedding, you
+know. And really, nothing seems to help me like my own particular
+medicine. It is hard, very hard, to be without it."
+
+Miss Milligan did not doubt it. It seemed, to her, a perfect shame. But
+had Mrs. Coombe ever tried "Peebles' Perfect Pick-me-ups" for the
+nerves? They were certainly very excellent.
+
+Yes. Mrs. Coombe had heard of them and no doubt they were very good for
+some people. But constitutions differ so. On the whole she felt sure
+that even "Peebles' Perfect Pick-me-ups" would not suit her nearly as
+well as her own particular remedy.
+
+It was at this point that Miss Milligan stopped fitting and began to
+pick her teeth, a sign, as we have before stated, of great mental
+activity. If nothing would suit Mrs. Coombe but this one medicine and if
+the medicine could be obtained in Detroit and if Mrs. Coombe had the
+correct address--why not write for it? It was a brilliant idea, but Mrs.
+Coombe shook her head.
+
+She had the address, naturally, and she had also thought of writing, but
+it would be of no use. Esther and the doctor actually watched her mail.
+
+"Incredible!"
+
+"Oh, not in any offensive way. They did not mean to be tyrannous. They
+were quite convinced that patent medicines were very injurious. But
+women suffering from nerves (like yourself, dear Miss Milligan) know
+that relief is often found in the least likely places and from remedies
+not mentioned in the Materia Medica."
+
+Miss Milligan knew that very well. And people are so hard to convince.
+When Mrs. Barker, over the hill, had first recommended that new
+blood-purifier to Miss Milligan, Miss Milligan had laughed. But after
+taking only six bottles she had thanked Mrs. Barker with tears in her
+eyes. "And I must say," added she in a burst of virtuous indignation,
+"that if I were going to Detroit to-morrow I would bring you back all
+the patent medicine you wanted, Mrs. Coombe, and be very glad to
+do it."
+
+This was most satisfactory save for one small fact, namely that Miss
+Milligan was not going to Detroit to-morrow. Mrs. Coombe thanked her
+very much and raised her arm (which shook sadly) while Miss Milligan
+pinned in the underarm seam.
+
+"Even as it is," went on Miss Milligan, "I don't see why--a little
+higher please, and turn a trifle to the light, thank you!--I don't see
+why it can't be done. Nobody inspects my mail, thank heaven! and one
+address is as good to a druggist as another."
+
+What a bright idea! Strange that it had never occurred to Mrs. Coombe to
+arrange things so easily. It was very, very clever and kind of Miss
+Milligan to think of it. But--people might talk! Think how upset the
+doctor would be if their innocent little plot were spoken of abroad.
+People are so unkind, quite horrid in fact. And as Esther and the doctor
+were doing it all for her good they would naturally hate to have their
+actions misunderstood. Of course, Mrs. Coombe knew that Miss Milligan
+herself would never mention it to a soul. She felt quite sure of that,
+still--as it did not appear how the little plot could be spread abroad
+under those circumstances unless the lay-figure in the corner should
+become communicative, Mrs. Coombe's sentence remained plaintively
+unfinished. Miss Milligan, in spite of its being so very unnecessary,
+found herself promising solemnly never to mention it.
+
+As the whole thing was entirely unpremeditated it seemed like a special
+piece of good luck that Mrs. Coombe should have at that moment in her
+pocket a note to the druggists (who were not called druggists, exactly)
+and that all she needed to do was to add Miss Milligan's address, and
+hand to that lady sufficient money to secure a postal note as an
+enclosure. She did this very quickly and the whole little affair was
+satisfactorily disposed of when Esther was seen coming hurriedly down
+the street.
+
+"I thought," said Esther, who entered a little out of breath and with a
+worried pucker between her eyes, "I thought that I would just run in and
+see how the linings look."
+
+"You can never tell anything from linings," said Miss Milligan in an
+injured tone. "Gracious! I don't suppose any one would ever want a dress
+if they went by the way the linings look. I always advise my customers
+never to look in the glass until I get to the material, what with seams
+on the wrong side and all!"
+
+"There is really nothing at all to see as yet," assented Mrs. Coombe
+crossly.
+
+Esther seated herself by the open window.
+
+"Very well," she said quietly. "I won't look. I'll just wait."
+
+Mrs. Coombe shrugged her shoulders and displaced a pin or two. There was
+an injured look upon her face and Miss Milligan, replacing the pins,
+wondered how it is that nice girls like Esther Coombe never see when
+they're not wanted.
+
+The fitting went quickly forward. Mrs. Coombe seemed to have lost all
+her genial expansiveness. Miss Milligan's pins had overflowed from her
+pin-cushion into her mouth and Esther, who appeared tired, gazed
+steadily out of the window. Only the humming of the machines in the
+adjoining workroom and the subdued talk and laughter of Miss Milligan's
+young ladies saved the silence from becoming oppressive. Occasionally,
+when her supply of pins became exhausted, Miss Milligan would
+contribute a cooing murmur to the effect that it did "set beautiful
+across the shoulders" or that "the long line over the hip was
+quite elegant."
+
+Without doubt the atmosphere had changed with the coming of Esther. Mrs.
+Coombe became each moment more fidgety, she became, in fact, jerky! Her
+hands twitched, her head twitched, she could not stand still and
+suddenly she twitched herself out of Miss Milligan's hands altogether
+and flinging herself into a chair declared that she couldn't stand any
+more fitting that day. Even Miss Milligan's black currant eyes could see
+that her nerves were terribly wrong--she looked ghastly, poor thing! And
+all on account of a silly prejudice regarding patent medicines.
+
+Esther, who exhibited no surprise at her mother's sudden collapse,
+helped Miss Milligan to unpin the linings.
+
+"My mother has been a little longer than usual without her tonic," she
+calmly explained. "The other fittings can wait," and quickly, yet
+without flurry, she found Mary's hat, bag, gloves and parasol and picked
+up her handkerchief which she had flung upon the floor.
+
+Mrs. Coombe accepted these services without thanks, indulging indeed in
+a little spiteful laugh which Miss Milligan obligingly attributed to her
+poor nerves. Things had come to a pretty pass indeed, thought the
+sympathetic dressmaker, when a grown woman is obliged to have her
+medicine chosen for her like a baby.
+
+As she stood in the doorway watching the two ladies out of sight, a just
+indignation grew within the breast so strongly fortified outside, so
+vulnerable within; and without even waiting to call her giggling young
+ladies to order, she pinned on her hat and departed to send Mrs.
+Coombe's postal note to the Detroit druggist, who, oddly enough, was not
+a druggist at all.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXX
+
+
+Esther and her step-mother set out upon their homeward walk in silence.
+The older woman's face was drawn and bitter, Esther's thoughtful and
+sad. Though there seemed no reason for haste, Mrs. Coombe's steps grew
+constantly quicker until she was hurrying breathlessly.
+
+More than once the girl glanced at her anxiously as if about to speak,
+yet hesitating. Then when the walk threatened to become a run she laid a
+detaining hand upon her arm.
+
+"If you walk so very rapidly, mother, people will notice." It was the
+only argument which never failed of effect. Mrs. Coombe's steps
+slackened.
+
+"Besides," went on Esther eagerly, "every moment is a gain. Ten minutes
+more will make this the longest interval yet. Don't you think you
+could try...."
+
+"No!"
+
+The word was only a gasp and the face Mary turned for a moment on the
+girl was livid. The eyes shone with hate. "You--you beast!" she muttered
+chokingly.
+
+Esther turned a shade paler, but otherwise gave no sign that she had
+heard. "Mother, just try, you are doing so well, so splendidly. The
+doctor says ..."
+
+"Be quiet--be quiet! I hate him. I won't try. I won't be tortured--oh,
+why can't you all leave me alone!" She began to sob and moan under her
+breath, careless even of a possible passerby. Fortunately there was no
+one, and they were already within sight of home. Esther, very white,
+supported the shaking woman with her arm and they hurried on together.
+At the door she would still have accompanied her but Mary flung herself
+angrily from her hold and ran up the stairs with sudden feverish
+strength. Esther turned into the living room and dropped into the
+nearest chair.
+
+She was still sitting there without having removed either hat or gloves
+when, a little later, Callandar entered.
+
+"Well, nurse," with a faint smile, "how are things to-day?" His quick
+eye had noticed in a moment the girl's closed eyes and listless
+attitude, but nothing in his tone betrayed it.
+
+"Very well, I think, until a little while ago. We were late in getting
+home from the dressmaker's--"
+
+"I see. You look rather done up. The fact is you are overdoing things.
+Rather foolish, don't you think?"
+
+"No," stubbornly. "I am all right."
+
+"You are exhausted and there is no need. Things are going well. The dose
+is steadily diminishing, more quickly than she suspects. It looks as if
+we might begin to breathe again. It is a great gain to feel reasonably
+sure that she has no more of the stuff hidden anywhere. If she had, she
+would have used it during that last crisis."
+
+The girl in the chair winced. She hated even to think of the night to
+which his words referred. "Yes," she said, "but--but there won't be any
+more times like that, will there?"
+
+"Yes," grimly. "We are not through yet. But every crisis will be a
+little easier--if things go as they are going."
+
+Esther sighed. "It is very terrible, isn't it?" she said. "And really it
+doesn't seem fair, for it wasn't her fault; in the beginning she didn't
+know. And she does suffer so."
+
+"We must not think of it in that way. It helps more to think of the
+suffering she is escaping. What she is going through now is saving her,
+body and soul. It is taking her out of torment and leading her back to
+life, and sanity. You don't know, but I do, and any struggle, any
+suffering is mild compared to the horrors before her if she kept on. She
+was taking some cocaine too. The word means nothing to you, but to a
+physician it spells hell. So you see--it gives one strength."
+
+Esther sat up and straightened her collar. "I'm ashamed of myself," she
+said. "No wonder you want another nurse. But I won't resign yet. And I
+wanted to ask you--do you think it is necessary now to be with her
+whenever she goes out? She hates it so. I think she is getting to hate
+me, too. Where could she possibly get the stuff? None of our local
+stores would sell it without a prescription."
+
+"I know. But in a case like this you can never be sure of anything. No,
+we must not relax in the slightest. Even as it is, I am continually
+afraid." He began to pace the room restlessly. "There may be a weak spot
+somewhere, some loop-hole we have forgotten. I think the druggists are
+safe and the mail is watched. That last supply, you are sure it was all
+destroyed?"
+
+"Yes, I burned it. At least I gave it to Aunt Amy to burn. I couldn't
+leave mother."
+
+"Well, let us call Aunt Amy, and make sure. I believe I am foolishly
+nervous, but--" without finishing his sentence the doctor walked to the
+door and waited there until Aunt Amy answered his call.
+
+"Auntie," said Esther, "you remember the little package I gave you that
+night when mother was so ill? It was done up in purplish blue paper."
+
+"Yes, Esther."
+
+"Do you remember what you did with it, dear?"
+
+Aunt Amy looked frightened.
+
+"I--I don't know. I've a very good memory, Esther. But somehow I'm not
+quite sure."
+
+"You will remember presently," said Callandar kindly. "We want to be
+quite sure that it was destroyed. You know, I explained to you, that
+Mary must take no more of that medicine. It is very dangerous...."
+
+"What does it do?" unexpectedly.
+
+"It is a kind of poison. It makes people very ill, so ill that in time
+they die."
+
+"Mary likes it. She says it makes her nerves better and puts her to
+sleep."
+
+"When did she say that?"
+
+"When she asked me if I had any."
+
+The doctor and the girl exchanged a quick look.
+
+"And you gave her some?"
+
+"Oh, no, I couldn't. I had burned it in the stove--I remember now."
+
+They both drew a breath of intense relief. But when she had left them,
+Callandar looked very sober. "There, you see," he said, "was a
+possibility we had overlooked."
+
+"Yes, and it would have been my fault. I should have made sure long ago.
+It is hard to get out of the habit of taking things for granted."
+
+"Yet it is the one thing we must never do. In this we must trust no one,
+and nothing. Then we shall win. If there is no relapse now, the worst,
+the slowest part, is over. Soon you will be free, dear girl--and God
+bless you forever for what you have been to her and to me."
+
+She answered him only with a wistful smile and when he had gone, she
+sighed. She would be free soon, he said. Strange that he could not see
+that it was her freedom that she dreaded. Hard as it had been, hard as
+it was, there was a still harder time coming--the time when she would be
+free--free, to leave forever the man she loved.
+
+The present with its load of duty and anxiety, the constant strain of
+watching, its bearing of poor Mary's thousand ingratitudes seemed dear
+and desirable when she thought of the black gulf of separation at the
+end of the tortuous way. But of course he could not guess. How could he?
+Men are so different from women.
+
+She knew, though, that she was coming to the end of her strength. Not
+even the doctor guessed how great the strain of those past weeks
+had been.
+
+When Mary had awakened to find that her secret was discovered she had
+been like a mad thing. There had been rage, tears, protestations,
+hysterical denials--finally confession and anguished promises. That she
+had never realised the reality of her danger, nor the extent of her
+servitude was plain. It seemed easy enough to promise. Esther and the
+doctor were making a terrible fuss about nothing, as usual. She grew
+sulky under Callandar's warnings and her fury knew no bounds when she
+found that certain of her hidden stores had been confiscated. She
+demanded that the supply be left in her hands; was not her
+promise enough?
+
+But all this was before she knew what denial meant, before she realised
+that the way back along the path she had trodden so easily was
+thick-set with suffering; that every backward inch must be fought for
+with agony and tears. Then she had broken down altogether, had raved and
+pleaded. The very knowledge of the depth to which she had fallen,
+threatened to send her deeper still. Callandar soon realised that if she
+were to be saved it must be in spite of herself. There were but two
+points of strength in her weak nature; one the newly awakened, yet
+capricious passion for himself, and the other that ruling terror of her
+life, which of all her inherent safeguards was the last to give way
+under the assaults of the drug, namely, "What will people say?" but
+neither of these, nor both of them together, could stand for a moment
+before the terrible appetite when once its craving was denied.
+
+Twice she failed her helpers just when they were beginning to hope. In
+her first search Esther had not exhausted the hiding places of the
+poison and, to retain the temptation by her, Mary had lied and lied
+again. Twice when the crises of her desire had come upon her she had
+given way, helplessly, completely; and twice they had begun all over
+again. The third time she had not been able to procure the drug, had
+been compelled to fight through on the decreasing dose which the doctor
+had allowed.
+
+No wonder Esther shuddered when she thought of that night! Yet at the
+time she had stood beside the moaning woman, white and firm, when even
+Callandar had staggered for a moment from the room.
+
+Next morning they had taken heart of hope again. Undoubtedly Mary had
+exhausted the supply, and the possibility of its being replenished
+seemed remote. It was only a matter of time now; of care, of
+unremitting, yet gentle vigilance and Mary would be cured. The bride
+could go to her husband, clean and in her right mind. And Esther
+would be free.
+
+Strangely enough, it was Mary herself who objected to a hastening of
+their remarriage. Perhaps in spite of her inevitable deterioration there
+was that in her still which forbade her going to him as she was. Perhaps
+it was only another and more obscure effect of the drug; some downward
+instinct which made her dread the putting of herself within the circle
+of her husband's strength. She would fight her fight outside. Why? Was
+it because she would conquer of herself, or because she did not really
+wish to conquer at all?
+
+To Esther, Mary's refusal came as a reprieve. But to Callandar it was
+but a lengthening out of torture. Man's love must always, in its
+essence, be different from woman's; though many women seem incapable of
+recognising this fact. To Esther, now that she had put aside her first
+half-understood glimpse of passion, it was sweet to be near him, to hear
+his voice, to touch his hand and, above all, to spend her strength in
+his service. But to him the strain was almost intolerable. The sight of
+her, the touch of her, the whole soul-shattering nearness of her beauty
+meant constant conflict; all the fiercer since it must be unsuspected.
+
+Willits, the only man who had been told the truth, watched the fight
+with admiration, sharply touched with anxiety. Expert in the moulding of
+buttons, he knew very well that Callandar was drawing rather recklessly
+upon his newly acquired strength. If the tension did not slacken soon
+there might be another physical breakdown, and then--Willits shrugged
+his shoulders. It would be entirely too bad if this very fine button
+were to be spoiled after all. His heart was sore for his friend.
+
+"You see," Callandar had written in one of his rare letters, "it was a
+right instinct which warned me that no man escapes the consequences of
+his own acts. There did come a short, golden time when I put the voice
+of instinct behind me and dared to think that I, at least, had shaken
+myself free. Closing the door of yesterday, I boldly knocked open the
+door of to-morrow--and lo, to-morrow and yesterday were one!
+
+"I know, now, that even had poor Mary been dead, as I believed, the
+payment would have been exacted in some other way. When my brain is
+clear enough to think, I have flashes of thankfulness that payment is
+permitted to take the form of expiation. I can save Mary, and I will. In
+some strange and rather dreadful way her need is my salvation.
+
+"I have said nothing of Esther. How can I? The other day I heard Miss
+Sinclair say that Esther Coombe was losing all her good looks. 'Thin as
+a rail, and peeked as a pin' were the words she used. To me she has
+never been so lovely. She is thinner; there are hollows in her cheeks;
+her lips are no longer a thread of scarlet. The transparent lids of her
+deep, wonderful eyes droop often and her hair seems to have lost its
+life and hangs soft and very close to her face. I love her. I love her
+as a man loves a woman, as a knight loves his lady, as a Catholic loves
+the Madonna! This terrible strain must soon be over for her. I am doing
+all in my power to hurry on the marriage. She is young. She is bound to
+forget. When she leaves here she goes out of my life--and may God
+speed her!
+
+"She is to go to Toronto. Lorna Sinnet has good friends there and they
+will take her into their circle. She will begin to taste a fuller life,
+and as her interests expand the old wound will heal. She will find
+happiness yet. When Mary recovers, she and I will return to Montreal. I
+am quite fit now. I feel that I can never work hard enough. Mary will
+like the excitement of city life, and I rely upon you and Lorna to make
+our coming as easy as possible. How is Lorna? A talk with her will be
+a tonic.
+
+"Does not all this sound admirably lucid and sensible? I want you to see
+that I am not losing my hold--that I have finally faced down the problem
+of the future. And there is one thing that has come to me out of all
+this, a wonderful thing; I have forgotten Fear. It seems to me that all
+my life I have lived in fear. Now I am not afraid...."
+
+It was when Bubble was entering the post office for the purpose of
+posting this letter that he met Miss Milligan, coming out. Miss Milligan
+was evidently in a hurry, so great a hurry that she had not time to
+question Bubble upon affairs in general as was her usual custom. Instead
+she asked him to do something for her. It was a trifling service, only
+to deliver to Mrs. Coombe a small postal packet which she held in
+her hand.
+
+"It will only take you a few moments, Zerubbabel," she said. "I was
+going to deliver it myself but Mrs. Stanton wants a fitting right away.
+I ought not to have come down to the post at all. But I promised Mrs.
+Coombe--does Dr. Callandar permit you to run messages in your
+spare time?"
+
+"Sure," declared the youth, "only I don't get much spare time. The
+doctor's terrible busy. Since we got the phone in, it's ringing all the
+time! But I guess I can slip over to Mrs. Coombe's or if I see Jane I
+can give the parcel to her."
+
+"No!" Miss Milligan seemed struck with a sudden hesitancy. "You must
+not give it to Jane, you must give it to Mrs. Coombe. Dear me, I believe
+I had better take it myself."
+
+Without listening to the boy's polite protests she hurried off again.
+Bubble gazed after her with relieved astonishment.
+
+"Guess it must be something for the wedding," declared he, sapiently.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXI
+
+
+The next day was the day of the Presbyterian Sunday school picnic. It
+was bound to be beautiful weather, because it always was. The
+Presbyterians seemed to have an understanding with Providence to that
+effect. But Jane, who must have been born a sceptic, was up very early
+just to see that there was no mistake.
+
+There was a hint, just a hint, of autumn in the air. On the window-sill
+lay a golden leaf. It was the forerunner. The garden lay quiet,
+brooding; the rising sun shone softly through a yellow haze.
+
+Jane shivered deliciously in her thin night gown. It was going to be a
+perfectly glorious, scrumptious day. She leaned farther out to make sure
+that the leaves of the small silver maple beneath her window were not
+turned wrong side up--a sure sign of rain. And as she looked, she
+noticed a curious thing--the side door was open.
+
+Somebody else must be up. If it were Esther, Jane decided that she would
+call "Boo" very loudly and surprise her; but it was her mother and not
+Esther who came out of the open door. Jane drew back, watching through
+the curtains. She thought her mother looked very pretty in her dressing
+gown with her hair down and her bare feet thrust into pink satin mules.
+It was a pity, Jane thought, that she wasn't as nice as she looked. And
+how curiously she was acting. She was actually climbing up the little
+ladder which led to the bird house by the side of the lawn. Jane knew
+there was nothing at all in the bird house, for she herself had placed
+the ladder there the day before. Whatever was she doing? Jane giggled,
+for one of Mary's slippers had fallen off leaving her foot bare. But she
+didn't seem to care. She was putting her hand far into the bird house.
+Jane watched the hand carefully to see what it might bring out. But it
+came out empty. Mary hurriedly climbed down the ladder, picked up her
+slipper, glanced quickly around the empty garden and ran back into the
+house closing the door without a sound.
+
+Jane was puzzled. What had her mother hoped to find in the bird house?
+She crept back into bed, wondering, and just as she was slipping off to
+sleep, the solution came. "She was hiding something," thought Jane,
+sleepily, "and when I get up I'll find out what it is."
+
+Little things are the levers which move the big things of life. Had it
+been any other day save the day of the picnic, Jane would certainly have
+found out what Mary hid in the bird house and many things might have
+been different. But there was so much to do that morning and Ann and
+Bubble came over before Jane finished breakfast so that in the
+delightful hurry of getting ready and packing baskets, she forgot
+all about it.
+
+There was a disappointment, too, at the last moment, for just when they
+were all ready and the doctor had come with the motor, Mrs. Coombe
+decided that she really did not feel equal to going and that meant that
+Esther had to stay behind. Jane showed signs of tears. Ann and Bubble
+protested volubly. Even the doctor did his best to change
+Mary's decision.
+
+"You really ought to come, Mary," he said, "the drive alone will do you
+good, and if you get tired of it, I can bring you home early." He looked
+at her rather anxiously as he spoke but she did not seem ill. She looked
+better than usual for her eyes were brighter and her face was
+faintly flushed.
+
+"No, I won't come to-day. I'm tired. There is not the slightest need for
+Esther to stay. I am going to stay in my room with a good book."
+
+"Oh, Esther, do come! Oh, Esther, you promised!" Thus Ann and Bubble,
+while Jane pulled at her frock.
+
+Mary looked on with a slightly acid smile. The doctor drew her aside.
+
+"Won't you come?" he asked patiently. "You see how disappointed the
+children are."
+
+"Yes, about Esther. And Esther does not need to stay. It's absurd. Are
+you never going to trust me?"
+
+"You know it isn't you that we distrust. It is something stronger than
+you, or any of us. Mary, be patient, just a little longer. You want to
+be free, don't you?"
+
+She hid the glitter in her eyes, against his coat. "Yes, of course. Only
+don't ask me to go to-day. It excites me. I want to be quiet."
+
+"Very well, and you promise--"
+
+"Yes, I'll promise anything. And if Esther stays I'll be decent to her.
+Though why you bother about her so much, I don't see. She is nothing
+to you."
+
+"She is very much to you," sternly.
+
+"Yes--a spy! Oh, well, don't let's quarrel. Be sure to be back early for
+the supper party to-night. Mr. Macnair and Annabel are invited. You can
+bring them with you in the motor. It is just as well Esther isn't
+going. There'll be lots of little things to attend to."
+
+"That's settled then." Knowing that further persuasion was useless, he
+kissed her and turned to quiet the eager children.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Almost she held her breath as she watched him go. Her small hands
+twisted, a pulse beat visibly in her temple, her lips worked, she shook
+from head to foot. Nevertheless she stood there, controlling herself,
+until the motor horn had honked its farewell to a chorus of children's
+laughter. Then, as one released from some desperate strain, she turned
+and fled to her room....
+
+"Mother!" Esther came in slowly, unpinning her hat. There was no answer
+to her call. But she had not expected any. In her sulky moods Mrs.
+Coombe often went for days without speaking to her step-daughter. When
+the girl saw that she had gone to her room she was rather relieved than
+otherwise; it meant at least a peaceful afternoon. Mary, in her room,
+was considered safe and all that Esther need do was to be ready in order
+to accompany her if she decided to go out.
+
+She was not disappointed at missing the picnic. It was getting rather
+hard to be gay. And it would be nice to have everything ready when the
+party returned.
+
+It was a quietly beautiful afternoon and as the girl went about her
+simple tasks she was not unhappy. Already she was learning the great
+lesson which many more fortunate lovers miss, that the rarest fragrance
+of love lies in its bestowal. That is why love is of all things most
+securely ours.
+
+Once she called up to the blowing curtains of Mrs. Coombe's window.
+
+"Mother, won't you come and help me with the flowers?" But no hand
+pushed the curtain aside, nor did she receive any answer. Perhaps Mary
+was really asleep. In that case she was sure to be amiable at
+supper time.
+
+Everything was daintily ready and Esther had had time to slip on her
+prettiest frock when the "honk" of the returning motor brought a faint
+colour into her pale cheeks.
+
+"Dear me, you've got quite a colour, Esther," said Miss Annabel Macnair
+in a slightly injured voice. She had come intending to tell Esther how
+badly she was looking and to recommend a tonic.
+
+"I don't see why you didn't come to the picnic."
+
+"Oh, Esther," Jane's plain little face was radiant, "you missed it! It
+was the nicest picnic yet. I won one race and Bubble won another, and
+Ann won't speak to either of us. She says she hates her aunt because
+she'd have won a race too if she hadn't had so much starch in her
+petticoats. But Mrs. Sykes says she wouldn't be a mite surprised if Ann
+has a bad heart--not a wicked heart, just a bad one, the kind that makes
+you drop down dead. Some of Ann's folks died of bad hearts, Mrs. Sykes
+says. But the doctor says it's all nonsense. He agreed with Ann that it
+wasn't anything but petticoats--Oh, say! how pretty the table looks. Did
+mother say you could use the best china?"
+
+"Seeing that it's Esther's china on her own mother's side, I guess she
+can use it if she likes," said Aunt Amy, mildly belligerent. "I thought
+you might want to set the table before we got home, Esther, and I was so
+afraid you might forget and use the sprigged tea set. But the doctor
+said you'd be sure not to."
+
+"That's one of her queer notions, I suppose?" said Miss Annabel in a
+stage whisper plainly heard by every one. "How odd! Can you come
+upstairs with me, Esther? I want to speak to you most particularly and I
+haven't seen you for ages.
+
+"Not that I haven't tried," she continued in her jerky way as they went
+up the stairs together; "but you seem to be always with your mother.
+Going to lose her soon. Natural enough. I said to Mrs. Miller, 'There's
+real devotion.' Possible to overdo it though. Marriage is terribly
+trying. For relatives. But long engagements are worse. How was it you
+didn't get to the picnic?"
+
+Esther murmured that she hadn't quite felt like going to the picnic.
+
+"Well, you didn't miss much. Even Angus wasn't as cheerful as usual.
+Inclined to be moody. And that brings me to what I wanted to tell you.
+Remember that last time you had lunch with us?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Remember me saying that I never ask questions, but that I always find
+out? Well--I have."
+
+"Have what?" asked Esther, who had not been following.
+
+"Found out. Found out what is the matter with my brother. Exactly what I
+thought. He is the victim of an unhappy attachment. Unreciprocated!"
+
+"But--"
+
+"You remember you laughed at me, Esther. Suggested liver. And when I
+mentioned your mother you almost convinced me that I was wrong. Although
+I am never wrong. It _is_ your mother, Esther. My poor brother,
+brokenhearted, quite--utterly!"
+
+This was so amazing that Esther waited for more.
+
+"I suppose he felt certain of her until Dr. Callandar stepped in. Could
+hardly believe it. When I told him of your mother's reputed engagement
+he was not in the least disturbed. Said 'Pshaw!' Couldn't imagine such a
+possibility. I said, 'I assure you it is the truth, Angus,' and he
+merely remarked, 'Well, what if it is?' in a most matter of fact way.
+Quite calm!"
+
+"And you think--"
+
+"My dear, I am sure. All put on. To deceive me. Although I never am
+deceived. So I waited. And then one night last week I happened to get
+home from a business session of the Ladies' Aid, early. I went in
+quietly. Angus was in his study, without a light, but the door was a
+little bit open, and I could hear his voice quite plainly. He was
+praying--"
+
+"Oh, please--"
+
+"My dear, I couldn't help hearing. I didn't listen. I was rooted to the
+spot. Positively! He--"
+
+"You must not tell me, Miss Annabel, I won't listen."
+
+"Very well, my dear. Perhaps you are right. Couldn't tell you his very
+words anyway. I cannot remember them. He was very eloquent, terribly
+worked up! And he was praying for Her. That's what he called your
+mother, just Her. It sounded almost--almost popish, you know! Then
+suddenly he stopped as if something had cut him off--sharp. There was a
+silence. So long I began to be frightened and then he cried out loud,
+'Not for me! Not for me!' It was dreadful! But it proves my point, I
+think. Why, my dear, whatever is the matter?"
+
+Esther, leaning against the window frame, was sobbing weakly.
+
+"Dear me! I had no idea you would feel it so badly. Take a sip of
+water--do!"
+
+Esther struggled to regain her self-control.
+
+"It seems so--sad," she faltered.
+
+"Yes, of course. It is sad. And I have great sympathy with my poor
+brother," went on Miss Annabel pinning down her hair net. "But do you
+know, I sometimes think," she hesitated and a slow blush arose in her
+middle-aged cheek, "I sometimes think that people in love aren't to be
+pitied after all. Though it is hardly a thought to express to a young
+girl like you.
+
+"You know," she went on awkwardly as Esther still made no remark, "they
+feel a great deal, of course, but it must be so very _interesting_. A
+little cold cream for my nose, Esther. If I leave it until I get home I
+shall certainly peel."
+
+Esther provided the cream and a powder puff. She felt sick at heart. Her
+calmer world of the afternoon burst like a bubble leaving only a tear
+behind. The vision of Angus Macnair in the dark study reaching out
+frantic hands for the thing he knew could never be his, seemed a last
+touch of unendurable irony. Surely some one, somewhere, must be moved to
+dreadful mirth at these blunders of the fates. From the echo of such
+laughter commonplace was the only refuge. Esther bathed her eyes and
+called to Jane to let her mother know that supper was ready.
+
+The sounds of the child's cheerful tattoos upon Mrs. Coombe's door
+accompanied them down the stairs, but when they had waited a few
+minutes, Jane came quietly into the room alone.
+
+"Mother doesn't answer me, Esther."
+
+Miss Annabel looked surprised, then curious. Esther felt her face flame.
+It was really too bad of Mary to make things so much harder than she
+need. Her refusal to answer could only mean that she had determined to
+be thoroughly disagreeable; and with company in the house. But her
+annoyance was abruptly checked by the effect of the news upon the
+doctor. It was not annoyance she read in his eyes. It was dismay. With a
+murmured sentence, which may or may not have been excuse, he turned
+from the room.
+
+"I am so sorry," explained Esther smoothly. "Mother is not at all well,
+one of her old headaches. The doctor has gone up to see if he can be
+of any use."
+
+Miss Annabel shook her head gloomily. "Mark my words," she said, "your
+mother ought to take those headaches of hers more seriously. A headache
+seems a little thing, but I know of a case--"
+
+With Esther's sympathetic encouragement the good lady launched upon a
+recital of melancholy happenings more or less connected with headaches
+which occupied her attention very pleasantly and prevented any one else
+from saying anything until the return of the awaited guest. He came in
+looking as usual and bearing an apology from the hostess for her sudden
+indisposition. "Nothing at all serious," he added lightly. "It is
+possible that she may join us later." But it was noticeable that as he
+spoke he did not look at Esther nor could her anxious glance read the
+impassive sternness of his face.
+
+It was not a successful meal. In spite of the pretty table, the dainty
+food, the well kept up fire of conversation, the beautiful evening out
+of doors, the softly shaded light inside, from first to last the supper
+was a nightmare. Of what avail the careful pretence that nothing was
+wrong? A very miasma of dread enveloped that table, a thing so palpable
+that Miss Annabel found herself starting at a sound, the minister's
+ready tongue faltered on a favourite phrase, Esther's clear voice grew
+blurred, Aunt Amy wrung her hands, Jane's eyes were wide with
+unchildlike care. Only Callandar seemed undisturbed, courteous,
+interested.
+
+It was a relief to them all when after an uncomfortable half-hour with
+coffee on the veranda the minister suddenly remembered a forgotten
+committee meeting and hurried Miss Annabel away with half her parting
+words unspoken. The doctor, still courteous and interested, walked down
+with them to the gate. He would wait, he said, a little longer to see
+how Mrs. Coombe found herself. Esther carried off a subdued and silent
+Jane to bed.
+
+"Esther," whispered Jane as her sister bent to kiss her, "why do lovely,
+lovely days always end so badly?"
+
+"They don't, Janie."
+
+The child sighed. "Mine do. I never had a perfect day in all my life."
+
+"You will have. Every one has perfect days--sometime."
+
+"Have you, Esther?"
+
+"Yes, dear."
+
+Jane looked up sleepily. "Perhaps mine will come to-morrow!"
+
+Esther went slowly down stairs and out into the garden. Callandar was
+coming up the path from the gate. He walked slowly. When they met, he no
+longer avoided her glance.
+
+"Well?" She had no need to ask. Yet she did ask, falteringly.
+
+"We have failed," he said briefly.
+
+The quiet hopelessness of his voice left no room for argument. Esther
+opened her lips to protest, but found nothing to say.
+
+"She has outwitted us," he went on. "How? who can say? They have the
+cunning of the devil! There is only one thing to do now. Only one way--"
+
+"You mean?--"
+
+"The wedding must take place at once. I suppose the farce is really
+necessary. But there must be no more delay. Only the unsparing use of a
+husband's authority can save her now. I shall take her away. I must be
+with her day and night. In France there is a place I know, beautiful,
+isolated. I shall take her there. If all else fails there is the
+treatment of hypnotic suggestion. But--I shall not fail, I dare not!"
+
+Blindly she put out her hand--he clasped it gently--yet not as if he
+knew whose hand it was. Then, laying it aside, he passed by, and,
+leaving her sobbing in the dusk, went on into the house and up the
+stairs to the closed room.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXII
+
+
+It became quickly known in Coombe that, owing to Mrs. Coombe's delicate
+health, the wedding would take place much sooner than had been expected.
+A sea voyage, it was conceded, was the necessary thing and as Dr.
+Callandar would not allow his fiancée to go away alone it seemed only
+fair that he should make haste to go with her. Comment on all these
+points was much more restrained than usual because, just at this time,
+Coombe withstood the shock of finding out that Dr. Callandar was no less
+than Dr. Henry Chedridge Callandar of Montreal. No, not his brother, nor
+his cousin, but the man himself!
+
+Of course Coombe had suspected this all along. Never for a moment had it
+been really deceived. Over and over again it had said: "My dear, that
+young man is not a mere local practitioner, mark my words!" From the
+first, Coombe had observed the marks of true distinction in him. He was
+so odd! He seemed to care nothing at all for appearances, and, as
+everybody knows, this comfortable attitude of mind is the privilege of
+the famous few. Besides, there was the matter of the marriage. Coombe
+had been right in thinking that Mary Coombe had not gone into the matter
+blindfold. She had known very well upon which side her bread was
+buttered, and as to her giving way to his whims in the absurd way she
+did--that, too, was understandable under the circumstances.
+
+What puzzled Coombe, now, was how she had managed it. She was not
+pretty, at least not very pretty. She was not young, at least only
+comparatively young. And goodness knows, she was not clever! Hardly a
+mother in Coombe but had at least one daughter prettier, younger and
+cleverer; a daughter, in fact, who could give Mary Coombe aces and kings
+and still win out. Why had the doctor not been attached to one of these?
+It was incomprehensible. Even if, through a misplaced devotion to his
+profession, he had determined to marry into a doctor's family--there was
+Esther! Esther Coombe was a fine girl and quite nice looking before she
+had begun to "go off." Even as it was she had more to recommend her than
+her step-mother. There seemed to be a general impression that all men
+are fools.
+
+"If they would only let some woman with sense choose their wives for
+them," declared the eldest Miss Sinclair in a burst of confidence, "they
+might get along fairly well. But if ever a man gets married to the right
+woman, it happens by accident."
+
+Nevertheless, at a special meeting of the Ladies' Aid, called for the
+purpose, it was decided to give the bride a present. They had not
+intended to do it for fear of establishing a precedent. But when it came
+out who Dr. Callandar was, it hardly seemed right to let one of their
+best known members go from them to a more exalted sphere in a city
+(which many of them might, from time to time, feel inclined to visit)
+without showing her by some small token how very highly she was held in
+their regard. Every one could see the sense of this and the vote was
+unanimous. In regard to the nature of the gift there was more diversity
+of opinion, but it was finally decided that, as the value of this kind
+of thing lies not in the gift but in the spirit of the giving, a brown
+jar with the word "Biscuits" in silver lettering would do very well.
+Carving knives were thought of but as Mrs. Atkins very fitly said,
+"Everybody is sure to give carving knives"--a phenomenon which all the
+ladies accepted as a commonplace.
+
+Of the prospective bride herself, Coombe saw little. She remained very
+much at home. She had lost much of her spasmodic energy, was inclined to
+be moody and even rude. Her state of health accounted naturally for this
+and also for the arrival of a new inmate at the Elms, a cool and capable
+looking person who was discovered, after much amazed enquiry, to be a
+trained nurse. Not a hospital nurse exactly but a kind of special nurse
+whose duties included massage, and the giving of certain baths and
+things which the doctor thought strengthening. Her name was Miss Philps.
+Coombe never got behind that. No one could ever boast that she knew more
+of Miss Philps than her name. She was, and remains to this day,
+a mystery.
+
+There are people like that, although this was Coombe's first experience
+of one. Miss Philps was not a recluse. Everywhere Mrs. Coombe went, Miss
+Philps went too. Even Esther was not more assiduous in her attentions.
+She was not a silent person either, far from it. She bubbled over with
+precise and cheerful comment, she appeared to talk even more than was
+absolutely necessary and it was only upon her departure that her
+entertainers noticed that she had said nothing at all. A very baffling
+person to deal with. Coombe could not manage to "take to" her at all and
+great sympathy was felt for Mrs. Coombe when she was reported to have
+said to Miss Milligan that going out with Miss Philps felt exactly like
+a jail delivery--whatever that might be!
+
+But if Miss Philps was not appreciated at large it was different in her
+own immediate circle. She had not been at the Elms a day before Esther
+recognised the doctor's wisdom in getting her. She was discreet,
+capable, kindly. The burden upon the girl's shoulders grew momentarily
+lighter. Miss Philps, with her matter of fact cheeriness, her strength
+and her experience, was exactly what that house of overstrained
+nerves needed.
+
+"Dear me," she said, "you're all as fidgety as corn in a popper. And no
+need for it. I've nursed dozens worse than your mother, Miss Esther, and
+had them right as a trivet before I got through. As long as we can keep
+her hands off the stuff--and that's what I'm here for. So don't worry!"
+
+Esther drew a deep breath. It was certainly good to feel the strain
+lifting, to have time for dreams again. The time was so pitifully short
+now. Two more weeks and she would leave Coombe behind her. The old life
+would be definitely over and done with. Looking back, she could see that
+it had been a happy life, and the future looked so dark. In youth, all
+life's happenings seem so terribly final. Every parting feels like a
+parting forever. Esther felt quite sure that she would never return
+to Coombe.
+
+In the week before the wedding, freed from her continual attendance upon
+her mother, she unobtrusively paid farewell to all her old haunts and
+favourite places. It was a sweet sadness. She did not taste the sweet,
+but it was there. As one grows older, one does not linger over sad
+moments. It is because the sweet has vanished, only the bitter remains.
+But in untried youth sadness has a touch of beauty, a glamour of
+romance which shrouds its deepest pain. It is as if something within us,
+infinitely wise, were smiling, knowing well that for the young there is
+always to-morrow.
+
+The maple by the schoolhouse turned early that year. When Esther, in her
+pilgrimage, came to say good-bye it welcomed her with all the glory of
+autumn. Against its greener brothers it stood out, naming, defiant.
+Beside it, the red pump seemed no longer red. Red and yellow, its
+falling leaves tossed themselves into the girl's lap as she sat upon the
+porch steps. It is almost certain that, as Esther gathered them, she
+compared her sad heart to a leaf which had fluttered from the tree of
+happy life. There seemed no outlook for her. She could not see through
+winter into spring.
+
+The school children with their new teacher (whom Esther could not help
+but feel was sadly incompetent) had all gone home and it was very quiet
+on the porch steps. She closed her eyes and dreamed and clearly through
+her dream she heard, as she had heard that first morning in early
+summer, a determinedly cheerful, yet husky, voice singing. Some one was
+coming down the hill.
+
+ "From Wimbleton to Wombleton is fifteen miles;
+ From Wombleton to Wimbleton is fifteen miles;
+ From Wimbleton to Wombleton, from Wombleton to Wimbleton,
+ From Wimbleton to Wombleton,--"
+
+The song trailed off into silence as it had done before. The girl's
+closed eyes smarted with tears--"Oh, it is a very long way!" she
+murmured, and burying her face in fallen leaves she felt that at last
+she knew the meaning of despair.
+
+But though his voice had echoed through Esther's dream, Callandar was
+not on the long hill nor anywhere near it. Unlike Esther, he paid no
+farewells during these last days. He avoided the hill particularly and
+drove past the schoolhouse seldom and always at top speed. If the sight
+of the turning maples moved him at all it was not because he compared
+his lost happiness to a fallen leaf. Callandar was long past such gentle
+sadnesses as these. Every day he filled as full of work as possible. He
+walked far and hard in hope of tiring himself into dreamless sleep at
+night. And every day his face grew older, greyer, more sternly set.
+
+At the very last, and as if inspired by some special imp of the
+perverse, Mary declared that she must have a church wedding. Opposition
+was useless. With all the distorted force of her drug-ridden brain, she
+desired this one thing. She wept, she coaxed, she raved. Every woman,
+she stormed, had a right to a proper wedding. She had always been
+cheated, she had been a pawn shoved about at the bidding of others, her
+own wishes never consulted. Was there any reason, any reason at all, why
+she should not be properly married in the church?
+
+He ventured quietly to remind her that there were peculiar circumstances
+in the case. But she burst out at that. He was ashamed of her. Ashamed
+of his own wife. If there were peculiar circumstances whose fault were
+they? Not hers, surely? Would she be where she was now if he had not
+neglected her all those years? Anyway, peculiar circumstances or not,
+she would be married decently or she would not be married at all.
+
+With set lips, the doctor gave in. Opposition maddened her, and, after
+all, one farce more or less could not matter much.
+
+"Very well," he said, "make your own arrangements."
+
+Immediately, Mary became amiable. She was quite polite to Miss Philps,
+almost pleasant to Esther. Into the preparations for the wedding she
+entered with some of her old spasmodic energy. The occasion, she
+determined, should be a talked of one in Coombe. She made plans, a fresh
+one every day, and talked of them continually.
+
+Only--there was one plan of which she did not speak. There was one
+unsaid thing which matured quietly, covered by the noise of much
+talking. Yet this plan more than any other would have to do with the
+success of her last appearance in Coombe. It would be foolish indeed,
+she decided, to let any promise, however well-meant, stand in the way of
+this success. She could not, and would not, face a crowded church
+feeling as she felt now. That was absurd! She would need some little
+stimulant to help her carry it off. A very slightly increased dose would
+do it. Only sufficient to banish that horrible craving, to give her a
+long, satisfying sleep and then just a touch more, very little, to brace
+her in the morning. Enough to send warm tingling thrills of well being
+through her tired body, to brighten her eyes, to clear her brain and
+steady her shaking nerves--to make her young again, young and a bride.
+
+Only this once! Never again.
+
+Of what use to continue the sophistries which justified her treachery to
+herself! Perhaps of the three it was she who suffered most during that
+last week. She lived in an agony of anticipation, a hell of desire for
+which a sane pen has no description. Yet no one must suspect that she
+anticipated or desired anything--not the cool-eyed Miss Philps, not
+Esther, not the doctor, not even Jane. The mask must not slip for one
+single moment. So far, they suspected nothing; but they were always on
+their guard, always. A careless look, an unconsidered movement might
+betray her, and then--! She raved in her room sometimes when she thought
+of a possible balking of her purpose.
+
+She was very clever. She still had self-control when it was necessary to
+have it in the furtherance of the one devouring passion. Only when she
+was quite alone did she ever give way. The doctor thought her
+wonderfully docile and took heart of hope. A month or two alone with her
+in Prance and all would be well. In the meantime, patience! Naturally
+she was full of childish whims. He smiled at her indulgently when she
+asked him to request Miss Philps to stay outside of the fitting room at
+Miss Milligan's. "For you know," she said, "it is bad luck, very bad
+luck, for any person to see one, in one's wedding gown before the proper
+time. And anyway," the grey eyes filled with easy tears, "I'm sure it
+isn't good for me never to be trusted, not even with silly Miss
+Milligan."
+
+The plea seemed genuine. It was like Mary to be concerned about the
+wedding-dress superstition. And what possible danger could there be?
+Miss Milligan in all probability had never heard the fatal names of
+opium and cocaine save as unpleasant things associated with Chinese and
+tooth-drawing. It was absurd to imagine Mary coming to harm there.
+
+From this you will see that, upon the occasion of the last discovery,
+Mary had lied desperately and well. The "cache" in the bird-house had
+been found, but Miss Milligan's name had never been connected in the
+most remote way with that relapse. Mary had sworn that the new supply
+had not been new at all but had formed part of an old cache which she
+had hidden, in a place which even she had forgotten, all quite
+accidentally. And although many supplementary enquiries were made, the
+real truth had remained undiscovered.
+
+So in the simplest way in the world, Mary secured several uninterrupted
+"fittings" with Miss Milligan while the excellent Miss Philps sat
+without and waited.
+
+"This is positively the last time I shall have to trouble you, dear Miss
+Milligan," said her customer sweetly. "Of course, as soon as we are
+married, I am going to tell Dr. Callandar all about it and when he sees
+how very much better my medicine has made me, he will be quite ready to
+withdraw his objections. In the meantime I am sure you feel, as I do,
+that our little ruse has been quite justifiable!"
+
+Miss Milligan did. She felt quite proud of her part in it. It is
+something to help a fellow woman and still more to get the better of a
+fellow man. Especially such a celebrated man as Dr. Callandar! She would
+order the fresh supply at once, that very afternoon, by the first mail.
+And as soon as the packet came she would see that Mrs. Coombe had it in
+person. "There is certain to be a few last touches necessary to the
+dress after it has been sent home," she remarked with a smile of truly
+Machiavellian subtlety.
+
+"Yes!" said Mary. "That night--after the dress comes home!" She spoke
+sharply, unnaturally. Her face turned a dull, pasty white. She shook so
+that Miss Milligan was thoroughly frightened. But presently she
+controlled herself and forced a pathetic smile.
+
+"You see, dear Miss Milligan, how much I need it."
+
+"Indeed a blind bat could see that!" said the dressmaker pityingly.
+"Shall I call the nurse?"
+
+But Mrs. Coombe would not hear of Miss Milligan calling the nurse!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIII
+
+
+It is the onlooker who sees most of the game and Aunt Amy was an ideal
+onlooker. Always self-effacing and silent, she was now more silent and
+self-effacing still. Consequently the principal actors tended to forget
+their parts when in her presence. No one explained anything to Aunt Amy
+but no one concealed anything from her. She simply "didn't matter." So
+far as the playing out of the little drama was concerned, Aunt Amy was
+supposed to be safely off the stage. She looked and listened, had her
+strange flashes of psychic insight and came to her own conclusions about
+it all, quite undisturbed by facts as they appeared to others. Her
+conclusions were very simple. Esther loved the doctor. The doctor loved
+Esther. That, in spite of this, Callandar was deliberately planning to
+marry Mary she considered a purely arbitrary matter arranged by those
+mysteriously malignant powers known as "They." Callandar, himself, had
+clearly no choice, Esther was helpless, and Mary triumphed easily and
+inevitably because Mary was one of "Them" herself. Aunt Amy had become
+firmly convinced of this latter fact. Everything went to prove it--the
+theft of the ring, the threat to shut her (Amy) up, the easy triumph
+over Esther, and a thousand and one trifles all "confirmation strong as
+proofs of holy writ." Of course it would be impossible to make this
+clear to Esther or the doctor. Amy realised that and did not try. But in
+her own mind she thought of it continually. And her little pile of proof
+mounted higher day by day.
+
+Esther, absorbed in the care of her step-mother, was not even aware that
+Aunt Amy noticed her growing listlessness, her heavy eyes, her fits of
+brooding. She did not know that a silent foot paused before her closed
+door, listening. All she knew was that it was relief unspeakable to be
+with Aunt Amy, to let drop the mask of cheerful energy without fear of
+questioning or of wonder. Aunt Amy didn't matter.
+
+Mary, too, felt that it was needless to hoodwink Amy. No need to pretend
+with her. She might show herself as irritable, as conscienceless, as
+nerve-racked and disagreeable as she chose without fear of displaying
+"symptoms." Aunt Amy was not looking for symptoms, indeed Mary thought
+she grew more stupid daily. After her marriage something would really
+have to be done about Amy. She hoped the doctor wouldn't be silly
+about it.
+
+Even Dr. Callandar was not careful to hide his burden from those faded
+eyes. He was more self-conscious even with Ann or Bubble than he was
+with her. What matter if she did see his mouth harden or his eyes
+burn?--Poor Aunt Amy, such things could have no meaning for her. She was
+a soul apart.
+
+A soul apart indeed, how far apart none of them quite realised; yet near
+enough to love--and hate. As the days went by and Esther drooped like a
+graceful plant athirst for water there grew in Aunt Amy's twisted brain
+a slow corroding anger. The timid, bitter anger of a weak nature which
+is often more deadly than the lordly passion of the strong.
+
+If she could only do something. If she could only outwit "Them"! She
+would do anything at all, if she could only find the thing to do. It was
+terrible to be so helpless. It was maddening to have to be so careful.
+Yet careful she must be, she never forgot that. Often as she went about
+the house or stood in the sunny kitchen rolling out her flaky pie-crust,
+she pondered over ways and means. But none seemed suitable. Some of her
+plans were fantastic to a degree, but she always had sense enough to
+reject them in the end. In her planning she was conscious of no sense of
+right or wrong but only of suitability. There could be no question of
+right or wrong in dealing with "Them." They were outside the pale. No.
+What she wanted was something simple and effective. A little poison,
+now--in a pie? But Amy knew nothing of poison, nor how to obtain any,
+nor how to use it effectively in a pie when once obtained. She might
+consult the doctor perhaps? But something warned Aunt Amy that the
+doctor would not take kindly to the idea of a little poison in a pie. So
+this beautiful scheme had to be given up. She sighed.
+
+"What a big sigh, Auntie!" Esther, who was sitting at the table peeling
+apples, looked up questioningly. "A penny for your thoughts."
+
+A look of cunning came over Aunt Amy's face. And instead of speaking her
+real thoughts she said, "I was thinking of weddings, Esther."
+
+"But why the sigh?"
+
+"I don't like weddings. Once there was a young girl going to be married.
+She was very happy. She was so happy that she was afraid to look at her
+own face in the glass. And it was eleven o'clock on Tuesday. I mean she
+was waiting for eleven o'clock on Tuesday. She was to be married then.
+But just one minute before the time, something happened--the clock
+stopped, I think. Anyway eleven o'clock on Tuesday never came. So she
+could not get married. And she grew old and her flowers fell to pieces.
+It was very sad."
+
+"Poor Auntie!"
+
+Aunt Amy moved uneasily. "Do you know who the girl was, Esther?"
+
+"Don't you know, Auntie?"
+
+"No, that is, I am never sure. Sometimes I think I used to know her. But
+she's gone. I never see her now. I'd like to find her if I could."
+
+"You will find her some day, Auntie. Try not to fret about it."
+
+It was seldom indeed that Aunt Amy spoke even thus vaguely of that other
+self of hers which she had lost in the tragedy of her youth. Esther's
+heart was full of pity as she listened. What was her own trouble
+compared to this? She at least would have her memories.
+
+"There is just one chance," went on Aunt Amy, now gently excited. She
+had never spoken of this chance before but she felt that Esther might
+like to hear of it. "Just one chance! You see, the world being
+round--the world is round, isn't it, Esther?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Well, the world being round there is a chance that, if she waits long
+enough, eleven o'clock on Tuesday may come around again. Then if she is
+ready and if she has the ring he gave her, the red ring, and if they are
+both very quick they may be married after all."
+
+"Oh, Aunt Amy, _dear_! That is why you love the ruby ring?"
+
+But the old lady's memory was clouding again. She looked bewildered and
+would say no more. Esther kissed her with new tenderness. "I am so glad
+you have it safely back," she whispered. "You need never be afraid of
+losing it again."
+
+Aunt Amy found it hard to make the pies that morning. She was enveloped
+in a deep sadness, a sadness which in some misunderstood way seemed
+inseparable from the idea of that lost friend of hers, the girl-bride
+whose marriage hour had never struck. It seemed to Aunt Amy that the
+girl had been waiting a very long time and was tired. Even if the world
+were round, it was a very big world and eleven o'clock on Tuesday took a
+wearisome time to travel around it. She could not understand why she
+should feel so terribly sorry for the waiting girl, but she did. A hot
+tear fell into the pie-crust. That would never do! The pie-maker
+furtively dried her eyes and came back to the consideration of more
+immediate problems.
+
+It may seem strange that no one noticed the morbid state of Aunt Amy at
+this time. But it would have been more strange if any one had noticed
+it. Of outward signs there were practically none. Even the silent
+hand-wringing had ceased. She ceased to rebuke Jane for stepping upon
+the third stair; she ceased to talk of the peculiarities inherent in
+sprigged china. She was more and more careful not to mention "Them,"
+and, as always, her housekeeping was a wonder and a delight.
+
+She even offered to make Mary's wedding-cake. An offer which Mary
+received graciously. No one could make fruit cake like Aunt Amy and if
+it proved too big for the house oven the baker could bake it in his.
+Jane was delighted. She told Bubble that it was to be a "hugeous" cake,
+the like of which was never seen in Coombe and she defied Ann to produce
+any relative or ancestor whatever whose wedding-cake had even faintly
+approached such dimensions. Ann retorted that big wedding-cakes were
+vulgar and that her Aunt Sykes did not think it proper for a widow woman
+to have a wedding-cake at all.
+
+The making of the cake was a great mental help to Aunt Amy. It seemed to
+ease her mind and aid her to think clearly. She thought of many things
+as she prepared the materials, made most clever plans. That all the
+plans had to do with the preventing of the marriage and the final
+circumventing of "Them" goes without saying. There was one especially
+good plan which came to her while she stoned the raisins. Still another,
+while the currants were being looked over, and a third, more brilliant
+than either, while she chopped the candied peel. The trouble was that
+when she came to mix all her ingredients into the batter, her plans
+began to mix up too, until all was hopeless confusion. It was most
+disheartening! And the wedding, now, only a few days off. She wanted to
+go away into a corner and wring her hands, but if she did, some one
+might notice--and then "They" would have the chance they were looking
+for. Aunt Amy was too clever for that!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIV
+
+
+The day before the wedding, the wedding dress came home. No one had seen
+it. Mary's superstition in regard to this point was indulgently smiled
+at by everybody.
+
+"But hadn't I better see it on you just once," suggested Esther. "Some
+trifle may have been forgotten and a missing hook and eye might spoil
+the effect of the whole thing."
+
+"Oh, I have thought of that. Miss Milligan is going to run in after
+supper to see that everything is right. Then if anything is needed she
+can attend to it at once. Of course, it doesn't matter about Miss
+Milligan seeing it--for bad luck I mean."
+
+"How about me?" asked Callandar, smiling.
+
+"You!" with a playful shriek, "you would be worse than anybody. You
+would hoodoo it entirely!"
+
+"How about little girls?" asked Jane coaxingly.
+
+Mary turned suddenly peevish. "Don't bother me, Jane. I shall not let
+any one see it and that's enough." But their combined suggestions had
+disturbed her, and it was only upon their serious assurance that of
+course her wishes would be respected that her amiability returned.
+
+Yet it was apparent that she felt rather worried about the dress herself
+for she had worked herself into a small fever of nervous anxiety before
+the promised appearance of Miss Milligan for the last fitting. When at
+last that lady arrived, a trifle late, and very much out of breath, Mary
+would hardly let her say good evening to the others, before hurrying
+her upstairs.
+
+"And I think," said she hesitatingly, "that I shan't come down again
+to-night. I am tired. If the doctor calls in, tell him that I am trying
+to get a good rest for to-morrow. Good night, Miss Philps. Good
+night, Esther!"
+
+To the girl's astonishment she kissed her. A light, hot kiss which fell
+on her cheek like a fleck of glowing ash. Yet it was a real kiss and may
+have meant that the giver was not ungrateful. Jane, too, had a good
+night kiss that night; but Aunt Amy had already gone upstairs.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"Well?" They were safely in the upstairs room now and the door was
+closed.
+
+"I've got it. It came on the afternoon mail. I went down to the post
+office specially. I knew you kind of counted on it for to-morrow."
+
+With the glee of a child playing conspirator Miss Milligan dived into
+the recesses of the reticule she carried. "Here it is. No, that's
+peppermints. But it's here somewhere--"
+
+"Oh, hurry!" Mary almost snatched the packet from the friendly hand. At
+sight of it she turned deathly white and began to shake as she had
+shaken that day in the fitting-room. But this time she recovered
+quickly, almost before Miss Milligan had noticed it.
+
+"Thank you so much," she said. With the last effort of her self-control
+she forced herself to place the packet upon the dresser. She wanted to
+snatch at it to tear it open, to scream with the relief of the tablets
+in her hand, but she did none of these things. Instead she thanked Miss
+Milligan again and proceeded to talk of other things, anything that
+would do to fill up the short time necessary to conceal the real purpose
+of the visit so that Esther and Miss Philps would not suspect--never for
+a moment suspect!
+
+"Do you think we really need try on the dress?" asked the conscientious
+Miss Milligan.
+
+Mrs. Coombe thought not. It was quite all right, she felt sure of that.
+And really she was a little tired. It had been a trying day. She
+moistened her lips and tried to smile, keeping her eyes well away from
+the tempting heaven in the little pasteboard box. Would the woman
+never go!
+
+Fortunately Miss Milligan was a lady who prided herself upon her good
+sense and also upon her proper pride. She always knew, she declared,
+when she was not wanted, and, strange as it may seem, it began to dawn
+upon her that this was one of those rare occasions. Mrs. Coombe was very
+pleasant, of course, but Miss Milligan missed something, a certain
+cordiality which might have tempted her to prolong her stay. She was not
+offended, for if she considered that her self-denying journeys to the
+post office were meeting with less than their just deserts, she was not
+a woman to insist upon gratitude where gratitude was not freely given.
+She stayed therefore no longer than the fiction of dress-fitting
+required and then with a somewhat strained "good night" passed down the
+stairs and out of the house.
+
+Mary waited, rigid as a statue, until she heard the front gate close,
+then, the last defence down, she sprang to the dressing table--tearing
+off the paper from the package as a puppy dog might tear the covering
+from a bone. A glass of water stood ready. Her shaking hands reached for
+it, counted the number of tablets and slipped them in. Then, with a long
+breath of relief, the tension relaxed. She raised her eyes, triumphing
+eyes, to the mirror and saw--Aunt Amy watching her from the doorway.
+
+She had forgotten to lock the door!
+
+But it was only Aunt Amy.
+
+Fear and relief came in almost the same breath. She steadied herself
+against the dresser.
+
+"Shut the door!"
+
+Aunt Amy obeyed. But she shut herself inside the door. "What do you
+want?" Mary never wasted words on Amy--"Ah!"
+
+With a motion so swift that it seemed like a conjuror's miracle, Aunt
+Amy had slipped from her stand by the door, snatched up the open box,
+and was back again before the choking cry on the other's lips had
+formed itself.
+
+"Esther says you musn't take these," said Aunt Amy in her colourless
+voice.
+
+For a second Mary hesitated. If she made the murderous spring which
+every baffled nerve in her tortured body urged her to make, Amy would
+scream. A scream would mean, Miss Philps--Esther--the doctor: agony and
+defeat. With a mighty effort she held herself. She tried to
+speak quietly.
+
+"Don't be a fool, Amy. This is some medicine the doctor gave me himself.
+Hand it to me at once."
+
+Aunt Amy smiled. It was a sly little smile. It made Mary want to rave,
+for it said more plainly than words that Aunt Amy knew. Swiftly she
+changed her tactics. Her face softened, became gentle, entreating--
+
+"Amy--dear. I am only going to use a little. If you love me, give me the
+box."
+
+Useless! Aunt Amy still smiled. She put the box behind her. With her
+other hand she felt for the door knob.
+
+"Amy, give it to me! What have I ever done to you?"
+
+"You stole my ring." In exactly the same tone she might have said, "You
+are a murderess."
+
+The ring! Mary had forgotten the ring. Wait, perhaps it was not hopeless
+even yet. Amy placed an absurd value on that ring--and she, Mary, had
+the gem in her possession. She did not know that Esther had found and
+restored it. To her it was still in the box at the bottom of her drawer.
+A dazzling plan flashed through her excited brain. She would bribe Amy
+with the ring. The thought nerved her.
+
+"Do you really want your ring back?" she asked sweetly.
+
+Aunt Amy paused with her hands on the door knob.
+
+"I have it back."
+
+"Oh, no. You haven't. It is in a box in my drawer."
+
+"It is not. Esther gave it to me!" But there was a spark of fear in
+Amy's eyes. Contradiction so easily confused her. _Had_ Esther given her
+the ring? She felt oddly uncertain.
+
+Mary laughed, and the laugh increased Aunt Amy's confusion. After all it
+was quite possible that Mary had taken the ring again. It had been
+locked away and hidden, but locks and hiding-places were never an
+obstacle to "Them."
+
+"I've got it safe enough!" taunted Mary, tormentingly.
+
+The spark of fear flamed. Amy took a swift step forward. "Give it to
+me!"
+
+"Give me the box--and I will."
+
+Aunt Amy had ceased to care about the box. Almost she placed it in the
+outstretched hand, then, with quick cunning, caught it back.
+
+"The ring first."
+
+Mary shrugged her shoulders. She felt cool enough now. It was going to
+be easy. She turned to the bureau and began to pull things out of the
+drawer, scattering them anywhere. She could not remember exactly where
+she had put the ring. As she searched, she talked.
+
+"There is nothing to be tragic about," she said. "I intended to give you
+your ring anyway--some day. And the medicine is nothing that will hurt.
+It is only something to make me sleep so that I shan't look a sight
+to-morrow. I am taking only a little. No one will know. I shall not even
+oversleep. But if Esther or any of them knew, they would make a fuss.
+You must promise not to tell them--before I give you the ring. Just tell
+Esther that I do not want to be disturbed early. I'll wake myself, in
+plenty of time for the wedding."
+
+"In plenty of time for the wedding!" For a moment Amy wondered what it
+was about the phrase which sounded familiar? Then she seemed to see, as
+in a dream, the vision of a young girl all in white, with flowers in her
+hands, sitting alone in a room waiting, watching a clock--a clock which
+never quite came round to the hour of eleven on Tuesday. Time has a
+great deal to do with weddings, evidently. People who wish to be married
+must be ready at the fateful moment, otherwise they have to
+wait--forever, perhaps. "Plenty of time"--suddenly a flash of direct
+inspiration seemed to coordinate her scattered faculties. She saw
+clearly a plan, a beautiful, simple plan to prevent the marriage. What
+if Mary should _not_ wake in plenty of time for the wedding? What if the
+hour, the wedding hour, should not find her ready? The thing was so
+simple! If one tablet would make Mary sleep, two would make her sleep
+longer. For the moment she forgot even the ruby ring in her childish
+pleasure at such a clever idea. Her worn face was lit by a satisfied
+smile as she swiftly, quietly dropped more tablets from the box into the
+glass--one--two--she was not quite sure how many!
+
+"Here is the ring," said Mary turning at last from the disturbed drawer
+with a cardboard box in her hand. It was the box from which Esther had
+taken the ring long before, but Mary was in too great a hurry to open
+it. She did not doubt that it contained the ring. For once in her life
+Mary thought she was playing fair.
+
+They completed the exchange in silence, Mary wondering a little at the
+pleasant change which she saw in Amy's face. But she was too hurried to
+enquire into the cause of it. She hardly waited to hear her promise not
+to tell Esther but fairly pushed her from the room. Then, secure behind
+her locked door, she wiped the perspiration from her forehead and sank
+exhausted into the nearest chair.
+
+When her strength came back her first care was to hide the remaining
+tablets in a safe place in her travelling bag, she never intended to use
+them again, never! But it would do no harm to feel that she could trust
+herself to leave them alone, as of course she could. Then she loosened
+her hair, not pausing to brush it, and, slipping off her dress, wrapped
+herself in a certain flowered dressing gown. Not one of the dainty new
+ones, but a gown whose lace was yellowed and torn, a gown which felt
+like an old friend but which, after to-night, she would wear no more--
+
+Listen! Was that some one at the door?
+
+Only Miss Philps calling good-night. Mary answered "Good-night" in a
+sleepy voice, and the step passed on. It left her shaking like a leaf in
+the wind. What else indeed was she? A fluttering, fading leaf shaken in
+the teeth of a wind of dread and mad desire.
+
+All was quiet now. She would be disturbed no more that night. Her
+shaking hands rattled the spoon which stirred the mixture in the glass.
+The familiar motion quieted her. Here, right in her hands, was peace,
+rest, a swift and magical release from the torment of appetite denied.
+To-morrow--but why think of to-morrow? She might be stronger then.
+Everything might be easier. All she really needed was a long
+night's sleep.
+
+She turned out the light and throwing up the blind stood for a moment
+looking out into the soft moonlight. The moon was clear. It would be a
+beautiful day for the wedding! Smiling, she picked up the glass and
+with a whispered, "Here's to the bride!" raised it to her eager lips
+and drank.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Silence settled down upon the Elms. There was a harvest moon that night,
+a glorious rounded moon more golden than silver. The garden slumbered,
+wrapped in mellow light, even the shadows gleamed faintly luminous. The
+breeze, roaming at will, shook drowsy perfume from the lingering
+flowers, but for all it aped the summer it was unmistakably an autumn
+breeze, melancholy, earth-scented. It stirred the curtains at Mary's
+window; rustled through the great bowlful of crimson leaves upon
+Esther's writing table and softly stirred the dark hair of the girl as
+she sat with her face hidden in her curved arms. For a very long time
+she sat there while the moon looked in and looked away again and who
+can tell what her thoughts were, or if she thought at all.
+
+By and by she rose and went to the window, looking out to where a month
+ago she had stood by the garden gate under the stars. It was drenched
+with moonlight now and the shadow under the elm tree was dark.
+
+What was that? A darker shadow in the shadow? Esther's hand caught at
+the curtain, her heart gave a great leap and then grew still. She knew
+who stood there. This was the good-bye he could not speak. Tears fell
+unheeded down the girl's pale cheeks. If during those last days she had
+had any doubt of the love which loyalty to Mary had helped him hide so
+well, they were all swept away now. A warm spot grew and glowed in her
+heart and a line from that old immortal love lyric which she had learned
+in her school days came back vivid with eternal truth.
+
+ "I had not loved thee, dear, so much
+ Loved I not honour more."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXV
+
+
+It was a perfect day for the wedding. Autumn at her brightest and gayest
+before her new bright robes began to brown. Soft air, mellow sun,
+cool-lipped breeze, horizon veiled in tinted mist--a gem of a day, the
+jewel of a season.
+
+"Them as has, gets," murmured Mrs. Sykes, gloomily, as she tied on her
+Sunday bonnet. She rather resented the kindness of nature upon this
+present occasion. A nice rain would have suited her mood better.
+
+Nevertheless, much as her mind misgave her in regard to the wedding, she
+was early on her way to the Elms to see if she could help.
+
+"They're sure to be flustrated," she told herself. "Aunt Amy's just as
+likely as not to lose what little bit of head she has and hired help are
+broken reeds. Esther will have the brunt of it. She'll be glad enough to
+see me, I'll be bound."
+
+Do not imagine that Mrs. Sykes was curious. Curiosity was a failing
+which she systematically repudiated. But she was a very helpful person
+and it was wonderful how many opportunities of helpfulness she found
+upon solemn or joyous occasions. If, while helping, her ears were open,
+and her eyes shrewd, can she be blamed for that? There may be people
+with ears who hear not but they do not live in Coombe. The only
+difficulty is to manage to be, like Mr. Micawber, on the spot.
+
+Mrs. Sykes was early, but not too early. When she slipped in at the side
+door there was already a stir of unusual movement in the house but the
+final flutter was still measurably distant. Jane dashed past with
+crimped hair and white ribbons flying. Miss Philps, very stately in a
+new gown, was arranging flowers in geometrical patterns. Dr. Callandar,
+self-possessed as ever, talked upon the veranda with Professor Willits
+who had arrived the night before. Aunt Amy was busy in the kitchen.
+Esther, flushed and excited, with eyes that flashed blue fire, seemed
+everywhere at once.
+
+"Oh, Mrs. Sykes," she exclaimed, "how nice of you to come! Won't you
+please get Jane and tie her up--her ribbons, I mean? It is almost time
+to dress."
+
+"Would you like me to assist?" asked Miss Philps, looking up from a
+geometrical pattern.
+
+"Oh, thanks, Miss Philps. There are some hooks I cannot manage. But
+mother will probably need a lot of help. I thought you were with
+her now."
+
+"No. She has not yet sent for me." Miss Philps drew out her watch and
+consulted it. "Dear me!" with slight surprise, "it is much later than I
+thought. Perhaps I had better go up."
+
+Esther looked worried. "I believe you had--if she hurries at the last
+she will be terribly excited. Aunt Amy told me she wished particularly
+not to be disturbed this morning, but surely she has forgotten how late
+it is getting."
+
+"I'll go up," said Miss Philps. "It's time for her tonic anyway, and we
+must persuade her to eat something. When you are ready for me to hook
+your dress, call. I can easily manage you both."
+
+This is all that Mrs. Sykes heard, for just then Jane flew by again like
+a returning comet and had to be captured and properly tied up. Mrs.
+Sykes, as she admitted herself, was no hand at fancy fixings but she was
+painstaking and conscientious and the bow-tying absorbed all her
+energies. She was getting on very well and had almost succeeded in
+adjusting the last bow when a cry from the room above startled her into
+the tying of a double knot.
+
+"What was that?"
+
+It was not a loud cry--but there was something in it which brought Mrs.
+Sykes' heart leaping into her throat, which sent Esther reeling against
+the stair baluster, which brought the doctor, white-faced from the
+veranda--it was the kind of cry which carries in its note the psychic
+essence of terror and disaster.
+
+Mrs. Sykes for all her iron nerve felt suddenly faint. Jane began to
+cry. The doctor and Esther had raced up the stairs. But there was no
+repetition of the cry. Instead there was silence. Then a murmur of
+voices and sounds of ordered activity overhead.
+
+Clearly something had happened. But what? Mrs. Sykes wanted very much to
+go and see. But the glimpse she had caught of Callandar's eyes as he
+sprang to the stair, the look of white horror in Esther's face as she
+followed him, and above all, that strange terrifying Something in the
+cry she had heard seemed to discourage enquiry. The good lady turned her
+attention to the comforting of Jane. After all, if she waited long
+enough she could hardly help hearing all about it. At first hand, too.
+
+It seemed a long time that she waited. Miss Philps came up and down the
+stairs several times but she did not appear to see Mrs. Sykes. Jane
+stopped crying and wandered out into the garden. Still Mrs. Sykes
+waited and presently Aunt Amy came in, looking quite excited and asked
+eagerly what time it was. Mrs. Sykes told her, adding with asperity that
+these were fine goings-on, and that they'd all be late for the wedding
+if they didn't hurry up.
+
+"Yes, I think they will. I'm almost sure they will," said Aunt Amy, and
+she laughed as a child laughs when it is greatly pleased.
+
+"Dear me, she is much madder than I thought," murmured Mrs. Sykes.
+"Whatever is the matter? What are they doing?" she asked in a
+louder tone.
+
+Aunt Amy raised a finger, "Hush! she's asleep. Let us tidy up the room.
+I don't think she is going to wake up for a long time yet. And then
+she'll have to wait till the world goes round again."
+
+"Well of all the--" began Mrs. Sykes, but she was interrupted by the
+entrance of Professor Willits. With the virtuous air of one who strictly
+minds her own business she began to tie her bonnet strings.
+
+"Don't go, Mrs. Sykes," said the professor gravely. "I think--I'm afraid
+you may be needed."
+
+"I hope nothing serious has happened?" faltered Mrs. Sykes, now
+thoroughly disturbed, but he did not seem to hear her. He was listening
+intently to the sounds overhead. They were very slight sounds now and
+presently they ceased altogether. Willits looked more anxious. Then, in
+the midst of a new, heavier silence, Dr. Callandar himself came down
+the stairs.
+
+At first sight he appeared almost as usual. He did not notice Mrs. Sykes
+but went straight across the room to Willits.
+
+"Nothing--any use--" he began haltingly. Then suddenly the words ceased
+to come. His lips moved but there was no sound. With an expression of
+intense surprise he lifted his hand to his head, and swayed awkwardly
+into the nearest chair.
+
+"Land sakes, look out! he's going to fall," cried Mrs. Sykes in terror.
+
+"Breakdown," said the professor briefly. "I expected something of the
+kind. Help me to get him to the car."
+
+"Oh, Land, Land," moaned; Mrs. Sykes, "whatever"--but realising that the
+time for questioning was not yet, she did what she was told without
+more words.
+
+"Better send for Dr. Parker," said Willits crisply to Miss Philps who
+had come in quietly. "Better tell the minister, too. Keep the little
+girl down stairs. I'll be back as soon as I can. Mrs. Sykes, I shall
+want you to come with me."
+
+"Oh, Land--" but she got no further, the car was off like the wind.
+
+Later when the doctor had been put to bed like a child and telegrams
+dispatched which would bring a specialist and a nurse on the afternoon
+train, the good lady drew a long breath and decided that she couldn't
+"last out" a moment longer.
+
+Drawing Willits from the room her questions burst forth in their
+unstemmed torrent.
+
+The tall man listened at first in bewilderment. Then, as the true
+inwardness of the case dawned on him, a look which was almost admiration
+came over his angular countenance.
+
+"Why, Mrs. Sykes," he said, "is it possible that you do not know? I
+would have told you before but I took your knowledge for granted. The
+poor lady whom my friend was to marry was found dead in her bed. She
+died during the night. An overdose of sleeping powder."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVI
+
+
+Autumn that year was short and golden. Winter came early. In November it
+stormed, thawed, stormed again and began to freeze in earnest. The frost
+bit deeply but one night when its grip was sure, the temperature rose a
+little and snow began to fall. For days and nights it snowed, softly,
+steadily, without wind, and then the clouds parted and the sun shone
+out--a far off sun in a sky as blue as summer and cold as polar seas.
+The air tingled and snapped with frost. In the azure cup of the sunlit
+sky it sparkled like golden wine, and, like wine, it thrilled and
+strengthened. People stamped their feet and beat their hands to keep
+warm but smiled the while and murmured: "Glorious!"
+
+So much for the weather--since it was the weather which became the main
+factor in helping Coombe forget the tragedy at the Elms. Wonder is no
+nine-day affair in Coombe. One sensation is carefully conserved until
+the next one comes along, but in this case the early winter with its
+complete change of interests, its sleighing, skating and snow-shoeing,
+its reawakening of business and social bustle proved a distraction
+almost as effective as battle, murder or sudden death. The talk died
+down, the interest slackened, and the principal actors were once more
+permitted to become normal persons living in a normal world.
+
+For a time it had seemed that this desired condition would never be
+obtained. Coombe had felt the breath of a mystery. It was supposed to
+know everything and suspected that it knew nothing--a state of things
+aggravating to any well regulated community.
+
+There had been an inquest, of course, and at the inquest the whole sad
+affair was supposed to have been made plain. It was simplicity itself.
+Simplicity, in fact, was its most annoying characteristic. Mrs. Coombe,
+it appeared, had been for a long time somewhat of a sufferer from an
+obscure trouble, referred to generally as "nerves." For the relief of
+this trouble, one of whose symptoms was insomnia, she had, from time to
+time, had recourse to narcotics which, as everyone knows, are dangerous,
+if not, as many thought, positively immoral. Undoubtedly the poor lady
+had died from an overdose. It was easy, the coroner said, for a
+sympathetic mind to reconstruct the details of the terrible occurrence.
+It was the night before the wedding and the deceased had retired early.
+Miss Milligan, who had run in for a last look at the wedding gown, and
+who had been the very last person to see and speak with her, deposed
+that she had appeared more than ordinarily tired and seemed anxious to
+be alone. Asked if she detected any other signs of disordered nerves the
+witness had said, no. The deceased had not appeared worried about
+anything? No. The wedding gown had been quite satisfactory? Quite.
+
+No more questions were asked and Miss Milligan had not thought it
+necessary to go into the matter of the getting of the nerve tonic. The
+dead woman's harmless little deception was safe in her hands. It hadn't
+anything to do with the case anyway. Although in her own heart Miss
+Milligan blamed Dr. Callandar severely for not allowing the poor woman
+to use her tonic constantly. Had he done so the final tragedy might
+never have happened. Needless to say this good lady never knew what she
+had done. The fact that Mary Coombe had been a drug victim under
+treatment did not come out at the inquest. The coroner knew, but he was
+a sensible man and a very kind one. It hardly needed the logical
+arguments of Miss Philps or the heart-broken entreaties of Esther to
+convince him that knowledge of this fact was not for the general public.
+The only legally necessary information was the cause of death and that
+was simple enough. Easily understood, too, for given a tendency to
+sleeplessness and the excitement incident to a wedding, what more
+natural than that the excited bride should have sought relief in her
+customary sleeping draught.
+
+The mistake, the taking of a lethal dose, was, as all such mistakes are,
+inexplicable. Did her hand shake? Had she miscounted the number of
+tablets? Had she, in her nervous state, deliberately risked a larger
+dose whose danger she did not realise? These questions would never be
+answered. She had been alone in her room, nor was there a thread of
+evidence upon which to hang a theory. Esther, the nurse, Jane, Dr.
+Callandar (poor man!) had noticed nothing out of the ordinary when they
+had parted from her that last time. Aunt Amy's evidence was not taken.
+No one thought to question her and she volunteered no information. Of
+all the household at the Elms she was least disturbed by the tragedy,
+but, naturally, one does not expect the mentally weak to realise sorrow
+like ordinary people. This exemption was, as many did not fail to
+remark, one of their compensations. So in this, as in other things, Aunt
+Amy did not matter. She went her quiet way undisturbed, the one
+contented and peaceful person in that house of shock and horror.
+
+Why, then, since all was so plain, did Coombe scent a mystery? It would
+be hard to say. Perhaps the curious behaviour of Dr. Callandar was
+partly responsible. When the news of his sudden breakdown became known
+the first natural comment was, "So, you see, he did love her after all."
+But, upon longer consideration this did not seem to meet the case. A man
+may be genuinely in love with a woman and yet not be stricken, as had
+the doctor, by her sudden death. Dimly, Coombe felt that there must be a
+cause behind the cause. Miss Sinclair, the eldest, even went so far as
+to quote Shakespeare to the effect that "men have died and the worms
+have eaten them, but not for love." True, the doctor was not dead but
+his illness was proving a very long and stubborn one. In its early
+stages he had been taken away to Toronto for special treatment and had
+been quite unable to see any one, even the minister, before he left.
+Mrs. Sykes alone, with the exception of the trained nurses, had laid
+eyes on him since his sudden collapse on the day of the wedding. And
+Mrs. Sykes, miraculously, had nothing to say.
+
+It was rumoured, however, that his brain was affected, that he was
+paralysed, that he was deaf and blind, that he was dying of slow
+decline. Somehow the town felt that Mary Coombe, living or dead, did not
+loom large enough as a cause of such disintegration.
+
+Esther's actions, too, were part of the puzzle. It had been confidently
+supposed that she would go away at once for a rest and change. Every one
+knew that the Hollises had offered to take her with them on a long trip
+to the Pacific Coast. But Esther had declined to go. She declined to go
+anywhere. Worn out as she was with strain and grief, she persisted in
+disregarding the advice of everybody. ("So headstrong in a young girl!
+But Doctor Coombe, her father, was always like that.") Apparently she
+intended to go on exactly as if nothing had happened and to all
+arguments said nothing save, "I think it will be best," or, "I am not
+fit for strange scenes just now," or something equally futile. Coombe
+was quite annoyed with Esther--so stubborn!
+
+Only to Miss Annabel did the girl attempt to justify her attitude when
+that kind soul had exhausted persuasion and was inclined to feel both
+worried and hurt.
+
+"Don't you see," she explained haltingly, "I can't go away. I don't want
+to. I can't make the effort. Here every one understands and will make
+allowances. I want to be quiet, to rest, to think. I want to get back to
+where I was before--if I can."
+
+"Before what, my dear?"
+
+"Before--everything! I can't explain. But I know it is the only way I
+shall ever be content. I want to take my school again and to go on
+working and looking after Jane and Aunt Amy. Although," with a little
+smile, "it is really Auntie who looks after Jane and me. Won't you help
+me, dear Miss Annabel? I am quite sure that this is the only thing
+to do."
+
+"You are a strange girl, Esther. One would think you would be crazy to
+get away. Look at Angus! He's going. He has suddenly found out that a
+trip to the Holy Land is necessary if one is to speak intelligently upon
+many portions of the Bible. Absurd! But I never let him dream that I
+know that isn't his reason. And I hope you won't. It is all over now and
+the sooner he forgets the better. But I think even you are convinced,
+now, that I was right about--you know to what I refer!"
+
+Esther murmured something indistinguishable and Miss Annabel departed
+much pleased with her own perspicacity. And she did help. She let it be
+known at the Ladies' Aid that she quite understood Esther and approved
+of her. After all, it was senseless to run away from trouble since
+trouble can run so much faster. And it was natural and right of Esther
+to feel that nowhere could she find so much sympathy and consideration
+as in her own town. Travelling was fatiguing anyway.
+
+As for the school, that was easily arranged. A little discreet wire
+pulling and Esther was once more established as school mistress of
+District Number Fifteen. People shook their heads, but by the time of
+the first snowstorm they had ceased to prophesy nervous prostration, and
+by the time sleighing was fairly established they were ready to admit
+that the girl had acted sensibly after all.
+
+No one guessed that there was another reason for Esther's refusal to go
+away. It was a simple reason and had to do with the fact that in Coombe
+the mails were sure and regular. Travellers miss letters and strange
+addresses are uncertain at best, but in Coombe there was small chance of
+any untoward accident befalling a certain weekly letter in the
+handwriting of Professor Willits. Esther lived upon these letters. Brief
+and dry though they were, they formed the motive power of her life and
+indeed it was from one of them that she had received the impetus which
+roused her from her first trance of grief and horror.
+
+"My dear young lady (Willits had written).
+
+"I believe that there are times when the truth is a good thing. It might
+be tactful to pretend that I do not know the real reason of Calendar's
+collapse but it would also be foolish. I think he is going to pull
+through. Now the question is--how about you? Are you going to be able to
+do your part?
+
+"Let me be more explicit. It may be a long time before our friend is
+thoroughly re-established in health but it is quite probable that he
+will be well enough, and determined enough, to face some of his problems
+in the spring. He will turn to you. Are you going to be able to help
+him? When he comes to you will he find a silly, nervous girl, all
+horrors and regrets and useless might-have-beens or will he find you
+strong and sane, healthily poised, ready to face the future and let the
+dead past go? For the past is dead--believe me!
+
+"You have seemed to me to be an excellently normal young person, but no
+doubt the shock and trouble of late events have done much to disturb
+your normality. Can you get it back? On the answer to that, depends
+Callandar's future. I shall keep you informed, weekly, of his progress."
+
+Esther had thought deeply over this letter. Its brief, stern truth was
+exactly the tonic she needed. Like a strong hand it reached down into
+her direful pit of morbid musings, and, clinging to it, she struggled
+back into the sunlight. Above all and in spite of everything, she must
+not fail the man she loved!
+
+At first she had to fight with terrors. She feared she knew not what.
+The vision of Mary upon the bed, still and ghastly in the golden light
+of morning, came back to shake her heart. The memory of Callandar's
+face, of the frantic struggle to drag the dead woman back to life, made
+many a night hideous. The endless questioning, Could it have been
+prevented? Could I have done more? tortured her, but by and by, as she
+faced them bravely, these terrors lost their baleful power. Her youth
+and common-sense triumphed.
+
+The school helped. One cannot continue very morbid with a roomful of
+happy, noisy children to teach and keep in order. Jane's need of her
+helped, for she, dared not give way to brooding when the child was
+near. Aunt Amy helped--perhaps most of all. She was a constant wonder
+to the girl, so cheerful was she, so thoughtful of others, so forgetful
+of herself. Her little fancies seemed to have ceased to fret her, there
+was a new peace in her faded eyes. Sometimes as she went about the house
+she would sing a little, in a high thready voice, bits from songs that
+were popular in her youth. "The Blue Alsatian Mountains" or "When You
+and I Were Young, Maggie" or "Darling Nellie Grey." She told Esther that
+it was because she felt "safe." "The blackness hardly ever comes now,"
+she said. "I don't think 'They' will bother me any more."
+
+"Why?" asked Esther, curious.
+
+But Aunt Amy did not seem to know why--or if she knew she never told.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVII
+
+
+A robin hopped upon the window sill of School-house Number Fifteen and
+peered cautiously into the room. He had no business there during lesson
+hours and the arrival of Mary's little lamb could not have been more
+disturbing. The children whispered, fidgeted, shuffled their feet and
+banged their slates.
+
+"Perhaps they do not know it is spring," thought the robin and ruffling
+his red breast and swelling his throat he began to tell them.
+
+"It is spring! It is spring! It is spring!"
+
+The effect was electrical. Even the tall young teacher turned from her
+rows of figures on the blackboard.
+
+"Come out! come out! come out!" sang the robin.
+
+The teacher tapped sharply for order and the robin flew away. But the
+mischief was done. It was useless to tell them, "Only ten minutes more."
+Ten minutes--as well say ten years. The little fat boy in the front seat
+began to cry. A long sigh passed over the room. Ten minutes? The teacher
+consulted her watch, hesitated, and was lost.
+
+"Close books," she ordered. "Attention. Ready--March." The jostling
+lines scrambled in some kind of order to the door and then broke into
+joyous riot. It was spring--and school was out!
+
+Their teacher followed more slowly, pausing on the steps to breathe
+long and deeply the sweet spring air. In a corner by the steps there was
+still a tiny heap of shrinking snow, but in the open, the grass was
+green as emerald, violets and wind flowers pushed through the tangle of
+last year's leaves. The trees seemed shrouded in a fairy mist of green.
+Robins were everywhere.
+
+The girl upon the steps was herself a vision of spring--the embodiment
+of youth and beautiful life. Coombe folks admitted that Esther Coombe
+had "got back her looks." Had they been less cautious they might have
+said much more, for the subtle change which had come to Esther, the
+change which marks the birth of womanhood, had left her infinitely
+more lovely.
+
+From the pocket of the light coat she wore she brought forth a handful
+of crumbs and scattered them for the saucy robins and then, unwilling to
+hasten, sat down upon the steps to watch their cheerful wrangling.
+Peeling for more crumbs she drew out a letter--a single sheet covered
+with the crabbed handwriting of Professor Willits. At sight of it a soft
+flush stole over her face. She forgot the crumbs and the robins for,
+although her letter was two days old and she knew exactly what it
+contained, the very sight of the written words was joy to her. Like all
+Willits' notes it was short and to the point.
+
+"Our friend has gone," she read. "We wanted to keep him for a month yet,
+but the robins called too loudly. He left no word of his destination,
+only a strange note saying that at last he was up the hill and over. May
+he find happiness, dear lady, on the other side."
+
+One thing I notice--this recovery of his is different from his former
+recovery. If I were not afraid of lapsing into sentiment, I should say
+that he has achieved a soul cure. The morbid spot which troubled him so
+long is healed. A psychologist might explain it, but you and I must
+accept the result and be thankful. It is as if his subconscious self
+had removed a barrier and signalled 'Line clear--go ahead.' It is more
+than I had ever dared to hope.
+
+ Your friend,
+ E.P. Willits.
+
+"P.S.: Are you ready?"
+
+Esther looked at the postscript and smiled--that slow smile which lifted
+the corner of her lips so deliciously.
+
+"May we wait for you, Teacher?"
+
+"Not to-day, dears."
+
+The children moved regretfully away. Presently the school yard was
+deserted. The busy robins had finished quarrelling over their crumbs and
+were holding a caucus around the red pump. In the quietness could be
+heard the gurgle of the spring rivulets on the hill.
+
+Was there another sound on the hill, too? A far off whistling mingled
+with the gurgling water and twittering birds? Esther's hand tightened
+upon the letter--she leaned forward, listening intently. How loud the
+birds were! How confusing the sound of water! But now she caught the
+whistling again--
+
+ "_From Wimbleton to Wombleton is fifteen miles_"--
+
+The familiar words formed themselves upon the girl's lips before the
+message of the tune reached her brain and brought her, breathless, to
+her feet. He was coming--so soon!
+
+Panic seized her. Her hand flew to her heart--she would hide in the
+school-room, anywhere! Then she remembered Willits' postscript, the
+postscript which she had thought so needless. Her hand fell to her side.
+The panic died. Next moment, head high and eyes smiling, she walked down
+to the gate.
+
+He was coming along the road under the budding elms--hatless, carrying a
+knapsack. His tweeds were splashed with mud from the spring roads, his
+face was thin, his hair was almost grey. Yet he came on like a conqueror
+and there was nothing old or tired in the bound wherewith he leaped the
+gate he would not pause to open.
+
+"Esther!"
+
+She looked up into his eyes and found them shadowless. Her own eyes
+veiled themselves,
+
+Neither found anything to say.
+
+But overhead a robin burst into heavenly song.
+
+
+
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+The Project Gutenberg eBook, Up the Hill and Over, by Isabel Ecclestone
+Mackay
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: Up the Hill and Over
+
+Author: Isabel Ecclestone Mackay
+
+Release Date: December 12, 2003 [eBook #10438]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: US-ASCII
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK UP THE HILL AND OVER***
+
+
+E-text prepared by Brendan Lane, Charlie Kirschner, and the Prooject
+Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading Team
+
+
+
+UP THE HILL
+
+AND OVER
+
+BY
+
+ISABEL ECCLESTONE MACKAY
+Author of "The House of Windows," etc.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ _The road runs back and the road runs on,
+ But the air has a scent of clover_.
+ _And another day brings another dawn,
+ When we're up the hill and over_.
+
+
+
+TO MY MOTHER
+
+WHO MIGHT HAVE LIKED THIS BOOK HAD SHE LIVED TO READ IT
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+
+ "From Wimbleton to Wombleton is fifteen miles,
+ From Wombleton to Wimbleton is fifteen miles,
+ From Wombleton to Wimbleton,
+ From Wimbleton to Wombleton,
+ From Wombleton--to Wimbleton--is fif--teen miles!"
+
+The cheery singing ended abruptly with the collapse of the singer upon a
+particularly inviting slope of grass. He was very dusty. He was very
+hot. The way from Wimbleton to Wombleton seemed suddenly extraordinarily
+long and tiresome. The slope was green and cool. Just below it slept a
+cool, green pool, deep, delicious--a swimming pool such as dreams
+are made of.
+
+If there were no one about--but there was some one about. Further down
+the slope, and stretched at full length upon it, lay a small boy. Near
+the small boy lay a packet of school books.
+
+The wayfarer's lips relaxed in an appreciative smile.
+
+"Little boy," he called, somewhat hoarsely on account of the dust in his
+throat, "little boy, can you tell me how far it is from here to
+Wimbleton?"
+
+Apparently the little boy was deaf.
+
+The questioner raised his voice, "or if you can oblige me with the exact
+distance to Wombleton," he went on earnestly, "that will do quite
+as well."
+
+No answer, civil or otherwise, from the youth by the pool. Only a
+convulsive wiggle intended to cover the undefended position of the
+school books.
+
+The traveller's smile broadened but he made no further effort toward
+sociability. Neither did he go away. To the dismayed eyes, watching
+through the cover of some long grass, he was clearly a person devoid of
+all fine feeling. Or perhaps he had never been taught not to stay where
+he wasn't wanted. Mebby he didn't even know that he _wasn't_ wanted.
+
+In order to remove all doubt as to the latter point, the small boy's
+head shot up suddenly out of the covering grass.
+
+"What d'ye want?" he asked forbiddingly.
+
+"Little boy," said the stranger, "I thank you. I want for nothing."
+
+The head collapsed, but quickly came up again.
+
+"Ain't yeh goin' anywhere?" asked a despairing voice.
+
+"I was going, little boy, but I have stopped."
+
+This was so true that the small boy sat up and scowled.
+
+"I judge," went on the other, "that I am now midway between Arden,
+otherwise, Wimbleton, and Arcady, sometime known as Wombleton. The
+question is, which way and how? A simple sum in arithmetic will--little
+boy, do not frown like that! The wind may change. Smile nicely, and I'll
+tell you something."
+
+Urged by necessity, the badgered one attempted to look pleasant.
+
+"That's better! Now, my cheerful child, what I really want to know is
+'how many miles to Babylon?'"
+
+A reluctant grin showed that the small boy's early education had not
+been utterly neglected. "Aw, what yeh givin' us?" he protested
+sheepishly, "if it's Coombe you're lookin' for, it's 'bout a mile and a
+half down the next holler."
+
+"Holler?" the stranger's tone was faintly questioning. "Oh, I see. You
+mean 'hollow,' which being interpreted means 'valley,' which means, I
+fear, another hill. Little boy, do you want to carry a knapsack?"
+
+"Nope."
+
+"No? Strange that nobody seems to want to carry a knapsack. I least of
+all. Well," lifting the object with disfavour, "good-day to you. I
+perceive that you grow impatient for those aquatic pleasures for which
+you have temporarily abjured the more severe delights of scholarship.
+Little boy, I wish you a very good swim."
+
+"Gee," muttered the small boy, "gee, ain't he the word-slinger!"
+
+He returned to the pool but something of its charm was dissipated. Vague
+thoughts of school inspectors and retribution troubled its waters. Not
+that he was at all afraid of school inspectors, or that he really
+suspected the stranger of being one. Still, discretion is a wise thing
+and word-slinging is undoubtedly a form of art much used in high
+scholastic circles. Also there had been a remark about a simple sum in
+arithmetic which was, to say the least, disquieting. With a bursting
+sigh, the small sinner scrambled to his feet, reached for the hated
+books, and disappeared rapidly in the direction of the halls of
+learning.
+
+Meanwhile the stranger, unconscious of the moral awakening behind him,
+plodded wearily up the steep and sunny hill. As he is our hero we shall
+not describe him. There is no hurry, and there will be other occasions
+upon which he will appear to better advantage. At present let us be
+content with knowing that there was no reason for the hat and suit he
+wore save a mistaken idea of artistic suitability. "If I am going to be
+a tramp," he had said, "I want to look like a tramp." He didn't, but his
+hat and coat did.
+
+He felt like a tramp, though, if to feel like a tramp is to feel hot and
+sticky and hungry. Perhaps real tramps do not feel like this. Perhaps
+they enjoy walking. At any rate they do not carry knapsacks, but betray
+a touching faith in Providence in the matter of clean linen and
+tooth brushes.
+
+Before the top of the hill was reached, Dr. Callandar wished devoutly
+that in this last respect he had behaved like the real thing. In setting
+out to lead the simple life the ultimate is to be recommended--and
+knapsacks are not the ultimate. They are heavy things with the property
+of growing heavier, and prove of little use save to sit upon in damp
+places. The doctor's feelings in regard to his were intensified by an
+utter lack of dampness anywhere. The top of the hill was a sun-crowned
+eminence, blazingly, blisteringly, suffocatingly hot. The valley, spread
+out beneath him, was soaked in sunshine, a haze of heat quivered visibly
+above the roofs of the pretty town it cradled. There was a river and
+there were woods, but the trees hung motionless, and the river wound
+like a snake of brass among them.
+
+The doctor regarded both the knapsack and the prospect resentfully. He
+had hoped for a breeze upon the hill-top, and there was no breeze.
+Raising his hand to remove his hat, he noticed that the hand was
+trembling, and swore softly. The hand continued to tremble, and holding
+it out before him he watched it, interestedly, until a powerful will
+brought the quivering nerves into subjection.
+
+"Jove!" he muttered. "Not a moment too soon--this holiday!"
+
+Then, hat in hand, he started down the hill.
+
+It was a long hill, very long, much longer than it had any need or right
+to be. It had a twist in its nature which would not allow it to run
+straight. It meandered; it hesitated; it never knew its own mind, but
+twisted and turned and thought better of it a dozen times in half a
+mile. It was a hill with short cuts favourably known to small boys and
+to tramps with a distaste for highways; but this tramp, not being a real
+one, knew none of them, and was compelled to do exactly as the hill did.
+The result was, that when at last it slipped into the cool shade of a
+row of beeches at its base, its victim was as exhausted as itself.
+
+He was thirsty, too, and, worse still, he knew from a certain dizzy
+blindness that one of his bad headaches was coming on--and there still
+lay another mile between him and the town. Pressing his hand against his
+eyes to restore for the moment their normal clearness of vision, he saw,
+a short way down the road, a gate; and through the gate and behind some
+trees, the white gleam of a building. But better than all, he saw,
+between the gate and the building, a red pump! Then the blindness and
+pain descended again, and he stumbled on more by faith than by sight;
+blundering through the half-open gate, his precarious course directed
+wholly by the pump's exceeding redness, which shone like a beacon
+fire ahead.
+
+Fortunately, it was a real pump with real water and a sucker in good
+standing, warranted to need no priming. At the stroke of the red handle
+the good, cool water gurgled and arose with a delightful "plop!" It
+splashed from the spout freely upon the face and hands of the victim of
+the long hill--delicious, life-giving! The delight it brought seemed
+compensation almost for heat and pain and weariness. Callandar felt that
+if he could only let its sweetness stream indefinitely over his closed
+eyes it would wash away the blindness and the ache. Perhaps--
+
+"I am afraid I cannot allow you to use this pump!" said a crisp voice
+primly. "This is not," with capital letters, "a Public Pump!"
+
+Callandar wiped the surplus water from his face and looked up. There,
+beside him in the yellow haze of his semi-blindness, stood the owner of
+the voice. She appeared to be clothed in white, tall and commanding.
+Surrounded by the luminous mist, her appearance was not unlike that of a
+cool and capable avenging angel.
+
+"This pump," went on the angel with nice precision, "is not for the use
+of pedestrians."
+
+"Ah!" said the pedestrian.
+
+"If you will continue down the road," the voice went on, "you will find,
+when you reach the town, a public pump. You may use that."
+
+The pedestrian, feeling dizzier than ever, sat down upon the pump
+platform. It was wet and cool.
+
+"The objection to that," he said wisely, "is simple. I cannot continue
+down the road."
+
+"I should like you to go at once," patiently. "There is a pump--"
+
+The pedestrian raised a deprecating hand.
+
+"Let us admit the pump! Doubtless the pump is there, but there is a pump
+here also, and a pump in the hand is worth two pumps, an ice-box and a
+John Collins in town. You doubtless know the situation created by
+Mahomet and the mountain? This is the same, with a difference. In this
+case the pump will not come to me and I cannot go to the pump. Therefore
+we both remain _in statu quo_. Do I make myself plain?"
+
+Apparently he did, for there was no answer. Logic, he concluded, had
+achieved its usual triumph. The avenging angel had withdrawn. Blissfully
+he stooped again, closing his eyes to the cool drip of the water, but
+scarcely had they felt its chill relief when a sharp bark caused them to
+fly open with disconcerting suddenness--the avenging angel had returned,
+and with her was an avenging dog! Seen through the mist, the dog
+appeared to be a bull pup of ferocious aspect.
+
+"I am sorry," the cool voice had no ruth in it, "but it is my duty not
+to allow tramps upon these grounds. If you will not go, I must ask
+the dog--"
+
+"ASK the dog!" In spite of his aching head the tramp (now no longer
+pedestrian) laughed weakly.
+
+"Oh, please don't ask him!" he entreated. "He looks too awfully willing!
+Besides, I begin to perceive that my presence is not desired. Naturally
+I scorn to remain."
+
+Very slowly he raised himself from the damp pump platform by means of
+the red pump-handle. In this manner he achieved an upright position
+without much difficulty and all might have gone well had he behaved like
+a proper tramp. But forgetting himself, under the tyranny of training
+and instinct, he attempted, in deference to the sex of the angel, to
+raise his hat (which was not on his head anyway). In so doing he
+released the red pump-handle, lost his balance, struggled wildly to
+regain it, and then collapsed with a terrible sense of failure and
+ignominy, right into the open jaws, as it were, of the avenging dog!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+
+He had a fancy that something cool and kind was licking his hand....
+
+It felt like the tongue of a friendly dog. He seemed to have been
+dreaming about dogs. Something soft and cold lay on his head. It felt
+like a wet handkerchief ... the pain had dulled to a slow throbbing ...
+if he opened his eyes he would know who licked his hand and what it was
+that lay upon his head ... on the other hand, opening his eyes might
+bring back the pain. It seemed hardly worth the risk ... still, he would
+very much like to know--
+
+Without being able to decide the question, he fell asleep.
+
+When he awoke, his head was clear and the pain was gone. He felt no
+longer unbearably tired, but only comfortably weary, deliciously drowsy.
+Had he been at home in his own bed he would have turned over and gone
+cheerfully to sleep again. As it was, he opened his eyes with a zestful
+sense of curiosity.
+
+He was lying, very easily, upon soft grass. Above him spread the thick
+greenery of a giant maple; his head rested upon a cushion and close
+beside him, with comforting nose thrust into his open palm, lay a
+ferocious-looking bull pup. The pup grinned with delight at his
+tentative pat; barked fiercely, and then grinned again as if to say,
+"Don't mind me, it's only my fun!"
+
+There was a noise somewhere, a loud, cheerful noise--the noise of
+children playing. Not one child, nor two, but children--lots of them!
+This was perplexing; and another perplexing thing was the nearness of a
+white stoop which led up to the door of a white building; neither stoop
+nor building had he ever seen before. Again the dog barked, loudly, and
+as if in answer to the bark, the door above the stoop opened and a young
+girl came out. She cast a casual glance at him as he lay under the tree,
+and, settling herself daintily upon the white steps, opened a small
+basket and took from it a serviceable square of white damask and a
+lettuce sandwich. He could see the lettuce, crisp and green, peeping out
+at the edges.
+
+At the sight, he was conscious of a strange sensation; an almost
+forgotten feeling to which, for the moment, he could put no name.
+
+And then, as the girl bit into the sandwich, illumination came. He was
+_hungry_! But what an unkind, inconsiderate girl!--Another bite and the
+sandwich would be gone--
+
+"I am awake," he suggested meekly.
+
+"So Buster said." The girl smiled approvingly at the dog. "Good Buster!
+You may come off guard, sir. Run away and get your lunch."
+
+With a delighted bark for thanks the bull pup trotted away. Callandar's
+sense of injury deepened. The girl had begun upon a second sandwich.
+Perhaps there were only two!
+
+"Are you hungry, Mr. Tramp?" asked the girl innocently.
+
+"I think," he said, pausing in order to give his words full weight, "I
+am starving!" Then, as the blissful meaning of this first feeling of
+healthy hunger dawned upon him, he added solemnly: "Thank the Lord!"
+
+"Yes?" There was a cool edge of surprise in the girl's voice. She
+proceeded thoughtfully with the second sandwich.
+
+"Yes. Hunger is a beautiful thing, a priceless possession. Money cannot
+buy it, skill cannot command it. The price of hunger is far
+above rubies."
+
+The girl looked down upon him and smiled. It was such a dear little
+smile that for a moment its recipient forgot about the disappearing
+sandwich.
+
+"I am so glad," she said warmly, "that you feel like that!"
+
+There was a slight pause. "Because," she went on, finishing the last
+bite of the second sandwich, "until now I had always thought that hunger
+wasn't a bit nice. Unless, of course, one has the power to gratify it."
+
+"Fortunately," said Callandar a little stiffly, "I have that power."
+
+The girl raised her eyebrows. They were long and straight and black, and
+she raised them charmingly. But she was a most unkind and heartless
+girl, for all that. Never while he lived would he ask her for a
+sandwich. With a comfortable feeling of security his hand felt for his
+well-filled pocketbook. It was gone!
+
+"By Jove!"
+
+Stronger ejaculation seemed forbidden by the Presence on the steps. He
+tapped all his pockets carefully. The pocketbook was in none of
+them--and he had used the last cent of loose change for a glass of milk
+for breakfast.
+
+"I suppose," the girl had apparently not noticed his sudden
+discomfiture, "that you mean you have money? But the nearest place where
+money would be of use is Coombe, and Coombe is a full mile away. It is
+a pity that my principles, and the principles of the school-board,
+should be all against the feeding of tramps. Otherwise I might offer you
+a sandwich."
+
+"You might," bitterly, "but I doubt it!"
+
+"Even now, putting the school-board aside, I might offer you one if you
+were to ask prettily and to apologise to me for making rather a fool of
+me this morning over there by the pump!"
+
+The pump! Why, of course, the pump! It all came back to him now--the
+pump, the avenging angel! (Had this been the avenging angel?) The
+avenging dog!--Oh, heaven, was _that_ the avenging dog?
+
+He burst into a boyish shout of laughter.
+
+"There are only two sandwiches left," she warned him. The doctor stopped
+laughing.
+
+"Oh, please!" he said.
+
+There was something very pleasant about him when he used that tone; a
+persuasive charm, a trace of command. The girl liked it--and passed
+a sandwich.
+
+"Anyway it was you who took for granted that I was a tramp," he smiled
+at her. "If I remember rightly I was hardly in a condition to contradict
+you. Not but that it was a natural conclusion. I am curious to know why
+you changed your mind."
+
+"Oh! as soon as you fainted I knew. Tramps don't faint!"
+
+"Not ever?"
+
+"Well--hardly ever! And besides--look at your hands!"
+
+The doctor looked, and blushed.
+
+"Dirty?" he ventured.
+
+"Not half dirty enough! And it wasn't only your hands. I noticed--oh!
+lots of things!" For no perceptible reason a tiny blush fluttered
+across the whiteness of her face like a roseleaf chased by the wind. The
+pleasure of watching it made the doctor forget to answer, and the
+girl went on:
+
+"I know lots more about you than that you aren't a tramp. I know what
+you are. You are a doctor!" triumphantly.
+
+"A Daniel come to judgment!"
+
+"Yes, a Daniel! Only I wouldn't have been quite so sure if you hadn't
+dropped this out of your pocket." With a gleeful laugh she held up a
+clinical thermometer.
+
+The doctor laughed also. "Men have been hanged on less evidence than
+that," he admitted. "All the same I don't know where it came from. Some
+one must have judged me capable of wanting to take my own temperature.
+Anything else?"
+
+"Only general deductions. You are a doctor, you are going to
+Coombe--deduction, you are the doctor who is going to buy out Dr.
+Simmonds's practice."
+
+Callandar scrambled up from his pillow with a look of delighted surprise
+on his face.
+
+"Why--so I am!" he exclaimed.
+
+"You say that as if you had just found it out."
+
+"Well, er--you see I had forgotten it--temporarily. My head, you know."
+
+The suspicion in the girl's eyes melted into sympathy. "I suppose you
+know," she said with quite a motherly air, "that old Doc. Simmonds
+hasn't really any practice to sell?"
+
+"No? That's bad. Hasn't he even a little one? You see" (the sympathy had
+been so pleasant that he felt he could do with a little more of it), "I
+could hardly manage a big one just now. As you may have noticed, my
+health is rather rocky. Got to lay up and all that--so it's just as
+well that old Simpkins' practice is on the ragged edge."
+
+"The name is Simmonds, not Simpkins," coldly.
+
+"Well, I didn't buy the name with the practice. My own name is
+Callandar. Much nicer, don't you think?"
+
+"I don't know. A well-known name is rather a handicap."
+
+This time the doctor was genuinely surprised.
+
+"A handicap? What do you mean?"
+
+"People will be sure to compare you with your famous namesake, Dr.
+Callandar, of Montreal. Everyone you meet," with a mischievous smile,
+"will say, 'Callandar--ah! no relation to Dr. Henry Callandar of
+Montreal, I suppose?' And then they will look sympathetic and you will
+want to slap them."
+
+"Dear me! I never thought of that! I had no idea that the Montreal man
+would be known up here. In the cities, perhaps, but not here."
+
+The girl raised her straight black brows in a way which expressed
+displeasure at his slighting tone.
+
+"You are mistaken," she said briefly. "I must go now. It is time to ring
+the bell. The children are running wild."
+
+For the first time the doctor began to take an intelligent interest in
+his surroundings, and saw that the tree, the white stoop and the small
+white building were situated in a little, quiet oasis separated by a low
+fence from the desert of a large yard containing the red pump. On the
+other side of the fence was pandemonium!
+
+"Why, it's a school!" he exclaimed.
+
+The school-mistress arose, daintily flicking the crumbs from her white
+pique skirt.
+
+"District No. 15. The largest attendance of any in the county. I really
+must ring the bell." She flicked another invisible crumb. "I hope," she
+added slowly, "that I haven't discouraged you."
+
+"Oh, no! not at all. Quite the contrary. It seems unfortunate about the
+name, but perhaps I can live it down. It isn't as if I were just out of
+college, you know.--In fact," as if the thought had just come to him,
+"do I not seem to you to be a little old for--to be making a
+fresh start?"
+
+The girl's eyes looked at him very kindly. It was quite evident that she
+thought she understood the situation perfectly. "I shouldn't worry about
+that, if I were you," she said. "Young doctors are often no use at all.
+A great many people _prefer_ doctors to be older! I know, you see, for
+my father was a doctor. He was Dr. Coombe; for many years he was the
+only doctor here, the only doctor that counted," with a pretty air of
+pride. "The town was named after his father-I am Esther Coombe."
+
+The doctor acknowledged the introduction with a bow and a quick smile of
+gratitude.
+
+"You are really very kind, Miss Coombe," he said. "If--if I should take
+Dr. Spifkin's practice, I hope I may see you sometimes. It is not far
+from here, is it, to the town--pump?"
+
+Esther laughed. "No, but I do not live out here. I only teach here. We
+live in town, or almost in. You will pass the house on the way to the
+hotel. But before you go--" with a gleeful smile she handed him his lost
+pocketbook--"this fell out of your coat when I pull--helped you under
+the tree. I should have given it to you before, but I wanted you to
+understand just how far the blessing of hunger depends upon one's power
+to gratify it."
+
+They laughed together with a splendid sense of comradeship; then with a
+startled "I really must ring the bell!" she turned and ran up the steps.
+
+Smilingly he watched her disappear, waiting musingly until a sudden
+furious ringing told him that school was called.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+
+Two sandwiches, an apple, and a glass of water may save a man from
+starvation, but they do not go far towards satisfying the reviving
+appetite of a convalescent. Walking with brisk step down the road,
+Callandar began to imagine the kind of meal he would order--a clear
+soup, broiled steak, crisp potatoes--a few little simple things like
+that! He fingered his pocketbook lovingly, glad that, for the first time
+in some months, he actually wanted something that money could buy.
+
+Now that noon was past, the intense heat of the morning was tempered by
+a breeze. It was still hot and his footsteps raised little cyclones of
+dust which flew along the road before him, but the oppression in the air
+was gone, and walking had ceased to be a weariness. The mile which
+separated him from Coombe appeared no longer endless, yet so insistent
+were the demands of his inner man that when a town-going farmer hailed
+him with the usual offer of a "lift," he accepted the invitation
+with alacrity.
+
+"Better," he murmured to himself, "the delights of rustic conversation
+with a good meal at the end thereof than lordly solitude and
+emptiness withal."
+
+But contrary to expectation the rustic declined to converse. He was a
+melancholy-looking man with a long jaw and eyes so deep-set that the
+observer took them on faith, and a nose which alone would have been
+sufficient to identify him. Beyond the first request to "step up," he
+vouchsafed no word and, save for an inarticulate gurgle to his horse,
+seemed lost in an ageless calm. His gaze was fixed upon some indefinite
+portion of the horse's back and he drove leaning forward in an attitude
+of complete bodily and mental relaxation. If his guest wished
+conversation it was apparent that he must set it going himself.
+
+"Very warm day!" said Callandar tentatively.
+
+"So-so." The farmer slapped the reins over the horse's flank, jerked
+them abruptly and murmured a hoarse "Giddap!" It was his method of
+encouraging the onward motion of the animal.
+
+"Is it always as warm as this hereabouts?"
+
+"No. Sometimes we get it a little cooler 'bout Christmas."
+
+The doctor flushed with annoyance and then laughed.
+
+"You see," he explained, "I'm new to this part of the country. But I
+always thought you had it cooler up here."
+
+The manner of the rustic grew more genial.
+
+"Mostly we do," he admitted; "but this here is a hot spell." Another
+long pause and then he volunteered suddenly: "You can mostly tell by
+Alviry. When she gets a sunstroke it's purty hot. I'm going for the
+doctor now."
+
+"Going for the doctor?" Callandar's gaze swept the peaceful figure with
+incredulous amusement. "Great Scott, man! Why don't you hurry? Can't the
+horse go any faster?"
+
+"Maybe," resignedly, "but he won't."
+
+"Make him, then! A sunstroke may be a very serious business. Your wife
+may be dead before you get back."
+
+The deep-set eyes turned to him slowly. There seemed something like a
+distant sparkle in their depths.
+
+"Don't get to worrying, stranger. It'll take more 'an a sunstroke to
+polish off Alviry."
+
+"Was she unconscious?"
+
+"Not so as you could notice."
+
+"But if it were a sunstroke--look here, I'll go with you myself. I am a
+doctor."
+
+"Kind of thought you might be," he responded genially. "Thinking of
+taking on old Doc. Simmonds's practice?"
+
+"I don't know. But if your wife--"
+
+The rustic shook his head. "No. You wouldn't do for Alviry. She said to
+get Doc. Parker, and a sunstroke ain't going to change her none. But if
+she likes your looks she'll probably try you next time. Tumble fond of
+experiments is Alviry--hi! giddap!" He slapped his horse more forcibly
+with the loose reins and settled into, mournful silence.
+
+"Going to put up at the Imperial?" he asked after a long and peaceful
+pause.
+
+"I want to put up somewhere where I can get a good meal and get it
+quickly."
+
+The mournful Jehu shook his head gloomily.
+
+"You won't get that at the Imperial."
+
+"Where had I better go?"
+
+"There ain't any other place to go--not to speak of."
+
+The doctor let fall a fiery exclamation.
+
+"What say?"
+
+"I said that it must be a queer town."
+
+"I'm a little hard of hearing, now and agin. But I gather you're not a
+church-going man. It's a great church-going place, is Coombe. Old Doc.
+Simmonds was a Methody. We were kind of hoping the next one might be a
+change. There's two churches of Presbyterians and they're tumble folk
+for hanging together."
+
+The doctor laughed. "Thanks for the tip. I'll remember. Coombe is
+considered a healthy place, isn't it?"
+
+"Danged healthy."
+
+The commiseration in the other's tone lent to the simple question such
+an obvious meaning that the doctor hardly knew whether to be amused
+or annoyed.
+
+"Heavens, man! I'm not an undertaker. I asked because I'm rather rocky
+myself. That is, partly, why I'm here."
+
+The mournful one nodded. "Good a reason as any," he assented sadly.
+
+"By the way--er--there used to be a Dr. Coombe here, didn't there?
+Didn't he live somewhere hereabouts?"
+
+The sad one turned his meditative eyes from their focus upon the horse's
+back and rested them upon the open and guileleas face by his side. Then
+from deep down in his brawny throat came a sudden sound. It was
+unmistakably a chuckle. Without the slightest trace of an accompanying
+smile, the sound was startling.
+
+"What's the matter?" asked the doctor irritably.
+
+"Nothing. Only when anybody's seen Esther, they always start asking
+about old Doc. Coombe. It gives them a kind of opening. Yes, that's the
+old Coombe place--over there. The one with the fir trees and the big elm
+by the gate."
+
+"A pleasant house," said Callandar in a detached voice.
+
+"So-so. The old Doc. uster putter around considerable. But they say his
+widow isn't doing much to keep it up. Tumble flighty woman, so they say.
+Young, you know, just about young enough to be the old Doc.'s
+daughter--"
+
+"But--"
+
+"Oh! Esther ain't her child. Esther's ma died when she was a baby. There
+is a child, though, Jane they call her, a pindling little thing. But
+p'r'aps you've met Jane too?"
+
+"I did not say--"
+
+"No, but I thought likely if you'd met one, you'd have met the other.
+Jane's nearly always hanging around Esther 'cept in school hours. Awful
+fond of Esther she is. Folks say that Esther's more of a mother to Jane
+than her own ma. But I dunno. Alviry says it's a shame the way Esther's
+put upon; all the cares of the house when she had ought to be playing
+with her dolls. Stepmother with 'bout as much sense as a fly. Old Aunt
+Amy, nice sort of soul but--" he touched his head significantly and
+heaved the heaviest sigh yet.
+
+"Do you mean to say that there is an aunt who isn't quite sane?" asked
+Callandar, surprised.
+
+"_I_ don't say so. Some folks does. Alviry says she's a whole lot wiser
+than some of the rest of us."
+
+From the tone of this remark it was evident that Alviry's observation
+had been intended personally. Callandar choked back a laugh.
+
+"What say?" asked the other suspiciously.
+
+"I said, rather hard luck for a young girl."
+
+The mournful one nodded and relapsed into melancholy. The doctor
+turned his attention to the house which a flicker of the whip had
+pointed out. It was long and low, with wide verandas and a somewhat
+neglected-looking lawn. At one side an avenue of lilacs curved, and on
+the other stood a stiff line of fir trees. The front of the house was
+well shaded by maples and near the gate stood a giant elm-tree, around
+the trunk of which ran a circular seat. It all looked cool, green and
+inviting. As the old horse walked sedately past, a woman's figure came
+out of one of the long windows and flung itself lightly, yet, even at
+that distance, with a certain suggestion of impatience, into one of the
+veranda chairs.
+
+"That'll be Mrs. Coombe now," volunteered his informant. "Tumble saucy
+way she has of flinging herself around--jes' like a young girl! Mebby
+you can see what sort of dress she's got on. Alviry'll be int'rested
+to know."
+
+"It's too far off," said Callandar, amused. "All I can see is that the
+lady is wearing something white."
+
+"Went out of weeds right on the dot, she did! It's not much over a year
+since the old Doc. died. Esther's still wearing some of her black, but
+jes' to wear them out, not as symbols. Mrs. Coombe's got a whole new
+outfit, Alviry says. Turrible extravagant! Folks says it takes Esther
+all her time paying for them with her school money. But I dunno.
+What say?"
+
+"I didn't say anything. But, since you ask, do you think all this is any
+of my business?"
+
+"Well, since you ask, it ain't. 'Tisn't my business either; but it kind
+of passes the time. Giddap!"
+
+Perhaps the old horse knew he was getting near the end of his journey
+for, contrary to expectation, he did "giddap" with a jerk which nearly
+unseated the doctor and caused a flicker of mild surprise to flit across
+the sad one's face.
+
+"Turrible fast horse, this," he confided, "all you got to do is to get
+him going."
+
+"Don't let me take you out of your way. If you'll tell me the
+direction--"
+
+"Sit still, stranger. I'm going right past the Imperial. Hardly any
+place in Coombe you can go without going past the Imperial. It's what
+you call a kind of newclus."
+
+As he spoke, the horse, now going at a fairly respectable rate, turned
+into the main street of the town; a main street, thriftily prosperous
+but now somewhat a-doze in the sun. Half-way down, the intelligent
+animal stopped with another jerk for which the doctor was equally
+ill-prepared. Before them stood a modest red brick building, three
+stories in height, with a narrow veranda running across the lowest story
+just one step up from the pavement. On the veranda were green chairs and
+in the chairs reclined such portion of the male Coombers as could do so
+without fear and without reproach. Along the top of the veranda was a
+large sign displaying the words, "HOTEL IMPERIAL."
+
+Callandar alighted nimbly from the democrat, that being the name of the
+light spring wagon in which he had travelled, and shook his good
+Samaritan by the hand. "Thank you very much," he said, "and I sincerely
+hope that the sunstroke will not have terminated fatally by the time you
+reach home."
+
+The deep-set eyes turned to him slowly and again he fancied a twinkle in
+their mournfulness. "If it does," said the sad one tranquilly, "it will
+be the first time it ever has--giddap!"
+
+As no one came forth to take his knapsack, Callandar slung it over his
+shoulder and entered the hotel. The parting remark of his conductor had
+left a smile upon his lips, which smile still lingered as he asked the
+sleepy-looking clerk for a room, and intimated that he would like lunch
+immediately.
+
+"Dining room closed," said that individual shortly.
+
+"What do you mean?"
+
+"Dining room closes at two; supper at six."
+
+"Do you mean to say that you serve nothing between the hours of two and
+six?"
+
+"Serve you a drink, if you like," with an understanding grin at his
+questioner's dusty knapsack.
+
+Forgetting that he had become a Presbyterian, the doctor made a few
+remarks, and from his manner of making them the clerk awoke to the fact
+that knapsacks do not a hobo make nor dusty coats a tramp. Now in Canada
+no one is the superior of any one else, but that did not make a bit of
+difference in the startling change of demeanour which overtook the
+clerk. He straightened up. He removed his toothpick. He arranged the
+register in his best manner and chose another nib for his pen. When
+Callandar had registered, the clerk was very sorry indeed that the hotel
+arrangements were rather arbitrary in the matter of meal hours. He was
+afraid that the kitchen fires were down and everything cold. Still if
+the gentleman would go to his room, he would see what could be done--
+
+The gentleman went to his room; but in no enviable frame of mind. So
+wretched was his plight that he was not above valuing the covert
+sympathy of the small bell-boy who preceded him up the oilclothed
+stairs. He was a very round boy: round legs, round cheeks, round head
+and eyes so round that they must have been special eyes made on purpose.
+There was also a haunting resemblance to some other boy! Callandar
+taxed his memory, and there stole into it a vision of a pool with
+willows. He chuckled.
+
+"Boy," he said, "have you a little brother who is very fond of going to
+school?"
+
+"Nope," said the boy. (It seemed to be a family word.) "I've got a
+brother, but he don't sound like that."
+
+"You ought to be in school yourself, boy. What's your name?"
+
+"Zerubbabel Burk."
+
+"Is that all?"
+
+"Yep. Bubble for short."
+
+"Have you ever known what it is to be hungry?"
+
+"Three times a day, before meals!"
+
+"Well, I'm starving. Do you belong to the Boy Scouts?"
+
+"Betyerlife."
+
+"Well, look here. I am an army in distress. Commissariat cut off,
+extinction imminent! Now you go and bring in the provisions. And, as we
+believe in honourable warfare, pay for everything you get, but take no
+refusals--see?" He pressed a bill into the boy's ready hand and watched
+the light of understanding leap into the round eyes with pleasurable
+anticipation.
+
+"I get you, Mister! Here's your room, number fourteen."
+
+The boy disappeared while still the key with its long tin label was
+jingling in the lock. The doctor opened the door of room number fourteen
+and went in.
+
+Rooms, we contend, like people, should be considered in relation to that
+state in which it has pleased Providence to place them. To consider
+number fourteen in any environment save its own would be manifestly
+unfair since, in relation to all the other rooms at the Imperial,
+number fourteen was a good room, perhaps the very best. A description
+tempts us, but perhaps its best description is to be found in its effect
+upon Dr. Callandar. That effect was an immediate determination to depart
+by the next train, provided the next train did not leave before he had
+had something to eat.
+
+He was aroused from gloomy musings by a discreet tap announcing the
+return of the scouting party. The scouting party was piled with parcels
+up to its round eyes and from the parcels issued an odour so delicious
+that the doctor's depression vanished.
+
+"Good hunting, eh?"
+
+"Prime, sir. 'Tisn't store stuff, either! As soon as I see that look in
+your eye I remembered 'bout the tea-fight over at Knox's Church last
+night and how they'd be sure to be selling off what's left, for the
+benefit of the heathen." The boy gave the roundest wink Callandar had
+ever seen and deposited his parcels upon the bed. "They always have
+'bout forty times as much's they can use. Course I didn't get you any
+_broken_ vittles," he added, noticing the alarm upon the doctor's face.
+"It's all as good as the best. Wait till you see!"
+
+He began to clear the wash-stand in a businesslike manner, talking all
+the time. "This here towel will do for a cloth. It's bran' clean--cross
+my heart! I borrowed a dish or two offen the church. They know me....
+We'll put the chicken in the middle and the ham along at this end and
+the pie over there where it can't slip off--"
+
+"I don't like pie, boy."
+
+"I do. Pie's good for you. We'll put the beet salad by the chicken and
+the cabbage salad by the ham and the chow-chow betwixt 'em. Then the
+choc'late cake can go by the pie--"
+
+"Boy, I don't like chocolate cake."
+
+"Honest? Ah, you're kiddin' me! Really? Choc'late cake's awful good for
+you. I love chocolate cake. This here cake was made by Esther Coombe's
+Aunt Amy--it's a sure winner! Say, Mister, what do you like anyway?"
+
+"Ever so many more things than I did yesterday. By Jove, that chicken
+looks good!"
+
+"Yep. That's Mrs. Hallard's chicken. I thought you'd want the best. She
+ris' it herself. And made the stuffin' too."
+
+"Did she 'ris' the ham also?"
+
+"Nope. It's Miss Taylor's ham. Home cured. The minister thinks a whole
+lot of Miss Taylor's curin'. Ma thinks that if Miss Taylor wasn't quite
+so hombly, minister might ask her jest on account of the ham. You try
+it--wait a jiffy till I sneak some knives!"
+
+Callandar looked at the decorated wash-stand and felt better. He had
+forgotten all about the room, and when the knives came, in even less
+than the promised jiffy, he forgot everything but the varied excellences
+of the food before him. The chicken was a chicken such as one dreams of.
+The salads were delicious, the homemade bread and butter fresh and
+sweet; the ham might well cause feelings of a tender nature towards its
+curer! The chocolate cake? He thought he might try a small piece and,
+having tried, was willing to make the attempt on a larger scale. The boy
+was a most efficient waiter, discerning one's desires before they were
+expressed. But when they got to the pie, the doctor drew up another
+chair at the pie side of the table and waved the waiter into it.
+
+There was no false modesty about the boy; neither did he hold malice. If
+he had felt slightly aggrieved at not having been invited earlier, he
+forgot it after the first mouthful and for a time there was no further
+conversation in number fourteen. The doctor had temporarily discarded
+his theory that it is better to rise from the table feeling slightly
+hungry. The boy had never had so foolish a theory to discard. The
+chicken, the ham, the pie, disappeared as if conjured away. The boy
+grew rounder.
+
+"Boy," said the doctor at last, "hadn't you better stop? You are
+'swelling wisibly afore my werry eyes!'"
+
+The boy shook his head, but presently he began to have intervals when he
+was able to speak.
+
+"Better plant all you can," he advised. "Ma says the grub here would
+kill a cat. I eat at home. Ma wouldn't risk my stomach here.
+It's fierce."
+
+"But I'll have to eat, boy. Isn't there another hotel?"
+
+"Yep; two. But you couldn't go to them. This here's the only decent one.
+Gave you a nice room anyway." He looked around admiringly. "Going to
+stay long?"
+
+"No--that is, yes--I don't know! How can I stay if I can't eat?"
+
+The boy picked his round white teeth thoughtfully with a pin.
+
+"You might get board somewheres."
+
+This was a new idea.
+
+"Why--so I might! Does Mrs. Hallard who raises chickens or Miss
+What's-her-name who cures ham, keep boarders?"
+
+"Nope. But they're not the only oysters in the soup--There's the bell!
+They never give a man a minute's peace. Say, if you don't really like
+that pie, don't waste it--see? Tell you about boarding-houses later."
+
+Callandar had to clear the table himself. This he did by the simple
+expedient of putting everything on top of everything else. But he did
+not waste anything, a precaution whose value he realised that night upon
+returning from the dining room where he had spent some time in looking
+at that repast known to the Imperial as supper. Bubble, the bell boy,
+found him with his mind made up.
+
+"Boy," he said, "you have saved my life. But I fear I can sojourn no
+longer in your delightful town. Find me the first train out in the
+morning.".
+
+The boy's face fell.
+
+"Ain't you going to stay? Why, it's all over town that you're the new
+doctor come to take old Doc. Simmonds's practice. Mournful Mark, that
+you drove up with, told it. He said he shouldn't wonder if you're real
+clever. Says he suspects you're an old friend of Doc. Coombe's
+folks--went to college with the doctor, mebby. Says that likely Alviry
+will have you next time she gets a stroke."
+
+"Tempting as the prospect is, boy, I fear ..."
+
+"Oh, dang it! There's the bell again."
+
+He darted out, bumped down the sounding stairs and, while the doctor was
+still considering the words of his ultimatum, appeared again at the
+door, this time decorously on duty.
+
+"A call for you, sir," said Bubble primly.
+
+"A--what?"
+
+"A call, sir. Mrs. Sykes wants to know if the new doctor will call
+'round first thing in the morning to see Mrs. Sykes's Ann. She dunno,
+but she thinks it's smallpox."
+
+"Quit your fooling, boy."
+
+"Cross my heart, doctor!"
+
+"Smallpox?"
+
+"Oh!" cheerfully, "I don't cross my heart to that. Mrs. Sykes always
+thinks things is smallpox. Ann's had smallpox several times now. But the
+rest is on the level. What message, sir?"
+
+Callandar hesitated. (And while he hesitated the Fateful Sisters
+manipulated a great many threads very swiftly.) "What train ..." he
+began. (The Fateful Sisters slipped a bobbin through and tied a cunning
+knot.) Without knowing why, Callandar decided to stay. He laughed.
+Bubble stood eagerly expectant.
+
+"Tell Mrs. Sykes I'll come, and ..." but Bubble did not wait for the
+end of the message.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+
+Coombe is a pretty place. It has broad streets, quiet and tree-lined. It
+has sunny, empty lots where children play. No one is crowded or shut in.
+The houses stand in their own green lawns, and are comfortable and even
+picturesque. The Swiss chalet style has not yet come to Coombe, so the
+architecture, though plain, is not productive of nightmare. The roads
+are like country roads, soft and yellowish; green grass grows along the
+sides of many of them, and board sidewalks are still to be found,
+springy and easy to the tread. There is a main street with macadamised
+roadway and stone pavements, real flat stone, for they were laid before
+the appearance of the all-conquering cement. There is a postoffice with
+a tower and a clock, a courthouse with a fountain and a cannon, a park
+with a bandstand and a baseball diamond, a townhall with a belfry and no
+bell, an exhaustive array of churches, the Imperial Hotel, and the
+market. We mention the market last (as we were taught at school) because
+on account of its importance it ought to come first.
+
+When Dr. Callandar, having been efficiently valeted by Bubble, set out
+to pay his first professional call, he drew in deep breaths of the
+pleasant air with a feeling of well-being to which he had long been a
+stranger. He had slept. In spite of the room, in spite of the chocolate
+cake, in spite of the pie, he had slept. And that alone was enough to
+make the whole world over. It was still hot but with a heat different
+from the heat of yesterday. A little shower had fallen during the night.
+There was a sense of the north in the air, a light freshness, very
+invigorating. He liked the quiet shaded streets; the cannon by the
+courthouse amused him; the number of church steeples left him amazed. He
+felt as if he had stumbled into a dream-town and must walk carefully
+lest he stumble out.
+
+Bubble had given him very complete directions, indeed so minute were
+they that we will omit them lest some day you find the way yourself and
+drop in on Mrs. Sykes when she is not expecting company. But Dr.
+Callandar in his amused absorption had forgotten that he was going to
+Mrs. Sykes at all, when he was recalled to a sense of duty by a sharp
+hail from the corner house of a street he had just passed. Looking back,
+he saw, half-way down the road, a tall, red woman leaning over a gate,
+who, upon attracting his attention, began waving her arms frantically,
+after the manner of an old-fashioned signalman inviting a train to "Come
+on." Callandar's step quickened in spite of himself and he forgot his
+idle musings.
+
+"Land sakes! I thought you'd never get here!" exclaimed the red woman
+fervently. "I suppose that imp of a boy didn't direct you right. Lucky I
+knew you as soon as you passed the corner. Mark Morrison may be as
+useless as they make 'em, but he's got a fine gift for description. Come
+right in. I'm dreadful anxious about Ann. It don't seem like measles,
+and she's had chicken-pox twice, and if she's sickening for anything
+worse I want to know it. I ain't one of them optimists that won't
+believe they're sick till they're dead. Callandar's your name, Mark
+says--any chance of your being a cousin to Dr. Callandar of Montreal
+that cured Mrs. Sowerby?"
+
+"No, I am not that Dr. Callandar's cousin."
+
+"I told Mark 'twasn't likely--or you wouldn't be here. Not if he'd any
+family feeling. I'm a great believer in a man making his own
+stepping-stones anyway," she went on with a friendly smile; "we ought to
+rise up on ourselves, like the poet says, and not on our cousins."
+
+"A noble sentiment," said Callandar gravely, as he followed her up the
+walk, across a veranda so clean that one hesitated to step on it, and
+into a small hall, bare and spotless, where he was invited to hang
+up his hat.
+
+"You're younger than I expected," went on Mrs. Sykes kindly. "I hope you
+ain't entirely dependent on your practice in Coombe?"
+
+The amazed doctor was understood to murmur something about "private
+means."
+
+"That's good. You'd starve if you hadn't. Coombe's a terrible healthy
+place and poor Doc. Simmonds didn't pay a call a week. I just felt like
+some one ought to warn you. I despise folks who hold back from telling
+things because they ain't quite pleasant. Know the worst, I always say;
+it's better in the end. Of course, as Mark says, your being a
+Presbyterian will make considerable diff'rence. Some folks thought Doc.
+Simmonds was pretty nigh an infiddle!"
+
+Too overcome by his feelings to answer, Callandar followed her up the
+narrow stair and into a clean bright room with green-tinted walls and
+yellow matting on the floor.
+
+Mrs. Sykes waved a deprecatory hand, at once exhibiting and apologising
+for so much splendour.
+
+"This is the spare-room," she explained. "And there," pointing to the
+high, old-fashioned bed, "is Ann."
+
+Callandar crossed the immaculate matting gingerly, taking Ann on faith,
+as it were, for, from the door, no; Ann was visible, only a very small
+dent in the big whiteness of the bed.
+
+"Ann! Here's the doctor!"
+
+A small black head and a pair of frightened black eyes appeared for a
+moment as if by conjuration, and instantly vanished.
+
+"Ann!" said Mrs. Sykes more sternly.
+
+There was a squirming somewhere under the bedclothes, but nothing
+happened.
+
+"Great Scott!" exclaimed the doctor, "you've got the child in a
+feather-bed!"
+
+Mrs. Sykes beamed complacently.
+
+"Yes, I have. It may seem like taking a lot of trouble for nothing, but
+you never can tell. I ain't one of them that never prepares for
+anything. Jest as soon as Ann gets sick I move her right into the
+spare-room and put her into the best feathers. Then if she should be
+took sudden I wouldn't have anything to regret. The minister and the
+doctor can come in here any hour and find things as I could wish....
+Ann! what do you mean by wiggling down like that? Ann--come up at once!
+The doctor wants to see your tongue."
+
+This time the note of command was effective. The black head came to the
+surface, again followed by the frightened eyes and plump little cheeks
+stained with feverish red.
+
+"Some cool water, if you please," ordered the doctor in his best
+professional manner. Mrs. Sykes opened her lips to ask why, but
+something caused her to shut them without asking.
+
+When she had left the room, Callandar leaned suddenly over and lifted
+Ann bodily out of the dent and placed her firmly upon a pillow. It was a
+very plump pillow, evidently filled with the "best feathers," but
+compared with the bed it was as a rock in an ocean.
+
+"Now," he said gravely, "you are safe, for the present. You are on an
+island; but be very careful not to slide off for if you do I may never
+be able to look at your tongue."
+
+The child's hands grasped the island convulsively.
+
+"Don't hold on like that," he warned. "You might tip." He leaned close
+so that she might see the smile in his eyes, "And if you tipped ..."
+
+The child gave a sudden delighted giggle. "I'd go right in over my head,
+wouldn't I?"
+
+"Yes. And next time you were rescued you might feel more inclined to
+tell your aunt what you had been eating before you became ill."
+
+Ann stopped giggling.
+
+"You don't need to tell _me_," went on the doctor, "because I know!"
+
+"How d'ye know?"
+
+"Magic. Be careful--you were nearly off that time! Does your aunt know
+anything about those things you ate?"
+
+"No."
+
+"Very well. But you must promise not to eat those particular things
+again. Not even when you get the chance." Then as he saw the woe upon
+her face, "At least, not in quantities!"
+
+"Cross my heart!" said Ann, relieved.
+
+"Here's the water," said Mrs. Sykes, returning. "Ann, get right back
+into bed. Do you want to get your death? Haven't I told you till I'm
+tired to keep your hands in? Is it measles, Doctor? She's subject to
+measles. Perhaps it's the beginning of scarlet fever. But if it's
+smallpox I want to know. No good ever comes of smoothing things over."
+
+The doctor smiled at Ann.
+
+"It isn't smallpox this time, Mrs. Sykes."
+
+"Did you look at them spots on the back of her neck?"
+
+"Yes. A little rash caused by indigestion. I wouldn't worry."
+
+"Don't mind me. I'm used to worrying. I don't dodge my troubles like
+some I know. Indigestion? It looks more like eczema. Eczema is a
+terrible trying thing. But if the child's got it I don't want it called
+indigestion to spare my feelings."
+
+"But it's not eczema! It's indigestion--and prickly heat. I'm afraid
+Ann's stomach has been giving trouble. It has been hotter than is usual
+here, I understand. Heat often upsets children. While I write out a
+prescription, you might bathe her face and hands."
+
+Mrs. Sykes gazed doubtfully at the water. "She was done once last night
+and once this morning just before you came in," she remarked in an
+injured tone. "But if you think she needs it again, this sort of water's
+no good. Nothing's ever any good for Ann except hot water and soap."
+
+The doctor looked up from his writing in surprise. Then as the meaning
+of the thing dawned upon him, he laughed heartily.
+
+"Oh, Ann's as clean as the veranda floor!" he explained. "This is just
+to cool her off. Let me show you--doesn't that feel nice, Ann?"
+
+"Lovely!" blissfully.
+
+Mrs. Sykes sniffed.
+
+"I suppose that's some new-fangled notion? I never heard before of
+cooling people off when they've got a fever. In my time, the hotter you
+were, the hotter you were made to be, till you got cool naturally. I
+suppose," with half-interested sarcasm, "that you'd give her cold water
+to drink if she asked for it?"
+
+"Certainly."
+
+"Well, I expect she knows better than to ask for it!"
+
+Feeling Ann's imploring gaze, Callandar resorted to diplomacy.
+
+"The fact is, Mrs. Sykes," he said pleasantly, "there really isn't very
+much wrong with Ann. You have been letting your forethought and your
+natural anxiety run away with you. There is not the slightest occasion
+for alarm. If there were, I should not dream of hiding it from one so
+well-prepared as yourself. As it is, you have taken a lot of needless
+trouble--this beautiful feather-bed, for example! I feel sure that Ann
+would do very well in her own bed."
+
+The victim of the feathers gave a relieved gasp which her aunt mistook
+for a sigh of regret.
+
+"Her own bed's well enough for anything ordinary," she admitted in a
+mollified tone. "Even if it is a store mattress."
+
+"Quite good enough. Many a little girl would be glad of it." The
+doctor's tone was virtuous. "If you will allow me, I shall carry her in
+now. You see, she is cooler already. By to-morrow, if she takes her
+medicine, she ought to be as well as ever."
+
+Ann's own room turned out to be on the shady side, and though not so
+grand as the spare-room, it was pleasantly cool. The little bed with the
+hard mattress and the snowy counterpane was infinitely to be preferred
+to the ocean of feathers, and the rescued maiden lay back on her smaller
+pillows with a sigh of gratitude.
+
+"Sure you won't tell?" she whispered as he laid her down.
+
+"Honour bright. Cross my heart! But you must take the medicine. It's
+nasty, but not too nasty, and you mustn't squeal--or it will be the
+spare-room again. Red cheeks and prickly heat are consequences, but
+feather-beds and medicine are retribution."
+
+"That's right, Doctor," said Mrs. Sykes, who had heard the last words.
+"There's nothing like a word about retribution when a person's sick. It
+helps 'em to realise their state. I don't hold with the light-minded
+that want to get away from retribution. Depend upon it, they're the very
+folks that's got it coming to them. Yes. No one needs to go around
+denying that there's a hell, if their feet are planted upon a rock and
+they know they're never going there. It's years now since I've looked
+hell in the face and turned my feet the other way. But I do say that if
+I'd decided to go straight ahead in the broad and easy path, I wouldn't
+try to shut my eyes to the end of it, like some folks! Are you putting
+up at the Imperial, Doctor?"
+
+"'Putting up' exactly expresses my condition."
+
+"Well, you may as well know at once that a doctor in a hotel will never
+get any forwarder in Coombe. You'll have to get boarding somewhere. Have
+you looked around yet?"
+
+"No. I--"
+
+"Then I don't mind telling you that the spare-room is to let and the
+little room down below that has a door of its own and seems made exactly
+for a doctor's office. I shouldn't mind letting you have them if you
+feel sure that the smells wouldn't get loose all through the house and
+in the cooking. There's a barn where you could keep your horse."
+
+"I haven't got a horse," protested Callandar feebly.
+
+"But of course you'll be getting one. A doctor has to have a horse. If
+you can't pay for it down, Mark knows some one who'd let you have a good
+one on time. You can trust Mark, if he _is_ mournful. Of course I don't
+say that these rooms are the only rooms to let in Coombe, but I do think
+they're about as good as you can get--being so near to Dr. Coombe's old
+house. People get used to coming for a doctor down this street."
+
+"But that was, over a year ago."
+
+"It takes more 'an a year for Coombe folks to change their ways. Only
+this day week I saw Bill Brooks tearing down this way on account of Mrs.
+Brooks' being took kind of unexpected, and Bill losing his head and
+forgetting all about Dr. Coombe being dead and Dr. Parker living on the
+other side of the town."
+
+"And you think that if I'd been here he would have 'tore' in here?"
+
+"If he hadn't I'd just have called out to him as he went by. He was that
+wild he'd have taken anybody."
+
+"I see," with humility. "I lost a good chance there!"
+
+"Well, if you live here you'll get others. Why, from the spare-room
+windows you can see the corner window down at the Coombe place. I could
+make out to let you have your meals, too. Only I'd expect you to be as
+reg'lar as Providence permitted. I know a doctor is bound to be more
+aggravating in that way than other folks, but if you'd be as regular as
+lay in you, I'd put up with it. 'Tisn't as if I wasn't always prepared.
+When will you want to move in?"
+
+"Really, I--I don't know--" The bewildered Callandar glanced for help to
+Ann, but met only clasped hands and an imploring stare. "I'll--I'll let
+you know," he faltered.
+
+Thinking it over afterwards, he could never understand why he did not
+promptly refuse to be coerced, but at the time surrender seemed the only
+natural thing. Besides, he couldn't stay another day at the Imperial. He
+had to go somewhere. Perhaps it was his destiny to secure Ann against
+further feather-beds. Anyway, he accepted it.
+
+"Oh, goody!" cried Ann, clapping her hands.
+
+"Ann! put your hands under those clothes. How often must I tell you that
+you'll get your death? If you like, Doctor, there's nothing to prevent
+your moving in to-morrow. I'll need a day to air the feather-tick and
+make some pie."
+
+The doctor was at last roused to action.
+
+"There are conditions," he said hastily. "If I come here, there is to be
+no feather-tick and no pie!"
+
+"No feather-bed?" in amazement.
+
+"No pie?" Ann's voice was a sorrowful whisper.
+
+"You see," Callandar explained, "I am here partly for my health. My
+health cannot lie on feather-beds nor eat pie--well, perhaps," with a
+glance at Ann, "an occasional pie may do no harm. But I shall send down
+some springs and a mattress. I have to use a special kind," hastily.
+
+"Oh! it's spinal trouble, is it?" Mrs. Sykes surveyed him
+commiseratingly. "You look straight enough. But land! You never can
+tell. Them spinal troubles are most deceiving. Terrible things they are,
+but they don't shorten life as quickly as some others. Not that that's a
+blessing! Mostly, folks as has them would be glad to go long before they
+are took. Still, it gives them some time to be prepared. I remember--"
+
+"I must go now, Mrs. Sykes. Give Ann some of the medicine as soon as it
+comes. It isn't exactly spinal trouble that is the matter with me, you
+know, but--er--I'll send down the kind of mattress I like. In fact, I
+shall probably wish to furnish my rooms myself. You won't mind,
+I'm sure."
+
+"Land sakes, no, I don't mind! Most doctors are finicky. Don't worry
+about the medicine. I'll see that Ann takes it."
+
+She watched him go with a glance in which satisfaction and foreboding
+mingled. "Poor young feller!" she mused. "He didn't like what I said
+about his spine a mite. Back troubles makes folks terrible touchy."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+
+Two days after the installation of what Mrs. Sykes persisted in calling
+the "spinal mattress," Esther Coombe was late in getting home from
+school. As was usually the case when this happened, Jane, designated by
+mournful Mark as "the Pindling One," was sitting on the gatepost gazing
+disconsolately down the road. There were traces of tears upon her thin
+little face and the warmth of the hug which returned her sister's
+greeting was evidence of an unusually disturbed mind.
+
+"Why aren't you playing with the other children, Jane?"
+
+"I don't want to play, Esther. Timothy's dead."
+
+"Yes, I know, dear. But Fred has promised you a new puppy--"
+
+"I don't want a new puppy. I want Timothy."
+
+"But Timothy is so much happier, Jane. He was old, you know. In the
+Happy Hunting Grounds, he will be able to frisk about just like other
+dogs. Wouldn't you like an apple?"
+
+Jane considered this a moment and decided favourably. But her tale of
+woe was not yet complete. "Mother's ill again," she announced gloomily.
+"I mustn't play band or nail the slats on the rabbits' hutch. Aunt Amy
+gave me my dinner on the back porch. I liked that. I wouldn't go in the
+house, not till you came, Esther."
+
+The straight brows of the elder sister came together in a worried frown.
+
+"You know that is being silly, Jane."
+
+"I don't care."
+
+"You must learn to care. Run now and get the apple and ask Aunt Amy to
+wash your face."
+
+Jane tripped away obediently, her griefs assuaged by the mere telling of
+them, and Esther passed into the house by way of the veranda. It was a
+charming veranda, long and low, opening through French windows directly
+into the living room which, like itself, was long and low, and charming.
+There is a charm in rooms which can be felt but not described. It exists
+apart from the furnishings and even the occupants; it is an essence,
+haunting, intangible--the soul of the room! only there are many rooms
+which have no soul.
+
+Through the living room at the Elms vagrant breezes entered, loitered,
+and drifted out again, leaving behind them scents of sun-warmed flowers.
+The light there was soft and green. The comfortable chairs invited rest;
+the polished rosewood table, the bright piano shining in the brightest
+corner, the smooth old floor in whose rug the colours had long ceased to
+trouble, the general air of much used comfort, satisfied and refreshed.
+
+Esther loved the room. Her first childish memory was of the rosewood
+table shining like a pool in the lamplight and of her own wondering face
+reflected in it, with her father's laughing eyes behind. In every way it
+was associated with the beginnings of things. The magic of all music
+began for her in the sweet, thin notes of the old square piano; the key
+to fairy land lay hidden somewhere in that shelf of well-worn books.
+
+Yet to-night she entered with a hesitating step. It was obvious that she
+felt no pleasure in the cool greenness. The room was the same room but
+it was as if the expression on a well-known face had unaccountably
+changed and become forbidding. The girl sighed as she flung her hat
+upon a chair.
+
+"Esther," Jane's voice, somewhat obscured by the eating of the promised
+apple, came through the open window, "are you sure about Timothy being
+in the Happy Hunting Grounds?"
+
+"Of course, dear."
+
+"But he wasn't what you would call a Christian, Esther?"
+
+"He was a good dog."
+
+"Can Timothy chase chickens there?"
+
+"Probably."
+
+"And cats?"
+
+"Certainly cats."
+
+"Is that what happens to bad cats when they die?"
+
+Esther viewed this logical picture of everlastingly pursued cats with
+some dismay.
+
+"N-o. I don't suppose it would be real cats."
+
+"But Tim wouldn't chase anything but real cats."
+
+"Jane, I wish you wouldn't talk with your mouth full."
+
+Being thus reduced to giving up the argument or the apple, Jane
+abandoned the former. It was clear that Esther was not in the mood for
+argument. The child's quick observation had not failed to note the
+lagging step, nor the quick sigh. She nodded her head as if in answer to
+some spoken word.
+
+"Yes, I know. I feel like that, too. That's why I didn't come in before;
+that's why I'm not really in yet. It catches you by the throat and makes
+you breathe funny. What is it, Esther?"
+
+"Why--I don't know, Jane. It's loneliness I think--missing Dad."
+
+The child shook her head. But whatever her objection might have been it
+was beyond her power of expression. She slid off the veranda step and
+wandered back into the garden. There was another apple in the pocket of
+her apron, and apples are great comforters.
+
+Left alone, Esther with a resolutely cheerful air took down a blue bowl
+and proceeded to arrange therein the day's floral offerings. A sweet and
+crushed mixture they were, pansies, clove-pinks, mignonette, bleeding
+hearts, bachelors' buttons, all short stemmed and minus any saving touch
+of green, but true love offerings for all that. Wordless gifts most of
+them, prim little bunches, hot from tight clasping in chubby hands,
+shyly and swiftly deposited on "Teacher's desk" when the back of that
+divinity was turned. The blue bowl took kindly to them all, and as the
+girl's clever fingers settled and arranged the glowing chaos it seemed
+that with their crushed fragrance something of the lost spirit of the
+room came back. Just so had she arranged hundreds of times the sweet
+smelling miscellanies which had been her father's constant tribute from
+grateful patients.
+
+She had almost finished when the door opened to admit a little, grey
+wisp of a woman with a mild white face and large faded eyes which might
+once have been beautiful. She was dressed entirely in lavender, a
+fondness for this colour being one of the many harmless fancies born of
+a brain not quite normal. The rather expressionless face brightened at
+sight of the girl by the table.
+
+"Why, Esther--I didn't hear you come in. Have you put a mat under the
+bowl? See now! You have marked the table."
+
+Esther good humouredly reached for a table-mat, for the polish of this
+particular article of furniture was the pride of Aunt Amy's life. "It's
+all right, Auntie. It's not really a mark. Look, aren't they sweet? It
+is like one of father's posies. Is mother any better?"
+
+"The children must think a lot of you, Esther!"
+
+"Yes, although I think they would bring flowers to any one, bless 'em!
+Is mother--"
+
+"Your mother hasn't been down all day. I went up with her dinner but she
+didn't take any. She wouldn't answer."
+
+"Auntie, don't you think she ought to do something about these
+headaches?"
+
+"I don't know, Esther. She'll be all right to-morrow. She always is."
+
+"Yes. But they are getting more frequent, and you know--she is so
+different. She can't be well. Haven't you noticed it?"
+
+"No," vaguely.
+
+"Well, Jane has. So it can't just be imagination. She ought to consult a
+doctor."
+
+"She won't."
+
+"But it's absurd! What shall we do if she goes on like this? If there
+were only some one who would talk to her! She won't listen to me because
+she is older and married and--all that. All the same she doesn't seem
+older when she acts like this--like a child!"
+
+"Well, you know, Esther, there isn't any doctor here that your mother
+just fancies."
+
+The girl stooped lower over the blue bowl, perhaps to hide the little
+smile which crinkled up the corner of her mouth. The faint colour on her
+cheek may have been a reflection from the flowers.
+
+"Yes, but haven't you heard? There is a new doctor. He seems quite
+different--I mean they say he is awfully nice. Mrs. Sykes' Ann was
+telling me all about him. He is going to board with Mrs. Sykes. The
+child just worships him already. Perhaps mother might see him."
+
+"I shouldn't worry," said Aunt Amy placidly. "This pepper-grass will be
+very nice for tea. Did you tell Jane she might have two apples, Esther?"
+
+"No. I told her she might have one. But I don't suppose two will hurt
+her." Esther was used to Aunt Amy's inconsequences which made impossible
+the discussion of any subjects save the most trivial. But she sighed a
+little as she realised anew that there was no help here.
+
+"Jane is feeling badly about Timothy," she explained. "Don't you think
+we might have tea in here, Auntie? It is so cool."
+
+Aunt Amy, who had been anxiously rubbing an imaginary spot on the table,
+looked up with a startled air. "Oh, Esther!" she said, in the voice of a
+frightened child. Then with a child's obvious effort to control rising
+tears, "Of course, if you say so, Esther. But--but do you feel like
+risking the round table? Couldn't we have it on the little table in
+the corner?"
+
+The girl settled the last of her flowers and pushed back her hair with a
+worried gesture. A pang of mingled irritation and anxiety lent an edge
+of sharpness to her soft voice.
+
+"Auntie dear! I thought you had quite forgotten that fancy. You know it
+is only a fancy. Round tables are just like other tables. And you
+promised me--"
+
+"Yes, I know, but--"
+
+"Well, then, be sensible, dear. We shall have tea in here." Then seeing
+the real distress on the timid old face, the girl's mood softened. "No,
+we shan't," she declared gaily. "We'll have it as usual in the dining
+room. You will fix the pepper-grass and I shall set the table."
+
+But the end of Aunt Amy's vagaries was not yet. She hesitated, flushed
+and more timidly, yet as one who is compelled, begged for the task of
+setting the table herself. "For you know, Esther, the sprigged tea-set
+is so hurt if any one but me arranges it. Yes, of course, it is only a
+fancy, I know that. But the sprigged tea-set does feel so badly if I
+neglect it. All the pink in it fades quite out. You must have noticed
+it, Esther?"
+
+The girl sighed and gave in. Usually Aunt Amy's vagaries troubled her
+little. Disconcerting at first, they had quickly become a commonplace,
+for the coming of Aunt Amy to the doctor's household had been too great
+a blessing to invite criticism. Esther had soon learned to express no
+surprise when told that the sprigged china had a heart of extreme
+sensitiveness, and that the third step on the front stair disliked to be
+trodden upon, and that it was dangerous to sit with one's back to a
+window facing the east. All these and numberless other strange facts
+were part of Aunt Amy's twilight world. To her they were immensely
+important, but to the family the really important thing seemed that,
+with trifling exceptions, the new inmate of the household was gentle and
+kind; her housekeeping a miracle and her cooking a dream. In the years
+she had lived with them there had been but one serious thrill of
+anxiety, and that came when Dr. Coombe had discovered her endeavouring
+to infect Jane with her delusions. This had been strictly forbidden and
+the child's mind, duly warned, was soon safeguarded by her own growing
+comprehension. Jane quickly understood that it was foolish to shut the
+garden gate three times every time she came through it, and that no one
+save Aunt Amy thought it necessary to count all the boards in the
+sidewalk or to touch all the little posts under the balustrade as one
+came down stairs. Some of the prettier, more elusive fancies she may
+have retained, but, if so, they did her no harm.
+
+As for Aunt Amy herself, she lived her shadow-haunted life not
+unhappily. Dr. Coombe she had worshipped, yet his death had not affected
+her as much as might have been feared. Perhaps it was one of her
+compensations that death to her was not quite what it is to the more
+normal consciousness. It was noticeable that she always spoke of the
+doctor as if he were in the next room. Her devotion to him had been
+caused by his success in partially relieving her of the most distressing
+burden of her disordered brain--the delusion of persecution. Aunt Amy
+knew that somewhere there existed a mysterious power known vaguely as
+"They" who sought unceasingly to injure her. Of course it was only once
+in a while that "They" got a chance, for Aunt Amy was very clever in
+providing no opportunities. More than once had she outwitted "Them."
+Still, one must be always upon one's guard! From this harrowing delusion
+the doctor had done much to deliver her, indeed she had become more
+normal in every way under his care. It was only now, a year after his
+death, that Esther imagined sometimes that there was a slipping back--
+
+The ill effects of sitting at a round table, for instance? It was a long
+time since this particular fancy had been spoken of and Esther had
+considered it gone altogether. Yet here it was, cropping out again and
+just at a time when other problems threatened. Things seemed determined
+to be difficult to-day.
+
+The fact was that Esther was suffering from the need of a confidant.
+Really worried as she felt about her step-mother's health, the burden of
+taking any determined action against the wishes of the patient herself
+was a serious one for a young girl. Yet in whom could she confide? Girl
+friends she had in plenty but not one whose judgment she could trust
+before her own. Had the minister been an older man or a man of different
+calibre she might have gone to him, but the idea of appealing to Mr.
+Macnair was distasteful. Neither among her father's friends was there
+one to whom she cared to go for advice concerning her father's widow.
+They had one and all disapproved, she knew, of the sudden second
+marriage and Dr. Coombe had never quite forgiven their disapproval.
+
+Often she felt like refusing the responsibility altogether. After all,
+her step-mother was a woman quite old enough to manage her own affairs.
+If she wished to foolishly imperil her health why need Esther care? Why
+indeed? But this train of reasoning never lasted long. Always there came
+a counter-question, "If you do not care, who will?" And the dearth of
+any answer settled the burden more firmly upon her rebellious shoulders.
+For one thing there was always the inner knowledge that Mary Coombe was
+weak and that she, Esther, was strong. She had always known this. Even
+when her father had brought home his pretty bride and Esther, a shy,
+silent child of eleven, had welcomed her, she had known that the
+newcomer was the weaker spirit. The bride had known it too. She had
+never attempted to control Esther, leaving the child entirely to her
+father--a bit of unwitting wisdom which did much to smooth daily life
+at the Elms. If the doctor saw his wife's weakness of character it is
+probable that it did not interfere with his love for her. Why need she
+be strong while he was strong enough for two? But he had forgotten one
+thing--the day when she would have to be strong alone!
+
+The realisation came to him upon his death-bed. Esther was sure of this.
+He could not speak, but she had read the message of his eyes, the appeal
+to the strength in her to help the other's weakness. No getting away
+from the solemn charge of that entreating look!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Esther was thinking of that look now, as she sat alone in the dusk of
+the veranda. Tea was over and Aunt Amy was putting Jane to bed. From her
+mother she had had no word. Blank silence had met her when she had taken
+the tea tray upstairs and called softly through the closed door. Mrs.
+Coombe was probably asleep. She would be better to-morrow; but before
+long she would be ill again, and the interval between the attacks was
+becoming shorter.
+
+There was anger as well as anxiety in the girl's mind. Her healthy and
+straightforward youth had little patience with her step-mother's
+unreasonable caprices. For her illness she had every sympathy, but for
+the morbid nervousness which seemed to accompany it, none at all. These
+constant headaches, the increasing nervous irritability from which Mrs.
+Coombe suffered lay like a shadow over the house. Yet the sufferer
+refused to take the obvious way of relief and persisted in her refusal
+with a stubbornness of which no one would have dreamed her light nature
+capable. Still, willing or unwilling, something must be done. Aunt Amy,
+too, was becoming more of an anxiety. Once or twice lately she had
+spoken of "Them," a sign of mental distress which Dr. Coombe had always
+treated with the utmost seriousness. Perhaps if a doctor were called in
+for Aunt Amy, Mrs. Coombe would lose her foolish dread of doctors and
+allow him to prescribe for her also. And if the new doctor were half as
+clever as Mrs. Sykes said he was--Esther's heart began to warm a little
+as her fancy pictured such a pleasant solution of all her problems. The
+little smile curved her lips again as she thought of the maple by the
+schoolhouse steps, and the lettuce sandwiches and--and everything. She
+closed her eyes and tried to recall his face as he had looked up at her.
+Instinctively she knew it for a good face, strong, humorous, kindly, but
+strong above all. And it was strength that Esther needed. When she went
+to bed that night her burden seemed a little lighter.
+
+I believe he can help me, she thought, and it isn't as if he were quite
+a stranger. After all, we had lunch together once!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+
+Undoubtedly Esther slept better that night for the thought of the new
+doctor. It cannot be said that the doctor slept better because of her.
+In fact he lay awake thinking of her. He did not want to think of her;
+he wanted to go to sleep. Twice only had he seen her. Once upon the
+occasion of the red pump and once when casually passing her on the main
+street. There was no reason why her white-rose face with its strange
+blue eyes and its smile-curved lips should float about in the darkness
+of Mrs. Sykes' best room. Yet there it was. It was the eyes, perhaps.
+The doctor admitted that they were peculiar eyes, startlingly blue. Dark
+blue in the shade of the lashes, flashing out light blue fire when the
+lashes lifted. But Mrs. Sykes' boarder did not want to think about eyes.
+He wanted to go to sleep. He did not want to think about hair either.
+Although Miss Coombe had very nice hair--cloudy hair, with little ways
+of growing about the temple and at the curve of the neck which a blind
+man could not help noticing. In the peaceful shadows of the room it
+seemed a still softer shadow framing the vivid girlish face.
+
+Still, on the whole, sleep would have been better company and when at
+last he did drop off he did not relish being wakened by the voice of Ann
+at his door.
+
+"Doc-ter, doc-ter! Are you awake? Can I come in?"
+
+"I am not awake. Go away."
+
+Ann's giggle came clearly through the keyhole.
+
+"You've got a visitor," she whispered piercingly through the same
+medium. "A man. A well man, not a sick one. He came on the train. He
+came on the milk train--"
+
+"You may come in, Ann." The doctor slipped on his dressing gown with a
+resigned sigh. "What man and why milk?"
+
+"I don't know. Aunt Sykes kept him on the veranda till she was sure he
+wasn't an agent. Now he's in the parlour. Aunt hopes you'll hurry, for
+you never can tell. He may be different from what he looks."
+
+"What does he look?"
+
+Ann's small hands made an expressive gesture which seemed to envisage
+something long and lean.
+
+"Queer--like that. He's not old, but he's bald. His eyes screw into you.
+His nose," another formative gesture, "is like that. A nawful big nose.
+He didn't tell his name."
+
+"If he looks like that, perhaps he hasn't any name. Perhaps he is a
+button-moulder. In fact I'm almost certain he is--other name Willits.
+Occupation, professor."
+
+"But if he is a button-maker, he can't be a professor," said Ann
+shrewdly.
+
+"Oh, yes he can. Button-moulding is what he professes. His line is a
+specialty in spoiled buttons. He makes them over."
+
+"Second-hand?"
+
+"Better than new."
+
+Ann fidgeted idly with the doctor's cuff-links and then with a flash of
+her odd childish comprehension, "You love him a lot, don't you?" she
+said jealously.
+
+The doctor adjusted a collar button.
+
+"England expects that every man shall deny the charge of loving
+another," he said, "but between you and me, I do rather like old
+Willits. You see I was rather a worn-out button once and he made me
+over. Where did you say he was?"
+
+"In the parlour--there's Aunt! She said I wasn't to stay. I'll get it."
+
+Indeed the voice of Mrs. Sykes could be heard on the stairs.
+
+"Ann! Where's that child? Doctor, you'd think that child had never been
+taught no manners. You'll have to take a firm stand with Ann, Doctor.
+Land Sakes, I don't want to make her out worse'n she is, but you might
+as well know that your life won't be worth living if you don't set
+on Ann."
+
+"All right, Mrs. Sykes. Painful as it may be, I shall do it. Are you
+sure it's safe to leave a stranger in the parlour?"
+
+Mrs. Sykes looked worried. "I hope to goodness it's all right, Doctor.
+He's been in the parlour half an hour. I don't think he's an agent,
+hasn't got a case or a book anywhere. But agents are getting cuter every
+day. Naturally I didn't like to go so far as to ask his name. And I'm
+not asking it now. Curiosity was never a fault of mine though I do say
+it. Still a woman does like to know who's setting in her front parlour."
+
+"And you shall," declared Callandar kindly. "Just hang on a few moments
+longer, dear Mrs. Sykes, and your non-existent but very justifiable
+curiosity shall be satisfied."
+
+The parlour at Mrs. Sykes opened to the right of the narrow hall. Its
+two windows, distinguished by eternally half-drawn blinds of yellow,
+looked out upon the veranda, permitting a decorous gloom to envelop the
+sacred precincts. Mrs. Sykes was too careful a housekeeper to take risks
+with her carpet and too proud of her possessions to care to hide their
+glories altogether; hence the blinds were never wholly drawn and never
+raised more than half way. In the yellow gloom, one might feast one's
+eyes at leisure upon the centre table, draped in red damask, mystic,
+wonderful, and on its wealth of mathematically arranged books, the
+Bible, the "Indian Mutiny" and "Water Babies" in blue and gold. This
+last had been a gift to Ann and was considered by Mrs. Sykes to be the
+height of foolishness. Still, a book is a book, especially when bound in
+blue and gold.
+
+Upon the gaily papered walls hung a framed silver name-plate and two
+pictures. One a gorgeously coloured print of the lamented Queen Victoria
+in a deep gold frame, and the other a representation of an entrancing
+allegorical theme entitled "The Two Paths," illustrating the ascent of
+the saint into heaven and the descent of the sinner into hell. At the
+top of this picture was the legend, "Which will you choose?"--implying a
+possible but regrettable lack of taste on the part of the chooser.
+
+Into this abode of the arts and muses came Callandar, alert and smiling.
+It was hardly his fault that he stumbled over the visitor who, whether
+in awe or fear of these unveiled splendours, had retreated as far as
+possible toward the door.
+
+"Don't mind me!" said the visitor meekly.
+
+"Willits! by Jove, I thought it would be you! Say, would you mind not
+sitting on that chair? It's just glued!"
+
+The visitor arose with conspicuous alacrity. He was a tall man with a
+domelike head, piercing eyes and formidable nose. Ann's description had
+been terribly accurate. He observed the tail of his coat carefully and
+finding no damage, seemed relieved.
+
+"Sit here," said Callandar affably. "And don't expect me to make you
+welcome, because you aren't. What misfortunate chance has brought you
+to Coombe?"
+
+"Neither fortune nor chance had anything at all to do with it," declared
+the visitor. "I followed your luggage. I wanted to see you."
+
+"Well, take a good look."
+
+"I think you can guess why."
+
+"Yes," with a sigh. "I was always a good guesser. And, frankly, Willits,
+I wish you hadn't."
+
+"I do not doubt it. But, first, is there any other place where we can
+talk?"
+
+"Don't you like this?" innocently.
+
+The Button-Moulder's look of surprised anguish was sufficient answer.
+Callandar laughed.
+
+"You always were a bit narrow in your views, Willits. How often have I
+impressed upon you that beauty depends upon understanding? I don't
+suppose you have even tried to understand this room? No? Will it help
+any if I tell you that Mrs. Sykes went without a spring bonnet that she
+might purchase the deep gold frame which enshrines Victoria the Good, or
+if I explain that Joseph Sykes, deceased, whose name you see yonder upon
+that engraved plate, was the most worthless rogue unhung. Yet the silver
+which displays--"
+
+"Not in the least," interrupted the other hastily. "The place is a
+nightmare. Nothing can excuse it! And you--how you stand it I
+cannot see."
+
+"My dear man, I don't stand it. I am not allowed to. It's only upon
+special occasions that any one is allowed to stand this room. You are a
+special occasion. But as you seem so unappreciative we can adjourn to my
+office if you wish."
+
+"You have an office?"
+
+"Certainly. A doctor has to have an office. This way."
+
+Callandar strode across the room and opened a door in the opposite wall.
+It led into another room, smaller, with no veranda in front of it, yet
+with a window looking toward the road and two side windows through which
+the after flush of sunrise streamed. Its door opened upon a small stone
+stoop set in the grass of the front lawn. The furniture of the room was
+plain, not to say severe. Cool matting covered the painted floor,
+hemstitched curtains of linen scrim hung at the windows. There was a
+businesslike desk, a couch, a reclining chair, a stool by the door;
+another chair, straight and uncompromising, behind the desk. That
+was all.
+
+Willits looked around him in a kind of dazed surprise. "Office!" he kept
+murmuring. "_Office_!"
+
+"All rather plain, you see," said Callandar regretfully. "But for a
+beginner with his way to make, not so bad. My patients, three up to
+date, quite understand and conceal their commiseration with perfect good
+breeding. Also, the room has natural advantages, it is in the nature of
+an annex, you see, with a door of its own. Quite cut off from the rest
+of the house save-for the door by which we entered, the parlour door,
+which Mrs. Sykes informs me I may lock if I choose although she feels
+sure that I know her too well to imagine any undue liberties
+being taken!"
+
+The Button-Moulder with a gesture of despair made as if to sit down upon
+the nearest chair, but was prevented with kindly firmness by his host.
+
+"Not that chair, please. It may not be quite dry. I glued--"
+
+The voice of the visitor suddenly returned. It was a very dry voice;
+threadlike, but determined.
+
+"Then if you will kindly find me a chair which you have not glued I
+shall sit down and dispose of a few burning thoughts. Callandar, as soon
+as you have finished playing the fool--"
+
+"Consider it finished, old man."
+
+"Then what does this, all this"--with a sweeping hand wave--"mean? You
+cannot seriously intend to stay here?"
+
+"Why not?"
+
+"Your question is absurd."
+
+"No, it isn't. Let it sink in. Why should I not stay here? Examine the
+facts. I am ordered change, rest, interest, good air--a year at least
+must elapse before I take up my life again. I must spend that year
+somewhere. Why not here? It is healthy, high, piney, quiet. I had become
+utterly tired of my tramping tour. All the good I can get from it I have
+got. Chance, or whatever you like to call it, leads me to this place. A
+place which needs a doctor and which this particular doctor needs. There
+is nothing absurd about it."
+
+The tall man observed his friend in interested silence. Apparently he
+required time to adjust his mind to the fact that Callandar was in
+earnest. The badinage he brushed aside.
+
+"Then you really intend--but how about this office? If it is not a
+torn-fool office, where does the necessary rest come in?"
+
+"Rest doesn't mean idleness. I should die of loafing. As a matter of
+fact since coming here I have rested as I have not rested for a year.
+Look at me! Can't you see it? Or is the renovation not yet visible to
+the naked eye? Great Scott! I don't need to vegetate in order to
+rest, do I?"
+
+"No." Another pause ensued during which the gimlet eyes of the professor
+were busy. Then he seemed suddenly to leap to the heart of the matter.
+
+"And--Lorna?" He asked crisply.
+
+It was the other's turn to be silent. He flushed, looked embarrassed,
+and drummed with his fingers upon the table.
+
+"Of course I have no right to ask," added Willits primly.
+
+"Yes, you have, old man. Every right. But I knew you had come to ask
+that question and I didn't like it. The answer is not a flattering
+one--to me. Nor is it what you expected. To be brief, Lorna won't have
+me. Refused me--flat!"
+
+Blank surprise portrayed itself upon the professor's face.
+
+"The devil she did!"
+
+"Confess now!" said Callandar, smiling. "You thought I was the one to
+blame? There was retributive justice in your eye, don't deny it!"
+
+"But, I don't understand! I thought--I was sure--"
+
+"I know. But she doesn't! Not in that way. As a sister--"
+
+"That's enough! I--Accept my apology. I feel very sorry, Henry."
+
+Again that look of embarrassment and guilt upon the doctor's face.
+
+"No. Don't feel sorry! See here, let's be frank about the whole thing.
+It was a mistake, from the very beginning, a mistake. Miss Sinnet,
+Lorna, is a girl in a thousand. But--I did not care for her as a man
+should care for the woman he makes his wife. Nor did she care for
+me--wait, I'm not denying that there was a chance. We were very
+congenial. She might have cared if--if I had cared more greatly."
+
+"Henry Callandar! Are you a cad?"
+
+"No. Merely a man speaking the exact truth. I thought I might risk it,
+with you. Lorna Sinnet is not a woman to give her love and take a
+half-love in return. She was more clear-sighted than you or I. We should
+both have been very miserable."
+
+Elliott Willits sighed. He was a very sensible man. He prided himself
+upon being devoid of sentiment, but even the most sensible of men,
+entirely devoid of sentiment, do not like to see their well laid
+plans go wrong.
+
+"Well," he said, "I was mistaken. Let us say no more about it."
+
+Callandar's eyes softened, melted into misty grey. He laid his arm
+affectionately over the other's thin shoulders. "Only this," he said.
+"That no man ever had a better friend! I know you, old Button-Moulder. I
+know your ambition to make of me a 'shining button on the vest of the
+world!' You thought that Lorna might help. But I failed you there. I'm
+sorry. That was really the bitterness of the whole thing---to fail you!"
+
+"You owe me nothing," gruffly.
+
+"Only my life--my sanity."
+
+"I shall doubt the latter if you stay here."
+
+"No, you will see it triumphantly vindicated. I tell you I am better
+already. Look at my hand! Do you remember how it shook the last time I
+held it out for you. A few more months of this and it will be steady as
+a rock. Ah! it's good to be feeling fit again! And it isn't only a
+physical improvement." His smile faded and rising he began to pace the
+room. "I doubt if even you fully understand the mental depression that
+was dragging me down. No wonder Lorna would have none of me! Strange,
+that I cannot understand my own case as I understand the cases of
+others. Do what I would, I could not heal myself, the soul of the matter
+persistently escaped me. I was beginning to be as much the victim of an
+obsession as any of the poor creatures whom I tried to cure."
+
+"You never told me of that."
+
+"No, I was afraid to speak of it. It would have made it seem more real.
+But I can tell you now, if you are sure you will not be bored."
+
+"I shall not be bored," said Willits quietly.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+
+"In order to make you understand, I'll have to go back," said the doctor
+musingly, "a long way back. Some of the story you already know, but now
+I want you to know it all. But first--when you found me in that
+hospital, a useless bit of human wreckage, and forced me back into life
+with your scorn of a coward and your cutting words, what did you think?
+What did I tell you? It is all hazy to me."
+
+"You told me very little. It was plain enough. You had come a bad
+cropper. Some girl, I gathered. You had lost her, you blamed yourself.
+You talked a great deal of nonsense. I inferred--the usual thing!"
+
+"You were mistaken. It was at once better and worse than that. But let's
+begin at the beginning. My father was a fairly wealthy man--but a
+dreamer. He made his money by a clever invention and lost it by an
+investment little short of idiotic. Like many unpractical men he had
+rather fancied himself as a man of business and the disillusion killed
+him. He--shot himself. My mother, my sister and myself were left, with
+nothing save a small sum in the bank and the deed of the modest house we
+lived in. Adela was twenty-one and I was nineteen. We sold the house,
+moved into rooms; Adela learned shorthand and went into an office. I
+wanted to do the same. But mother was adamant. I must finish my college
+course and take my degree; she and Adela could manage until I could make
+it up to them later. It was hard, but it seemed the only sensible
+thing to do--
+
+"I faced the task of working my way through college with a thankful
+heart, for though I pretended that I did not care, it would have been a
+terrible thing to have given up my life's ambition. The thought of Adela
+trudging to the office hurt--it was the touch of the spur. I needn't
+tell you, you can guess how I worked! People were kind. One summer, old
+Doctor Inglis, whose amiable hobby it was to help young medical
+students, engaged me for the holidays as his chauffeur and general
+helper at a wage which would see me through my next term. It seemed an
+unusual piece of luck, for he lived only twenty miles from my mother's
+home and an electric tram connected the towns. One night I went with
+Adela to a Church Social--of all places--and that is where the story
+really begins, for it was at the Social that I met Molly Weston. It
+seemed the most casual of all accidents, for you can imagine that I did
+not frequent churches in those days, and Molly, too, had come there by
+chance. She was dressed in pink, her cheeks were pink, she wore a pink
+rose in her hair. She was the prettiest little fairy that ever smiled
+and pouted her way into a boy's heart. Before I left her I was madly in
+love--a boy's first headlong passion. Adela was amazed, teased me in her
+elderly sister way but never for a moment took it seriously. Molly was a
+mere bird of passage, an American girl staying with friends for a brief
+time, therefore my infatuation was a humorous thing. But it was not so
+simple as that. Molly stayed on, Dr. Inglis was indulgent, we met
+continually. If her friends knew of it they did not care. It was just a
+flirtation of their pretty guest's. As a serious factor I was quite
+beneath the horizon, a young fellow working his way through college, and
+with, later on, a mother and sister to support.
+
+"Molly understood the situation. At least she knew all the facts. I
+doubt if she ever understood them. She was one of those helpless,
+clinging girls who never seem to understand anything clearly. I remember
+well how I used to agonise in explanation, trying to make her see our
+difficulties and to face them with me. But when I had talked myself into
+helpless silence she would ruffle my hair and say, 'But you really do
+love me, don't you, Harry?' or 'I don't care what we have to do, so long
+as mother doesn't know.'
+
+"I soon found out that her one strong emotion was fear of her mother.
+She was fond of her but she feared her as weak natures fear the strong,
+especially when bound to them by ties of blood. I was allowed to see her
+photograph--the picture of a grim hard face instinct with an almost
+terrible strength. No wonder my pretty Molly was her slave. One would
+have deemed it impossible that they were mother and daughter. Molly, it
+appears, was like her father, and he, poor man, had been long dead.
+Molly would do anything, promise anything, if only her mother might not
+know. She had not the faintest scruple in deceiving her, but this I
+laid, and still lay, to the strength of her love for me.
+
+"She did love me. She must have loved me--else how could her timid
+nature have taken the risk it did?
+
+"Summer fled by like a flash. Molly stayed with her friends as long as
+she could find an excuse and then went on for a brief week in Toronto.
+It was the week, of course, that I returned to college. We hoped that
+she could extend her stay, but her mother wrote 'Come home,' and there
+was no appeal from that. Then I did a desperate thing. Without Molly's
+knowledge I wrote to her mother telling her that I loved her daughter
+and begging, as a man begs for his life, to be allowed to ask her to
+wait for me. The letter was a lie in that it concealed the fact that my
+love was already confessed but I felt it necessary to shield Molly. I
+received no answer to the letter, but Molly received a telegram, 'Come
+home at once.'
+
+"I can leave you to imagine the scene--my despair, Molly's tears! Never
+for an instant did she dream of disobeying and I--I felt that if she
+went I should lose her forever.
+
+"Willits, there is something in me, devil or angel, which will not give
+up. Nothing has ever conquered it yet and Molly was like wax in my
+hands--so long as 'Mother' need not know. I do not attempt to excuse
+myself; what I did was dastardly, but it did not seem so then. The night
+before she left, she stole away from home. I had a license and we were
+married by a Methodist minister. He knew neither of us and probably
+forgot the whole incident immediately. It was a marriage only in name
+for we said good-bye at Molly's door. She left next morning. I never saw
+her again."
+
+Into the silence which followed, the professor's words dropped dryly.
+
+"What was your idea in forcing a meaningless marriage?"
+
+"I loved her. I knew that it was the only way. Madly as I loved her, I
+knew that Molly was weak as water. I could not, would not, run the risk
+of letting her leave me without the legal tie. But I justified it to
+myself--I could have justified anything, I fear! I vowed a vow that she
+would be repaid for the waiting as never woman yet was paid. She wept on
+my shoulder and said, 'And you really do love me, Harry--and you'll
+swear mother need never know?'
+
+"I swore it. There were to be no letters. Molly was too terrified to
+write and still more terrified of receiving a letter. She would live in
+constant dread, she said, if there were a possibility of such a thing.
+Weak in everything else she was adamant in this.
+
+"I went back to work. I worked with the strength of ten. Health,
+comfort, pleasure, all were subordinated to the fever of work. I hoped
+that I might steal a glimpse of her sometimes. She promised to try to
+return to Toronto. But my letter must have alarmed the mother. I found
+out, indirectly, that shortly after her return, Mrs. Weston whisked her
+off to Europe. They were gone a year. When they returned I was in the
+far west with a government surveying party, earning something to help me
+with my last year's college expenses. When I was again in Toronto she
+had vanished. Gone, as I afterward learned, to stay with an aunt in
+California. Her mother, alive to danger, was not going to risk a
+meeting, and my vow to Molly left me helpless. But how I worked!
+
+"That last year things began to come my way. Adela married a fine young
+fellow, wealthy and generous. My mother went to live with them in their
+western home, Calgary, where they still are. Then Thomas Callandar, my
+mother's brother, who had never bothered about any of us living, died,
+and left me a handsome property, adding, as you already know, the
+condition that I take the family name. You remember that my father's
+name, the name under which I married Molly, was Chedridge.
+
+"Nothing now held me from Molly--in another month I would have my
+degree, and free and rich I could go to claim her. It seemed like a
+fairy tale! In my great happiness I broke my promise and wrote to her,
+to the California address, hoping to catch her there. In three weeks'
+time the letter came back from the dead letter office. I wrote again,
+this time to the Cleveland address, a short note only, telling her I was
+free at last. Then, next day, I followed the letter to Cleveland, wealth
+in one hand, the assurance of an honourable degree in the other.
+
+"I had no trouble in finding the house. It was one of a row of houses,
+nondescript but comfortable, in a pleasant street. It seemed familiar--I
+had seen Molly's snapshots of it often. I cannot tell you what it felt
+like to be really there--to walk down the street, up the path, up the
+steps to the veranda. I was trembling as with ague, I was chalk-white I
+knew--was I not in another moment to see my wife!
+
+"I could hear the electric bell tingle somewhere inside. Then an awful
+pause. What if they were not at home? What if they lived there no
+longer? I knew with a pang of fear that I could not bear another
+disappointment.
+
+"There was a sound in the hall, the door knob moved--the door opened. I
+gasped in the greatness of my relief for the face in the opening was
+undoubtedly the face of Molly's mother. They were at home. They must
+have had my letter--they must be expecting me--
+
+"Something in the woman's face daunted me. It was deathly and strained.
+Surely she did not intend to continue her opposition? Yet it confused
+me. I forgot all that I had intended to say, I stammered:
+
+"'I am Henry Chedridge. I want to see Molly. I am rich, I have my
+degree--'
+
+"'You cannot see her!' she said. Just that! The door began to close. But
+I had myself in hand now. I laid hold of the door and spoke in a
+different tone. The tone of a master.
+
+"'This is foolish, Mrs. Weston. I thought you understood. I can and I
+will see your daughter. Molly is my wife!'
+
+"She gave way at that. The door opened wide, showing a long empty hall.
+The woman stood aside, made no effort to stop me, but looking me in the
+eyes she said: 'You come too late. Your wife is not here. Molly
+is dead!'
+
+"Then, in one second, it seemed that all the years of overwork, of
+mental strain and bodily deprivation rose up and took their due. I tried
+to speak, stuttered foolishly, and fell like dead over the door-sill of
+the house I was never to enter.
+
+"You know the rest, for you saved me. When I struggled back to life,
+without the will to live, you shamed and stung me into effort. You
+brought the new master-influence into my life, taught me that the old
+ambition, the old work-ardour was not dead. Those months with you in
+Paris, in Germany, in London at the feet of great men saw a veritable
+new birth. I ceased to be Henry Chedridge, lover, and became Henry
+Callandar, scientist. All this I owe to you."
+
+The other raised his hand.
+
+"No, not that. Some impulse I may have given you, but you have made
+yourself what you are. But--you have not told me all yet?"
+
+"No." Again the doctor began his uneasy pacing of the room. "The rest is
+harder to tell. It is not so clear. It has nothing to do with facts at
+all. It is just that when I first began to show signs of overwork this
+last time I became troubled with an idea, an obsession. It had no
+foundation. It persisted without reason. It was fast becoming
+unbearable!"
+
+He paused in his restless pacing and Willits' keen eyes noticed the look
+of strain which had aroused his alarm some months ago. Nevertheless he
+asked in his most matter-of-fact tone, "And the idea was--?"
+
+Callandar hesitated. "I can hardly speak of it yet in the past tense.
+The idea is--that Molly is not dead!"
+
+"Good Heavens!" ejaculated the professor, startled out of his calm. "But
+have you any reason to doubt? To--to base--"
+
+"None whatever. No enquiries which I have made cast doubt upon the
+mother's words. But on the other hand I have been unable to confirm
+them. I cannot find where my wife died--except that there is no record
+of her death in the Cleveland registries. She did not die in Cleveland."
+
+"But you have told me that they were seldom at home. That the mother was
+a great traveller."
+
+"Yes. The want of evidence in Cleveland proves nothing."
+
+"Did you feel any doubt at first?"
+
+"Absolutely none. The gloomy house, the empty hall, the white face and
+black dress of the woman in the door, the look of horror and anger in
+her eyes--yes, and a kind of grim triumph too--all served to drive the
+fatal message home. Dead!--There was death in the air of that house,
+death in the ghastly face--in the cruel, toneless words!--After my
+tedious recovery I made an effort to see Mrs. Weston, although I had
+conceived a horror of the woman, but she was gone. The house had been
+sold. I tried to trace her without result. She seemed to have vanished
+off the face of the earth."
+
+"And how long ago did the whole thing happen?"
+
+"Twelve years. I was twenty-three when I went to claim my bride. I am
+thirty-five now."
+
+"Dear me!" said the little man sincerely, "I have always thought you
+older than that! But twelve years is--twelve years! And you say this
+doubt is a very recent thing?"
+
+"Yes. I have told you the thing is absurd. But I can't help it."
+
+"Have you made any further enquiries?"
+
+"Yes, uselessly. There is a rumour that Mrs. Weston, too, is dead. A
+lady who used to know them tells me that she is certain she heard of her
+death--in England, she thinks, but upon being questioned was quite at
+sea as to where or when or even as to the original source of her
+information. She remembers 'hearing it' and that's all. Then I sought
+for the aunts, the maiden ladies whom Molly visited in California. They
+too are gone, the older died during the time I lay ill in the hospital.
+The younger one was not quite bright, I believe, and was taken away to
+live with some relatives in the East. It was not Molly's mother who
+fetched her. It was a man, a very kind man whom the old lady, my
+informant, had never seen before. She said he had a queer name. She
+could not remember it, but thought he was a physician. I imagine that
+the kind friend was an asylum doctor."
+
+"Very likely. And could your informant tell you nothing of the niece--if
+Molly had visited there?"
+
+"She remembered her last visit very well but her memories were of no
+value. She was a sweet, pretty child, she said, and she often wondered
+how she came to have such a homely mother. She evidently disliked Mrs.
+Weston very much, and when I asked her if she had ever heard of Molly's
+death she said no, but that she was not a bit surprised as she had
+always predicted that the pretty, little, white thing would be worried
+into an early grave. I noticed the word 'white' and asked her about it,
+for the Molly I knew had a lovely colour. Her memory became confused
+when I pressed her, but she seemed quite sure that the girl who came
+that winter with her mother was a very pale girl--looked as if she might
+have come south for her health."
+
+"All of which goes to prove--"
+
+"Yes--I know. Poor Molly! Poor little girl! I believe in my heart that
+our mad marriage killed her. Without me constantly with her, the fear of
+her mother, perhaps the doubt of me, the burden of the whole disastrous
+secret was too much. And it was my fault, Willits--all my fault!" He
+turned to the window to hide his working face. "Do you wonder," he added
+softly, "that her poor little wraith comes back to trouble me?"
+
+"Come, come, no need to be morbid! You made a mistake, but you have
+paid. As for the doubt which troubles you--it is but the figment of a
+tired brain. The mother could have had no possible reason for deceiving
+you. You were no longer an ineligible student--and the girl loved you.
+Besides, there was the legal tie. Would any woman condemn her daughter
+to a false position for life? And without reason? The idea is
+preposterous. Come now, admit it!"
+
+"Oh, I admit it! My reasoning powers are still unimpaired. But reason
+has nothing to do with that kind of mental torture. It is my soul that
+has been sick; it is my soul that must be cured. And to come back to the
+very point from which we started, I believe I shall find that cure
+here--in Coombe."
+
+"With Mrs. Sykes?" dryly.
+
+"Certainly. Mrs. Sykes is part of the cure."
+
+"And the other part?"
+
+"Oh--just everything. I hardly know why I like the place. But I do. Why
+analyse? I can sleep here. I wake in the morning like a man with the
+right to live, and for the first time in a year, Willits, a long
+torturing year, I am beginning to feel free of that oppression, that
+haunting sense that somewhere Molly is alive, that she needs me and that
+I cannot get to her. I had begun to fear that it would drive me mad.
+But, here, it is going. Yesterday I was walking down a country road and
+suddenly I felt free--exquisitely, gloriously free--the past wiped out!
+That--that was why I almost feared to see you, Elliott, you bring the
+past so close."
+
+The hands of the friends met in a firm handclasp.
+
+"Have it your own way," said the professor, smiling his grim smile.
+"Consider me silenced."
+
+The doctor's answer was cut off by the jingling entrance of Mrs. Sykes
+bearing before her a large tray upon which stood tall glasses, a beaded
+pitcher of ice cold lemonade and some cake with white frosting.
+
+"Seeing as it's so hot," said she amiably, "I thought a cold drink might
+cool you off some. Especially as breakfast will be five minutes late
+owing to the chicken. I thought maybe as you had a friend, doctor, a
+chicken--"
+
+"A chicken will be delicious," said the doctor, answering the question
+in her voice. "Mrs. Sykes, let me present Professor Willits; Willits,
+Mrs. Sykes! Let me take the tray."
+
+Mrs. Sykes shook hands cordially. "Land sakes!" she said. "I thought you
+were a priest! Not that I really suspicioned that the doctor, good
+Presbyterian as he is, would know any such. But priests is terrible
+wily. They deceive the very elect--and it's best to be prepared. As it
+is, any friend of the doctor's is a friend of mine. You're kindly
+welcome, I'm sure."
+
+"Thank you," said the professor limply.
+
+The doctor handed them each a glass and raised his own.
+
+"Let us drink," he said, "to Coombe. 'Coombe and the Soul cure!'"
+
+"Amen!" said Willits.
+
+"Land sakes!" said Mrs. Sykes. "I thought it was his spine!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+
+Zerubbabel Burk sat upon his stool of office in the doctor's consulting
+room, swinging his legs. Would-be discoverers of perpetual motion might
+have received many hints from Bubble, though he himself would have
+scorned to consider the swinging of legs as motion. He was under the
+delusion that he was sitting perfectly still. For the doctor was asleep.
+
+Asleep, at four o'clock on a glorious summer day! No wonder his friend
+and partner wore a tragic face.
+
+"Doesn't seem to care a hang if he never gets any patients!" mused
+Bubble, resentfully, stealing a half fond, half angry glance at the
+placid face of the sleeper. "Only two folks in all day and one a kid
+with a pin in its throat. And all he says is, 'Don't worry, son, we're
+getting on fine!' We'll go smash one of these days, that's what we'll
+do--just smash!"
+
+"Tap-tap" sounded the blinds which were drawn over the western windows.
+A pleasant little breeze was trying to come in. "Buzz" sounded a fly on
+the wall. Bubble arose noisily and killed it with a resounding "thwack."
+
+"Wake the doctor, would you?" he said. "Take that!"
+
+But even the pistol-like report which accompanied the fly's demise
+failed to ruffle the sleeper. Bubble returned disconsolate to
+his stool.
+
+"Smash," he repeated, "smash is the word. I see our finish."
+
+The pronoun which Bubble used nowadays was always "we." He belonged to
+the doctor body and soul, but it was no servile giving. The doctor also
+belonged to him, and it was with this privilege of ownership that he now
+found fault with his idol. Had any one else objected to the doctor's
+afternoon rest he would have found reason and excuse enough; but in his
+own heart he was puzzled. Such indifference to the appearances, such
+wilful disregard of "business" could hardly, he thought, be real; yet,
+for an imitation, it was remarkably well done. Bubble admired even while
+he deprecated.
+
+Why, he did not even go to church so that the minister might introduce
+him around as "Dr. Callandar, the new brother who has come amongst us."
+Neither did he walk down Main Street, nor show himself in public places.
+When he went walking he went early in the morning and directed his steps
+toward the country. About all the usual means of harmless and necessary
+advertising he did not seem to know Beans! Bubble looked disconsolately
+out of the window. There was Ann, now, coming across the yard. School
+must be out, and still the doctor slept.
+
+"Anybody in?" asked Ann in a stage whisper.
+
+"Not just now. Been very busy though. Doctor's resting. Stop that
+noise."
+
+"I'm not making any noise! He's part my doctor anyway. I'll make a noise
+if I like--"
+
+"No you won't, miss!"
+
+"But I don't _like_," added Ann with her impish smile. "If he's asleep
+what are you staying here for? Come on out."
+
+Bubble regarded the tempter with scornful amazement.
+
+"That's it!" he exclaimed, "jest like I always said, women haven't any
+sense of honour. What d'ye suppose I'm here for?"
+
+"Not just to swing your legs," placidly. "He doesn't need you when he's
+asleep, does he? Come on and let's get some water-cress. He'd like some
+for his tea--dinner I mean. Say, Bubble, why does he call it dinner?"
+
+"Because he comes from the city, Silly! They don't have any tea in the
+city. They have breakfast when they get up and lunch at noon and dinner
+about seven or eight or nine at night. Then if they get hungry before
+bed-time they have supper. The doctor says he never gets hungry after
+dinner so he don't have that."
+
+Ann considered this a moment.
+
+"They do so have tea!" she declared. "I heard Mrs. Andrew West telling
+about it. She said her sister in Toronto had a tea specially for her."
+
+"Oh," with superb disdain, "that's just for women. If they can't wait
+for dinner they get bread and butter and tea in the afternoon. But they
+have to eat it walking around and they only get it when they go out
+to call."
+
+Ann sighed. "I'd like to live in the city," she murmured. "Say, don't
+you feel as if you'd like a cookie right now?"
+
+Bubble squirmed. But his Spartan fortitude held.
+
+"In business hours? No, thank you. 'Tisn't professional. Look silly,
+wouldn't I, if one of our patients caught me eating?"
+
+"How many to-day?"
+
+"That'd be telling. 'Tisn't professional to tell. Doctor says if a man
+wants to succeed, he's got to be as dumb as a noyster in business!"
+
+"Pshaw!" said Ann, "Aunty'll tell. She always counts. Then you don't
+want a cookie?"
+
+"Well--later on--Cricky! here's some one coming! You scoot--pike it!"
+
+"I won't!" Ann stood her ground, peering eagerly around the rose bush.
+"It's only Esther Coombe. She'll be coming to see Aunt--no--she's coming
+here! Hi, Bubble, wake him up--quick!"
+
+"Hum, Hum!" said Bubble in a loud voice, rattling a chair. The sleeper
+made no movement.
+
+Ann, brave through anxiety, flew across the room and shook him with all
+the strength of her small hands. The heavy lids lifted and still
+Ann shook.
+
+"Is it an earthquake?" asked the victim politely.
+
+"No--it's a patient! Oh, do get up. Oh, goodness gracious, look at your
+hair!"
+
+The doctor passed his hand absently over a disordered head. "Yes," he
+said, "I have always thought that shaking is not good for hair. Dear me!
+I believe I have been asleep!"
+
+Ann threw him a glance of mingled admiration and reproach and vanished
+through the parlour door just as the step of the patient sounded upon
+the stone steps.
+
+"Why, Bubble Burk!" said a voice. "What are you doing here?"
+
+At the sound of the voice, sleep fled from the doctor's eyes. He arose
+precipitately.
+
+"I'm workin'," Bubble's voice was not as confident as usual. "This here
+is Dr. Callandar's office. Mrs. Sykes' visitors go round to the
+front door."
+
+"Oh! But it's the doctor I wish to see. Is he in?"
+
+Bubble was now plainly agitated.
+
+"If you'll just wait a moment, I'll--I'll see."
+
+Leaving Esther smiling upon the steps he disappeared into the shaded
+office and pulled up the blinds. The couch had been decorously
+straightened. The office was empty! Bubble gave a sigh of relief and his
+professional manner returned.
+
+"He isn't just what you might call in," he explained affably to Esther.
+"But he'll be down directly. Walk in."
+
+Esther walked in and took the seat which Bubble indicated.
+
+"Somebody sick over at your house?" with ill-concealed hope.
+
+Esther dimpled. "Not dangerously, thank you."
+
+"Then it's just tickets for the choir concert. I might have known. But
+you're too late. Doctor's got half a dozen already. He--"
+
+Further revelations were cut short by the entrance of the doctor
+himself. A doctor with sleep-cleared eyes, fresh collar, and newly
+brushed hair. A doctor who shook hands with his caller in a manner which
+even the professional Bubble felt to be irreproachable.
+
+"Bubble, you may go."
+
+With a grin of satisfied pride the junior partner departed, but once
+outside the gloomy expression returned.
+
+"It's only choir-tickets!" he told Ann, who was waiting around the
+corner of the house. "Come on--let's go fishin'."
+
+Inside the office Esther and the doctor looked at each other and smiled.
+He, because he felt like smiling; she, because she felt nervous. Yet it
+was not going to be as awkward as she had feared. With a decided sense
+of relief she realised that Dr. Callandar looked exactly like a doctor
+after all! Convention, even in clothes, has a calming effect. There was
+little of the weary tramp who had quenched his throat at the school
+pump in the well groomed and quietly capable looking doctor. With a
+notable decrease of tension Esther saw that the man before her was a
+stranger, a pleasant, professional stranger, with whom no embarrassment
+was possible.
+
+As for him he realised nothing except that Coombe was really a
+delightful place. He felt glad that he had stayed.
+
+"No one ill, I hope, Miss Coombe?" His tone, even, seemed to have lost
+the whimsical inflection of the tramp.
+
+"No, Doctor. Not ill exactly. It is Aunt Amy. We cannot understand just
+what is the matter. You see, Aunty imagines things. She is not quite
+like other people. Perhaps," with a quick smile as she thought of Mrs.
+Sykes, "perhaps you may have heard of her--of her fantastic ideas? They
+are really quite harmless and apart from them she is the most sensible
+person I know. But lately, just the other day, something happened--"
+
+He checked her with an almost imperceptible gesture. "Could you tell me
+about it from the beginning?"
+
+Esther looked troubled. "I do not know much about the beginning. You
+see, Aunt Amy is my step-mother's aunt, and I have only known her since
+she came to live with us shortly after my father's second marriage. But
+I know that she has been subject to delusions since she was a young
+girl. She was to have been married and on the wedding day her lover
+became ill with scarlet fever, a most malignant type. She also sickened
+with it a little later; it killed him and left her mentally twisted--as
+she is now. Her health is good and the--strangeness--is not very
+noticeable. It has usually to do with unimportant things. She is
+really," with a little burst of enthusiasm, "a Perfect Dear!"
+
+The doctor smiled. "And the new development?"
+
+"It is not exactly new. She has always had one delusion more serious
+than the others. She believes that she has enemies somewhere who would
+do her harm if they got the chance. She is quite vague as to who or what
+they are. She refers to them as 'They.' Once, when she came to us first,
+she was frightened of poison and, although my father, who had great
+influence over her, seemed to cure her of any active fear, for years she
+has persisted in a curious habit of drinking her coffee without setting
+down the cup. The idea seemed to be that if she let it out of her hands
+'They,' the mysterious persecutors, might avail themselves of the
+opportunity to drug it. Does it sound too fantastic?"
+
+"No. It is not unusual--a fairly common delusion, in fact. There is a
+distinct type of brain trouble, one of whose symptoms is a conviction of
+persecution. The results are fantastic to a degree."
+
+Well, the day before yesterday Aunt Amy was drinking her coffee as
+usual, when she heard Jane scream in the garden. She is very fond of
+Jane, and it startled her so that she jumped up at once, forgetting all
+about the coffee, and ran out to see what was the matter. Jane had cut
+her finger and the tiniest scratch upsets poor Auntie terribly. She is
+terrified of blood. When she came back she felt faint and at once picked
+up the cup and drank the remaining coffee. I hoped she had not noticed
+the slip but she must have done so, subconsciously, for when I was
+helping her with the dishes she turned suddenly white--ghastly. She had
+just remembered!
+
+'They've got me at last, Esther!' she said with a kind of proud
+despair. 'I've been pretty smart, but not quite smart enough.'
+
+I pretended not to understand and she explained quite seriously that
+while she had been absent in the garden 'They' had seen her half-filled
+cup and seized their opportunity. It was quite useless to point out that
+there was no one in the house but ourselves. She only said, 'Oh, "They"
+would not let me see them "They" are too smart for that.' Overwhelming
+smartness is one of the attributes of the mysterious 'They.'
+
+"I hoped that the idea would wear away but it didn't; it strengthened.
+In vain I pointed out that she was perfectly well, with no symptom of
+poisoning. She merely answered that naturally 'They' would be too smart
+to use ordinary poisons with symptoms. 'I shall just grow weaker and
+weaker,' she said, 'and in a week or a month I shall die!' I tried to
+laugh but I was frightened. Mother advised taking no notice at all and I
+have tried not to, but I can't keep it up. She is certainly weaker and
+so strange and hopeless. I am terrified. Can mind really affect matter,
+Doctor Callandar?"
+
+"No. As a scientific fact, it cannot. But it is true that certain states
+of mind and certain conditions of matter always correspond. Why this is
+so, no one knows, when we do know we shall hold the key to many
+mysteries. The understanding, even partial, of this correspondence will
+be a long step in a long new road. Meanwhile we speak loosely of mind
+influencing matter, ignoring the impossibility. And, however it happens,
+it is undoubtedly true that if we can, by mental suggestion, influence
+your Aunt's mind into a more healthy attitude the corresponding change
+will take place physically."
+
+"But I have tried to reason with her."
+
+"You can't reason with her. She is beyond mere reason. I might as well
+try to reason you out of your conviction that the sun is shining. A
+delusion like hers has all the stability of a perfectly sane belief."
+
+"Then what can we do?"
+
+"Since that delusion is a fact for her we must treat it as if it were a
+fact for us."
+
+"You mean we must pretend to believe that the danger is real?"
+
+"It is real. People have died before now of nothing save a fixed idea of
+death."
+
+"Oh!"
+
+"But don't worry. Aunt Amy is not going to die. When may I see her? If I
+come over in a half an hour will that be convenient?"
+
+Esther rose with relief. How kind he had been! How completely he had
+understood! She had been right, perfectly right, in coming to him. In
+spite of Mrs. Coombe's ridicule, Aunt Amy's need had been no fancy. And
+there was another thing; he was coming to the house. Her mother would
+see him--and presto! her prejudice against doctors would vanish--he
+would cure the headaches, and everything would be happy again.
+
+The doctor, watching keenly, thought that she must have been troubled
+greatly to show such evident relief.
+
+"One thing more," he said. "Was there, do you know, any history of
+insanity in your aunt's family?"
+
+The girl paled. The idea was a disturbing one.
+
+"Why--no--I think not. I never heard. You see, she is not my Aunt,
+really, but my step-mother's aunt. There was a brother, I think, who
+died in--in an institution. He was not quite responsible, but in his
+case it was drink. That is different, isn't it? Does it make any
+difference?"
+
+"No--only it may help me to understand the case. Good-afternoon."
+
+He watched her go, through a peep-hole made by Bubble in the blind.
+
+"Pretty, isn't she?" said a reflective voice below him.
+
+The doctor started. But it was only Mrs. Sykes who had stepped around
+the house corner to pluck some flowers from the bed beneath the window.
+As he did not answer, the voice continued, "That boy Burk has gone
+fishing. I told you you'd regret putting that new suit on to him, brass
+buttons and all! Not that I want to say anything against the lad and his
+mother a widow, but when a person's dealing with a limb of mischief a
+person ought to know what to expect. Anybody sick over at
+Esther's house?"
+
+The doctor, leaning against the door in deep reverie, did not seem to
+hear. Mrs. Sykes, after a suspicious glance, decided that perhaps he
+really had not heard, and proceeded.
+
+"Not that I'm asking out of curiosity, Land sakes! But I've got some
+black currant jelly that sick folks fancy. I could spare a jar as
+well as not."
+
+A pause.
+
+The flower picker bunched her flowers into a tight round knot which she
+surveyed with pride. "That step-mother of Esther's now," she said. "I
+don't hold much with her. Flighty, I call her. Delicate, too, if looks
+don't lie. Men are queer. The only thing queerer is women. What d'ye
+suppose a sensible middle-aged man like Doctor Coombe ever saw in that
+pretty doll? And what did she see in him--old enough to be her father? A
+queer match, I call it. But they do say that her side of it is easy
+explained. Anyway it must have been a trying thing when the doctor's
+gold mine didn't--"
+
+Mrs. Sykes' flow of words ceased abruptly, for rising from a last
+descent upon the rose bush she saw that her audience had vanished.
+
+"Dear me! I hope he didn't think I was trying to be curious," said Mrs.
+Sykes.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+
+It required some persuasion to induce Aunt Amy to consent to see the
+doctor. Doctors, she had found (with the single exception of Dr.
+Coombe), were terribly unreasonable. They asked all kinds of questions,
+and never believed a word of the answers.
+
+"And if I have a doctor," she declared tearfully, "I shall have to go to
+bed. And if I go to bed who will get supper? The sprigged tea-set--"
+
+"But you won't need to go to bed, Auntie. You aren't ill, you know; just
+a little bit upset. If you feel like lying down why not use the sofa in
+my room? And even if you do not wish to see the doctor for yourself,"
+Esther's tone was reproachful, "think what a good opportunity it is for
+us to get an opinion about mother. Don't you remember saying just the
+other day that you thought mother was foolish to be so nervous
+about doctors?"
+
+"Yes, but she needn't stay in the room, need she, Esther? I don't want
+her in the room. She laughs. But I would like to lie on your sofa and if
+I must see him I had better wear my lavender cap."
+
+"Yes, dear, and you will not mind mother staying--"
+
+"But I do mind, Esther. And anyway she can't," triumphantly, "because
+she has gone out."
+
+"Gone out? Mother? But she knew the doctor was coming and she
+promised--"
+
+"Yes, I know. She said to tell you she had fully intended staying in
+until the doctor had been, but she had forgotten about the Ladies' Aid
+Meeting. She simply had to go to that. She said you could attend to the
+doctor quite as well as she could and that it was all nonsense anyway,
+because there was nothing whatever the matter with me." The faded eyes
+filled with tears again and Esther had much ado to prevent their
+imminent overflow.
+
+She settled Aunt Amy upon the couch and adjusted the lavender cap
+without further betrayal of her own feelings, but in her heart she was
+both angry and hurt. Her mother had known of the doctor's intended visit
+and had distinctly promised to remain in to receive him. What would Dr.
+Callandar think? It was most humiliating.
+
+The Ladies' Aid Meeting was plainly an excuse for a deliberate shirking
+of responsibility. Or, worse still, Mrs. Coombe, divining Esther's
+double motive, may have left the house purposely to escape seeing the
+doctor on her own account. Esther well knew the stubbornness of which
+she was capable upon this one question, and the cunningness of it was
+like her. She had made no objections; she had not troubled to refuse or
+to argue--she had simply gone out.
+
+Well, it was something to feel that she, Esther, had done what she
+could. At any rate, there was no time to worry, for the doctor was
+already coming up the walk.
+
+Esther hurried to the door. It relieved her to find that he seemed to
+expect her, and showed no offence on realising that the patient's
+nearest relative was not at home to receive him. Indeed, he seemed to
+think of no one save the patient herself. His manner, Esther thought,
+was perfect. Had she been a little older she might have suspected such
+perfection, deducing from it that Callandar, like herself, was
+subconsciously aware of an interest in the situation not altogether
+professional. But the girl made no deductions and certainly there was no
+trace of any embarrassment in the doctor's way with his patient. It took
+only a moment for Esther to decide that here, at least, she had done the
+right thing. She waited only long enough to see the frightened look in
+Aunt Amy's eyes replaced by one of timid confidence and then, murmuring
+an excuse, slipped away, leaving them together.
+
+Callandar also waited while the startled eyes grew quiet and then lifted
+the fluttering hand into his own firm one.
+
+"Creatures of habit, we doctors, aren't we?" he said, smiling. "Always
+taking people's temperatures."
+
+Aunt Amy ventured upon a vague answering smile.
+
+"I understand," continued the doctor, "that you have reason to fear that
+you have been poisoned?"
+
+The hand began to flutter again, but quieted as the pleasant, confident
+voice went on:
+
+"Your niece has told me something of the case but no details. Perhaps
+you can supply them for me. When exactly did it happen and what kind of
+poison was it?"
+
+The fluttering hand became quite still and the eyes of Aunt Amy slowly
+filled with a great amazement. Here was an unbelievable thing--a doctor
+who did not argue or deny or playfully scold her for "fancies." A doctor
+who took her seriously and showed every intention of believing what she
+said. No one, save Dr. Coombe, had ever done that--
+
+"It is always best in these cases to get the details from the patient
+herself," went on the doctor, encouragingly.
+
+No, he was not laughing! Aunt Amy could detect nothing save the gravest
+of interest in his kindly eyes. An immense relief stole over her. A
+relief so great that Callandar, watching, felt his heart grow hot
+with pity.
+
+"Oh, doctor!" she cried feebly, "I--" a rush of easy tears drowned the
+rest of the sentence.
+
+Callandar let her cry. He knew the value of those tears. Presently when
+she grew more quiet he exchanged her soaking bit of cambric for his own
+more serviceable square. Aunt Amy dried her eyes on it and handed it
+back as simply as a child.
+
+"Pray excuse me," she begged, "but--the relief! I might have died if you
+had not come." She went on brokenly. "You see," dropping her voice, "my
+relatives are _queer_. They have strange ideas. When I know things quite
+well they tell me I am mistaken. Mary, my niece, laughs. Even Esther,
+who tries to help me, thinks I do not know what I am talking about. They
+all argue in the most absurd manner. If I do not pretend always that I
+agree with them I have no peace. Sometimes when I tell some of the
+things I know, Esther looks frightened and says I am not to tell Jane.
+So I try to keep everything to myself. I don't want the children to be
+frightened. They are young and ought to be happy. I was happy when I was
+young--at least, I think it was I. Sometimes I'm not sure whether it
+wasn't some other girl--I get confused--"
+
+"Don't worry about it," said the doctor calmly. "Or about Miss Esther
+either. I want to hear all about the poison."
+
+Aunt Amy remembered her precarious condition with a start. Her eyes grew
+vague.
+
+"I don't know how They put it in," she said. "I didn't see Them, you
+know. I left my cup of coffee standing while I went to find Jane. I
+heard her crying. She had cut her finger and when I had bound it up I
+felt faint, so I foolishly forgot and picked up the coffee and drank it.
+I wasn't quite myself or I should never have been so careless."
+
+The doctor seemed to appreciate this point. "Did you taste anything in
+the coffee?" he asked.
+
+"No. Of course They would be too clever for that!"
+
+"And when did you begin to feel ill?"
+
+"Just as soon as I remembered that I had forgotten to pour out a fresh
+cup." The naivete of this statement was quite lost upon the
+eager speaker.
+
+Esther, who had re-entered the room, opened her lips to improve this
+opportunity for argument but, meeting the doctor's eye, refrained.
+Callandar took no notice of the significant admission.
+
+"Where do you feel the pain now?" he asked.
+
+Aunt Amy appeared disturbed.
+
+"Mostly in my head--I--I think." She moved restlessly.
+
+Callandar appeared to consider this.
+
+"But I suppose," he said thoughtfully, "that you really feel very little
+actual pain. None at all perhaps?"
+
+Aunt Amy admitted that she could not locate any particular pain.
+
+"Weakness is the predominating symptom," went on the doctor. "It is, in
+fact, a very simple case. All the more serious, of course, for being so
+simple, _if_ we did not understand it. But now that we know exactly what
+is wrong we need have no fear."
+
+Aunt Amy's vague eyes began to shine.
+
+"Shall we get the better of them again?" she asked eagerly.
+
+"We certainly shall," kindly. "Miss Esther, I am going to leave some
+medicine for your aunt; these little pink tablets. She must have one
+every two hours and two at bedtime. When she has taken them for two days
+I shall send something else. You will notice an improvement almost at
+once. Even in an hour or two, perhaps. By the end of the week all
+medicine may be discontinued."
+
+He crushed a little pink tablet in a spoon, mixed it with water, and
+watched the old lady while she eagerly swallowed it.
+
+"There!" he exclaimed. "That is the beginning! All we need now is a
+little rest and quiet. Nothing to excite the patient and a tablet
+regularly every two hours." He arose, affecting not to see Aunt Amy's
+grateful tears. "And of course," he added as if by an afterthought,
+"_They_ won't know anything about this. They will think that, having
+taken the coffee, the result is certain. They will take for granted that
+They have finished you, in fact! So cheer up, it is worth a little
+illness to be rid of the fear of Them forever."
+
+A lightning flash of hope lit up the worn face upon the pillow. "Oh,
+Doctor! Do you really think I am free?"
+
+"Sure of it."
+
+Aunt Amy sank back with a long sigh; her lined face grew suddenly
+peaceful. Esther, who had observed the little scene with wonder, said
+nothing, but taking the tablets, kissed her Aunt, and led the way out
+in silence.
+
+"Well?"
+
+As they stood together in the hall she could see the amused twinkle in
+the doctor's eye.
+
+"I don't like it! You lied to her!"
+
+"So I did," cheerfully.
+
+"These tablets," holding up the glass vial, "what are they?"
+
+"Tonic."
+
+"And the medicine which you are going to send later?"
+
+"More tonic."
+
+"But she thinks--you gave her to understand that they are the antidote
+for the poison which you know does not exist."
+
+"No. They are the antidote for a poison which does exist--medicine for a
+mind diseased."
+
+"It's--it's like taking advantage of a child."
+
+"So it is, exactly. I suppose you have never taken advantage of a child,
+for the child's good?"
+
+"Certainly not."
+
+"Never told one, gave one to understand, so to speak, that a kiss will
+cure a bumped head?"
+
+"That's different!"
+
+"Never told your school class during a thunderstorm that lightning never
+hurts good children?"
+
+"That's very different."
+
+"And yet all the time you know that lightning falls upon the just and
+unjust equally."
+
+Esther was silent. The doctor laughed.
+
+"I fear we are both sad story-tellers," he said gaily. "But in Aunt
+Amy's case the fibbing will all be charged to my account, you are merely
+the nurse. A nurse's duty is to obey orders and not frown (as you are
+doing now) upon the doctor. You will find that I shall effect a cure.
+Seriously, I do not believe that you have any idea of what that poor
+woman has been suffering. If the delusion of living in continual danger
+can be lifted in any way even for a time, it will make life over for
+her. You would not really allow a scruple to prevent some alleviation of
+your Aunt's condition, would you?"
+
+The girl's downcast eyes flashed up to his, startlingly blue.
+
+"No. I would not. I love her. I would tell all the fibs in the world to
+help her. But all the time I should have a queer idea that _I_ was doing
+wrong. It would be common sense against instinct."
+
+"Against prejudice," he corrected. "The prejudice which always insists
+that truth consists in a form of words."
+
+They were now in the cool green light of the living room. Esther stood
+with her back to the table, leaning slightly backward, supporting
+herself by one hand. She looked tired. There were shadows under her
+eyes. The doctor felt an impulse of irritation against the absent mother
+who let the girl outwear her strength.
+
+"My advice to you is not to worry," he said abruptly. "You are tired.
+More tired than a young girl of your age ought to be. You cannot teach
+those imps of Satan--I mean those charming children--all day and come
+back to home cares at night. Will it be possible for me to speak to Mrs.
+Coombe before I go?"
+
+Watching her keenly he saw that now he had touched the real cause of the
+trouble.
+
+"I am sorry," began Esther, but meeting his look, the prim words of
+conventional excuse halted. A little smile curled the end of her lips
+and she added, "Since she went out purposely to escape you, it is
+not likely."
+
+"Your mother went out to escape me?" in surprise.
+
+"In your capacity of doctor only. You see," with a certain childish
+naivete, "she hasn't seen you yet. And mother dislikes doctors very
+much. Oh!" with a hot blush, "you will think we are a queer family,
+all of us!"
+
+"It is not at all queer to dislike doctors," he answered her cheerfully.
+"I dislike them myself. At the very best they are necessary evils."
+
+"Indeed no! And when one is ill it seems so foolish--"
+
+"Is Mrs. Coombe ill?"
+
+"I don't know. I think so. She has headaches. She is not at all like
+herself. I hoped so much that you would meet her this afternoon, and
+then she--she went out!"
+
+"And this is really what is troubling you, and not Aunt Amy?"
+
+"Yes. You see, Aunt Amy has been quite all right until the last two
+days. But mother--that has been troubling us a long time."
+
+"How long?"
+
+"Almost since father died--a year ago."
+
+"But--don't you think that if Mrs. Coombe were really ill her prejudice
+would disappear? People do not suffer from choice, usually."
+
+"No. That is just what puzzles me!" She did indeed look puzzled, very
+puzzled and very young.
+
+"If I could help you in any way?" suggested Callandar. "You may be
+worrying quite needlessly."
+
+"Do people ever consult you about their mothers behind their mother's
+back?"
+
+"Often. Why not?"
+
+"Only that it doesn't seem natural. Grown-up people--"
+
+"Are often just as foolish as anybody else!"
+
+"Besides, I doubt if I can make you understand." Now that the ice was
+broken Esther's voice was eager. "I know very little of the real trouble
+myself. It seems to be just a general state of health. But it varies so.
+Sometimes she seems quite well, bright, cheerful, ready for anything!
+Then again she is depressed, nervous, irritable. She has desperate
+headaches which come on at intervals. They are nervous headaches, she
+says, and are so bad that she shuts herself up in her room and will not
+let any of us in. She will not eat. I--I don't know very much about
+it, you see."
+
+"You know a little more than that, I think, perhaps when you know me
+better?--It is, after all, a matter of trusting one's doctor."
+
+"I do trust you. But feelings are so difficult to put into words. And
+the greatest dread I have about mother's illness is only a feeling, a
+feeling as if I knew, without quite knowing, that the trouble is deeper
+than appears. Jane feels it too, so it can't be all imagination. It is
+caused, I think, by a change in mother herself. She seems to be growing
+into another person--don't laugh!"
+
+"I am not laughing. Please go on."
+
+"Well, one thing more tangible is that the headaches, which seem to mark
+a kind of nervous crisis, are becoming more frequent. And the
+medicine--"
+
+"But you told me that she took no medicine!"
+
+"Did I? Then I am telling my story very badly. She has some medicine
+which she always takes. It is a prescription which my father gave her a
+few months before he died. She had a bad attack of some nervous trouble
+then which seems to have been the beginning of everything. But that time
+she recovered and it was not until after father's death that the
+headaches began again. Father's prescription must, long ago, have lost
+all effect, or why should the trouble get worse rather than better? But
+mother will not hear a word on the subject. She will take that medicine
+and nothing else."
+
+"Do you know what the medicine is?"
+
+"No. Father used to fill it for her himself. She says it is a very
+difficult prescription and she never has it filled in town, always in
+the city."
+
+"But why? Taylor, here, is quite capable of filling any prescription. He
+is a most capable dispenser."
+
+"Yes--I know. But mother will not believe it."
+
+"And you say it does her no good whatever?"
+
+"She thinks that it does. She has a wonderful belief in it. But she gets
+no better."
+
+The doctor looked very thoughtful.
+
+"She will not allow you to try any kind of compress for her head?"
+
+"No. She locks her door. And I am sure she suffers, for sometimes when I
+have gone up hoping to help I have heard such strange sounds, as if she
+were delirious. It frightens me!"
+
+"Does she talk of her illness?"
+
+"Never, and she is furious if I do. She says she is quite well and
+indeed no one would think that anything serious was wrong unless they
+lived in the house. Any one outside would be sure that I am worrying
+needlessly. Am I, do you think?"
+
+"I can't think until I know more. But from what you tell me, it looks as
+if this medicine she is taking might have something to do with it. If it
+does no good, it probably does harm. Perhaps it was never intended to
+be used as she is using it. Otherwise, as you say, the attacks would
+diminish. At the same time a blind faith in a certain medicine is not at
+all uncommon. One meets it constantly. Also the prejudice against
+consulting a physician. It is probable that Mrs. Coombe does not realise
+that she is steadily growing worse. Could you let me examine the
+medicine?"
+
+Esther hesitated.
+
+"It is kept locked up. But, I might manage it. If I asked her for it she
+would certainly refuse. I--I should hate to steal it," miserably.
+
+"I see. Well, try asking first. It is just a question of how far one has
+the right to interfere with another's deliberately chosen course of
+action. The medicine is probably injurious, even dangerous. I should
+warn her, at least. If she will do nothing and you still feel
+responsible I should say that you have a moral right to have your own
+mind reassured upon the matter."
+
+Esther smiled. "I believe I feel reassured already. Perhaps I have been
+foolishly apprehensive and it never occurred to me that the medicine
+might be at fault; at the worst I thought it might be useless, not
+harmful. If I could only manage to have you see it without _taking_ it!
+There must be a way. I'll think of something and let you know."
+
+"Do." The doctor picked up his hat for the second time. He was genuinely
+interested. He had not expected to find a problem of any complexity in
+sleepy Coombe. The cases of Aunt Amy and the peculiar Mrs. Coombe seemed
+to justify his staying on. It was pleasant also to help this charming
+young girl--although that, naturally, was a secondary consideration!
+
+Esther ran upstairs with a lightened heart.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+
+"I really could not help being late, Esther! I tried to hurry them but
+Mrs. Lewis was there. You know what _she_ is!"
+
+Mrs. Coombe sank gracefully into a veranda chair. Out of the corners of
+her eyes she cast a swift glance at the face of her step-daughter and,
+as the girl was not looking, permitted herself a tiny smile of malicious
+amusement. She was a small woman but one in whom smallness was charm and
+not defect. Once she had been exceedingly pretty; she was moderately
+pretty still. The narrow oval of her face remained unspoiled but the
+small features, once delicately clear, appeared in some strange way to
+be blurred and coarsened. The fine grained skin which should have been
+delicate and firm had coarsened also and upon close inspection showed
+multitudes of tiny lines. Her fluffy hair was very fair, ashy fair
+almost, and would have been startlingly lovely only that it, too, was
+spoiled by a dryness and lack of gloss which spoke of careless treatment
+or ill health, or both. Still, at a little distance, Mary Coombe
+appeared a young and attractive woman. The surprise came when one looked
+into her eyes. Her eyes did not fit the face at all; they were old eyes,
+tired yet restless, and clouded with a peculiar film which robbed them
+of all depth. Curiously disturbing eyes they were, like windows with
+the blinds down!
+
+If her eyes were restless, her hands were restless too and she kept
+snapping the catch of her hand-bag with an irritating click as
+she spoke.
+
+"I know I ought to have been here when the doctor called to see Amy,"
+she went on, "but I could not get away. Mrs. Lewis talked and talked.
+That woman is worse than Tennyson's brook. She makes me want to scream!
+I wonder," musingly, "what would happen if I should jump up some day and
+scream and scream? I think I'll try it."
+
+"Do!"
+
+"What did Doctor Paragon-what's-his-name say about Amy?"
+
+"He thinks we have been treating Aunt Amy wrongly. He thinks she should
+be humoured more. His name is Callandar."
+
+"Callandar? What an odd name! It sounds half-familiar. I must have heard
+it somewhere. There is a Dr. Callandar in Montreal, isn't there? A
+specialist or something."
+
+"I think this is the same man. But if it is he, doesn't want it known.
+He is here for his health, and he has never taken the trouble to correct
+the impression that he is a beginner working up a practice. I thought so
+myself at first."
+
+"At first?"
+
+"When I first saw him. I have met him several times."
+
+Mrs. Coombe was evidently not sufficiently interested to pursue the
+subject. "Whoever he is," she said fretfully, "I hope he is not going to
+allow Amy to fancy herself an invalid."
+
+"He is going to cure the fancy."
+
+"Oh!" dubiously. "Well, I hope he does! I find I must run over to
+Detroit for a few days."
+
+"What?"
+
+"It would be provoking to have her ill while I'm away. No one else can
+manage Jane properly while you're at school. Where is Jane?"
+
+"I don't know. You are not speaking seriously, are you?"
+
+"I certainly am. At a pinch I suppose I could take Jane with me. She
+needs new clothes. But I'd rather not bother with her. Her measure will
+do quite as well. I wish you would call her. I've got some butterscotch
+somewhere. Here it is." The restless hands fumbled in the hand-bag. "No,
+it isn't here, how odd! I promised Jane--"
+
+"Mother, when did you decide to go away?"
+
+"Some time ago. It doesn't matter, does it? I had a letter from Jessica
+Bremner to-day. She asks me to come at once. It's in this bag somewhere.
+I declare I never can find anything! Anyway, she wants me to come."
+
+"When did you get the letter?"
+
+"On the noon mail, of course."
+
+Esther turned away. She knew very well that there had been no letter
+from Detroit on the noon mail. But there seemed no use in saying so.
+These little "inaccuracies" were becoming common enough. At first Esther
+had exposed and laughed at them as merely humorous mistakes; but that
+attitude had long been replaced by a cold disgust which did not scruple
+to call things by their right names. She knew very well that Mary Coombe
+had developed the habit of lying.
+
+"You see," went on the prevaricator cheerfully, "it would be necessary
+to run down to Toronto soon anyway. I haven't a rag fit to wear and
+neither has Jane. But Detroit is better. Things are much cheaper across
+the line. And easy as anything to smuggle. All you need to do is to wear
+them once and swear they're old."
+
+"An oath is nothing? But where is the money coming from?"
+
+Mrs. Coombe shrugged her shoulders. "One can't get along without
+clothes! And even if I could, there is another reason for the trip. My
+medicine is almost finished. I can't risk being without that."
+
+It was the opportunity for which Esther had waited. She spoke eagerly.
+
+"Why not try getting it filled here? I'm sure they are as careful as
+possible at Taylor's."
+
+The hand-bag shut with a particularly emphatic click. Mrs. Coombe rose.
+
+"We have discussed that before," she said coldly. "It is a very
+particular prescription and hard to fill. As it means so much to me in
+my wretched health to have it exactly right, I am surprised at
+you, Esther!"
+
+Esther put the surprise aside.
+
+"You could get it by mail, couldn't you?"
+
+"I shall not try to get it by mail."
+
+"But Taylor's are absolutely reliable. Why not give them a chance? If it
+is not satisfactory I shall never say another word. It seems so
+senseless going to Detroit for a few drugs which may be had around the
+corner. Perhaps it is not as difficult to fill as you think. Let me show
+the prescription to Dr. Callandar--" She stopped suddenly for Mrs.
+Coombe had grown white, a pasty white, and she broke in upon the girl's
+suggestion with a little inarticulate cry of rage, so uncalled for, so
+utterly unexpected, that Esther was frightened. For a moment the film
+seemed brushed from the hazel eyes--the blinds were raised and angry
+fear peeped out.
+
+"You wouldn't dare!" The words were a mere breath. Then meeting the
+girl's look of blank amazement she caught herself from the brink of
+hysteria and added more calmly, "What an impossible suggestion! I need
+no second opinion upon the remedy which your father prescribed for me
+and I shall take none. As for the journey, I shall ask your advice when
+I wish it. At present I am capable of managing my own affairs. I shall
+come and go as I like."
+
+The would-be firm voice wavered wrathed badly toward the end of this
+defiance, but the widely opened eyes were still shining and as she
+turned to enter the house, Esther caught a look in them, a gleam of
+something very like hate.
+
+"So that is what comes of asking," said Esther sombrely.
+
+She did not follow her step-mother into the house but remained for a
+while on the veranda, thinking. It was clearly useless to reopen the
+subject of the prescription. For some reason Mrs. Coombe regarded it as
+a fetish. She would not trust it to Taylor's. She would not allow a
+doctor to see it; there remained only the suggestion of Dr. Callandar
+that it be inspected without her consent. Esther knew where the
+prescription was kept, but--
+
+Women are supposed, by men, to have a defective sense of loyalty and it
+is a belief fairly well established, also among men, that there is a
+fundamental difference in the attitude of the sexes to that high thing
+called honour. Esther was both loyal and honourable. To deceive her
+step-mother, however good the motive, could not but be horrible to her
+and just now, being angry with a very young and healthy anger, she was
+less willing than ever to lose her own self-respect in the service of
+Mary Coombe.
+
+"I won't!" said Esther firmly, and went in to prepare Aunt Amy's supper.
+
+"I don't feel like I ought to be eating upstairs this way," fussed the
+invalid as Esther came in with the tray. "I am so much better. That
+medicine the doctor gave me helped me right away. He must be a very
+smart man, Esther."
+
+"It looks like it, Auntie."
+
+"I don't doubt I'll be around to-morrow just like he said. So I don't
+want you staying home from school. That girl you get to take your place
+is kind of cross with the children, isn't she?"
+
+"She is strict."
+
+"Well, don't get her. I don't like to think about the children being
+scared out of their lives on my account. So I'll just get up as usual. I
+could get up now if necessary. And my mind feels better."
+
+"Your _mind_?" Never before had Esther heard Aunt Amy refer to "her"
+mind as being in any way troublesome.
+
+"Yes. I suppose you never knew, but sometimes I have felt a little
+worried about my mind."
+
+"Whatever for?" The surprise which still lingered on the girl's voice
+was balm to Aunt Amy's soul. She laughed nervously.
+
+"Of course it was foolish," she said, "but really there have been times
+when I have felt--felt, I can hardly express it, but as if there were a
+little something _wrong_, you know. Did you ever guess that I felt like
+that, Esther?"
+
+"No, Auntie."
+
+Aunt Amy shivered. For a moment her faded eyes grew large and dark. "I'm
+glad you did not guess it. It is a dreadful feeling, like night and
+thunder and no place to go. A black feeling! I used to be afraid I might
+get caught in the blackness and never find a way out and then--"
+
+"And then what, dear?"
+
+"Why, then--I'd be mad, Esther!"
+
+"Oh, darling, how awful!" Esther's warm young arms clasped the trembling
+old creature close. "You must never, never be afraid again! Why didn't
+you tell me and let me help?"
+
+"I couldn't. You would not have believed me. And it would have
+frightened you. And you might have told Mary. If Mary knew of it she
+would be certain to be frightened and if she was frightened she would
+send me away. Then the darkness would get me."
+
+"It never shall, Auntie. No one shall ever send you away! And you won't
+be afraid any more, will you?"
+
+"No, not if you don't keep telling me that things I know aren't true. I
+know they are true, you see, but when you say they aren't it makes my
+head go round."
+
+"We'll be more careful, dear! And here is your medicine before you have
+your supper."
+
+Aunt Amy turned cheerfully to the supper tray.
+
+"Your mother need not be told about it," she observed. "She wouldn't
+understand. She was in a while ago to say she hoped I'd be better in the
+morning. She is going to the city. What she came for was to ask me to
+lend her my ruby ring. She never understands why I can't lend it to her.
+I told her she might have the string of pearls and the pearl brooch and
+the ring with the little diamonds and anything else except the ruby.
+You see, I might die before she got back, and I couldn't die without the
+ruby ring on my finger. I promised somebody--I can't remember whom--"
+
+"I know, dear, don't try to remember."
+
+"Mary says it is shameful waste to leave it lying shut up in the box in
+my drawer. But it has to lie there. If I took it out now it would stop
+shining immediately. And it must be all red and bright when I die, like
+a shining star in the dark. Then, afterwards, you can have it, Esther.
+You don't mind waiting, do you?"
+
+"Gracious! I hope I'll be an old woman before then! So old that I shan't
+care for ruby rings at all."
+
+Aunt Amy looked at the girl's pretty hand wistfully. "I'd like to give
+it to you right now, Esther. But you know how it is. I can't. If the red
+star did not shine I might lose my way. Some one told me--"
+
+"I know, Auntie. I quite understand. And you have given me so many
+pretty things that I don't need the ruby."
+
+"You may have anything else you want. But of course the ruby is the
+loveliest of all. If I could only remember who gave it to me--"
+
+"Perhaps you always had it," suggested Esther, hastily, for she knew
+quite well the tragic history of the ruby.
+
+"Perhaps. But I don't think so. I love it but I never dare to look at
+it. It makes the blackness come so near. Does it make you feel
+that way?"
+
+"No--I don't know--large jewels often give people strange feelings they
+say."
+
+"Do they?" hopefully. "Go and look at it now. Don't lift it out of the
+box. Just open the lid and look in. Perhaps you will feel something."
+
+Esther went obediently to the drawer where the beautiful jewel had lain
+ever since Aunt Amy's arrival. As no one outside knew of its existence
+it was considered quite safe to keep it in the house. The box lay in a
+corner under a spotless pile of sweet smelling handkerchiefs. Esther
+snapped open the lid of the case and looked in. She looked close, closer
+still, bending over the open drawer--
+
+"Do you feel anything, Esther?"
+
+The girl's answer came, after a second's pause, in a strained voice.
+"The drawer is so dark, I can't tell!"
+
+"Take it to the window," said Aunt Amy.
+
+Esther lifted the case from the drawer and carried it into a better
+light. Her eyes were panic-stricken. For her indecision had been only a
+ruse to give herself time to think. She had known the moment she opened
+the case that the ruby was gone!
+
+"It does make me feel queer," she said, closing the case. "I'll put it
+away."
+
+"Is it a black feeling?" with interest.
+
+"I think it is."
+
+"Then you are kin to it," said Aunt Amy sagely. "Your mother never has
+any feeling about it at all. Except that she would like to wear it. She
+was looking at it when she was in. She was as cross as possible when I
+told her she could not take it with her."
+
+Esther gathered up the tea things without a word. Her curved mouth was
+set in a hard red line. At the door she paused and turning back as if
+upon impulse, said: "If it makes you feel like that, I would advise you
+not to look at it, Auntie. It will be quite safe. I'll see to that. I'll
+appoint myself 'Guardian of the Ring.'"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+
+Esther carried the tea-tray into the kitchen and stood for a moment
+beside the open window letting the sweet air from the garden cool the
+colour in her cheeks. Through the doorway into the hall she could see
+into the living room where Jane sat at the table in a little yellow pool
+of lamplight, busy with her school home work. Farther back, near the
+dusk of one of the veranda windows, Mrs. Coombe reclined in an easy
+chair. Her eyes were closed; in the half light she looked very pretty,
+very fragile; her relaxed pose suggested helplessness. Unconsciously
+Esther's innate strength answered to the call; her hard gaze softened.
+To apply the terms liar and thief to that dainty figure in the chair
+seemed little short of brutality. Mary was weak, that was
+all--just weak!
+
+At the sound of the girl's step in the doorway Mrs. Coombe opened her
+eyes. They were very filmy to-night, blank, contented. Her nervousness
+seemed to have left her. Perhaps she was half asleep, for she yawned, an
+open, ugly yawn, which she did not trouble to raise her hand to hide.
+
+"I have decided to take Jane with me, Esther."
+
+"I don't want to go," said Jane.
+
+"Well, you are going--that's enough."
+
+"If you have really decided to go," began Esther slowly, "I think you
+are wise to take Jane. We cannot tell yet just how Aunt Amy may be."
+
+The child returned to her book with a discontented sigh. Esther came
+nearer and spoke in a lower tone. "But before you go," she said, "please
+don't forget to replace Aunt Amy's ring. If she were to find it gone it
+would be no joke but a serious shock, as I suppose you know."
+
+Mrs. Coombe laughed. And Esther realised that a laugh was the last thing
+she had expected. For anger, evasion, denial, she had been prepared.
+Mary would probably storm and bluster in her ineffective way--and return
+the ring. Instead--
+
+"How did you know I had it?" she asked good humouredly.
+
+"I saw that it was gone."
+
+"And the deduction was obvious? Well, this time you are right. I did
+take it. I expect I have a right to borrow my own Aunt's things if she
+is too mean to lend them. It's a shame of her to want to keep the only
+decent jewel we have shut up. Amy gets more selfish every day."
+
+"But you will put it back before she misses it?"
+
+Mrs. Coombe could see her step-daughter's face quite plainly and its
+expression made her wince, but she was reckless to-night. After all, why
+pretend? If Esther intended to eternally interfere with her affairs the
+sooner an open break came, the better.
+
+"Perhaps, perhaps not. Certainly not until I return from my visit."
+
+Esther fought down her rising dismay.
+
+"Mother, don't you understand what you are doing? The ring is Aunt Amy's
+You have no right to take it!"
+
+"I've a right if I choose to make one."
+
+"If Auntie finds out it is not in its box, we cannot tell what the
+effect may be!"
+
+"She needn't find out. What she doesn't know won't hurt her!"
+
+"But--it is stealing!"
+
+Mrs. Coombe laughed. "What a baby you are, Esther, for all your solemn
+eyes and grown-up airs. Stealing--the idea! Anyway you need not worry
+since you are not the thief." She yawned again, rose, and declared that
+she felt quite tired enough to go to bed.
+
+When she had gone, Jane left her lessons and came to her sister's side.
+
+"Esther, do I really have to go away with Mother?"
+
+"It looks like it, Janie. But you'll like it. Mrs. Bremner has a little
+girl."
+
+"I don't like little girls."
+
+"Then you ought to! The change will probably do you good."
+
+Jane looked dubious. "Things that I don't want never do me any good.
+Will you help me with my 'rithmetic?"
+
+"I will when I come back."
+
+"Where're you going?"
+
+"Out. I'll not be long. Answer Aunt Amy's bell if it rings, like a dear
+child."
+
+Esther's decision had been made, as many important decisions are,
+suddenly, and without conscious thought. All the puzzling over what was
+right and wrong seemed no longer necessary. Without knowing why, she
+knew that it had become imperative to get some good advice and get it at
+once. If she had been disturbed and uneasy before, she was frightened
+now. Something must be done, if not for Mary's sake at least for the
+sake of the honoured name she bore, and for Jane's sake!
+
+"Mother doesn't seem to _know_ when a thing is wrong any more!" was the
+burden of the girl's thought as she hurried upstairs.
+
+She knew where the prescription was kept--in a little drawer of her
+father's old desk, a drawer supposed to be secret. To-morrow Mary would
+take it away with her. Esther opened the drawer without allowing herself
+a moment for thought or regret. The paper was there, folded, in its
+usual place.
+
+With a sigh of relief she seized it, hurried to her own room for her hat
+and then out into the summer night. A brisk five minute walk brought her
+to Mrs. Sykes' gate, and there, for the first time, she hesitated.
+
+"Evening, Esther!" called Mrs. Sykes cheerfully from the veranda. "Come
+right along in. Mrs. Coombe told Ann you might be over to borrow the
+telescope valise if she decided to take Jane. Rather sudden, her going
+away, isn't it? Hadn't heard a word about it until the Ladies' Aid--come
+up and sit on the veranda and I'll get it."
+
+"I didn't come for the telescope," said Esther. "I came to see Dr.
+Callandar."
+
+"Oh," with renewed interest. "Well, he's in. At least he's in unless he
+went out while I was upstairs putting Ann to bed. That's his consulting
+room where the light is. It's got a door of its own so folks won't be
+tramping up the hall--but of course you know. You were here this
+afternoon. Funny, Mrs. Coombe going away with your poor Auntie sick and
+all! I suppose it _is_ your Auntie, since it can't be Jane or
+Mrs. Coombe?"
+
+"Yes, it is Aunt Amy. She has not been very well."
+
+"The heat, likely. Heat is hard on folks with weak heads. Not that your
+Auntie's head ever seems weaker than lots of other folks. Won't you come
+up and sit awhile?--Well, ring the bell."
+
+Mrs. Sykes voice trailed off indistinctly as Esther rounded the veranda
+corner and stood by the rose bush before the doctor's door. She pushed
+the new electric bell timidly.
+
+"You'll have to push harder than that!" called Mrs. Sykes. "It sticks
+some!"
+
+But the door had opened at once, letting out a flood of yellow light.
+
+"Miss Coombe--you?"
+
+"It's Esther Coombe come about her Aunt Amy," called the voice from the
+veranda.
+
+Hastily the doctor drew her in and closed the door with an emphatic
+bang. Then for the second time that day they looked into each other's
+eyes and laughed.
+
+"Do you think my patients will stand that?" he asked her ruefully.
+
+"Oh, we are used to Mrs. Sykes, we don't mind."
+
+"That's good! Ah, I see you have the mysterious prescription. It wasn't
+so hard after all, was it? Probably your mother was quite as anxious
+as you."
+
+"No, she refused to let me show it you. I took it. To-night was the only
+chance, for she is going away to-morrow and will take it with her."
+
+"And how about your Presbyterian conscience?" Still with a twinkle.
+
+"Silenced, for the present. But look at it quickly for the silence may
+not last. It seemed that I simply had to help mother, in spite of
+herself. And there was no other way. All the same I shall despise myself
+when I get time to think."
+
+The doctor took the paper with a smile. "When that time comes I shall
+argue with you, though argument rarely affects feeling. To my mind you
+are doing an eminently sensible thing."
+
+He opened the paper and peered at it under the lamp; looked quickly up
+at the girl's eager face and then from her to the paper again.
+
+"What is it?" she asked anxiously.
+
+"Why--I don't know. Where did you get this?"
+
+"In the secret drawer of father's desk."
+
+"Was the prescription always kept there?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+The doctor folded the paper again and handed it to her. "Does this look
+like the prescription?"
+
+"Yes, of course. It is the prescription."
+
+"I'm afraid not. Come and look."
+
+Esther seized the paper eagerly and saw--a neatly written recipe for
+salad dressing!
+
+Hot and cold with mortification, she stared at it blankly. "I have been
+nicely fooled," she said in a low voice.
+
+"Am I permitted to smile, or would it hurt your feelings?"
+
+"It is not at all funny! Of course the real prescription has been
+removed. She must have suspected. You see, I asked her to let me have
+it. Oh!" with sudden shame and anger. "She guessed that I might take it,
+don't you see?"
+
+"I am afraid you are right. But now at least I should think that you
+have done your whole duty. It would look as if Mrs. Coombe was herself
+aware of the inadvisability of continuing this prescription. Why else
+should she be so careful to prevent you showing it to me? At the same
+time she is determined to go on using it. We cannot prevent her."
+
+"Can we do nothing?"
+
+"When I see her I shall be better able to judge."
+
+"But she is going away."
+
+"Then we must wait. If it is, as I suspect, a case of disordered nerves
+aggravated by improper treatment, the instinct is strongly for
+concealment. Do you find, for instance, that Mrs. Coombe is not as frank
+in other matters as she used to be?"
+
+A shamed blush crimsoned the girl's cheek, but the doctor's tone was
+compelling and she answered in a low voice: "Yes, I think so."
+
+"Don't look like that. It is only a symptom of something rotten in the
+nervous system."
+
+"Isn't there such a thing as character?" bluntly.
+
+"As distinct from the nervous system? Some say not. But we do not need
+to venture such a devastating belief to know, well, that a dyspeptic is
+usually disagreeable. In potential character he may be equal to the
+cheeriest man who ever ate a hearty dinner. Think of Carlyle."
+
+"I don't like Carlyle."
+
+"But don't you admire him?"
+
+"No. Do you remember the story of the beggar who picked up his hat one
+day and instead of giving him sixpence, Carlyle said, 'Mon, ye may say
+ye hae picked up the hat of Thomas Carlyle.'"
+
+The doctor laughed. "Oh he had a guid conceit o' himself--must you go?"
+For Esther had risen.
+
+"Yes, thank you. Oh, please do not come with me. It is only a step. I'd
+much rather not. Mrs. Sykes would conclude that the whole family were in
+danger of immediate extinction."
+
+She was so evidently perturbed that the doctor laid down his hat, but
+for the first time it occurred to him that Mrs. Sykes was not an
+unmixed blessing.
+
+Esther was holding out her hand.
+
+"Then you think we can safely leave it until mother returns?"
+
+"I think we shall have to, and if things have been going on as long as
+you think, a week more or less will make no very material difference. In
+any case we cannot examine a lady by force or prevent her from getting a
+prescription until one knows it to be dangerous."
+
+"No, of course not. Good-night, and--thank you, Doctor!"
+
+"And I am not to be allowed to walk home with you?"
+
+"Truly, I would rather not."
+
+"Then good-night, and don't worry."
+
+He watched her flit down the dusky path, heard the click of the gate
+latch, and turned back into the office to wonder why it seemed suddenly
+bare and empty!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+
+Mrs. Coombe had been in the city a week when one morning Ann, who was
+feeling lonely without Jane, sat swinging upon the five-barred gate and
+whistling intermittently for Bubble. She had become very tired of
+waiting. She knew that Bubble could hear. The five-barred gate was
+within easy hearing distance of the house, and both doors and windows of
+the office were open. Therefore it became each moment more evident that
+the whistles were being deliberately ignored.
+
+"Horrid, nasty boy!" exclaimed Ann, climbing to a precarious seat on the
+highest of the five bars. "Well, if he waits until I come to get him,
+he'll--just wait!"
+
+It was very hot on the gate. The vacant field on the other side, where
+the Widow Peel pastured her cow, was hot, too, but if one cut across the
+field and circled the back of the Widow Peel's cottage one substantially
+lessened the distance between oneself and the cool deliciousness of the
+river. The Widow Peel was near-sighted and hardly ever noticed one
+rushing over her beds of lettuce and carrots and onions, or if she did,
+she could not "fit a name to 'em."
+
+Ann sighed and swung her brown legs. Should she or should she not go in
+search of Bubble? Going would mean a distasteful swallowing of proper
+pride; not going would mean--no Bubble. It would be a case of cutting
+off one's nose--Ann's small white teeth came together with a
+little click.
+
+"I'll go. But I'll pay him out afterwards."
+
+With this thoroughly feminine decision she tumbled off the gate, raced
+across the orchard and, having paused a moment to regain breath and
+poise, appeared casually at the office door. The office looked cool and
+empty; Bubble was not upon his official stool. Perhaps, after all, he
+had not heard the whistles! Perhaps--
+
+"What d'ye want?" asked a gruff voice from behind the desk.
+
+Ann jumped, and then tried to look as if she hadn't.
+
+"I knew you were there!" she said. "But just you wait till the doctor
+catches you at it!" Mounting the step she frowned across at Bubble who,
+in the doctor's favourite attitude, was reclining in the doctor's chair.
+"I suppose you think you look like him, but you don't, nor act like him
+either. If he was sitting there and a lady came in, he'd be up too quick
+for anything. And if the lady was polite and stayed on the doorstep
+(just like I am) he would say, 'Pray come in, madam,' and then he'd set
+a chair and--"
+
+"Oh, cut it out!" Bubble's dignity collapsed with his attitude. The
+tilted chair came down with a bang and its occupant settled himself more
+naturally upon a corner of the desk. "Don't bother me! I can't come out.
+Doctor's away. Some one's got to attend to business. See those
+medicines? Well, don't you go handling them! This here is for Lizzie
+Stephens (measles), and that there is for Mrs. Nixon (twins). If they
+got mixed I'd be responsible. Run away!"
+
+"Where's the doctor?" asked Ann, ignoring.
+
+"The doctor is out. You needn't wait. He won't be back all day."
+
+"Where'd he go?"
+
+"Little girls mustn't ask questions!"
+
+Ann's small face wrinkled into an elfish grin. "I know where he's gone,"
+she said slyly.
+
+"Yes, you do!" This sarcastic comment was Bubble's most emphatic
+negative.
+
+"Very well, then, I don't."
+
+Not to be outdone, Ann volunteered no further information. She sat down
+on the step and waited.
+
+Bubble busied himself with tying up the bottles. Presently he stepped
+out from behind the desk.
+
+"Think you can mind the office while I run around with these medicines?"
+he asked sternly.
+
+"Sure!" Ann's assent was placid.
+
+"What'll you say if any one comes and asks for the doctor--or me?"
+
+"You're out delivering medicines and the doctor's been called away very
+sudden."
+
+"What'll you tell them if they ask you what he's been called away to?"
+
+"Oh, I'll just say they needn't worry, 'tisn't anything catching."
+
+Bubble allowed his face to relax. He even displayed a grudging
+admiration for this feminine diplomacy.
+
+"And you wouldn't be telling lies, either," he remarked approvingly.
+"All the same," with a return to gloom, "we can't keep it a secret.
+Folks are bound to find out. You can bet your eyes on that!"
+
+Ann nodded. "I expect most of them know by now. Any one that wanted to
+could see them. _He_ didn't seem to care. They drove right down the main
+street and you could see the picnic basket sticking out at the side!"
+
+"O cricky! Isn't that just like him? You'd think he wanted the whole
+town to know he'd gone off picnicking with a girl. But I'd have thought
+Esther Coombe would have better sense!"
+
+"It wasn't Esther's fault. She couldn't act as if she was ashamed of
+him, could she? When a gentleman asks a lady to go out in his automobile
+she can't ask him to drive down the back streets."
+
+"If he had only taken her at night!" groaned the harassed junior
+partner. "But no, he must take a whole day off and him with two patients
+on his hands. Look at me! Have I ever asked off to go on any picnics?
+Not on your tintype. Business is business. Doctors can't fool round like
+other folks."
+
+Ann nodded agreement. Things were coming her way very nicely. She
+glanced at the wrathy Bubble out of the corners of her eyes. "I didn't
+think he'd be mean like that," she remarked craftily.
+
+"Like what? He isn't mean!"
+
+"To make you stay in all day."
+
+"He didn't. Not him! He gave me fifty cents and told me to take a day
+off. 'Just run around with the medicine, Bubble,' says he, 'and then you
+can hike it. I have a feeling in my bones,' he says, 'that nobody's
+going to die to-day.'"
+
+"Well, then--"
+
+"A man has a sense of duty for all that."
+
+"Well," rising with a dejected air, "if you're not coming, good-bye. It
+will be lovely paddling! Aunt's given me some lettuce sandwiches and two
+apple turnovers. One was for you, but I suppose I can eat them both. The
+sugar's leaked all round the edge--lovely!"
+
+The stern disciple of business watched her tie on her sun-bonnet with
+mingled feelings. It began to look as if she was really going!
+
+"Good-bye," said Ann.
+
+Bubble's red face grew a shade redder.
+
+"Just like a girl!" he said bitterly. "Because a man's got to deliver
+two medicine bottles, off she goes and won't wait for him. And the
+farthest I've got to go is over to Mrs. Nixon's. The whole thing won't
+take five minutes."
+
+Sun-bonnets are splendid things for hiding the face! Had Bubble seen
+that slow smile of victory there is no telling what might have happened.
+But he did not see it. And Ann was too good a general to exult openly.
+Her answer was carefully careless. "I'll wait--if you'll hurry up!"
+
+But the look which she threw after his hastily retreating figure was as
+old as Eve.
+
+Meanwhile the doctor and Esther, who had been so criminally careless of
+professional appearances as to drive down Main Street with a picnic
+basket protruding, were enjoying themselves with an enjoyment peculiar
+to careless people. Esther had forgotten about the pile of uncorrected
+school exercises which were supposed to form her Saturday's work; the
+doctor had forgotten about the measles and the twins. Rain had fallen in
+the night and the dust was laid, the trees were intensely green.
+
+Neither of them knew exactly how this pleasant thing had come about,
+although, as a matter of crude fact, Mrs. Sykes had played the part of
+the god from the machine. This energetic lady had made the doctor's
+professional career her peculiar care and it had occurred to her that,
+as a resident physician, he was disgracefully ignorant of the
+surrounding country. At the same moment she had remembered that
+to-morrow was Saturday, and that for trapesing the country and
+meandering around in outlandish places there was no one in town equal to
+Esther Coombe.
+
+"But," objected the doctor, "I hardly know Miss Coombe well enough to
+ask a favour of her."
+
+Mrs. Sykes opined that that didn't matter. "Land sakes," she declared,
+"it would be a nice state of affairs if one huming-being couldn't do a
+kindness to another without being acquainted a year or two." Besides,
+Esther, as the old doctor's daughter, might almost be said to have a
+duty toward the newcomer. Mrs. Sykes felt sure that Dr. Coombe would
+have insisted upon proper attentions being shown, since he was always
+"the politest man you ever saw, and terrible nice to strangers."
+
+Mrs. Sykes also, with the assistance of Aunt Amy, had provided the large
+basket. They might not need it all, but then again they might. It was
+best to be prepared. And, anyway, no one should ever say that she, Mrs.
+Sykes, "skimped" her boarders' meals. As for the big shawl, once
+belonging to a venerated ancestress, it is always safe to take a big
+shawl on a country trip even in June heat with the thermometer going up.
+
+The doctor agreed to everything, even the shawl. Whether one is taking a
+rest cure or not, it is distinctly pleasant to look forward to a day in
+the country with a lovely girl. Esther had taken his request quite
+simply. It seemed only natural to her that he should wish to explore,
+while the invitation to act as guide was frankly welcomed. Indeed her
+girlish gaiety in the prospect had shown very plainly that such holidays
+had been rare of late. School did not "keep" on Saturday, Jane was away,
+and Aunt Amy was so much better that she could leave her without
+misgiving. Bubble alone prophesied disaster, and at him they
+all laughed.
+
+There is a little folder published by the Town Council which gives a
+very good idea of the country around Coombe. We might quote this, but it
+will be much better for you to go some time and see things for yourself.
+Dr. Callandar saw a great deal that day, but was never very clear
+afterwards in his descriptions. It was rocky in spots, he knew, and wild
+and sweet and piney. And there were little lakes. He remembered the
+lakes particularly because--well, because of what came later.
+
+They had their lunch on the shores of a jewel-like bay, sitting upon the
+shawl of Mrs. Sykes' grandmother. Esther had many memories of the place.
+She had often camped there with her father. But it had been wilder then.
+Once a bear had come right up to the door of her tent.
+
+"By Jove!" said the doctor enviously, "what did you do?"
+
+"I said 'shoo'!"
+
+"And did he?"
+
+"Yes, he did. He was a nice bear, very obedient. Some days later father
+and I saw Mrs. Bear trot across the clearing with two baby bears behind.
+They were moving. I think Mr. Bear was looking for a house when he
+called on me."
+
+Altogether it was a magic day. There is an erroneous belief that magic
+has died out of the world. But in our hearts we all know better. Which
+of us has not lived through the magic hours of a magic day? Which of us
+does not know that land, unmapped, unnamed, a land whose sun is
+brighter, whose grass is greener, whose sky is bluer, and whose every
+road runs into a golden mist? Magic land it must be, for much seeking
+cannot find it. No one, not the wisest nor the best, may enter it at
+will; but for every one at some time the unseen gate swings open, birds
+sing, flowers bloom, the glory and the dream descend! Poor indeed,
+unutterably poor and cheated of his heritage is he who has not
+passed that way.
+
+They were not in love, of course. They were too happy for that. Love is
+the greatest thing in the world, but it is seldom quite happy. Esther
+and the doctor were not lovers but lingered in that deliciously
+unconscious state of "going-to-be-in-love-presently" which is nothing
+less than heavenly. Therefore they ate their lunch with appetite and
+laughed about the story of the bear. Both were surprised when the
+doctor's watch told them it was time to think of home.
+
+They came back very slowly along the shaded trail to where the car stood
+waiting in the brilliant light of the declining sun.
+
+"Just a moment," said the doctor, and cranked vigorously. A confusion of
+odd noises ensued, from which, somehow, the right noise did not emerge.
+
+"Just a moment," he repeated. "There appears to be something loose--or
+tight--or something. If you'll just sit out on the grass a moment, Miss
+Esther, I'll see what it is."
+
+Esther descended. The grass was just as pleasant to sit upon as the car
+seat and she knew nothing whatever about the tricky ways of motors.
+
+"Just a moment," said Callandar for the third time, and disappeared
+behind the bonnet. Fifteen minutes after, he reappeared with a very hot
+face decorated fantastically with black.
+
+"She's sulking," he announced gloomily.
+
+"Is she?" Esther's tone held nothing save placid amusement.
+
+"Just a moment." The doctor banged down the bonnet and effaced himself
+once more. This time under the body of the car.
+
+Motors are mysterious things. Why a well-treated, not to say pampered,
+car which some hours before had been left in perfect condition and
+excellent temper should abruptly turn stubborn and refuse to fulfil its
+chief end is a problem which we shall not attempt to solve. Every one
+who has ever owned a motor knows that these things be.
+
+The doctor, a modest man, considered himself a fair mechanician. In
+expansive moments he, who made nothing of his undoubted excellence in
+his own profession, was wont to boast that you couldn't teach him much
+about motors! He had laughed to scorn the remark of his Scotch chauffeur
+that "they things need a deal o' humourin'!" Humour a thing of cogs and
+screws? Absurd! One must master a motor, not humour her.
+
+Half an hour later he emerged from the car's eclipse and sank, a
+pitiable figure, upon the grass beside Esther.
+
+"Won't it go?" asked Esther dreamily. It had been very pleasant sitting
+there watching the sun set.
+
+The master of motors made a tragic gesture. "No," he said, "she won't."
+
+"Shake her," said Esther.
+
+Dr. Callandar pushed back his sweat-bedewed hair with fingers which left
+a fearsome streak above his left eyebrow. The girl laughed. But the
+doctor's decorated face was rueful.
+
+"Do you know, Miss Esther, I'm afraid it isn't a bit funny." His tone,
+too, was sober; and Esther, suddenly more fully alive to the situation,
+noticed that the hands clasped recklessly about the knees of once
+spotless trousers were shaking, just a little. He must be awfully tired!
+
+"That's because you can't see yourself. Give the motor a rest. There is
+plenty of time. Let's have tea here instead of on the way home. There is
+cold tea and chicken-loaf, bread and butter, and half a tart."
+
+The doctor brightened. "You may have the half-tart," he concluded
+generously. "And in return you will forgive me my pessimism. I believe I
+am hungry and thirsty and--if I could only swear I should be all right
+presently."
+
+Esther put her small fingers in her ears and directed an absorbed gaze
+toward the sunset.
+
+Callandar laughed.
+
+"All over!" he called. "Richard is himself again. And now we have got to
+be serious. Painful as it is, I admit defeat. I can't make that car
+budge an inch. It won't move. We can't push it. We have no other means
+of conveyance. Deduction--we must walk!"
+
+"Yes, only like most deductions, it doesn't get us anywhere. We _can't_
+walk."
+
+"Not to Coombe of course. Merely to the nearest farm house."
+
+"There isn't any nearest farm house."
+
+"Then to the nearest common or garden house."
+
+"I thought we were going to be serious. Really, there is no house within
+reasonable walking distance. We are quite in the wilds here. Don't you
+remember the long stretches of waste land we came through? No one builds
+on useless ground. The nearest houses of any kind are over on the other
+side of the lake. The beach is good there and there are a few summer
+cottages and a boarding house. Farther in is the little railway station
+of Pine Lake--"
+
+"Jove! That's what we want! Why did you try to frighten me? Once let us
+reach the station and our troubles are over. There is probably an
+evening train into Coombe."
+
+"There is. But we shall never catch it. We are on the wrong side of the
+lake. We have no boat. There is a trail around but it is absolutely out
+of the question, too far and too rough, even if we knew it, which we do
+not. It would take a woodsman to follow it even in daylight."
+
+"But--" The doctor hesitated. He was beginning to feel seriously
+disturbed. It seemed impossible that they could be as isolated as Esther
+seemed to think. Distance is a small thing to a powerful motor eating up
+space with an effortless appetite, which deceives novice and expert
+alike. It is only when one looks back that one counts the miles. He
+remembered vaguely that the nearest house was a long way back.
+
+"I'll have another try," he answered soberly, "and in the meantime,
+think--think hard! There may be some place you have forgotten. If not,
+we are in rather a serious fix."
+
+"There are no bears now," said Esther.
+
+"There are gossips!" briefly.
+
+The girl laughed. The thought of possible gossip seemed to disturb her
+not at all. "Oh, it will be all right as soon as we explain,"
+confidently. "But Aunt Amy will be terrified. If we could only get word
+to Aunt Amy! I don't mind so much about Mrs. Sykes, for she is always
+prepared for everything. She will comfort herself with remembering how
+she said when she saw it was going to be a lovely day: 'It may be a fine
+enough morning, Esther, but I have a feeling that something will happen
+before night. I have put in an umbrella in case of rain and a pair of
+rubbers and a rug and you'd better take my smelling salts. I hope you
+won't have an accident, I'm sure, but it's best to be forewarned.'"
+
+The doctor glanced up from his tinkering to join in her laugh. He felt
+ashamed of himself. The possibility of evil tongues making capital of
+their enforced position had certainly never entered into the thought of
+this smiling girl. Yet that such a possibility might exist in Coombe as
+well as in other places he did not doubt. And she was in his charge. The
+thought of her clear eyes looking upon the thing which she did not know
+enough to dread made him feel positively sick!
+
+When he spoke to her again there was a subtle change in his manner. He
+had become at once her senior, the physician, and man of the world.
+
+"Miss Esther," he said, leaving his futile tampering with the machine,
+"I can see no way out of this but one. I am a good walker and a fast
+one. I shall leave you here with the car and the rugs and a revolver
+(there is one in the tool box), and go back along the road. I shall walk
+until I come to somewhere and then get a carriage or wagon--also a
+chaperone--and come back for you. It is positively the only thing
+to do."
+
+Esther's charming mouth drooped delicately at the corners. "Oh no!
+That's not at all a nice plan. I'm afraid to stay here. Not of bears,
+but of tramps--or--or something."
+
+"Where there are no houses there will be no tramps."
+
+"There may be. You never can tell about tramps. And I couldn't shoot a
+tramp. The very best I could do would be to shoot myself--"
+
+"But--"
+
+"And I might bungle even that!" pathetically.
+
+"But, my dear girl--"
+
+"And anyway, I've thought of another plan. There is a place on the lake,
+on this side. Not a house exactly, but a log cabin, where old Prue
+lives. Did you ever hear of old Prue? She is a man-hater and a recluse
+and lives all by herself in the bush. It is a dreadful place and she
+keeps a fierce dog! But perhaps she keeps a boat, too. She must keep a
+boat," cheerfully, "because she lives right by the water and I know she
+fishes. If she would only let us have the boat! But I warn you she may
+refuse. She is like the witch in 'Hansel and Gretel.' Do you remember--"
+
+But at the first mention of the boat, the doctor had sprung to action
+and was now standing ready laden with the basket and the rug. With the
+air of a man who has never heard of "Hansel and Gretel" he slipped a
+most businesslike revolver into a pocket of his coat. "For the dog, if
+necessary," he said. "We must have that boat! Is it far?"
+
+"Quite a walk. About two miles through the bush. But I know the way and
+the trail is fairly good, or should be. It branches off from the one we
+took this morning."
+
+The sun was gone when they turned back into the woods but the wonderful
+after-light of the long Canadian sunset would be with them for a good
+time yet. There was no breeze to stir the trees, but the air had cooled.
+It was not unpleasantly hot, now, even in the thickest places. The
+doctor stepped out briskly.
+
+"Listen!" Esther paused with uplifted finger. The trees were very still
+but in the undergrowth the life of the woods was beginning to stir.
+Startled squirrels raced up the fallen logs, glancing backward with
+curious but resentful eyes. Hidden skirmishings and rustlings were
+everywhere and something brown and furry darted across the path with a
+faint cry.
+
+"Don't you feel as if you were in some fairy country?" asked the girl.
+"You can feel and hear them all about you though they keep well hidden.
+A million eager eyes are watching, Lilliputian armies lie in ambush
+beneath the leaves. How quiet they are now that we have stopped moving,
+but as soon as we go on the hurry and skurry will break out afresh! We
+are the invading army and the fairies fly to help the wood-folk protect
+their homes."
+
+As they branched into the deeper path the light grew dimmer. Outside, it
+would still be clear golden twilight but here the grey had come. And now
+the trees grew closer together and a whispering began--a weird and
+wonderful sighing from the soul of the forest; the old, primeval cry to
+the night and to the stars.
+
+It was almost dark when they reached the tiny clearing by the lake.
+Across the cleared space the water could be seen, faintly luminous, with
+the black square of the cabin outlined against it. There was no sign of
+life or light from the dark windows. A dog began to bark sharply.
+
+"He is chained!" said Callandar. "We are fortunate."
+
+"How can you tell?"
+
+"A free dog never barks in that tone. I think he has been a bad dog
+to-day. Killing chickens, perhaps, or chasing cats. A man-hater, like
+your old witch, is certain to have cats! I wonder where she is? Does she
+count going to bed at sundown as one of her endearing peculiarities?"
+
+"Quite the contrary, I imagine. Let's knock."
+
+They raced up the path to the door like children and struck some lusty
+blows. No one answered. The door was locked and every window was blank.
+
+"Knock again!"
+
+They knocked again, banged in fact, and then rattled the windows.
+
+"She could never sleep through all that racket!" said Callandar with
+conviction. "She must be out. Well, out or in, we've got to get that
+boat. Let's explore--this path ought to lead to the lake."
+
+"Shall we steal it?" in a delighted whisper.
+
+"We probably shall. You won't mind going to jail, I hope?"
+
+"Not at all!" The doctor was walking so rapidly that Esther was a little
+out of breath. "Only, the oars--are certain--to be locked--in the
+house!" she warned jerkily.
+
+"Then we shall serve sentence for house breaking also."
+
+"Oh, gracious!" Esther stumbled over the root of a tree and nearly fell.
+But the doctor only walked the faster. They scrambled together down the
+steep path and over the stretch of rocky beach to where the tiny float
+lay a black oblong on the water. The boat house was beside it.
+
+"Eureka!" cried the doctor, springing forward.
+
+But the door of the boat house was open and the boat was gone.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+
+It is a fact infinitely to be regretted, but the doctor swore!
+
+"Well, did you _ever!_" exclaimed Esther. She was a little tired and
+more than a little excited, a condition which conduces to hysteria, and
+collapsing upon the end of the float she began to laugh.
+
+"I wish," said the doctor judicially, "that I knew exactly what you find
+to laugh at."
+
+"Oh, nothing! Your face--I think you looked so very murderous. And you
+did swear--didn't you?"
+
+"Beg your pardon, I'm sure," stiffly.
+
+For an instant they gazed resentfully at each other. The doctor was
+seriously worried. Esther felt extremely frivolous. But if he wanted to
+be stiff and horrid,--let him be stiff and horrid.
+
+"I declare you act as if it were my fault the old boat is gone!" she
+remarked aggrievedly.
+
+"Don't be silly!"
+
+An uncomfortable silence followed. Esther began to realise how tired she
+was. Callandar stared out gloomily over the darkening lake.
+
+"Anyway it's bad enough without your being cross," said Esther in a
+small voice.
+
+"Cross--my dear child! Did I seem cross? What a brute you must think me.
+But to get you into this infernal tangle!--If this old woman is out in
+the boat she'll have to come back some time. She can't stay out on the
+lake all night."
+
+Esther, who thought privately that this was exactly what the old woman
+might do, made no reply. She rather liked the tone of his apology and
+was feeling better.
+
+"Then there is the dog. If she is anywhere near, she will be sure to
+hear the dog. From the noise he is making she will deduce burglars and
+return to protect her property. As a man-hater she will have no fear of
+a mere burglar. Luckily for us, that dog has a carrying voice!"
+
+Scarcely had he spoken than the dog ceased to bark.
+
+"Shall I go and throw sticks at it?" asked Esther helpfully.
+
+"Hush! The dog must have heard something. Let's listen!"
+
+In the silence they listened intently. Certainly there was something, a
+faint indeterminate sound, a sound not in the bush but in the lake, a
+sound of disturbed water.
+
+"The dip of a paddle," whispered Callandar. "Some one is coming in a
+canoe. The dog heard it before we did--recognised it, too, probably. It
+must be the witch!"
+
+The dipping sound came nearer and presently there slipped from the
+shadow of the trees a darker shadow, moving. A canoe with one paddle was
+coming toward them.
+
+Esther with undignified haste scrambled up from the float, abandoning
+her position in the line of battle in favour of the doctor. The dog
+broke into a chorus of ear-splitting yelps of warning and welcome. The
+moving shadow loomed larger and a calm though harsh voice demanded, "Be
+quiet, General! Who is there?"
+
+"We are!" answered Callandar, stepping as far from the tree shadow as
+possible. "Picnickers from Coombe, in an unfortunate predicament. Our
+motor has broken down, and we want the loan of a boat to get over to
+Pine Lake station."
+
+As he spoke he was vividly conscious of Esther close behind. So near was
+she that he felt her warm breath on his neck. She was breathing quickly.
+Was the child really frightened? Instinctively he put out his hand,
+backward, and thrilled through every nerve when something cool and small
+and tremulous slipped into it.
+
+The canoe shot up to the float.
+
+"You can't get any boat here."
+
+There was no surprise or resentment in the harsh level voice. Only
+determination, final and unshakable.
+
+Esther felt the doctor's hand close around her own. Its clasp meant
+everything, reassurance, protection, strength. In the darkness she
+exulted and even ventured to frown belligerently in the direction of the
+disagreeable canoeist. They could see her plainly now. A tall woman in a
+man's coat with the sleeves rolled up displaying muscular arms. Her
+face, even in the half-light, looked harsh and gaunt. With a skill,
+which spoke of long practice, she sprang from the canoe, scarcely
+rocking it, and proceeded to tie the painter securely to a heavy ring in
+the float. Then she straightened herself and turned.
+
+"I'll loose the dog!" she announced calmly.
+
+Just that and no more! No arguments, no revilings, no display of any
+human quality. There was something uncanny in her ruthlessness.
+
+"If you do, it will be bad for the dog," said Callandar coldly. "Who
+are you who threaten decent people?"
+
+It was the tone of authority and for an instant she answered to it. Her
+harsh voice held a faint Scotch accent.
+
+"There'll be no decent people here at this hour o' the nicht. Be off.
+You'll get no boat. Nor the hussy either. The dog's well used to
+guarding it."
+
+"How dare you!" Esther was so angry at being called a hussy that she
+forgot how frightened she was and faced the woman boldly. But the old
+hard eyes stared straight into her young indignant ones and showed no
+softening. Next moment old Prue had pushed the girl aside and
+disappeared in the darkness of the wooded path.
+
+"Quick!" The doctor's tone was crisp and steady. "The canoe is our
+chance. Jump in, while I hold it--in the bow, anywhere!"
+
+"But the paddle! She has taken the paddle!" Even as she objected she
+obeyed. The frail craft rocked as she slid into it, careful only not to
+overbalance; next moment it rocked more dangerously and then settled
+evenly into the water under the doctor's added weight.
+
+"Sit tight!" Carefully he leaned over her, steadying the canoe with one
+hand on the float. In the other she saw the glint of a knife, felt the
+confining rope sever, felt the strong push which separated them from the
+float and then, just as a great dog, fiercely silent now, bounded from
+the path above, a paddle rose and dipped and they shot out into
+the lake.
+
+"If he follows and tries to overturn us I'll have to shoot him," said
+the doctor cheerfully. "But he won't. Hark to him!"
+
+The long bay of the baffled dog rose to the stars.
+
+"There was an extra paddle in the boat-house," he explained. "I
+took it out when we first came down--in case of accident. Old
+She-who-must-be-obeyed must have forgotten it. It is a spliced paddle
+but we shall manage excellently. Luckily I know how to use it. All I
+need now is direction. Lady, 'where lies the land to which this ship
+must go?'"
+
+"'Far, far away is all the seamen know,'" capped Esther, laughing. "But
+if you will keep on around that next point and then straight across I
+think we ought to get there--Oh, look! there is the moon! We had
+forgotten about the moon!"
+
+They had indeed forgotten the moon. And the moon had been part of their
+programme too. Both remembered at the same moment that, according to
+schedule, they were now supposed to be almost home, running down Coombe
+hill by moonlight.
+
+"This is much nicer," said Esther, comfortably.
+
+"But--" he did not finish his sentence. Why disturb her? Besides it
+certainly was much nicer! The forgotten moon bore them no malice. A soft
+radiance grew and spread around them, the whole sky and lake were
+faintly shining though the goddess herself had not yet topped the trees.
+The shadows were becoming blacker and more sharply defined. In front of
+them the point loomed, inky black. Like a bird of the night the little
+canoe shot towards it, skimmed its darkness and then slipped,
+effortless, into shining silver space. The smile of the moon! Pleasing
+old hypocrite! Always she smiles the same upon two in a canoe!
+
+They were paddling toward her so that her light fell full on the
+doctor's face--a clean cut, virile face, manly, stern, yet with a
+whimsical sweetness hidden somewhere.
+
+"How handsome he is!" thought Esther, exactly as the moon intended.
+
+"Strong, too," her thought added as the light picked out his well-set
+shoulders and the sweep of the arm which sped the paddle so lightly yet
+so strongly up and down. Clear, yet soft, the moon showed no touch of
+grey in the hair (although the grey was there) nor did she point out the
+markings which were the legacy of strenuous years. Seen so, he appeared
+no older than she who watched shyly from girlish eyes.
+
+With a little shiver of utmost content Esther settled herself against
+the thwart of the canoe.
+
+Manlike he did not know the meaning of that shiver.
+
+"Fool that I am!" he exclaimed. "You are cold, and behold we have left
+behind the shawl of Mrs. Sykes' grandmother!"
+
+"Indeed we have not! The dog would have torn it to bits. I assure you
+the shawl of the venerated ancestress was in the canoe before I was."
+
+"Then wrap yourself up. It is wonderful how cool the nights are."
+
+Esther was not cold. But it is sometimes pleasant to be commanded. This
+is what enables man to persist in a certain pleasing delusion regarding
+woman's natural attitude. When she occasionally pleases herself by a
+simulation of subjection he immediately thrills with pride, crying,
+"Aha! I have her mastered!" Of course he finds out his mistake later.
+
+It pleased Esther, though not cold, to wrap herself in the shawl and it
+pleased Callandar to see her do it. I assure you it left the whole
+question of the subjection of women quite untouched.
+
+The moon knew all about it but, feminine herself, she favoured the
+deception. Around the girl's dark head she drew a circle of light. The
+branching tendrils of her hair, all alive and fanlike now in the
+coolness of the night, made a nimbus of black and silver from which her
+shadowed face shone like a faint pure pearl. As he seemed younger, so
+did she seem older; under the moon she was no longer a child, but a
+woman with mysterious eyes.
+
+An impulse came to him--the rare impulse of confidence! Suddenly it
+seemed that what he had mistaken for self-sufficiency had been in
+reality loneliness. He had learned to live to himself not because he was
+of himself sufficient but because no one else, save the Button Moulder,
+had ever come within speaking distance. Lorna Sinnet, for all his
+admiration of her, had established no claim upon his confidence, yet
+now, with this young girl, whom he had known but a few weeks, a new need
+developed--a need to talk of himself! A primitive need indeed, but, like
+all primitive needs, compelling.
+
+We need not follow the history. Perhaps, reported, it would not seem
+very lucid. There were blanks, unsaid things, twists of phrase, eloquent
+nothings which, wonderfully understandable in themselves, do not report
+well. Somehow he must have made it plain, for Esther understood it and
+understood him, too, in a way which we, who have never sailed with him
+under the moon, cannot hope to do. Faults of expression are no hindrance
+to this kind of understanding. He did not talk well, was clumsy, not at
+all eloquent, but magically she reconstructed the hopes and dreams of
+his ambitious youth. From a few bald phrases she fashioned the
+thunderbolt which shattered them, saw him stunned, then alive again,
+struggling. With every ready imagination she leaped full upon the fires
+of an ambition which accepted no check but fed upon difficulty and
+overleapt obstacles. Between stories of his early college life, her
+sympathy sensed the deadly strain which his narrative missed and, long
+before he mentioned it, her foresight had descried the coming of hard
+won success.
+
+But the really vital thing, the core of the short history, she followed
+slowly word by word, anxiously. It told of wonders which she did not
+know--love, passion, despair! Now indeed he seemed to be speaking in a
+strange language--yet not strange entirely. She hid each broken phrase
+in her heart, knowing them rare, and wondering at the treasure entrusted
+to her. Some of her girlhood she left behind her as she listened.
+Something new, yet surely old, stirred faintly. What was this love he
+spoke of? The breath of bygone passion brushed across her untouched soul
+and left it trembling!
+
+Into the long silence which followed the story her voice drifted like a
+sigh.
+
+"If she could only have lived until you came!"
+
+It was of the girl wife she thought. Her heart was full of an aching
+pity for that other girl whom life had cheated of her sweetest gift.
+More than the man who had lived out a bitter expiation, did she pity her
+who had missed the fight, slipped out of the struggle. Death seemed to
+Esther such a terrible thing. The new life stirring in her shuddered at
+the thought of mortality. That breath of the divine which we name Love
+began already to proclaim itself immortal.
+
+Yet Molly, that other girl, had loved--and died.
+
+The doctor, too, was lost in self communings. Already, with the words
+not cold upon his lips, he was surprised that he had told the story. How
+could he? Why had he? That pitiful little story of Molly which had been
+too sacred for the touch of a word. Above all, why had the telling been
+a relief? It was a relief, he knew that. Somewhere, in the silver waters
+of Pine Lake he had buried a burden. He felt lighter, younger. Had his
+very love for Molly become a load whose proper name was remorse? Had his
+heart harboured regret and fear under the name of sorrow? Or had he
+never loved at all, never really sorrowed? Had the thing he called love
+been but a boy's hot passion caught in the grip of a man's awakening
+will, a mistake made irrevocable by a stubbornness of purpose which
+could not face defeat? Whatever it had been, it had come to be a burden.
+And the burden had lightened--it pressed no longer. In a word, he was
+free! He was his own man again, unafraid, able to look into his heart,
+to open all the windows--no dark corners, no haunting ghosts! He could
+enter now without the dread of echoing footsteps or wistful, half-heard
+whisperings. The shade of pretty, childish Molly would vex no more.
+
+The relief of it--the pain of it! It was like a new birth.
+
+Meanwhile the strong, sure strokes were bringing them swiftly nearer the
+opposite shore where yellow dots of light proclaimed the position of the
+summer cottages. One dot, larger, detached itself from the others and
+indicated the flare on the end of the landing float. Outlines began to
+be darkly discernible, the moon's silver mirror was shivered by lances
+of gold. Very soon their journey would be ended.
+
+The paddle dipped more slowly. Esther sighed, and sat up straighter.
+Considering all the trouble they had taken, neither of them seemed
+overjoyed to be so near the desired haven.
+
+"We are nearly there," said Callandar obviously.
+
+Esther looked backward over their shining wake. Something precious
+seemed to be slipping away on those fairy ripples. Yet all she could
+find to say was--
+
+"We have come very fast. You must be tired."
+
+Strange little commonplaces, how they take their due of all the
+wonderful hours of life! Esther wriggled out of the shawl, smoothed her
+hair, arranged her ruffled collar. Callandar shipped his paddle and
+resumed his coat.
+
+"Where to, now?" he asked practically.
+
+"There is only one landing, we shall be right on it in a moment.
+Then--there are several of the cottagers whom I know. But I think Mrs.
+Burton will be the best. She has often asked me to visit her and is such
+a dear that the present unexpected arrival will not make me
+less welcome."
+
+"That's good! As for me, I'll make for the station and send the
+telegrams. They won't be seriously anxious yet, do you think?
+Then--there is a train I think you said?"
+
+"You have missed that. But there is a very early morning train, a milk
+train--O gracious!" Esther broke off with a start of genuine
+consternation. "To-morrow is Sunday!"
+
+"Naturally!" in surprise.
+
+"How horribly unfortunate! The milk train doesn't run on Sunday!"
+
+"Does the milk object to Sunday travelling?"
+
+"Don't joke!" forlornly. "It's dreadful that it should be Sunday. People
+will talk!"
+
+"Oh, will they?" The doctor was immensely surprised. "Why?"
+
+"Because it's Sunday."
+
+"What has Sunday got to do with it? They can't talk. Here you are safe
+and sound with your friend Mrs. Burton by 9 o'clock, an intensely
+respectable hour even in Coombe. What can they say?"
+
+"But it's Sunday! You will return home, by rail, on Sunday. Every one
+will know. Your breaking of the Sabbath will be put down to careless
+pleasuring. It will hurt your practice terribly!"
+
+Callandar laughed heartily. But before he could reply the quick bursting
+out of a blaze upon the shore startled them both. "What is it?" he asked
+apprehensively.
+
+"Only a bonfire! Some one is giving a bonfire party. It is quite the
+fashionable thing. There will be songs and speeches with lemonade and
+cake. Oh, hurry! We shall be in time for the programme."
+
+The mysterious woman, born of the moon, was gone. In her place was a
+rumple-haired, bright-eyed child. Callandar took up the paddle with a
+whimsical smile.
+
+"Sit still or you'll overturn the canoe!" he said warningly. And across
+the narrowing stretch of water floated the opening sentiments of the
+patriotic cottagers.
+
+"O Cana_dah_, our heritage, our love--"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+
+Henry Callandar, resting neck-deep in the cool green swimming pool,
+tossed the wet hair out of his eyes and whistled ingratiatingly to a
+watching robin. A delightful sense of guilt enveloped him, for it was
+Sunday morning and, since his experience at Pine Lake a week ago, he had
+learned a little of what Sunday means in Coombe. Esther had been quite
+right in fearing that his return by train upon that sacred day might
+deal a severe blow to his prestige--at least until Mrs. Sykes had had
+time to explain to every one how unavoidable it had been--and he knew
+that if he were to be caught in his present delightful occupation his
+Presbyterian reputation might be considered lost forever.
+
+The robin twittered at him prettily but refused to be beguiled. Sunday
+bathing was not among its weaknesses. Presently it flew away.
+
+"Gone to tell the minister, I'll be bound!" murmured Callandar. "'Twill
+be a scandal in the kirk. I'll lose all my five patients. Horrid
+little bird!"
+
+Smiling, he drew himself from the embrace of the faintly shining water
+and retiring to the willow screen began to dress with that virtuous
+leisureliness which characterises those who rise before their fellows.
+He had the world to himself; a world of cool, sweet scents, pure light
+and Sabbath quiet--that wonderful quiet which seems a living thing with
+a personality of its own, so different is it from the ordinary quiet of
+work-a-day mornings.
+
+The primrose sky gave promise of a beautiful day. The blue grey vault
+overhead was already filling with shimmering golden light, the drooping
+willows and the dew-wet grass were stirring in the breeze of dawn, the
+voice of the water sang in the stillness.
+
+Callandar slipped his blue tie snugly under the collar of his white
+flannel shirt and sighed with the ecstasy of health renewed. A
+half-forgotten couplet hummed through his brain.
+
+ "Sweet day, so cool, so calm, so bright!
+ The bridal of the earth and sky--"
+
+"And it's a hymn, too, or I'm a Dutchman," he declared, much edified.
+"That proves that swimming on Sunday is quite compatible with proper
+orthodoxy of mind. Shouldn't wonder if the Johnnie who wrote that wrote
+it on Sunday morning after a dip. I'll tell Mrs. Sykes he did
+anyway--where in thunder did I put my boots?"
+
+The missing articles had apparently fulfilled the purpose of their being
+by walking away, or else the robin had collected them as evidence!
+Callandar chuckled at a whimsical vision of them in a church court,
+damningly marked "Exhibit 1." But as he searched for them the utter
+peace of the morning fled and suddenly he became conscious that he and
+the willows no longer divided the world between them. Some one was near.
+He felt eyes watching. The curious half-lost instinct which warns man of
+the approach of his kind, told him that he was no longer alone. The
+doctor fixed a stern eye on the screening willows.
+
+"Zerubbabel!" he commanded, "come out of there at once, sir!"
+
+A stirring in the bushes was the only answer.
+
+The doctor glanced at his bootless feet.
+
+"Bubble," more mildly, "if you want a swim--"
+
+"It isn't Bubble," said a meek voice, "it's me. Are you dressed enough
+for me to come out?" Without waiting for an answer the elfish face of
+Ann appeared through the willow tangle. "If you're looking for your
+boots," she remarked kindly, "they're hanging on that limb behind you."
+
+But boots no longer absorbed the doctor.
+
+"Come out of those willows, both of you!"
+
+"There's only me," still meekly. "And I didn't come to swim. I came for
+you. Honour bright! The Button Man's here."
+
+"What?"
+
+"Yes, he is. He came in a big grey car and was sitting on the doorstep
+when Aunt got up. He told her not to disturb you, but of course Aunt
+thought that you ought to know at once and when she found that you were
+gone"--a poignant pause!
+
+"Yes, when she found me gone--"
+
+"When she found you gone," slowly, "she said you must have been called
+up in the night to a patient!"
+
+"Did she really?" The doctor's laugh rang out.
+
+"And I hope the Lord will forgive her for such a nawful lie!" finished
+Ann piously.
+
+"He will, Ann, He will! You can depend on that. He has a proper respect
+for loyalty between friends. Did I understand you to say that you had
+seen my boots? Oh, yes, thanks! Now I wonder what can have brought our
+Button Man back so soon? He didn't by any chance say, I suppose?"
+
+"Him?" with scorn. "Not much fear! I'll do up your boots if you like."
+
+"Thanks, no. That would be using unseemly haste. Button-men who go
+visiting on Sunday must learn to wait. Don't you want to have a splash,
+Ann? I'll walk on slowly, you can easily catch me up!"
+
+The child looked enviously at the now sparkling water, but shook her
+head.
+
+"I'd love to. But I dasn't. Aunt always knows when I've been in. Even if
+I go and muddy myself afterwards, she knows. She says a little bird
+tells her."
+
+"A robin, I'll bet. I know that bird! Sanctimonious thing! He was
+watching me this morning and went off as fast as he knew how, to spread
+the news. Ann, you have lived in this remarkable town all your life. Can
+you tell me just why it is wicked to go swimming on Sunday?"
+
+Ann looked blank. "No. But it is. You're likely to get drowned any
+minute! Not but what I'd risk it if it wasn't for Aunt. I'm far more
+scared of Aunt than I am of God," she added reflectively.
+
+"Why, Ann! What do you mean?"
+
+"Well, you never can tell about God, but Aunt's a dead sure thing! If
+she says you'll get a smack for going in the river you'll get it--but
+God only drowns a few here and there, for examples like."
+
+"Look here!" Callandar paused in his stride and fixed her dark eyes by
+the sudden seriousness in his own. "You've got the thing all wrong. God
+doesn't drown people for swimming on Sunday. He isn't that sort at all.
+He--He--" the unaccustomed teacher of youth faltered hopelessly in his
+effort to instruct the budding mind, but Ann's eyes were questioning and
+at their bidding the essential truth of his own childhood came back to
+him. "God is Love," he declared firmly. "Great Scott! a person would
+think that we lived in the Dark Ages! Don't you let 'em frighten you,
+Ann. What are you allowed to do on Sunday anyway?"
+
+"Church," succinctly. "And Sunday-school and church and the 'Pilgrim's
+Progress.'"
+
+"Well, that's something. Jolly good book, the 'Pilgrim's Progress'!"
+
+"Yes," dubiously. "If it didn't use such a nawful lot of big words. And
+if he'd only get on a little faster. He was terrible slow."
+
+"So he was. Well, let us be merry while we can. I'll race you to the
+orchard gate."
+
+At the gate they paused to regain their lost breath and sense of decorum
+for, across the orchard, the veranda could be plainly seen with the trim
+figure of Professor Willits in close proximity to the taller and gaunter
+outline of Mrs. Sykes. With one of her shy quick gestures, the child
+slipped her fingers from the doctor's hold and sped away through the
+trees. Her friendship with Callandar was the most wonderful thing that
+had ever happened to Ann, but she was not of the kind which
+parades intimacy.
+
+"Patient dead?" asked Willits dryly after they had shaken hands.
+
+"Patient?" Then, catching sight of the flaming red in the cheeks of his
+landlady, "Dead? Certainly not. Even my patients know better than to die
+on a morning like this. But whatever possessed you to disturb a
+righteous household? Mrs. Sykes, he doesn't deserve breakfast, but I do.
+When do you think--"
+
+"In just about five minutes, Doctor. Soon's I get the coffee boiling and
+the cream skimmed. I didn't know," with an anxiously reproving glance,
+"but what you might want to get washed up after you got in."
+
+"I--no, I think I'm quite clean enough, Mrs. Sykes. But it was very
+thoughtful of you to wait--"
+
+"Aunt, the coffee's boiling over!" The warning was distinctly audible
+and, with a gesture of one who abandons an untenable position, Mrs.
+Sykes retreated upon the kitchen.
+
+The visitor watched her flight with mild amaze.
+
+"I suppose I should seem curious if I were to ask why the excellent Mrs.
+Sykes imperils her immortal soul in your behalf? But why in the name of
+common sense is the peril necessary? It isn't a crime, is it, for a
+medical man to get up early and go for a swim?"
+
+"You forget what day it is," said Callandar solemnly. "Or rather, you
+never knew. I myself was not properly acquainted with Sunday until I
+came to this place. Your presence here is in itself a scandal. People do
+not visit upon the Seventh day in Coombe."
+
+"No? You should have informed me of the town's eccentricities. As it is,
+if my presence imperils your social standing you can seclude me until
+the next train."
+
+"Better than that," cheerfully, "I can take you to church."
+
+The alarmed look upon the professor's face was so enticing that
+Callandar continued with glee:
+
+"Why not? I have always thought your objection to church-going a blot
+upon an otherwise estimable character. Hitherto I have been too busy to
+attend to it, but now--"
+
+"Quit chaffing, Harry! I came up because I had to see you. You pay no
+attention to my letters. I never dreamed that you would stay a month in
+this backwater. What is wrong? What is the matter with you?"
+
+"Look at me--and ask those questions again."
+
+The keen eyes of the Button-Moulder looked deep into the doctor's steady
+ones. There was a slight pause. Then--
+
+"Yes, I see what you mean. I saw it as you came across the orchard." The
+sharp voice softened. "My anxiety for your health could hardly survive
+the way in which you leaped that fence! But all this makes it only the
+more mysterious. Have you found the fountain of youth or--or what?"
+
+Callandar threw an affectionate arm over the other man's shoulders.
+
+"I _am_ young, amn't I! Trouble is, I didn't know it." He ruffled his
+hair at the side so that the grey showed plainly. "Terrible thing when
+one loses the realisation of youth! But I've had my lesson. I'll never
+be old again, never!"
+
+In spite of himself the professor's straight mouth curved a little. A
+spark of pride glowed in his cool eyes as he bent them upon the smiling
+face of his friend. Yet his tone was mocking as he said, "Then it is the
+fountain of youth? One is never too old to find that chimera."
+
+"It's not something that I've found, old cynic. It's something that I've
+lost. Look at me hard! Don't you notice something missing? Did you ever
+read the 'Pilgrim's Progress'?"
+
+"The Pilgrim's--"
+
+"Breakfast is ready!" called Ann, teetering on her toes in the doorway.
+
+"The Pil--"
+
+"And Aunt--says--will--you--please--come--at--once--so's--the
+coff--ee--won't--be--cold!" chanted Ann.
+
+"Yes, Ann. We're coming."
+
+"But I want to know--"
+
+"Old man, I'll tell you after breakfast. I want you to see me eat. I
+wish to demonstrate that there is no deception. A miracle has really
+happened. No one could observe me breakfasting and doubt it!"
+
+When they were seated he looked guilelessly into the still disapproving
+face of Mrs. Sykes. "Perhaps you are wondering, as I did, what has
+brought Professor Willits back to Coombe," he said, "but time and space
+mean little to professors, and the fact is that Willits has long wished
+to hear a sermon by the Reverend Mr. Macnair. He is coming with me this
+morning. Perhaps you hadn't better mention it, though. It might disturb
+Mr. Macnair to know that so eminent a critic was listening to him."
+
+The eminent critic frowned grimly and took a fourth cream biscuit
+without noticing it.
+
+"Not a mite!" declared Mrs. Sykes. "The man ain't born that can fluster
+Mr. Macnair. Nor yet the woman, unless it's Esther Coombe--Land sakes,
+Doctor! I forgot to tell you how that cup tips! Ann, get a clean table
+napkin. I hope your nice white pants ain't ruined, Doctor? I really
+ought to put that cup away but it's a good cup if it's held steady and I
+hate to waste good things. Last time it tipped was when the Ladies' Aid
+met here. Mrs. Coombe had it and the whole cup spilled right over her
+dress. I was that mortified! But she didn't seem to care. I can't
+imagine what's the matter with that woman. She's getting dreadful
+careless about her clothes. Next time I met her she wore that same
+dress, splash an' all! 'Tisn't as if she hadn't plenty of new
+things,--more than they can afford, if what folks say is true. You
+haven't met Mrs. Coombe yet, have you, Doctor?"
+
+"She is away from home."
+
+"Well, when you do meet her you'll see what I mean, or like as not you
+won't, being a man. Men never seem to see anything wrong with Mary
+Coombe. But Esther must feel dreadful mortified sometimes when her Ma
+forgets to get hooked up behind. Esther's as neat as a pin. Always was.
+Why, even when she got home last week after that awful time you and she
+had up at Pine Lake, and her having to stay overnight without so much as
+a clean collar, she walked in here as fresh as a daisy--won't you let me
+give you some more coffee, Professor?"
+
+"Thank you, yes. You were saying--"
+
+"Willits, do you think so much coffee is good for you?"
+
+"Land sakes, Doctor, my coffee won't hurt him! It never seems to trouble
+you any. As I was saying, one would almost have thought that what with
+picnicking in the bush all day and trapesing around in a canoe half the
+night and having to stay where she wasn't expected and wouldn't like to
+ask the loan of the flat-irons--"
+
+"Please, Mrs. Sykes, don't let Ann eat another biscuit. I don't want her
+to be ill just when I want a day off to take Willits to church. Willits,
+as your medical adviser, I forbid more coffee. He will really injure
+himself, Mrs. Sykes, if I do not take him away. He isn't used to
+breakfasts like this and his constitution won't stand it."
+
+Mrs. Sykes beamed graciously under this delicate compliment and
+confiscated Ann's latest biscuit with a ruthless hand. "If you gentlemen
+would like to sit in the parlour--" she offered graciously. But
+Callandar with equal graciousness declined. The office would do quite
+well enough. Willits might want to smoke. "And as it-seems that my watch
+has stopped," he added, "perhaps you would be so kind as to tell us
+when it is time to change for church."
+
+The professor settled himself primly upon the hardest chair which the
+office contained and refused a cigar.
+
+"You seem to have acquired a reprehensible habit of fooling, Henry," he
+said. "Your language also is strange. When, for instance, you say
+'change for church,' to what sort of transformation do you refer?"
+
+Callandar chuckled.
+
+"Only to your clothes, old chap. Don't worry. You wouldn't expect me to
+go to church in flannels?"
+
+"I should not expect you to go to church at all."
+
+"Well, the fact is, old man, you are painfully ignorant. I do go to
+church, and the proper church costume for a professional man is a frock
+coat and silk hat. But as you are a traveller, and as you are not
+exactly a professional man, I shall not lose caste by taking you as
+you are."
+
+The imperturbable Willits waived the point. "I understood you to say,
+also, that your watch had stopped. Was that a joke?"
+
+"No such luck!" The doctor took out his watch and shook it. "Mainspring
+gone, I'm afraid!"
+
+"A month ago," said the professor, "if your watch had stopped you would
+have had a fit."
+
+"Really! Was I ever such an ass? Well, I'm not the slave of my watch any
+longer. Time goes softly in Coombe. Aren't you glad I'm not taking
+a fit?"
+
+"I am glad. But I want to understand."
+
+"Then let's return to the 'Pilgrim's Progress.' Ann and I were talking
+about it this morning. Do you remember the man with the pack on his back
+and how when he reached a certain spot the pack, seemingly without
+effort of his own, fell off and was seen no more?"
+
+Willits reflected. The doctor was thoroughly in earnest now. "I seem to
+recollect the incident to which you refer," he said after a pause. "If I
+remember rightly it is an allegory and is used in a definitely religious
+sense. The man with the pack meets a certain spiritual crisis. Do I
+understand that you--er--that you have experienced conversion? I am not
+guilty of speaking lightly of so important a matter, but I hardly know
+how to frame my question."
+
+The doctor tilted back his chair and looked dreamily out of the window.
+"I did not mean you to take my illustration literally. My religious
+beliefs are very much the same as they have always been. To a
+materialist like you they seem, I know, absurdly orthodox; to a church
+member in good standing they might seem fatally lax; but such as they
+are I have not changed them. Still, I was, as you know, a man with a
+burden. You may call the burden consequence or what you will, the name
+doesn't matter. The weight of that youthful, selfish, unpardonable act
+which bound a young girl to me without giving her the protection which
+that bond demanded, was always upon me, crushing out the joy of life.
+The news of her death made no difference, except to render me hopeless
+of ever making up to her for the wrong I had done. Her death did not set
+me free, it bound me closer.
+
+"I seemed like one caught in the tow of some swift tide, always fighting
+to get back, yet eternally being drawn away. The tide still flows out,
+for the tide of human life is the only tide which never returns, but I
+have ceased to struggle. I no longer look back. It is not that God has
+forgiven me (I have never been able to think of God as otherwise than
+forgiving), it is that I have forgiven myself."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+
+"It amounts to this, then," said Willits presently. "You are cured. The
+balance is swinging true again. It has taken a long time, but the cure
+is all the more complete for that. Now, when are you coming back to us?"
+
+Callandar did not answer.
+
+"You are needed. Not a day passes that your absence is not felt. You
+used to have a strong sense of responsibility toward your work. What has
+become of it?"
+
+"I have it still. I am not slighting my work by taking time to build
+myself into better shape for it."
+
+"But you will simply stagnate here!" querulously. "You are becoming
+slack already. You let your watch run down."
+
+The doctor laughed.
+
+"If many of my patients could do the same without worry they would not
+need a doctor. Half of the nervous trouble of the age can be ultimately
+traced to watches which won't run down. Leisure--unhurried leisure--that
+is what we want. We've got to have it!"
+
+"Piffle! I shall hear you talk about inviting your soul next."
+
+"Well, if I do he is in better shape to accept the invitation than he
+used to be."
+
+The professor's gesture was sufficiently expressive.
+
+"Very well. I give up. Remember, I advise against it. I think you are
+making a mistake!--I'll have that cigar now. I suppose one is allowed to
+smoke in the garden?"
+
+"Yes, do, that's a good fellow! I must run up and make myself
+presentable. I suppose you haven't seen Lorna lately?"
+
+"I have seen her very lately. She asked to be remembered."
+
+"Oh, you old prevaricator! Lorna never asked to be remembered in her
+life. What she really said was, 'If you see Harry give him my love!'"
+
+"If she did, you don't deserve it! Oh, boy," with sudden earnestness,
+"why will you make a fool of yourself? She's a woman in a thousand.
+Others see it if you don't. Since you've been away, MacGregor is paying
+her marked attention."
+
+"Good old Gregor!" The doctor's exclamation was one of pure pleasure.
+"And yet you say my absence isn't doing any good? Go along with you!
+Take your cigar and wait for me underneath the Bough. I'll not be long."
+
+He was long, however. The professor's cigar and his cogitations came to
+an end together without the promised reappearance. Even when he returned
+to the office it was empty except for Ann, who in the stiffest of
+starched muslin and whitest of stockings was spread out carefully upon
+the widest chair. Her black hair was parted as if by a razor blade and
+plastered tightly in slablike masses while the tension of the braids was
+such that they stuck out on either side of the small head like decorated
+sign posts. Weariness, disgust and defiance were painted visibly upon
+the elfish face.
+
+"This is the best chair!" said Ann politely, "but if you'll excuse me I
+shan't get up. Every time I sit down it makes a crease in a fresh place.
+By the time church is over I look like I was crumpled all over. It's the
+starch!" she added in sullen explanation.
+
+Willits, who liked children but did not understand them, essayed a mild
+joke.
+
+"Did you put some starch in your hair too?"
+
+Ann flushed scarlet with anger and mortification and made no answer.
+
+"It looked much nicer at breakfast," blundered on the professor
+genially. "If I were you I should unstarch it--" he paused abashed by
+the glare in Ann's black eyes and turned helplessly to Callandar, who
+had just come in, resplendent in faultless church attire.
+
+"Don't listen to him, Ann!" said the doctor. "Button moulders are so
+ignorant. They know absolutely nothing about hair or the necessity for
+special tidiness on Sundays. All the same, I'm afraid we shall have a
+headache if we don't let a reef out somewhere. Sit still a moment, Ann.
+I was always intended for a barber."
+
+To the fresh astonishment of Willits his friend's skilful hands busied
+themselves with the tightly drawn hair which, only too eager for
+freedom, soon fell into some of its usual curves. With a quick, shy
+gesture the child drew the adored hand to her lips and kissed it.
+Callandar turned a deep red. The professor chuckled, and Ann, furious at
+betraying herself before him, fled precipitately, the crackling starch
+of her stiff skirts rattling as she ran.
+
+For a moment Willits enjoyed his friend's embarrassment and then, as the
+probable meaning of the frock coat began to dawn upon him, his
+expression changed to one of apprehension.
+
+"You weren't in earnest about that church nonsense, were you?"
+
+"Certainly. If you need a clean collar take one of mine, and hurry up.
+The first bell has stopped ringing."
+
+"But I'm not going!"
+
+"Not if I ask you nicely?"
+
+"But why? What are you going for?"
+
+"Come and see."
+
+The shrewd eyes of the professor grew coldly thoughtful.
+
+"That is exactly what I shall do," he decided.
+
+From the home of Mrs. Sykes upon Duke Street to the First Presbyterian
+Church upon Oliver's Hill is a brisk walk of fifteen minutes. As Coombe
+lies in a valley, Oliver's Hill is not a hill, really, but a gentle
+eminence. It is a charming, tree-lined street bordered by the homes and
+gardens of the well-to-do. It is, in fact, _the_ street of Coombe, and
+to live upon Oliver's Hill is a social passport seldom mentioned but
+never ignored.
+
+As if social prominence were not enough, it had another claim upon the
+affections and memories of many, for up this hill every Sunday in a long
+and goodly stream poured the first Presbyterians who were not only the
+elect but also the elite of Coombe. To see Knox Church "come out" was
+one of the sights of the town and, decorously hidden behind a muslin
+curtain, a stranger might feast his eyes upon greatness unrebuked. It
+was said at one time that every silk hat in Coombe attended Knox Church,
+but this was vainglory, for it was afterwards proved that several
+repaired to St. Michael's and at least one to the Baptist tabernacle.
+With this explanation you will at once understand why the sidewalk was a
+few feet broader upon the church side of Oliver's Hill, and if this
+circumstance savours to you of ecclesiastical privilege we can only
+conclude that you are not Presbyterian, and request you not to be so
+narrow-minded.
+
+As the doctor and his half-reluctant friend turned at the foot of the
+hill they were immediately absorbed by the stream pressing upwards, for
+the last bell had already begun to ring.
+
+"We're all right," whispered Callandar encouragingly. "It rings for five
+minutes."
+
+The professor opened his lips to say something, but shut them with a
+snap. There was probably method in the doctor's madness but it was
+method which would never be disclosed through much questioning. With an
+expression of intense solemnity he fixed his eyes, gimlet-like, upon the
+middle button of the Sunday blouse of the lady in front of him and
+followed up the hill. To the absurdly low-toned remarks of his companion
+he vouchsafed no reply whatever.
+
+They entered the church to the subdued rustle of Sunday silks and the
+whisper of Sunday voices. At the door some one shook hands with
+Callandar and remarked in a ghostly whisper that it was a fine day. A
+grave young man, in black, led them to a pew half way down the aisle.
+Most of the pews were already full, the latest comers showing slight
+signs of hurry; and as they seated themselves the bell stopped and the
+organ began.
+
+There was a moment's expectant interval and then two doors, one at
+either side of the pulpit, opened simultaneously and the minister
+entered from one side, the choir from the other. Before the minister
+walked a very solemn man with abnormally long upper lip. This was Elder
+John MacTavish, a man of large substance, of great piety and poor
+digestion. It was upon this latter account that the doctor always
+observed him with peculiar interest, for had not Mrs. Sykes declared
+that if he should only be called in once to prescribe for John
+MacTavish's stomach his future in Coombe was secure?
+
+"Doctor Parker is doing him just no good at all," she reported. "So keep
+an eye on him. If he looks especially dour it's a good sign."
+
+"Would you say that he looks especially 'dour'?" whispered Callandar to
+Willits.
+
+"I should. Why?"
+
+"Oh, nothing--only it's a good sign! Hush!"
+
+When the minister has entered the pulpit at Knox Church there is a
+moment during which you may bow your head, or, if you consider this
+popish, you may cover your face with your gloved hand. It is a moment of
+severe quiet. One does not dare even to cough. Hence the doctor's
+warning "hush!"
+
+But this morning the quiet was rudely broken. Somewhere, just outside
+the open windows, sounded a laugh; a young, clear, unrestrained laugh,
+then the call of a sharp whistle, and next moment, through the doors not
+yet closed, hurtled something yellow and long-legged! With a joyous bark
+it rushed along the nearest aisle, across the front of the pulpit, down
+the other aisle and out at the door again.
+
+The congregation was amazed and grieved. Its serenity was shaken, even
+the minister seemed disturbed. Some younger members of the choir
+giggled. It was most unseemly.
+
+"Naughty dog!" said the voice outside the window. "Go home! Don't dare
+to lick my hand!"
+
+One of the choir members grew red in the face and choked. It was
+outrageous! And then, as if nothing at all had happened, the girl who
+had been the cause of the whole unfortunate incident entered and walked
+down the aisle. She appeared to be quite undisturbed; was, in fact,
+smiling. Every eye in the church followed her as, a little out of
+breath, a little flushed, with dark hair slightly disarranged as if from
+an exciting chase, she took her seat, unconscious, or careless, of them
+all. The minister, who had paused with almost reproachful obviousness,
+gave out the opening psalm and the congregation freed itself from
+embarrassment with an accustomed flutter of hymn-books.
+
+Going to church was somewhat interesting after all, thought Professor
+Willits. Then, in common with the rest of the congregation, he detached
+his eyes from the girl's exquisite profile and focused them upon
+the minister.
+
+Friends of the Rev. Angus Macnair asserted that he was a man in a
+thousand. For that matter he was a man in any number of thousands; for
+his was a personality, true to type, yet not likely to be duplicated.
+Born of a Highland Scotch father and a Lowland Scotch mother, he
+developed almost exclusively in his father's vein. Loyal in the extreme,
+narrow to fanaticism, passionate, emotional, yet trained to the cold
+control of a red Indian, he was a man of power, at once the victim and
+the triumph of his creed.
+
+Early in life he had come under a conviction of sin, had received
+assurance of forgiveness and of election and, before he had left the
+Public School, his Call had come. From that time forward he had burnt
+with a fierce fire of godliness which, together with a natural
+incapacity for seeing two sides to anything, had carried him safely
+through the manifold temptations to unbelief and heresy which beset a
+modern college education. Many wondered that a man so gifted should
+remain in Coombe, but the explanation is simple. He suited Coombe; the
+larger churches of the larger cities he did not suit. Lax opinions,
+heretical doctrines, outlooks appallingly wide were creeping in
+everywhere. It is safe to say that in most of the churches of his own
+faith he would have seemed bravely but hopelessly behind the times. But
+in Coombe he had found his place. Coombe was conservative. Coombe
+Presbyterians were still content to do without frills in the matter of
+doctrine. Coombe could still listen to hell fire and, if not unduly
+disturbed, did not at least smile behind its hand.
+
+Something of all this the Button-Moulder, student of men, felt as he
+watched the sombre yet glowing face of the preacher.
+
+The sermon that morning was one of a series dealing with the
+Commandments and the text was, "Thou shalt not bear false witness
+against thy neighbour." The speaker had the scholar's power of
+concentration, the orator's power of delivery. He was both poignant and
+personal. He seemed to do everything save mention names. Some sinners in
+that congregation, thought Willits, had undoubtedly been bearing false
+witness, and were now listening to a few plain words! Cautiously he
+glanced around, almost expecting to see the tale of guilt and sorrow
+legibly imprinted upon some culprit's face. But no one seemed at all
+disturbed, save one old lady who glared back at him an unmistakable
+"Thou art the man!" The congregation sat, serenely, soberly attentive,
+testifying their entire agreement with the speaker by an occasional sigh
+or nod. The more fiery the preacher's denunciations, the more complacent
+his hearers. In astonishment Willits realised that, if appearances go
+for anything, no one in Knox Presbyterian Church had ever borne false
+witness against anybody!
+
+The collecting of the offering was somewhat of an anti-climax, as was
+also the anthem by the choir, the latter consisting of a complicated
+arrangement of the question, "If a man die shall he live again?"
+reiterated singly by all parts in succession, by duets and quartets and
+finally by the whole choir, without so much as a shadow of an answer
+appearing anywhere.
+
+Willits gave a long sigh as they stepped into the summer day again. It
+had not been uninteresting, but he was quite ready for lunch. The
+doctor, on the contrary, seemed unaccountably to linger. He even paused
+to talk to a fat lady in mauve velvet who had mauve cheeks to match.
+
+"So glad to see you in church, Doctor! Young men, you know, are inclined
+to be young men! And these nice days--very tempting, I'm sure! Is your
+friend a stranger?"
+
+Callandar gravely introduced Willits, who became immediately convinced
+that this mauve lady was the most unpleasant person he had ever seen and
+doubtless the very person to whom the minister had spoken in his sermon.
+
+Why had Callandar let him in for this? Why was he waiting around for
+anyway? There he was, shaking hands with some one else--this time it was
+the girl who had laughed.
+
+"May I present my friend, Professor Willits, Miss Coombe?"
+
+The girl extended a graceful hand and for an instant the professor was
+permitted a look into eyes which caused him to set his firm lips
+somewhat grimly.
+
+"And I know, Willits, you will be delighted to meet our pastor, Mr.
+Macnair."
+
+A spark began to glow in the professor's eye, but Callandar's face was
+guileless. The minister shook hands with professional heartiness, but
+his gaze, Willits thought, was wandering. He began to feel interested.
+
+"Very fine day," he remarked imperturbably.
+
+"Lovely, lovely," agreed the minister, still heartily. The mauve lady
+was waiting for the pastoral handshake, but he did not notice her. He
+was watching the dark girl talking to Callandar.
+
+"What is so rare as a day in June?" said Willits, with deliberate
+malice.
+
+"Ah, yes, very much so. Delighted to have met you. You will excuse me,
+I'm sure. Annabel," with an impatient glance toward a stout, awkward
+woman in the background, "if you are not quite ready I think Miss Coombe
+and I will walk on." He moved toward the dark girl as he spoke and
+Willits followed.
+
+"Then I'll have to come some other day to get the roses," they heard
+Callandar say. "But remember I haven't a single flower in the office. So
+it will have to be soon."
+
+"At any time," answered the girl, flushing slightly.
+
+"No flowers?" repeated the minister, a little fussily, "dear me, I will
+speak to my sister. Annabel will be delighted to send you any quantity,
+Doctor. You must really drop in to see our garden, some day. Sunday, of
+course, is a busy day with me. Come, Miss Esther. Good morning, Doctor.
+Good morning, Professor. Glad to see you at our services any time--"
+
+Bowing courteously, the minister moved away, followed perforce by Miss
+Coombe. (An invitation to lunch at the manse is an honour not to be
+trifled with.) Perforce also the doctor stood aside and Willits caught
+the look, half shy, half merry, which the girl threw him from the depths
+of her remarkable eyes. It was really quite interesting, and rather
+funny. Not often had he seen fair ladies carried off from under the nose
+of Henry Callandar. Transferring his glance quickly to the face of his
+friend, he hoped to surprise a look of chagrin upon his abashed
+countenance, but the countenance was not abashed, and the look which he
+did surprise there startled him considerably. Henry Callandar, of all
+men, to be looking after any girl with a look like that!
+
+Well, he had been invited to come and see. And he had seen.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+
+As Esther walked away, demurely acquiescent, by the side of the Rev. Mr.
+Macnair she was conscious of a conflict of emotions. The sight of the
+doctor's disappointed face as he stood hat in hand, awoke regret and
+perhaps a trifle of girlish gratification. She had been sorry herself to
+miss that half hour among the roses but she was still too young and too
+happy to know how few are such hours, how irrevocable such losses. Also,
+it had seemed good to her maidenly pride that Dr. Callandar should
+know--well, that he should see--just exactly what he should know and see
+she did not formulate. But underneath her temporary disappointment she
+felt as light and glad as a bird in springtime.
+
+The minister was speaking, but he had been speaking for several moments
+before Esther's delighted flutter would permit of her listening to him.
+When at last her thoughts came back she noticed, with a happy-guilty
+start, that his tone was one of dignified reproof.
+
+"Naturally we all understand," he was saying, "at least I hope we all
+understand, that you are not primarily to blame. At the worst one can
+only impute carelessness--"
+
+"Oh, but it wasn't carelessness! You don't know Buster. He's the
+_cleverest_ dog! He hid. I had no idea that he was with me until he
+bounded past me at the church door. And though I whistled and tried to
+grab him he was in before I knew it. I'll make him sit up meekly and beg
+your pardon."
+
+A flush of what in a layman might have been anger crimsoned the
+minister's cheek.
+
+"You are well aware," stiffly, "that I am not referring to the incident
+of the dog."
+
+"To what then? I am sorry I wasn't listening but you seemed to be
+scolding and I couldn't think of anything else." Even the abstruse Mr.
+Macnair saw that her surprise was genuine. His tone grew gentler.
+
+"You are very young, Miss Esther. But since I must speak more plainly, I
+was referring to that mad escapade of a week ago. Don't misunderstand
+me, the blame undoubtedly rests upon the man who was thoughtless enough,
+selfish enough, to put you in such a position."
+
+"Whatever do you mean?" Esther was torn between anger and a desire to
+laugh. But seeing the earnestness in his face, anger predominated. "Can
+you possibly be referring to the breakdown of Dr. Callandar's motor?"
+she asked coldly.
+
+"I refer to the whole unfortunate adventure. If your step-mother had
+been at home I feel sure it would not have happened. She would never
+have permitted the excursion to take place."
+
+The girl's dark brows drew together in their own peculiar manner.
+
+"Let us be honest," she suggested. "You know quite well that my
+step-mother would not have bothered about it in the least."
+
+"I feel it my duty," went on the minister, "to tell you that there were
+some peculiar features in connection with the disablement of the motor.
+I understand from the mechanician who accompanied Dr. Callandar to the
+spot for the recovery of the machine that there was really very little
+the matter. A short ten minutes completed the necessary repairs."
+
+"Ten minutes? Oh, how silly he must have felt--the doctor I mean. After
+all the hours he spent and the things he said." She laughed with
+reminiscent amusement. "He threw the monkey wrench at it, too. And he
+thought he knew so much about motors!"
+
+Her companion observed her with sombre eyes. Was it possible that she
+had actually missed the point of his remark?
+
+"Can you understand," he said slowly, "how a man used to driving a motor
+car can have been entirely baffled by so slight an accident? To me it
+seems--odd!"
+
+"So Dr. Callandar thought, only he expressed it more forcibly."
+
+"And you?"
+
+"Well, I suppose I was heartless. But it was the funniest thing I ever
+saw!" Esther's laughter bubbled again.
+
+They were now at the manse gate. He saw that he must hasten.
+
+"My dear Miss Esther, let us be serious. I do not like to
+disturb your mind but I have a duty in this matter. Has it never
+occurred to you that this so-called accident may not have been
+so--so--er--entirely--er--irremediable, so to speak, as it was made
+to appear?"
+
+"Do you mean that he did it on purpose?" The tone was one of blank
+amazement. Esther's hand was upon the gate but forgot to press the
+latch. She was a quick brained girl and the insinuation in the
+minister's words had been patent. Yet that he should be capable of such
+an idea seemed incredible! Had he been looking at her he would have seen
+the clear red surge over her face from neck to brow and then recede, but
+not before it had lighted a danger spark in her eyes.
+
+"You did mean that!" She went on before he could answer. The scorn in
+her voice stung. But the Reverend Angus was not a coward.
+
+"That was my meaning. You are a young and inexperienced girl. You go
+upon an excursion with a man whom none of us know. An accident, a very
+peculiar accident, happens. You are led to believe that the damage is
+serious, but later, when the matter is investigated, it is found to have
+been trifling. What is the natural inference? What have you to say?"
+
+"It has been said before," calmly.
+
+"Well--"
+
+"Thou shalt not bear false witness against thy neighbor."
+
+They faced each other, the man and the girl. And the man's eyes fell.
+
+"God forbid that I should do so," he murmured.
+
+Esther's face softened. Her anger was not proof against humility.
+
+"If you are really disturbed about it," she said slowly, "I can reassure
+you. You say that you do not know Dr. Callandar. But I do know him. The
+whole situation rests upon that. He is a man incapable of the caddish
+villainy you impute. Why he could not repair the car, I cannot say. I
+think," with a smile, "that he does not know quite as much about cars as
+he thinks he does. But he did his best, I know that! When we found his
+efforts useless we took the only course possible and made at once for
+the canoe. We had to steal it, you remember, but the doctor showed no
+faltering in that. He was also prepared to shoot the dog. And you have
+my word for it that he made no attempt to swamp the canoe or to
+otherwise complicate matters. I arrived at Mrs. Burton's by ten minutes
+past nine. She was delighted to see me. Dr. Callandar walked over to the
+station and sent telegrams to Aunt Amy and Mrs. Sykes. He returned to
+Coombe upon the morning train. I remained with Mrs. Burton and came back
+in time for school on the milk train Monday morning. That is the whole
+story of the adventure and, to be frank, I enjoyed it immensely."
+
+The minister shook his head, but he could say no more. His attitude had
+not changed, yet he felt a sense of shame before the straightforward
+honesty of Esther's outlook. She had no sense of the evil of the world.
+That very fact seemed to make the world less evil.
+
+"When will Mrs. Coombe be back?" he asked abruptly.
+
+Immediately the girl's frank look clouded. "I do not know," she said.
+"She hardly ever tells me when she is returning. She may be at home any
+day now. You know how impulsively she acts."
+
+"Yes--just so." The minister's manner was absent. "The fact is I wish
+very much to speak with your mother regarding a certain matter. Not the
+matter we have been discussing, we will say no more of that, but a
+matter of great importance to--er--to me. The importance is such indeed
+that I doubt if I am justified in delaying longer if you have no idea of
+when I may expect to see her."
+
+Had Esther been noticing she must have remarked the unusual agitation of
+his manner, but Esther was not noticing.
+
+"Is it anything you could discuss with me?" she asked innocently.
+"Mother cares less and less for business. Unless it is something quite
+private she will probably turn it over to me in any case."
+
+"But this is not--er--a matter of business. Not exactly. Not a business
+matter at all, in fact. It is a matter which--"
+
+"Oh, there you are!" Miss Annabel's voice was breathless but gratified
+and free from the faintest suspicion of having arrived, as usual, at
+exactly the wrong moment. "Are you showing Esther the new rose, Angus?
+Such a disappointment, Esther, my dear! I had quite made up my mind that
+it was to be red. It came out pink, and such a beautifully strong
+plant--such a waste! I simply can't make myself care for pink roses.
+They are so common. Was I very long? You must both be starved. I know I
+am. Won't you come upstairs, Esther, and put off your hat?"
+
+Esther intimated that she would. Just now, she had no desire for the
+further company of Mr. Macnair. She was conscious even of a faint
+stirring of dislike. Therefore the eagerness with which she followed
+Miss Annabel filled that good lady with hospitable reproach.
+
+"I didn't intend to be so long," she apologised, "but you know what
+choir-leaders are? And Angus won't speak to him. I can't make Angus out
+lately. Tell me," abruptly, as they stood in the cool front room with
+its closed green shutters, "did _you_ notice anything peculiar
+about Angus?"
+
+"No," in surprise, "is he peculiar?"
+
+"Quite. He's getting fussy. He never used to be fussy. The trouble was
+to induce him to be fussy enough. Except over church matters. But this
+morning he was just like an ordinary man. About his collar" (Miss
+Annabel had a fascinating habit of disjointing her sentences anywhere)
+"nothing suited him. And you know, Esther, what care I always take with
+his collars. He said they were too shiny. Of course they're shiny. Why
+not? He said he noticed that men weren't wearing shine on their collars
+now. Fancy that!"
+
+"Not really?" Esther's fresh laugh rang out.
+
+"Well, words to that effect. He asked me if I wanted to make him a
+laughing stock before the congregation. Did you ever? And he _banged
+the door_!"
+
+"Does he not bang doors usually?"
+
+"Never. And he banged it hard. It shook the house."
+
+"But people have to bang doors, hard, sometimes, even ministers. I
+wouldn't worry if I were you. It probably did him the world of good. As
+for the collars--he may have been noticing Dr. Callandar's. Mrs. Sykes
+says the doctor sends all his laundry to the city."
+
+"You don't say? And is it different from ours?"
+
+"I--yes, I think it does look different."
+
+"How did you happen to notice it? Oh, Esther, you aren't really carrying
+on with that strange young man, are you?"
+
+The girl's cheek flamed. The question, she knew, was void of offence.
+"Carrying on" meant nothing, but the homely phrase seemed suddenly very
+displeasing--horribly vulgar! Her very ears burned. What if, some time,
+he should hear a like phrase used to describe their wonderful
+friendship? The thought was acute discomfort. Oh, how mean and small and
+misunderstanding people were!
+
+She took off her hat and smoothed her hair without answering. But Miss
+Annabel was so used to having her anxious queries unanswered that she
+did not notice the lack.
+
+"I know you haven't, of course," she went on. "But Coombe is such a
+place for gossip. Ever since you and he had that smash-up with the
+automobile, people have kind of got it into their heads that you're
+keeping company. But I said to Mrs. Miller, 'I know Esther Coombe better
+than you do and it isn't at all likely that a girl who can pick and
+choose will go off with a stranger--even if he is a doctor. And,' I
+said, 'how do we know he is a doctor anyway?' Goodness knows he came
+into the place like a tramp. You've heard, haven't you, Esther, how he
+came into the Imperial with nothing but a knapsack and riding in
+Mournful Mark's democrat?"
+
+This time she did pause for an answer and Esther said "Yes," shortly.
+
+"Then that settles it. I knew you had some sense. Just like I said to
+Mrs. Miller. Next time I see her I'll tell her what you say. 'Tisn't as
+if we knew anything about the man. No wonder you feel vexed about it."
+
+"I hope you will not mention the subject at all."
+
+"Of course not. Except to tell them how silly they are. You're sure you
+didn't notice anything queer about Angus when you were walking home
+from church?"
+
+"Nothing at all." Yet, as she said it, it occurred to her that she had
+noticed something unusual in the minister's manner--an agitation, a lack
+of poise! "Perhaps he is disturbed about church matters," she suggested,
+thinking of the interrupted conversation about the important matter
+which was not business. "Why don't you ask him?"
+
+Miss Annabel shook her head. "Oh, I never ask him anything! But,"
+cheerfully, "I almost always manage to find out. I'm rather good at
+finding out things. But this isn't a church matter. I know all the
+symptoms of that. This is different. It's--it's more human!"
+
+"Liver?" suggested Esther.
+
+"No. I know the symptoms of liver too, Esther! What if it should be
+_Love_!"
+
+The idea was so daring that Miss Macnair justly spoke it in italics. But
+the attitude of her listener was disappointing. Esther looked as if it
+might be quite a natural thing for the minister of Knox Church to
+fall in love.
+
+"Love!" she said the word caressingly. "Perhaps it is. They say love is
+a disturbing thing. But--does it usually make a man bang doors?"
+
+"It often turns a sensible man into a fool." Miss Annabel's tone held
+bitterness. "But what I can't discover is this! If Angus is in love,
+whom is he in love with?" The question was delivered with such force
+that Esther jumped.
+
+"I'm sure I don't know!"
+
+"Nor do I. And that is what I must find out. I have my suspicions. My
+dear, don't let me startle you, but have you ever thought that it might
+possibly be--your mother?"
+
+"Gracious! So it might! I never thought of it."
+
+"I have not been blind," went on Miss Annabel complacently. "I have
+noticed how often he calls at the Elms and how long he stays. Also how
+very considerate he is of Mrs. Coombe, how patient with Jane, how
+indulgent with you--"
+
+"Indulgent with me!" indignantly. "Why should he be 'indulgent' with
+me?"
+
+"Why, indeed," asked Miss Macnair pointedly, "unless on account of your
+mother?"
+
+Esther subdued a desire to laugh. Many little things, half-observed,
+seemed to fit in with Miss Annabel's theory. Yet, somehow, instinct told
+her that the theory was wrong.
+
+"I don't believe it," she declared finally. "At first I thought it
+possible but now I seem to know that we're on the wrong track. Mr.
+Macnair is not in love with mother, and as for mother--Oh, the thing is
+absurd! Aren't you awfully hungry, Miss Annabel?"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+
+It was a curious luncheon party. The host was abstracted, nervous, far
+from being his usual bland self. The guest was subdued, silent, uneasy
+for no reason at all. The hostess, usually an ever-springing well of
+comment and question, had decided upon quiet dignity as the most fitting
+expression of sensibilities ignored by the banging of doors.
+
+"I think, Angus," she ventured once, "that you ought to remonstrate with
+Mr. McCandless in regard to 'If a man die.' An Easter Anthem is an
+Easter Anthem, but after five renderings it is hardly fair to expect the
+congregation to behave as if they had never heard it before."
+
+"Quite so," said the minister absently.
+
+"Then may I tell him myself that it is your special request--"
+
+"Certainly not. I wish you would not interfere, Annabel. The choir does
+very well. I think I have told you before that your continual desire for
+something novel in music has not my sympathy. I am not sure that I
+approve of this growing craze for anthems. They seem to me, sometimes,
+wholly unconnected with worship. We do not ask for new hymns every
+Sunday, nor do we ever become weary of the psalms. Indeed, familiarity
+seems often the measure of our affection."
+
+"Net with anthems," firmly. "Anthems are different. Aren't anthems
+different, Esther?"
+
+"I have known familiarity to breed something besides affection in the
+case of anthems," agreed Esther.
+
+In the ordinary course of things this remark would have aroused her host
+into delivering a neat and timely discourse upon the proper relation of
+music to the service of the Protestant Church and the tendency of the
+present age to unduly exalt the former at the expense of the latter. But
+to-day he merely upset the salt and looked things at the innocent
+salt-cellar which his conscience, or his cloth, did not allow him
+to utter.
+
+Miss Annabel raised her eyebrows at Esther in a significant way,
+telegraphing, "What did I tell you?" And Esther signaled back, "You were
+right. He is certainly not himself."
+
+Several other topics were introduced with no better result and every one
+felt relieved when lunch was over.
+
+"I think," said the Reverend Angus, as they arose, "that it is probably
+pleasanter in the garden."
+
+Esther glanced at Miss Annabel. She wanted very much to go home. Yet in
+Coombe it was distinctly bad mannered to leave hurriedly, after a meal.
+She thought of pleading a headache, but the excuse seemed too
+transparent and she could think of nothing better. Miss Annabel was
+unresponsive. Her host was already moving toward the door. Now he held
+it open for her. There was nothing to do but go. If she were clever she
+could keep the conversation in Miss Annabel's hands.
+
+But Miss Annabel's brother had other ideas. "I think," he suggested with
+the soft authority which in that house was law, "that as you are taking
+Mrs. Miller's class, Annabel, it might be well for you to look over the
+Sabbath School lesson. Our guest will excuse you, I know."
+
+"Why, I've hardly seen her at all, Angus."
+
+"There will be time later. I am sure Miss Esther understands."
+
+Esther understood very well and her heart sank. She was probably in for
+another scolding. However, as politeness required, she murmured that on
+no account would she wish to interfere with the proper religious
+instruction of Mrs. Miller's class. Miss Annabel looked rebellious, but
+as usual found discretion the better part and contented herself with
+another facial telegram to Esther: "Find out what is the matter with
+him." And Esther smiled and nodded: "I'll try."
+
+"Perhaps you would like to see the rose bush to which my sister
+referred," began the minister nervously as they stepped out upon the
+lawn. "It is a very fine rose, but pink, I regret to say, pink. It is
+unfortunate that Annabel should dislike pink so much. I think myself
+that a pink rose is very pretty. Something a little different from the
+red and white varieties."
+
+Esther murmured, "Naturally," and opened her strange eyes widely so
+that he could see the mischief which was like a blue flash in the depths
+of them. He coloured faintly.
+
+"I fear I am talking nonsense! The fact is that I am thinking of
+something else. Something so important that it occupies my mind
+completely. That is why, Esther, I wished to speak with you alone."
+
+The girl was thoroughly interested now. She was flattered also. Miss
+Annabel had been right. Something was troubling the minister. And she,
+Esther, was to be his confidant. To her untroubled, girlish conceit
+(girls are very wise!) it seemed natural enough. She had no doubt of
+her ability to help him. Therefore her face and her answering "Yes?"
+were warmly encouraging.
+
+It is a general belief that a woman always knows, instinctively, when a
+man is going to propose to her. She cannot be taken unawares; her
+flutter, her surprise, her hesitancy are assumed as being artistically
+suitable, but her unpreparedness is never bona fide. If this be the true
+psychology of the matter then Esther's case was the exception which
+proves the rule. No warning came to her, no intuition. She was still
+looking at the minister with that warm expression of impersonal
+interest, when, without further preliminaries, he began his halting
+avowal of love.
+
+Had the poor pink rose-bush suddenly flamed into crimson she could
+scarcely have been more surprised. She caught her breath with the shock
+of it! But shocks are quickly over. One adjusts one's self with
+incredible swiftness. A moment--and it seemed to Esther that she ought
+to have been expecting this. That she ought to have known it all along.
+Thousands of trifles mocked at her for her blindness, thousands of
+unheeded voices shrieked the truth into her opened ears. She felt
+miserably guilty. Not yet had she arrived at the stage when she could
+justify her blindness and deafness to herself. Later, she would
+understand how custom, the life-long habit of regarding the minister as
+a man apart, had helped to dull her perception. Later, common sense
+would prove her innocent of any wilful blunder. But just now, in her
+first bewilderment, it seemed that nothing could ever excuse that lack
+of understanding which had made this declaration possible!
+
+"I love you, Esther! I have loved you for two years." (It was like the
+Reverend Angus to refer to the exact period.) "You must have seen it.
+This can be no surprise to you. You may blame me in your heart for not
+speaking sooner. But you were young. There seemed time enough. Then,
+lately, when I saw that you were no longer a child, I decided to speak
+as soon as your mother should have returned. But to-day I felt that I
+could not wait longer. I must know at once--now! I must hear you say
+that you love me. That you will be my wife. You will--Esther?"
+
+His impassioned tones lingered on the name with ecstasy.
+
+The startled girl forced herself to look at him, a look swift as a
+swallow's dart, but in it she saw everything--the light on his face--the
+love in his eyes! And something else she saw, something of which she did
+not know the name but from which, not loving him, she shrank with an
+instinctive shiver of revolt. He seemed a different man. The minister,
+the teacher, was gone, and in his place stood the lover, the claimer.
+Yes--that was it. He claimed her, his glance, his voice--somewhere in
+the girl's heart a red spark of anger began to glow.
+
+She tried to speak, but he silenced her by a gesture. "No, do not answer
+yet. Although you must have known what I have felt for you, you are
+startled by my suddenness, I can see that. I have told you that it was
+not my intention to speak so soon. Circumstances have hurried me. I felt
+that I must have this settled. That--that episode of last week alone
+would have determined me. Things like that must not recur. I must have
+the right to advise, to--to protect you. You are so young. You do not
+know the world, its wickedness, its incredible vileness." His face was
+white with intense inward passion. "With me you will be safe. My God!
+to think of you at the mercy of that man--of any man! It stirs a madness
+of hate in me. Hate is a sin, I know, but God will understand--it is
+born of love, of my love for you."
+
+Again the girl tried to force some words from her trembling lips. And
+again he stopped her.
+
+"Do not speak yet. I apologise for my violence. Forgive it. We need not
+refer to this aspect of the matter again. Let us dwell only upon the
+sweeter idea of our love--for you do love me? You will love me--Esther?"
+
+But the time for speech had gone. To her own intense surprise and to the
+minister's consternation, Esther burst into tears.
+
+She was frightened, angry, stung with pity and a kind of horror. She
+felt herself honoured and insulted at the same time; and with this
+strange medley of emotions was a consciousness of youth and inexperience
+very different from the calm, untried confidence of a few
+minutes before.
+
+"Forgive me, forgive me!" pleaded the conscience stricken suitor. "I
+have been too sudden! I should have prepared you. I should have allowed
+you to see more plainly." With a lover's first, fond air of possession
+he attempted to take her hand.
+
+"Don't!" The word was sharp as a pistol shot. Esther's tears were
+suddenly stayed. Furtively she slipped the hand he had touched behind
+her. With the other she felt for her handkerchief and frankly wiped
+her eyes.
+
+"You startled me," she explained presently. "And I am so sorry, so very
+sorry! I never dreamed that you thought of me at all--in that way, any
+more than I have thought of you. You honour me very much. But it is
+impossible. Quite, quite impossible."
+
+"You mean my position here, as minister? Believe me, I have thought of
+all that. There may be difficulties but we will conquer them together.
+Nothing is impossible if you love me, dear."
+
+"Oh!" She turned wide blue eyes upon him. "That is just it. I do not
+love you."
+
+The blow fell swift, unerring, dealt by the mercilessly honest hand of
+youth. Esther's eyes were quite dry now. Her nervousness was passing.
+Regret and pity were merged in one overpowering, instinctive desire: the
+desire to show him beyond all manner of doubt that she repudiated that
+possessive touch upon her hand. "I could not ever possibly marry you,"
+she said, as calmly as if she had been accustomed to dismissing suitors
+all her life.
+
+They were still standing by the rose-bush whose desperate fate it was to
+produce pink roses. With incredulous dismay, the minister saw her turn
+from him and take a step toward the house.
+
+She had refused him! She was leaving him! At any moment Annabel might
+finish her Sunday School lesson and come out upon the lawn--all his
+self-possession vanished like a puff of smoke.
+
+"Esther!" he cried, "Esther! wait. Give me a moment."
+
+She paused, but did not turn.
+
+"I think there is nothing more to say--I am very sorry."
+
+Sorry! She was sorry. This young girl upon whom he had set his desire,
+of whom he had felt so sure, to whom his love should have come as a
+crown, was sorry. King Cophetua, flouted by the beggar maid, could not
+have been more astonished, more deeply humiliated!
+
+But the greater wound was not to his pride. At any cost to his dignity
+and self-respect he could not let her go like this. His ministerial
+manner fell away, his readiness deserted him. In a moment he became all
+lover, pleading, entreating, with the one great abandon of his life,
+with the stammering eloquence of unspeakable desire!
+
+Slowly the girl turned to him. He saw her pure profile, then the full
+charm of her changing face. The blue eyes, widely open, were darker,
+lovelier than ever--Surely there was softening in their depths....
+
+"Es--ther, Es--ther!" Miss Annabel's voice broke upon the tense moment
+with cheerful insistence, and Miss Annabel herself appeared at the turn
+of the walk, waving a slip of paper. She saw them at once.
+
+"You're wanted at home, Esther. Your mother's come back. To-day! Think
+of that! On the noon train. In face of the whole town. And all she said
+when Elder MacTavish met her coming up from the station was that she had
+forgotten it was Sunday. Fancy!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+
+Perhaps never, in all her life of inopportune arrivals, had Miss Annabel
+been so truly welcome--or so bitterly resented! Esther turned to her
+with a heart-sob of relief, the minister walked away without a word.
+
+"Dear me! What's the matter?" said the good lady. "You seem all excited.
+Perhaps I shouldn't have shouted out the news so abruptly. But it never
+occurred to me that you might be startled. 'Tisn't as if your mother had
+been away a year. Jane's waiting for you down by the gate. Such a
+peculiar child! Nothing I could say will induce her to come in. Don't
+you find Jane is a peculiar child, Esther?"
+
+"Only a little shy," said Esther, quickening her steps.
+
+"Shy! Mercy, I shouldn't call her shy. That child has the
+self-possession of a Chinee! I hope you won't mind me saying it, but a
+little shyness is exactly what Jane needs."
+
+Esther, whose shaken nerves threatened hysterical laughter, made no
+reply to this, but hurried toward the small figure by the garden gate.
+
+"Oh, Jane!" she called, somewhat shakily.
+
+At her voice, the Shy One stopped kicking holes in the turf with the
+toes of her new boots and executing a bearlike rush, threw herself into
+her sister's arms.
+
+"I'm home, Esther! So's mother! And she says I don't have to go to
+Sunday School. That's why I didn't want to come in. Let's hurry before
+the minister comes."
+
+"Listen to that!" said Miss Annabel in indignation. "Any one would
+think my brother was an ogre. Angus! Why, he's gone! I thought he was
+following us."
+
+"I think Mr. Macnair went into the house."
+
+"Did he? What did I tell you? Perhaps my news surprised him as well as
+you. I thought he looked as pale as a plate. What do you think?"
+
+"I think it is none of our business."
+
+Miss Annabel gave her a shrewd look. "Perhaps not your business. You
+don't have to live with him. But I do. Well, good-bye, my dear. Tell
+your mother," significantly, "that I'll be over to see her soon."
+
+Both girls were relieved that the minister did not leave his study to
+say good-bye. They breathed more freely and their steps slackened as
+soon as the corner which hid the manse had been safely passed.
+
+"I've got new boots," began Jane. "See them? And Fred's new dog has got
+puppies! He calls her Pickles. She got the puppies this morning. Oh!
+they're darlings! But Fred is horrid. He says he is going to give me one
+for my own, to make up for Timothy. Just as if anything ever could! I
+never knew any one so heartless as Fred--except Job."
+
+"Job who?" It was a relief to Esther to let the childish chatter run on.
+
+"Why, _Job_. Job was just like Fred. When all his wives died and his
+little children and his cows, he felt bad, but when God gave him more
+wives and more children and lots of cows he was pleased as Punch. I
+always thought that so strange of God," in a reflective tone, "but I
+expect he knew what kind of man Job was and that he didn't have any real
+feelings. Do you think I ought to take the puppy, Esther? I shouldn't
+like to be like Job."
+
+"I think there is no danger, dear. But how is mother? Better?"
+
+"Was she sick?" in surprise.
+
+"Her headaches, you know."
+
+"Oh, yes. I don't know whether they are better or not," carelessly. "I
+didn't see much of mother while we were away. I played all day with Mrs.
+Bremner's little girl. Except when we went shopping. I think she must be
+better, for she did such lots of shopping."
+
+Esther smiled. "Not very much, I think, Janie. Shopping takes money."
+
+"But she did! I have lots and lots of new clothes. Only,"
+discontentedly, "most of them don't fit. Mother could never be bothered
+trying them on. She's got some lovely things, too. Dresses and hats and
+piles of new shoes and heaps of silk stockings--"
+
+"Jane, why do you say 'lots' and 'piles' and 'heaps' when you know you
+are exaggerating?"
+
+But there was a note of anxiety in the reproof nevertheless.
+
+"I'm not exaggerating, Esther! She did. Even Miss Bremner asked her what
+she was going to do with them all."
+
+The elder girl's fingers tightened upon the small hand she held. Her red
+lips set themselves in a firm line. In face of a danger which she could
+see and measure Esther had courage enough. And she had faced this
+particular danger before.
+
+"Mother will tell me all about it, no doubt," she said calmly. "Did she
+get me something pretty, too?"
+
+"Yes. It's a surprise."
+
+"And when she got all the pretty things I suppose she told the clerks to
+charge them?"
+
+"Oh, no. She paid for them out of her purse."
+
+Esther was conscious of a swift reaction. The things were paid for. Of
+course Jane had exaggerated. Children have no sense of value. Some
+dainty things, Mrs. Coombe was sure to buy; but, as Esther well knew,
+her slender stock of money would hardly have run to "piles" and "heaps."
+And of course she had been unjust in fearing that Mary had gone into
+debt. They had one experience of that kind, an experience which had
+ended in a solemn promise that it would never happen again. Mary
+understood the position as well as she did.
+
+As the girl's thought trailed naturally into the problem paths of every
+day, her weeks of freedom, her new interests, the strange experience in
+the manse garden seemed already remote. With the little frown of
+accustomed perplexity slipping in between her straight, black brows, her
+deeper agitation quieted. The unusual has no antidote so effective as
+the commonplace.
+
+They found Mrs. Coombe waiting for them on the veranda. Lying back in
+the shade, in her white dress she looked very much at her ease. Yet a
+quick observer might have noticed a certain anxiety in the glance she
+tried to render merely welcoming. She was thinner than she had been;
+tired lines dragged at the corners of the pouting mouth and dark circles
+showed plainly through their dusting of pearl powder. Changes which
+creep in unnoticed when one sees a person every day are startlingly
+apparent when absence has forced a clearer focus. Esther had known that
+her step-mother had changed, was changing, but as she bent over her now,
+the extent of the change shocked her. With a tightening at her heart
+she wondered what her father would say if he could see the difference
+wrought by one short year. Pearl powder, lavishly used, is not becoming,
+especially when it sifts into multitudes of fine lines; nor can powder
+or anything else brighten a dull, yellowing skin which in health would
+still be delicately clear and firm.
+
+But the dulled eyes and the faded face were only the symptoms of the
+real change in Mary Coombe. The thing itself lay deeper. Striving to
+express a subtlety which would not lend itself to words, Esther had more
+than once told herself that her mother was "not the same woman." Yet it
+was only to-day, as she stooped to kiss her, that the startling, literal
+truth of the phrase struck home. The outside changes were nothing--it
+was the woman herself who had changed.
+
+"Well, Esther!" The sweet high voice with its impatient note was the
+same as ever. "Here we are home again. Fancy me forgetting it was
+Sunday! Wasn't it funny? We met old MacTavish coming up from the station
+(not a single cab down to meet the train, of course!) and he looked so
+shocked. Really, this place grows more insufferable every day. It seems
+to agree with you, though, you're looking awfully well. Amy looks well,
+too. The new doctor must be something of a wonder."
+
+"He is considered very clever. Aunt Amy is certainly better. Now that
+you are home you must let him see what he can do for you."
+
+Mrs. Coombe's pouting lips lengthened into a hard line.
+
+"I won't see a doctor. And that's flat."
+
+"Are you feeling better, then?"
+
+As was always the case, her mother's perversity dissipated Esther's
+sympathy and left her tone cold. It was all the colder probably because
+just at that moment she had noticed that the simple white frock Mrs.
+Coombe was wearing was not simple at all. The delicate embroidery on it
+was all hand work. And French embroidery is no inexpensive trifle. It
+was probably a new "best" gown; but if so, why had it been worn on the
+train, why was it soiled in places and carelessly put on? The skirt was
+not even, the collar, having lost a support, sagged at one side and just
+below the girdle belt there was a small, jagged rent. Esther noticed
+these details with vexation and discomfort, for it was part of the
+change in Mary Coombe that from being one of the most carefully gowned
+women in town she had become one of the most slovenly. All her natty,
+pretty, American "style" which the plainer Canadians had sometimes
+envied was gone. But this--this was worse than usual! The girl's quick
+eyes travelled downward, noting the increased signs of deterioration
+with something like distress.
+
+"Why, mother," she exclaimed involuntarily, "there is a hole in your
+stocking!"
+
+"Is there?" Mary Coombe thrust out a small and elegant foot clad in
+thinnest silk and shod with pretty slippers not very clean and turning
+over at the heel.
+
+"Dear me!" she said. "So there is. I need new slippers too. I quite
+forgot to get any."
+
+"Oh, mother!" Jane's cry was instant. "You got heaps. Tan ones and brown
+ones and white ones and black ones with silver buckles--"
+
+"Jane!" interrupted Esther, laughing. "Give your imagination a rest."
+
+"But you did, didn't you, mother?"
+
+"Did I? Why, yes--I did buy a few shoes. I had forgotten. The Customs
+man didn't find them either. Run and fetch me a clean white pair, Jane,
+and bring down the surprise we got for Esther--see how disapproving she
+looks. I declare, Esther, it would be just like you to make things
+disagreeable the moment I get home. I didn't charge a cent, if that's
+what you're afraid of."
+
+"I knew you wouldn't do that," gravely. "And of course I'm glad you got
+the things. But I can't see how you managed."
+
+"Oh, sales," vaguely. "Things are so cheap in Detroit and Jessica
+Bremner is a born shopper. She gets wonderful bargains. Anyway, I got
+them, and I'm not a cent in debt."
+
+"What's debt?" asked Jane.
+
+"Buying what you can't pay for, Janie."
+
+"Oh, mother paid for everything. I saw her. It's Mrs. Bremner that's in
+debt, isn't she, mother?"
+
+"Don't be silly, Jane, of course not. Jessica is far better off than we
+are."
+
+"But she only gave you half the money for the ring. I heard her say--"
+
+"Jane, get those slippers at once."
+
+"I'm going. But Mrs. Bremner said--"
+
+Mrs. Coombe's hand came down with stinging force upon the child's ear.
+
+"Will you obey me--or will you not?"
+
+Jane retired wailing and her mother sank back into her veranda chair,
+red spots burning through the powder on her cheeks.
+
+Esther sat very still for a moment, and then, without looking at the
+other, she asked in a low voice:
+
+"What did she mean?"
+
+"How should I know?" fretfully.
+
+"What ring did Mrs. Bremner give you money for? Did--you have to sell
+one of your rings?"
+
+"Yes, I did."
+
+"Which one?"
+
+"Oh, don't bother me, Esther."
+
+"But I want to know which one."
+
+"It was the big red one!" called Jane from the hallway, where she had
+waited, safely out of reach.
+
+Mary Coombe sprang up, fury blazing in her eyes, but Jane had fled, and
+Esther, cool and capable, was blocking the doorway.
+
+"Sit down, mother. I've got to know about this. What ring does she
+mean?"
+
+For an instant the older woman hesitated, then with a little shrug she
+turned back to the chair. The fury had died away as quickly as it
+had arisen.
+
+"I knew you would be disagreeable," she said. "And you were bound to
+hear about the ring some time. Jane is the most ungrateful child, and a
+little tell-tale; the makings of a regular little cat! I'm sure I spent
+her full share on her, and I've brought you something nice, too. Not
+that I expect to be thanked for it. Of course I had to have some money.
+I hadn't a rag to wear, not a rag. And I got everything ready made. It's
+cheaper. Anyway, I can't stand dressmakers any more. They paw one so. I
+can't bear to be touched, my wretched nerves! And I remembered the fuss
+you made about the bills last time. You know you did make a fuss,
+Esther, as if all your dear father left belonged to you and not to me--"
+
+"But what did you _do_?"
+
+"I'm telling you, amn't I? I sold the ring, of course."
+
+"Which ring?"
+
+"The ruby ring. It's the only one that is worth anything!"
+
+"You sold Aunt Amy's ring?"
+
+"If you wish to put it that way, yes. I consider it is as much my ring
+as hers. She is my aunt and it is understood that all her things will
+come to me. She has lived here ever since I was married and I think it's
+a funny thing if she can't help me out occasionally. I simply had to
+have money and the ruby was the only thing worth selling. Good Heavens!
+Don't look so crazy. One would think I had stolen it!"
+
+"You have."
+
+Again Mrs. Coombe arose; this time without flurry. The little excitement
+had done her good. The dull eyes were actually sparkling, the sallow
+cheeks were flushed. She looked just as she used to look in one of her
+little rages before the great change came.
+
+"That's enough, Esther. I'll take no more from you. I did what seemed to
+me right. If Amy were in her right mind I should not have had to take
+the ring, she would have offered it. Under the circumstances I did the
+only sensible thing. Amy will never discover the loss. I am getting a
+very good price for it from Jessica Bremner. It is a valuable jewel. She
+snatched at the chance of getting it."
+
+Behind its whiteness Esther's face seemed to glow with pale flame. "Is
+it possible that you have forgotten the history of that ring?" she
+asked. "That it was poor Auntie's engagement ring and that, although she
+can't remember anything about it, she knows it means something more than
+life to her. And that she always says that she cannot die without the
+ruby on her finger?"
+
+Mrs. Coombe looked uncomfortable, but kept her poise.
+
+"It's all rubbish. She'll forget all about it. Dying people don't think
+of ruby rings. And anyway, she will probably outlive all of us. If
+not--we can easily divert her attention."
+
+The girl looked at her step-mother in horror, half believing that this
+must be some cruel joke. The callousness of the words seemed
+unbelievable. But the reality of them could no longer be doubted and the
+pale glow died out of her face, leaving it white and hard.
+
+"I do not understand you," she said slowly. "Somehow you do not seem
+quite--human. But be sure of this, Aunt Amy shall have back her lover's
+ring. Jane says it has not all been paid for. How much did you receive?"
+
+"I shall not tell you. And I warn you, Esther, not to waste your money.
+If you buy it back, I shall sell it again."
+
+They were standing now facing each other. Esther took a step forward and
+looked down steadily into her step-mother's face. Her own curious eyes
+were wide open, they looked like blue stars, bright, cold and
+powerful as flame.
+
+"No! You shall not."
+
+For a space Mary Coombe met that sword-like look, then her weaker will
+gave way. Her eyes shifted and fell. Her hands began to pluck nervously
+at the embroidery of her dress. She laughed, a little, affected laugh
+with no mirth in it, turned and entered the house.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX
+
+
+We have stated elsewhere that Coombe was conservative, but by this we do
+not mean to imply that it was benighted. Far from it! True, it talked a
+great deal before it ventured upon anything strange or new, referred
+constantly to the tax rate and ran no risks, but at the time of which we
+write it had decided to take a plebescite upon the matter of Local
+Option and, a little later, the council wished to go so far as to
+present Andrew MacCandless, who had served them five times as mayor,
+with an address and a purse of fifty dollars.
+
+The Presbyterian church, too, although still clinging to solid doctrine,
+was far removed from the tuning-fork stage. Through throes of terrible
+convulsion it had come to possess an organ, a paid soloist, and a
+Ladies' Aid, that insidious first thing in women's clubs.
+
+The first meeting of the Knox Church Ladies' Aid, after the return of
+Mrs. Coombe and Jane, was held for the purpose of putting together a
+quilt, not the old-fashioned kind, of course, but something quite
+new--an autograph quilt, very chaste.
+
+It was a large meeting and, providentially, Mrs. Coombe was late. I say
+providentially because, had she been early, it is difficult to imagine
+how her fellow members would have eased their minds of the load of
+comment justified by her indiscreet home-coming, and several other
+things equally painful but interesting. The Ladies' Aid had its printed
+constitution but it also had its unwritten laws and one of these laws
+was that strictest courtesy must always be observed. No member, whatever
+her failings, was ever discussed in meeting--when she was present.
+
+"What I cannot excuse," said Mrs. Bartley Simson, "is the tone of levity
+in which she answered Mr. MacTavish when he met her on the way from the
+station. It is possible that she had some good reason for coming on that
+particular train. I am not one of those who hold that nothing can ever
+justify Sunday travel. Exceptional cases must be allowed for. But the
+frivolity of her excuse nothing can justify."
+
+"Besides," said Miss Atkins, the secretary, "it was a--it sounded
+like--what I mean to say is that she could not possibly, _no one_ could
+possibly, have forgotten what day of the week it was."
+
+A subdued chorus of "Certainly not" and "Absurd" showed the trend of
+public opinion upon this point.
+
+"I once forgot that Wednesday was Thursday," said the youngest Miss
+Sinclair, who always stood for peace at any price.
+
+"Don't be silly, Jessie!" The elder Miss Sinclair, who believed in war
+with honour, jogged her sister's elbow none too gently. "That's a
+different thing altogether. For my own part," raising her voice, "I
+think that as a society we cannot be too careful how we minimise the
+fact itself. To us, as a society, it is the fact itself that matters,
+and not what Mrs. Coombe said about it. That, to a certain extent, may
+be her own affair. But I hold, and I say it without fear of successful
+contradiction, that no member of a community can disregard the Sabbath
+in a public way without affecting the community at large. That is why I
+feel justified in criticising Mrs. Coombe's behaviour. And I hope," here
+she raised a piercing eye and let it range triumphantly over the circle,
+"I sincerely hope that the minister has been told of this occurrence!"
+
+The meeting rustled with approbation. This, it felt, was something like
+a proper spirit. There was no compromise here. A thrill of conscious
+virtue, raised to the _n_th power, shot through the circle.
+
+"You think that Mr. Macnair ought to take cognizance of it officially?"
+asked Miss Atkins. (Being the secretary she used many beautiful words.)
+
+"I do."
+
+"But he and Mrs. Coombe are such friends!" objected the younger Miss
+Sinclair, who was a kindly creature.
+
+An electric silence fell upon the quilters. Every one looked toward the
+president.
+
+"I cannot allow such insinuations to be made at this meeting," said the
+President firmly.
+
+"But--but I did not insinuate anything!" stammered poor Miss Jessie who,
+severely jogged by her sister and transfixed by the President's eye, had
+turned the colour of the crimson square before her.
+
+"We all know," went on the President more mildly, "that Mr. Macnair
+calls fairly often at the Elms. We may even have heard rumours to the
+effect that he intends--I hardly know how to phrase it, but as our
+minister is unmarried and Mrs. Coombe is a widow you will understand
+what I mean. But, ladies, I may state on no less an authority than Miss
+Annabel that Mr. Macnair has no such intentions. There is absolutely
+nothing in it. His calls no doubt may be accounted for by the presence
+of--er--affliction in the house."
+
+"Do you mean Aunt Amy?" A younger woman with a clever and rather pretty
+face looked up. "Why, can't you see that there is a much simpler
+explanation than that?"
+
+It was certainly unfortunate that Mrs. Coombe should have chosen this
+moment to arrive. But the Ladies' Aid were used to interrupted
+statements. It was felt to be very convenient that one of the windows
+looked out directly upon the steps so that the meeting was never quite
+taken by surprise. A sudden pause there might be, but late arrivals had
+learned to expect that. It was the penalty for being late.
+
+"Dear Mrs. Coombe, so glad you have come!" said the hostess pleasantly.
+"No, you are not very late. We are only just beginning."
+
+Every one nodded and smiled. Chairs were moved and sewing shifted to
+provide space for the newcomer. A few left their work in order to shake
+hands and there was a general readjustment of everything, including
+topics of conversation. In the space of a few seconds it was noticed
+that Mrs. Coombe wore a new hat, a new gown, new slippers and silk
+stockings and that in spite of all these advantages they had never seen
+her look worse.
+
+"Dear Mrs. Coombe, I think your belt-pin has become--allow me!" Miss
+Milligan, dressmaker in private life, with a discreet swiftness,
+twitched the blouse and skirt into place and deftly fastened it. At the
+same time she closed a gap in the fastening of the blouse itself.
+
+Mary Coombe laughed. "Dear me! Am I undone? I must have forgotten to
+ask Amy to fix me. These blouses that fasten in the back are such a
+nuisance!"
+
+The President smiled politely, but with evident effort. Mrs. Coombe was
+a prominent member. Still, on principle, she, a president, could not be
+expected to approve of people who forgot to have themselves done up.
+Supposing the minister had been present!
+
+"What are we doing this afternoon?" asked the unconscious delinquent
+languidly. "Autograph quilts? I've got a lot of blocks for you--friends
+of mine in the city." She began to fumble in the pretty workbag she
+carried. "Gracious, I was sure I had them with me! Isn't that odd? I
+can't find them."
+
+"Let me look," suggested Miss Jessie Sinclair kindly.
+
+But the other snatched back the open bag with a gesture which was almost
+rude.
+
+"Oh, no--they are not there! I can't imagine what I have done with
+them." She looked up in a bewildered way. Indeed the perturbation was so
+out of proportion to the size of the calamity that the ladies questioned
+each other with their eyes.
+
+The President tapped with her thimble upon the quilting frame and every
+one became very busy. "I hope," she said, taking the conversation into
+her own hands for safe keeping, "that you found all well upon your
+return, Mrs. Coombe? I hardly ever seem to see Esther now. Did you know
+that we have been talking of changing our meeting to Saturday afternoon
+so that Esther and some more of our younger folk may join us? We thought
+that it would be so nice for them--and for us too," she finished
+graciously.
+
+Mrs. Coombe looked surprised. "I can hardly see Esther at a Ladies' Aid
+Meeting," she said. "Did she tell you she would come?"
+
+"No. We have not yet told any one of the proposed change. But we all
+felt--"
+
+"We all felt," interrupted Miss Sinclair, who was fairly sniffing the
+air with the spirit of glorious war, "that the less time our young girls
+have to go off philandering with young fools whom no one knows anything
+about, the better it will be for everybody concerned!"
+
+Mary looked up with an air of pleased surprise.
+
+"Has Esther been philandering?" she asked eagerly.
+
+The President frowned. This was hardly according to Hoyle.
+
+"I really think," began Miss Jessie Sinclair indignantly, "that Esther
+ought to be allowed to tell her mother--"
+
+"Gracious! Esther never tells me anything. And I'm dying to know. Who is
+the 'young fool'?--do tell me, somebody."
+
+Strangely enough, now that the way was open, no one seemed to have
+anything to say.
+
+"You've simply got to tell me now," urged Mary delightedly. "Unless it's
+only a silly bit of gossip."
+
+This fillip had the desired effect. Everybody began to talk at once and
+in five minutes Esther's step-mother knew all about the new doctor and
+the broken motor. When they paused for breath, she laughed softly.
+
+"It's the most amusing thing I've heard in ages. Fancy--Esther! Oh, it's
+delicious." She looked around the circle of surprised and disappointed
+faces and laughed again. "Oh, don't pretend! You know very well that
+you're not a bit shocked, really. And surely you don't think that I
+ought to scold Esther? Why," with a little flare of her old-time
+loyalty, "Esther is worth a dozen ordinary girls. I'd trust Esther with
+Apollo on a desert island. But I'll admit I'm rather anxious to see the
+young man. He must be rather nice if Esther agreed to show him around.
+As for the accident," she shrugged her shoulders, "I know enough about
+motors to know that that might happen any time."
+
+"You are right, of course," the President's tone was more cordial. "And
+anyway we have no right to discuss Esther's affairs. The reference to it
+grew out of the proposed change of meeting. And the change of meeting
+was thought of chiefly because when Mr. Macnair heard about the escapade
+he seemed much worried. Naturally, as he says, he carries all his young
+people on his heart, and Dr. Callandar being such a newcomer--"
+
+"Oh, yes, naturally." Mary Coombe's little gurgle of amusement had a
+note of cruelty in it, for she alone of all these women had guessed why
+the Rev. Angus Macnair should have taken Esther's escapade so much to
+heart. She knew, too, that the minister had no chance, but the idea of a
+rival was novel--and entertaining. Could Esther really have taken a
+fancy to this young doctor? Mary knew the Coombe gossips too well to
+take their chatter seriously, but there might be something in it. At any
+rate, there was enough to use as a conversational weapon against Esther.
+She was becoming a little nervous of Esther lately. The girl was
+positively growing up. Somehow, almost overnight it seemed, a new
+strength had come to her, a strength which her step-mother's weakness
+felt and resented. But now with this nice little story in reserve,
+things might be more even. Mary's eyes sparkled as she thought of some
+of the smart things she could say the next time Esther began to make a
+fuss about--about the matter of the ruby ring, for instance. Esther had
+been most disagreeable about that. Just as if any one could have
+foreseen that Amy would miss it so soon, or indeed at all, since it had
+been her fancy to keep it shut up in a stupid box.
+
+As a matter of fact, the affair of the ring had assumed the proportions
+of a small catastrophe. Aunt Amy had been feeling so much better that it
+had occurred to her to see if the ring were feeling better too. Only one
+peep she would take, hopeful that at last its strange enchantment might
+be past. If she could look into its depths without the blackness coming
+close she would know, with utter certainty, that Dr. Callandar's
+cleverness had circumvented the power of her old enemies. "They" would
+trouble her no more.
+
+But when, flushed with hope, she looked--the ring was gone!
+
+Esther, reading in the sitting room, was startled beyond words by the
+scream which rang through the house. She seemed to know at once what had
+happened and her gaze flew to her step-mother, laden with bitter
+reproach, before she sped up the stairs to Aunt Amy's room. The door was
+open and the tragedy was plain to see. Aunt Amy stood by the bureau with
+the empty box in her hand and on her face an expression so dreadful, so
+hopeless that, with a sob, the girl tried to crush it out against
+her breast.
+
+"What is it, dear? Don't look like that."
+
+"The ring, Esther! 'They' have taken the ring!"
+
+For an instant the girl hesitated, but common justice demanded that the
+sordid truth be told.
+
+"No, dear. The ring is safe. It was taken from the box, but in quite an
+ordinary, simple way. Don't tremble so! It is not lost. It is just as if
+I had gone to the box and borrowed it--"
+
+As she faltered, the poor woman raised her head in an agony of hope.
+"Have you got it, Esther? Oh, Esther, give it to me! I love you, Esther!
+You shall have it when I am dead. But I can't die without it. I promised
+somebody--I--I can't remember. Oh, Esther, don't keep it away from
+me--give it to me now!"
+
+Bitter, angry tears filled the girl's eyes as she took the pleading,
+fluttering hands in hers.
+
+"Don't, dear! Listen. It is quite safe. But I haven't got it. I promise
+you solemnly I will get it back. You'll believe me, won't you? You know
+I would not deceive you. And you won't be frightened? No one had
+anything to do with taking it but ourselves. I am going to tell you just
+how it happened--"
+
+"Don't bother. I'll tell her myself."
+
+In the doorway stood Mrs. Coombe, her eyes venomous with the anger of
+tortured nerves. Her high voice trembled on the verge of hysteria, yet
+she tried to speak with her usual mocking lightness.
+
+"There is no need to make a mystery of the thing, I'm sure. I took the
+ring because I was hard up--needed money at once. You understand what
+that means, I suppose, Amy? You never wore the ring, nor would you allow
+me to wear it. It was simply wasted lying in that silly box. My own
+jewelry is of much less value. Besides, I use it. One would have thought
+that you would be glad to assist in some way with the--er--household
+expenses. In any case, no such fuss is necessary, and I should advise
+you," her voice grew suddenly cold and menacing, "not to scream like
+that again. A few more such shrieks and--people will begin to wonder."
+Without so much as a glance at Esther she passed on to her own room.
+
+"Don't mind her!" The indignant girl tried to draw the trembling woman
+close. But Aunt Amy cowered away. Five minutes had undone the work of
+weeks. All the doctor's carefully laid foundations were crumbling.
+Esther, wrung with pity and remorse, stroked the grey hair in silence.
+She expected an outbreak of childish tears, but it did not come. Rather,
+the shivering grew less and presently Aunt Amy raised her head.
+
+"It was she--Mary--who took it?" she asked in a whisper.
+
+"Yes. But remember I have promised to get it back."
+
+Aunt Amy looked at her blankly. She did not seem to hear.
+
+"I never guessed it was Mary. Never! But now I know. I'll never be
+fooled again."
+
+"Know what?" asked Esther uneasily. There was a look in Aunt Amy's eyes
+which she disliked, a sly, cool look--more nearly mad than any look she
+had ever surprised there. "Tell me what it is that you know," she
+repeated coaxingly.
+
+But Aunt Amy would not tell. It was just as well, she thought, that
+Esther should not know that at last, after many years, she had found out
+the agent employed by "they" for her undoing. Ah, if she had only found
+out sooner. The ruby ring might still be shining in its box. But of
+course "they" knew that she would never suspect Mary, her own niece.
+They were so clever! But now she could be as clever as they--oh, very,
+very clever!
+
+"What did she mean about my screaming?" she asked, looking at Esther
+cunningly.
+
+"Nothing, nothing at all! Don't think of it."
+
+"But she did. I know what she meant. She meant that if I
+get--troublesome--she will shut me up!"
+
+"Nonsense!" declared Esther, thrilled to the heart with pity. "You must
+never think such a thought, dear. You shall never live anywhere but here
+with us. Why, you are our good angel, Auntie. We could never get on
+without you--you know that."
+
+Aunt Amy nodded, stroking the girl's soft hand with her work-worn one.
+"You are good and kind, Esther. I know you will take care of me, if you
+can. And I'm not afraid just now. It will be all right if I am clever. I
+must not be troublesome. If I am, she will put me away with the mad
+people. The people that make faces and scream. I never scream. Until
+to-day I haven't screamed for a long time. And I'll be more careful. Oh,
+I can be very careful, now that I know!"
+
+Again the strange mad look. It flitted across her lifted eyes like a
+dark shadow behind a window shade. And again Esther tried gently to
+question her, but Aunt Amy was "clever." She didn't intend that Esther
+should find out.
+
+The girl left her at last feeling both troubled and sad, but Mary Coombe
+laughed at her fears. She was in one of her most difficult moods.
+
+"It was all a tempest in a tea cup, as usual," she declared pettishly.
+"I do wish, Esther, that you would not be so disagreeable. She will have
+forgotten all about the ring by to-morrow. All she needs is a little
+plain speaking, and firmness."
+
+"Firmness! Cruelty, you mean. You terrified her."
+
+"Well, it had a good effect. She quieted down at once."
+
+"She is too quiet. It's that which troubles me. Surely you can see the
+damage that has been done? All her new cheerfulness is gone. She is back
+to where she was before the doctor helped her."
+
+"I never believed that any real improvement was possible. Insane people
+never recover."
+
+"She is not insane! How can you say so? But how shall we explain the
+change in her to Dr. Callandar? We can't tell him that--that you--"
+
+"Oh, don't mind me!" flippantly.
+
+"Anyway, the ring will soon be back, thank heaven! I have written to
+Mrs. Bremner."
+
+"You wrote to Jessica?"
+
+"Certainly. I told you I should. It was the only thing to do."
+
+Mary Coombe's rage flickered and sank before the quiet force in the
+girl's face and voice. With all the will in the world she was too weak
+to oppose this new strength in Esther. And before her mortified pride
+could frame a retort, the girl had left the room.
+
+It was of this quiet exit of Esther's that Mary was thinking as she
+sewed on the autograph quilt. Better than anything else it typified the
+change in the girl. It meant decision, and decision meant action. Mary
+shrugged her shoulders and frowned over the quilt. Yes, undoubtedly,
+Esther was getting troublesome. It might be well if she were married.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX
+
+
+Meanwhile, unconscious of her step-mother's troubled musings, Esther was
+loitering delightfully on her way from school. Aunt Amy, who never
+looked at a clock, but who always knew the time by what Jane called
+"magic," was beginning to wonder what had kept her. Strain her eyes as
+she would, there was no glint of a blue dress upon the long straight
+road, and Dr. Callandar, who in passing had stopped by the gate,
+declared that he had noticed a similar absence of that delectable colour
+between the cross roads and the school house.
+
+"I thought that I might meet her," he confessed ingenuously, "but when
+she was not in sight, I concluded that I was too late. Some of those
+angel children have probably had to be kept in. Could you make use of me
+instead? I run errands very nicely."
+
+"Oh, it isn't an errand." Aunt Amy smiled, for she liked Dr. Callandar
+and was always as simple as a child with him. His easy, courteous
+manner, which was the same to her as to every one else, helped her to be
+at once more like other people and more like herself. "It's a letter. I
+wanted Esther to read it to me. Of course I can read myself," as she saw
+his look of surprise, "but sometimes I do not read exactly what is
+written. My imagination bothers me. Do you ever have any trouble with
+your imagination, Doctor?"
+
+"I have known it to play me tricks."
+
+"But you can read a letter just as it's written, can't you?"
+
+"Yes. I can do that."
+
+"Then your imagination cannot be as large as mine. Mine is very large.
+It interferes with everything, even letters. When I read a letter myself
+I sometimes read things which aren't there. At least," with a faint show
+of doubt, "people say they aren't there."
+
+"In other words," said Callandar, "you read between the lines."
+
+Aunt Amy's plain face brightened. It was so seldom that any one
+understood.
+
+"Yes, that's it! You won't laugh at me when I tell you that everything,
+letters, handkerchiefs, dresses and everything belonging to people have
+a feeling in them--something that tells secrets? I can't quite explain."
+
+"I have heard very sensitive people express some such idea. It sounds
+very fascinating. I should like very much to hear about it."
+
+"Would you? You are sure you won't think me queer? My niece, Mary
+Coombe, does not like me to tell people about it. She has no imagination
+herself, none at all. She says it is all nonsense. But I think,"
+shrewdly, "that she would like to know some of the things that I know.
+Won't you come in, Doctor? Come in and sit under the tree where it
+is cooler."
+
+The doctor's hesitation was but momentary. He was keenly interested. And
+at the back of his mind was the thought that Esther must certainly be
+along presently. Fate had not favoured him of late. He had not seen her
+for five days. It is foolish to leave meetings to fate anyway. Then, if
+another reason were needed it was probable that if he stayed he would
+meet Esther's mother. He was beginning to feel quite curious about
+Mrs. Coombe.
+
+"Thanks. I think I will come in. All the trees in Coombe are cool, but
+your elm is the coolest of them all. Let me arrange this cushion for
+you. Is that right?"
+
+He settled Aunt Amy comfortably upon the least sloping portion of the
+old circular bench and, not wishing to trust it with his own weight, sat
+down upon the grass at her feet.
+
+"Now," he said cheerfully, "let us have a regular psychic research
+meeting. Tell me all about it."
+
+"What's that?" suspiciously.
+
+"Psychic research? Oh, just finding out all about the queer things that
+happen to people."
+
+"Do queer things happen to other people besides me?"
+
+"Why, of course! Queer things happen to everybody."
+
+Aunt Amy seemed glad to know this.
+
+"They never talk about them," she said wistfully. "But, then, neither do
+I. Except to you. What was it you wanted me to tell you?"
+
+"Tell me what you mean when you say that you read in a letter what is
+not written there. You see I haven't much imagination myself and I don't
+understand it."
+
+"Neither do I," naively. "But it seems to be like this--take this
+letter, for instance, when I found it in--well, it doesn't matter where
+I found it--but as soon as I picked it up, I knew that it was a love
+letter. I felt it. It is an old letter, I think. And some one has been
+angry with it. See, it is all crumpled. But it is a real love letter.
+All the love is there yet. When I took it in my hands it all came out
+to me, sweet and strong. Like--like the scent of something keen,
+fragrant, on a swift wind. I can't explain it!"
+
+"You explain it very beautifully," gravely. "I can quite understand that
+love might be like that."
+
+"Can you?" with a pleased smile. "And can you understand how I feel it?
+I can feel things in people, too. Love and hate and envy and all kinds
+of things. I never say so. I used to, but people did not like it. They
+always looked queer, or got angry. They seemed to think I had no right
+to see inside of them. So I soon pretended not to see anything. But a
+letter doesn't mind. This one," swinging the crumpled paper swiftly
+close to his face, "is glad I found it. Can't you feel it yourself?"
+
+Callandar shook his head. "I am far too dull and commonplace for that!"
+He smiled. "But I have no doubt it is all there, just as you say. Why
+not? Our knowledge of such things is in its infancy."
+
+Aunt Amy stroked the paper with gentle fingers. "Yes, yes, it is all
+there," she murmured. "But I may have read it wrongly for all that. The
+written words I mean. I can't help reading what I feel. Once I felt a
+letter that was full of hate, dreadful! And I read quite shocking things
+in it. But when Esther read it, it was just a polite note, beginning
+'Dear' and ending 'Your affectionate friend."'
+
+"It might have been very hateful for all that."
+
+"But no one knew it. That is why I am so anxious always to know if I
+read things right. Will you read this letter to me?"
+
+"With pleasure--if I may."
+
+"Oh, it doesn't belong to any one. It isn't Esther's because it's too
+old and it begins 'Dearest wife' and it isn't Mary's because it isn't
+Doctor Coombe's writing; so you see I thought it might not hurt anybody
+if I pretended it was mine."
+
+"No," gently, "I do not see why it would."
+
+"I never had a love letter of my own. Or if I did I cannot find it. The
+only thing I ever had with love in it was the ruby ring, and that--"
+
+She checked herself suddenly; her small face freezing into such a mask
+of tragedy that Callandar was alarmed. But to his quick "What is it?"
+she returned no answer and the expression passed as quickly as it
+had come.
+
+When he held out his hand for the letter, she seemed to have forgotten
+it. Her gaze had again grown restless and vague. It would do no good to
+question further, the rare hour of confession was past.
+
+"You both look very comfortable, I'm sure!" It was Esther's laughing
+voice. She had come so quietly that neither of them had heard her. Aunt
+Amy's vagueness vanished in a pleased smile and Callandar, as he sprang
+to open the gate, forgot all about the unread letter and everything
+else, save that she had come.
+
+Why was it, he wondered, that he could never recall her, save in dulled
+tints. Lovely as she had lingered in his memory, her living beauty was
+so much lovelier. There, in the shade of the elm, her blue dress flecked
+with gold, the warm pallor of heat upon her face, her hair lying close
+and heavy, a little pulse beating where the low collar softly disclosed
+the slim roundness of her white throat, she was not only beautiful, she
+was Beauty. She was not only Beauty, she was Herself, the one woman in
+the world! He acknowledged it now, with all humility.
+
+The girl greeted him quietly. She did not, as was her custom, look up
+at him with that sweet widening of the eyes which he had learned to
+hunger for. The truth was that she, too, was moving slowly toward her
+awakening. The days in which they had not met had been full of thoughts
+of him. Dreams had come to her, vague, delicious bits of fancy which had
+whispered in her ear and passed, leaving a new softness in her eyes, a
+new flush upon her cheek. There was about her a dewy freshness which
+seemed to brighten up the world. Vaguely her girl friends wondered what
+had "come over" Esther Coombe, and at home Aunt Amy's pathetic eyes
+followed her, dim with a half-memory of long past joy. But it was Mrs.
+Sykes' Ann who best expressed the change in her beauty when, one day,
+she said to Bubble: "Esther Coombe looks like she was all lighted up
+inside and when she walks you'd think the wind was blowing her."
+
+So it happened that while yesterday she might still have smiled into the
+doctor's eyes as she greeted him, to-day she shook hands without looking
+at his face at all.
+
+Callandar found himself remarking that it was a fine day. Esther said
+that it was beautiful--but dusty. A little rain would do good. She
+fanned herself with her broad hat, and stopped fanning to examine
+closely a tiny stain on the hem of her frock.
+
+"Dear me," she said, "I'm afraid it's axle grease! Mournful Mark gave me
+a lift this morning."
+
+"Oh, I hope not!" anxiously from Aunt Amy, and referring, presumably, to
+the grease.
+
+The doctor looked at the little stray curl on the nape of the graceful
+neck and wished--all the foolish things that lovers have wished since
+the world began. But he had a great longing to see her eyes. If he were
+to say sharply, "Look at me!" would she look up? Absurd idea! And
+anyway he couldn't say it, or anything else, for the first time in his
+life Henry Callandar was tongue-tied.
+
+Did she, too, feel strange? Was that why she kept her eyes so
+persistently lowered? No, it could hardly be that. She laughed and
+talked quite naturally--seemed entire mistress of herself.
+
+"I know I am late, Auntie. It's Friday, you know, and I walked slowly. I
+forgot that I had promised to help Jane wash the new pup. But there is
+time yet. Supposing we have tea, English fashion, out here. I'll
+tell mother--"
+
+"She is at the Ladies Aid, Esther."
+
+"Oh, yes. I forgot. Well, then you must entertain Dr. Callandar while I
+see about tea."
+
+"No tea for me, thanks," said the doctor hastily. He didn't know why he
+said it except that he wanted to say something, something which might
+make her look at him.
+
+But she did not look. His refusal lost him a cup of tea and gained him
+nothing whatever.
+
+"No tea?" Her tone was mildly wondering, but she was looking at Aunt Amy
+while she spoke. "I'm sorry you are in a hurry. Bubble said you
+were busy."
+
+"Not busy exactly. But it's office hours, you know. My partner grows
+quite waxy if I'm late, and I'm late now."
+
+"Another day, then?" Esther's tone was charmingly gracious, but she
+seemed to be addressing the gate post, as far as he could judge from the
+direction of her gaze.
+
+Callandar picked up his hat, gloomily. There was nothing to do now but
+take his leave. And if he had had any sense he might have been going to
+stay for tea. Office hours be hanged!
+
+"Thank you, another day I shall be delighted." He took the hand she
+offered and bowed over it. Delightful custom this of shaking hands!
+Esther's hand was cool as a wind-blown leaf. Would she actually say
+good-bye without looking at him? He held the hand firmly but she did not
+seem to be conscious that he held it. She was smiling at some children
+who were going by on the sidewalk.
+
+"Good-bye," said Callandar in a subdued voice.
+
+"Good-bye," said Esther sweetly.
+
+He dropped her hand, they bowed formally, and the foolish, poignant
+little tragedy of parting was over. Not once had they looked into each
+other's eyes.
+
+When he had gone Esther sank down upon the elm tree seat.
+
+"Oh, Auntie!" she said with a little sob in her voice. "I want--some
+tea!"
+
+Aunt Amy glanced irresolutely from the open letter in her hand to the
+girl's face, and decided to postpone the matter of the letter. "I'll get
+it, Esther. You sit here and rest."
+
+When she returned the girl seemed herself again. She took the tea-tray
+and kissed the bearer with a fervour born of remorse. "I am a Pig," she
+declared, "and you are a darling! Never mind, we'll even up some day."
+
+"When you have had your tea, Esther, I've got a letter I want you to
+read."
+
+"A letter? Who from? I mean, from whom? Gracious! I'll have to be more
+careful of the King's English, now that I'm a school teacher."
+
+"I don't know. It is signed just 'H' and it's written to 'Dearest wife.'
+You don't know who that could be, do you?"
+
+"Mother, perhaps?"
+
+"No. It's not in your father's writing and his name did not begin with
+'H.'"
+
+"Where did you find it, dear?"
+
+"Up in an old trunk of your grandma's--I mean of Mary's mother's. One of
+the trunks that were sent here after she died. Mary asked me to put moth
+balls in it. This letter was all crushed up in a corner. I took it out
+to smooth it, because I knew it was a love letter. You don't think any
+one would mind?"
+
+"N--o." Esther, who knew Aunt Amy's feeling about love letters, could
+not find it in her heart to disagree. "I think we may fairly call it
+treasure-trove. It's only a note anyway." Her eyes ran swiftly over the
+two short paragraphs upon the open sheet.
+
+"Dearest wife:--
+
+"At last I can call you 'wife' without fear. Our waiting is over. Brave
+girl! If it has been as long to you as to me, you have been brave
+indeed. But it is our day now. Even your mother cannot object any
+longer. I am coming for you to-morrow. Only one more day!
+
+"Dear, I think that in my wild impatience I did you wrong. But love does
+not blame love. No wife shall ever be so loved as you. May God forget me
+if I forget what you have done for me...."
+
+"What a strange letter!" Esther looked up wonderingly.
+
+"Is that all, Esther?" Aunt Amy's face was vaguely disappointed. "The
+one I read was much longer than that."
+
+"That is all that is written here, Auntie. But it is a beautiful letter.
+They had been separated, you see, and she had been brave and waited. One
+can imagine--"
+
+The click of the garden gate interrupted her.
+
+"Here's your mother," said Aunt Amy, in a flurried tone. "Don't let
+her--"
+
+"Is that the mail, Esther?" Mrs. Coombe's high voice held a fretful
+intonation. Aunt Amy seized the letter and hid it in her dress. "She
+shan't see it," she whispered childishly.
+
+"Is that the mail?" repeated Mrs. Coombe, coming up the walk.
+
+"No, there is no mail," said Esther, "No one has been to the post
+office. Perhaps Jane had better run down now."
+
+"But you had a letter," suspiciously. "I'm sure I saw it. Where is it?"
+
+"Don't be absurd, mother. I have no letter. Nor would I think it
+necessary to show it to you if I had. I am not a child."
+
+"You are a child. And let me tell you, a clandestine correspondence is
+something which I shall not tolerate. Let me see the letter."
+
+Esther was feeling too happy to be cross. Besides it was rather funny to
+be accused of clandestine correspondence.
+
+"I think I'll go and help Jane with the pup," she said cheerfully. "Too
+bad you didn't come in sooner, mother. Dr. Callandar was here."
+
+"Then you do refuse to show me the letter?"
+
+"If I had one I should certainly refuse to show it. Why do you let
+yourself get so excited, mother? You never used to act like this. It
+must be nerves. Every one notices how changed you are." She paused,
+arrested by the frightened look which replaced the futile anger on her
+step-mother's face.
+
+"I'm not different. Who says I am different? It is you who are trying
+to make a fuss. I'm sure I do not care about your letter. Why should I?
+Your father always seemed to think you needed no advice from any one.
+Only don't imagine that I am blind. I _saw_ you with a letter."
+
+Having triumphantly secured the last word, she turned to busy herself
+with the tea-tray, and Esther, knowing the uselessness of argument, went
+on toward the house. Aunt Amy attempted to follow but was stopped
+by Mary.
+
+"Amy, what did that doctor want here?"
+
+"He came to see me."
+
+Mary laughed. "Likely!" she said. "This tea is quite cold. Was it he who
+left the letter for Esther?"
+
+"Esther didn't have a letter. I had one."
+
+Again the incredulous laugh, and the dull red mounted into Aunt Amy's
+faded cheeks. She clutched the treasured letter tightly under her dress.
+This mocking woman should never see it! But as she turned again to leave
+her, another consideration appealed to her unstable mind. Mary suspected
+Esther--and nothing would annoy her more than to find herself mistaken.
+On impulse Aunt Amy flung the letter upon the tea-tray.
+
+"There it is. Read it, if you like. It has nothing to do with Esther. Or
+any one else. I found it in one of your mother's old trunks."
+
+Left alone, Mary Coombe drank her tea, which after all was not very
+cold. She was not really interested in the letter, now that she had got
+it. Had not a vagrant breeze tossed it, obtrusively, upon her lap, she
+would probably not have looked at it.
+
+Listlessly she picked it up, opened it, glanced at the firm, clear
+writing....
+
+A sharp, tingling shock ran through her. It was as if some one had
+knocked, loudly, at dead of night at a closed door! That writing--how
+absurdly fanciful she was getting!
+
+"Dearest wife," she read, "at last I can call you 'wife' without
+fear"--the vagrant breeze, which had tossed the letter into her lap,
+tossed it off again. Her glance followed it, fascinated!
+
+Of course she had dreamed the writing? She had been terribly troubled by
+dreams of late. But what had Amy said about finding the paper in her
+mother's trunk? The whole thing was a fantastic nightmare. She had but
+to lean forward, pick up the letter, read it properly and laugh at her
+foolishness.
+
+But it was a long time before she found the strength to pick it up. When
+she did, she read it quietly to the end with its scrawled "H." Then she
+read it over again, word by word. Her expression was one of terror
+and amaze.
+
+When she had finished she looked up, over the pleasant garden, with
+blank eyes. Her face was ashen.
+
+"He came," she said aloud. "He came! But--_what did she tell him when he
+came_?"
+
+The garden had no answer to the question. Somewhere could be heard a
+girl's laugh and the sharp bark of a protesting puppy. Mary Coombe drew
+her hand across her eyes as if to clear them of film and, trying to
+rise, slipped down beside the elm-tree seat, a soft blot of whiteness on
+the green.
+
+They found her there when they had finished washing the puppy, but
+though she came quickly to herself under their eager ministrations, she
+would not tell them what had caused her sudden illness. To all their
+questionings she answered pettishly, "Nothing! Nothing but the heat."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI
+
+
+When a man of thirty-five has at last shaken himself free from the
+burden of an unhappy love affair, he is not particularly disposed to
+welcome an emotional reawakening. He knows the pains and penalties too
+well; the fire of Spring, he has learned, can burn as well as brighten.
+Callandar thought that he had done with love, and a growing suspicion
+that love had not done with him brought little less than panic. Upon the
+occasion of Willits' second visit he had begun to realise his danger and
+the professor never guessed how nearly he had persuaded him to leave
+Coombe. Some deep instinct was urging flight, but the impulse had come
+just a little bit too late. He could not go, because he wanted so very
+much to stay.
+
+After Willits' departure he had deliberately tested himself. For five
+days he did not try to see Esther and upon the sixth he realised finally
+that seeing Esther was the only thing that mattered. Then had come the
+short interview under the elm tree--an interview which had shown him a
+new Esther, demure, adorable, with eyes which refused to look at him. He
+had come away from that meeting with a new pulse beating in his heart.
+
+To doubt was no longer possible. He loved her.
+
+But she? Lovers are proverbially modest, but their modesty is fear
+disguised. They hope so much that they fear to hope at all; it seemed
+impossible to Callandar that Esther should not love him and yet it
+seemed impossible that she should. Only one thing emerged clearly from
+the chaos--the immediate necessity of finding out.
+
+"Why don't you ask her?" demanded Common Sense in that wearily patient
+way with which Common Sense meets the vagaries of lovers.
+
+"But it is so soon," objected Caution, while Fear, aroused, whispered,
+"Be careful. Give her time." Even Mrs. Grundy made herself heard with
+her usual references to what people, represented by Mrs. Sykes, might
+say, adding scornfully, "Why, you haven't met the girl's mother yet.
+Don't make a fool of yourself, please."
+
+But over all these voices rose another voice, insistent, demanding to be
+satisfied. It might be premature, it might be all that was rash and
+foolish but he simply had to find out at once whether or not Esther
+Coombe loved him.
+
+His final decision came one morning when driving slowly home from an all
+night fight with death. He was tired but exultant, because he had won
+the fight, and life, which slips so easily away, seemed doubly precious.
+After all, he was no longer a boy. If life still held something
+beautiful for him, why should he wait? He had waited so many
+years already.
+
+Guiding the car with one hand, he slipped the other into his pocket and
+opening a small locket which he found there, gazed long and earnestly at
+the picture it contained. The face it showed him was a young face, fair,
+rounded, childish. Dear Molly! his thought of her was infinitely tender.
+He loved her all the more for the knowledge that he had not loved her
+enough. Well, he could never atone now. She was gone--slipped away, he
+thought, with but little more knowledge of living than the tiny baby he
+had just helped to bring into the world. Brushing away the mist which
+for a moment blurred his sight, Callandar kissed the picture gently and
+shut the case.
+
+The dawn was golden now. The motor began to gather speed. An early
+farmer getting into market with a load of hay, drew amiably to one side
+to let it pass. From a, wayside house came the cheerful noise of opening
+shutters; a milk cart rattled out of a nearby gate; the motor sped still
+faster--the new day was fairly begun.
+
+Early as it was, Mrs. Sykes was busy washing the veranda. This was a
+ritual, rigorously observed twice every day; in the morning with a pail
+and broom, in the evening with the hose. Par be it from us to malign the
+excellent Mrs. Sykes or to suggest that her opportune presence on the
+front steps was due to anything save the virtue of cleanliness. Mrs.
+Sykes, as she often said, couldn't abide curiosity. Still, it would be
+very interesting to know whether Amelia Hill's latest was a boy or a
+girl. Mrs. Hill had already been blessed with nine olive branches, all
+girls, and had confided to Mrs. Sykes that if the tenth presented no
+variation, she didn't know what on earth Hill would do--he having acted
+so kind of wild-like last time. Mrs. Sykes, unable to resist the trend
+of her nature, had advised that no variation could be looked for. "It
+may be," she had said, "but after a run of nine, it isn't to be
+expected. There's no denying that girls run in some families. I know
+jest how you feel, Mrs. Hill, and, if I could, I'd encourage you, for
+I'm a great believer in speaking the truth in kindness. But it's best to
+be prepared, and a girl it will be, you may be sure."
+
+"You are up early, Mrs. Sykes," said the doctor cheerfully. "Wait till I
+take the car around and I'll finish up those steps for you."
+
+"Land no! I won't let you, Doctor. You're clean tired out. I've got a
+cup of hot coffee waiting. I don't suppose, with Amelia laid aside, any
+of them Hills would think to give you so much as a bite. All girls too."
+
+"Not all girls now, Mrs. Sykes," said the doctor cheerfully. "A son and
+heir arrived this morning. Fine little fellow. They appear to be
+delighted."
+
+The discomfited prophet leaned against the door-post for support.
+
+"A boy? It can't be a boy! It doesn't stand to reason!"
+
+"It never does, Mrs. Sykes."
+
+"And I was so sure 'twould be another girl!" There was an infinitesimal
+pause during which Mrs. Sykes' whole outlook readjusted itself, and then
+with a heavy sigh she continued, "Poor Amelia Hill! She'll certainly
+have her troubles now. I shouldn't wonder a mite if it didn't live.
+Miracles like that seldom do. And if it does, it will be spoiled to
+death. No boy can come along after nine sisters and not be made a sissy
+of. Far better if it had been a girl in the first place. And yet I
+suppose Amelia's just as chirpy as possible? She never was one to look
+ahead to see what's coming."
+
+"Lucky for her!" murmured Callandar, as he picked his way over the
+shining wetness of the veranda. "And now, Mrs. Sykes, I want you to do
+me a favour. Don't go predicting to my patient that her boy baby will
+die, or if he doesn't it would be better for him if he did. A woman who
+has mothered nine children is entitled to a little peace of mind with
+the tenth. Don't you think so?"
+
+"Land sakes, yes. If you put it that way. But the shock will be all the
+worse when it comes. Still, if you want the poor thing left in a fool's
+paradise I don't object. Perhaps it would be a good thing to have the
+three littlest Hills over here to spend a week with Ann. I can stand
+them if you can."
+
+"Good idea!" Callandar smiled at her, but attempted no thanks. He had
+learned early that she was as shy about doing a kindness as a child who
+hides its face, while offering you half of its lolly-pop. "I'll fetch
+them. But some one will have to pick them out. Likely as not I'd bring
+the middle three instead."
+
+"They are dreadful similar," assented Mrs. Sykes, pouring coffee. "I
+don't know but what it was them Hill children that made me a
+suffragette!"
+
+"What?"
+
+Mrs. Sykes did not notice the unflattering (or flattering) surprise in
+the doctor's voice.
+
+"Yes. I think it was the Hill children as much as anything. There they
+are, nine of them, like as peas in a pod, and all healthy. I shouldn't
+wonder if the whole nine grows up--and what then? Amelia Hill just can't
+hope to marry nine of them. Three out of the bunch would be about her
+limit. And what are the others going to get? I say, give them the vote.
+Land sakes! Why not? I ain't one to refuse to others what I don't
+want myself."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII
+
+
+Tired though he must have been, the doctor had never felt less like
+sleep. There was a fever in his blood which the cool quietness of the
+spare room could not soothe. The lavendered freshness of the bed invited
+in vain. Crossing to the western window, he threw up the blind and
+looked out to where, peeping out between roofs and trees, the gable
+window of the Elms glittered in the early sun. The morning breeze blew
+softly on his face, sweet with the scent of flowering pinks and
+mignonette. In the orchard all the birds were up and singing. Every
+blade of grass was gemmed with dew, sparkling through the yellow glory
+of dawn like diamonds through a primrose veil. But Callandar, usually so
+alive to every manifestation of beauty, saw nothing save the distant
+glitter of the gable window. The morning, in which he could hardly hope
+to see Esther, stretched before him intolerably long.
+
+Upon impulse he drew his desk to the window and, sitting down, began to
+write:
+
+"Dear Old Button-Moulder--
+
+"Behold the faulty button about to be recast! This is to be a big day. I
+am writing you now because if she refuses me, I shan't be able to tell
+you of it, and if she accepts me I shan't have time. I fancy you know
+who she is, old man. I saw enlightenment grow in your eyes that day
+after church. I hardly knew it myself, then, but now I am sure. Do you
+remember that house we looked at one day? I have forgotten even the
+street, but we can find it again. It had a long sloping lawn, you
+remember, and stone steps and a beautiful panelled hall running straight
+through to a walled garden which might well have fallen there by some
+Arabian Nights enchantment. That is the house I mean to have for Esther.
+I can see her there quite plainly, in her blue dress, filling the rose
+bowl which stands upon the round table in a dusky corner of the hall.
+Over her shoulder, through the open door, glows the riotous colour of
+the garden. Her pure profile gleams like mother-o'-pearl against the
+dark panelling--say, Willits, just go and look up that house, will you?
+I am going to ask her to marry me. And I never knew before what a coward
+I am. Was there ever a chap named Callandar who quoted uppish remarks
+about being Captain of his Soul? If so, let me apologise for him. I
+think the chap who wrote those verses could never have been in love--or
+perhaps he wrote them after she said 'yes.' I'll telegraph the news.
+Don't expect me to write. And don't dare to come down to see me. H.C.
+
+"P.S.--I came upon a good thing the other day. It is by Galsworthy, the
+chap who writes English problem novels:
+
+ "'If on a spring night I went by
+ And God were standing there,
+ What is the prayer that I would cry
+ To Him? This is the prayer:
+ O Lord of courage grave,
+ O Master of this night of spring,
+ Make firm in me a heart too brave
+ To ask Thee anything!'"
+
+"Rather fine, don't you think? Or is it just a madness of pride? On
+second thought, I don't believe that I have arrived at the stage when I
+can do without God. H."
+
+He folded the letter, stamped and addressed it and placed it upon the
+table in the hall where Ann would find and post it. Then, lighting a
+cigar, he sat down beside the open window and began to wonder how the
+momentous meeting with Esther could be best arranged. Perhaps if he
+walked out to the schoolhouse and waited until lunch time? No, it was
+Saturday morning and there was no school. The obvious thing was to call
+at the house, but this, the doctor felt, was sure to be unsatisfactory.
+Not only was there Jane to think of and Aunt Amy--but there was also the
+as-yet-unknown Mrs. Coombe. The visit would almost certainly end in a
+formal call upon the family. He might perhaps send Bubble over with an
+invitation to go fishing. No, that was too risky. Esther might refuse to
+go fishing and that would be a bad omen.
+
+In a sudden spasm of nervousness Callandar threw the half-burned cigar
+out of the window and, following it with his eyes, was not sorry to be
+distracted by the sight of Ann in her night-dress, crying under the pear
+tree. Ann crying was an unusual sight, but Ann in a night-dress was
+almost unbelievable. The doctor knew at once that something serious must
+have happened and went down to see.
+
+The child looked up at his approach, all the natural impishness of her
+small face drowned in sorrow. In her open hand she held the body of a
+tiny bird, all that was left of a fledgling which had tried its
+wings too soon.
+
+"It toppled off and died," said Ann. "All its brothers and sisters
+flewed away."
+
+"Heartless things!" said Callandar, and then seeing that comfort was
+imperative he sat down beside the mourner and tried to do the proper
+thing. He explained to her that the dead bird was only one of a
+nest-full and that the dew was wet and that she was getting green stains
+on her nightie. He reminded her that birds' lives, for all their seeming
+brightness, are full of danger and trouble. Perhaps the baby bird was
+just as well out of it. At least it would never know the lack of a worm
+in season, nor the bitterness of early snow. This particular style of
+comfort he had found very effective in cases other than baby birds, but
+it didn't work with Ann.
+
+"I don't care," she sobbed, "it might have lived anyway. It never had a
+chance to live."
+
+Living, just living, was with Ann clearly the great thing to be desired.
+
+Callandar stopped comforting and took the child on his knee.
+
+"I believe you've got the right idea, little Ann," he said. "It isn't so
+much the sorrow that counts or the joy either, but just the living
+through it. We're bound to get somewhere if we keep on. Don't cry any
+more and we'll bury the little bird all done up in nice white fluffy
+cotton. As Mrs. Burns says when any one dies: 'It's such a comfort to
+have 'em put away proper.' And then after a while you and Bubble might
+go fishing."
+
+"I can't." Ann showed signs of returning tears. "If Aunt lets me go
+anywhere, I promised to go and help Esther Coombe pick daisies to fix
+the church for to-morrow."
+
+Here was chance being kind indeed! But the doctor dissembled his
+exultation.
+
+"Hum! too bad. Where did Miss Esther tell you to go?" he asked
+guilelessly.
+
+"To the meadow over against the school."
+
+"What time?"
+
+"Half past two."
+
+"Well, cheer up, I'll tell you what--I'll go and help Miss Esther pick
+the daisies. I can pick quite as fast as you. And I'll speak to Aunt
+Sykes and make it right with her. So if you run now and get dressed you
+and Bubble may go just as soon as you've had breakfast. And stay all
+day. Be sure you stay all day, mind."
+
+A good sound hug was the natural answer to this and when the
+conspirators met at breakfast everything had been satisfactorily
+arranged. Ann had her holiday and the doctor's way lay clear before him.
+For all his apparent ignorance Callandar knew that daisy field quite as
+well as Ann. It was wild and lonely, yet full of cosy nooks and hollows.
+Mild-eyed cows sometimes pastured there. It was a perfect paradise for
+meadow-larks. Could any man ask better than to meet the girl he loved in
+a field like that?
+
+"You're not eating a mite, Doctor."
+
+With a start, Callandar helped himself to marmalade.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+So much for the morning of the eventful day. We have given it in detail
+because it was so commonplace, so empty of any incident which might have
+foreshadowed the happenings of the afternoon. Callandar was restless,
+but any man is restless under such circumstances. He found the morning
+long, but that was natural. Long afterwards he thought of its slow
+moving hours, lost in wonder that he should have caught no glimpse,
+heard no whisper, while all the time, through the beauty of the scented,
+summer day, the footsteps of inescapable fate drew so swiftly near.
+Fortunate indeed for us that the fragile house we dwell in is provided
+with no windows on the future side, and that the veil of the next moment
+is as impenetrable as the veil of years.
+
+What are they, anyway, these curious combinations of unforeseen
+incidents which under the name of "coincidence" startle us out of our
+dull acceptance of things? Can it be that, after all, space and
+circumstance are but pieces in a puzzle to which the key is lost, so
+that, playing blindly, we are startled by the _click_ which announces
+the falling of some corner of the puzzle into place? Or is it merely
+that we are all more closely linked than we know, and is "coincidence"
+but the flashing of one of numberless invisible links into the light of
+common day? Some day we shall know all about it; in the meantime a
+little wonder will do us good.
+
+It was, of course, coincidence that this afternoon Mary Coombe should
+offer to gather the marguerites for Esther and that, the Saturday help
+having failed to materialise, Esther was glad of the offer which left
+her free to help Aunt Amy in the kitchen. It was also coincidence that
+Mary should choose to wear her one blue dress and her shady hat which
+looked a little like Esther's. But, given these coincidences, it is easy
+to understand why the doctor, passing slowly by the field of
+marguerites, felt his heart bound at the supposed sight of Esther among
+the flowers.
+
+Now that the moment had really come, his restlessness fell from him. He
+felt cool, confident, happy! The world, the beautiful world, was gay in
+gold and green. Over the rise, half hidden by its gentle undulation, he
+caught the glint of a blue gown--
+
+Running his car under the shade of some nearby trees, the doctor leapt
+the pasture fence in one fine bound. The blue figure among the daisies
+was stooping, her face hidden by a shady hat. No one else was in
+sight--just he and she in all the lovely, sunny, breeze-swept earth! He
+came towards her softly; called her name, but so low that she did not
+hear. Then a meadow-lark, disturbed, flew up with his piercing "sweet!"
+the stooping figure turned and he saw, in the clear sunlight, the face
+under the shady hat--
+
+Had something in his brain snapped? Or was he living through a nightmare
+from which he would awake presently? The world, the daisy field, the
+figure in blue, himself, all seemed but baseless fabrics of some
+fantastic vision!
+
+For, by a strange enchantment, the face which should have been Esther's
+face was the face of Molly Weston, his lost wife!
+
+It could not be! But it was.
+
+Incredible the swiftness with which nature rights herself after a
+stunning shock. Only for a moment was Callandar left in his paradise of
+uncertainty. The next moment, he knew that he beheld no vision, knew it
+and accepted it as certainly and completely as if all his life had been
+but a preparation for the revelation.
+
+"You!" he said. It was only a whisper but it seemed to fill the
+universe. "You--Molly!"
+
+At the name, the hazel eyes which had met his so blankly sprang suddenly
+alive--recognition, knowledge, fear, entreaty, flashed across them in
+one moment's breathless space--then they grew blank again and Mary
+Coombe fell senseless beside her sheaf of daisies.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII
+
+
+Bending over the form of his lost wife, Henry Callandar forgot Esther.
+His mind, careful of its sanity, removed her instantly from the
+possibility of thought. She was gone--whisked away by some swift genie
+and, with her, vanished the world of blue and gold inhabited by lovers.
+
+There remained only that white, faded face among the daisies. With
+careful hands he removed the crushed hat and loosened the collar at the
+neck. It was Molly. Not a doubt of that. Not Molly as he remembered her
+but Molly from whom the years had taken more than their toll, giving but
+little in return. He could not think beyond this fact, as yet. And he
+felt nothing, nothing at all. Both heart and mind lay mercifully numb
+under the anaesthetic of the shock.
+
+Deftly he did the few things necessary to restore the swooning woman,
+noting with a doctor's eye the first faint flush of pink under the dead
+white nails, then the flutter of breath through the parted lips and the
+slow unclosing of the hazel eyes which, at sight of him, sprang widely,
+vividly into life.
+
+"Harry!" The name was the merest whisper and held a quiver of fear. He
+remembered, stolidly, that just so had she whispered it upon the evening
+of their hurried marriage.
+
+"Yes, Molly. It is all right. Don't be frightened!"--Just so had he
+soothed her.
+
+She closed her eyes a moment while strength came back and then, raising
+herself, slipped out of his arms with a little breathless movement of
+avoidance. She seemed indeed to cower away and the fear in her eyes hurt
+him with a physical pang. Instinctively he put out his hand to reassure
+her, repeating his entreaty that she should not be frightened.
+
+"But I am frightened!" Her voice was hoarse. "You terrified me! You had
+no right to come like that. You should have let me know--sent
+word--or--or something."
+
+"Sent word?" He repeated the words, in a dazed way. "How could I? How
+could I know?"
+
+"How could you come if you didn't know?" Already the miracle of
+readjustment which in women is so marvellously quick, had given back to
+Mary Coombe something of her natural manner. Besides, she had always
+known that some day he might find her--if he cared to look.
+
+"Why should you come at all?" she flashed, raising defiant eyes. "The
+time to come was long ago."
+
+"I did come." Callandar spoke slowly. "I came--" he paused, for how
+could he tell her that his coming had been to a house of death.
+
+The bald answer, the strangeness of his gaze stirred her fear again. For
+a moment they stared at each other, each busy with the shifting puzzle.
+Then her quicker intuition abandoned the mystery of the present meeting
+to straighten out the past.
+
+"Then you followed the letter?"
+
+"Yes, I followed the letter."
+
+"And you saw her--my mother?"
+
+"Yes, I saw your mother."
+
+Impulsively he moved toward her but she shrank back, plainly terrified.
+
+"Don't! I didn't know. I swear I did not know. I never saw the
+letter--until last night. And I don't understand. What--what did my
+mother tell you when you came?"
+
+"There was only one thing which would have kept me from you, Molly."
+
+"Only one thing? What?" she almost whispered.
+
+"She told me you were dead."
+
+The flash of understanding on her face showed that she, at least, had
+shifted part of the puzzle into place.
+
+"I see now," she said slowly, "I have wondered ever since I saw the
+letter. But I did not think she would go that far. Yet it was the
+simplest way. There was no date on the letter--but I guessed that it
+must have come too late."
+
+"Too late?"
+
+"Yes, or she would never have dared. Besides she might not have wanted
+to. She didn't know. I never had the courage to tell her. But if the
+letter had come in time--"
+
+She faltered, growing confused under his intense gaze.
+
+"In time for what?" he prompted patiently.
+
+She brushed the question aside.
+
+"Did you believe her when she said that?"
+
+"Yes. Why should I have doubted? It seemed to be the end. I fainted on
+the doorstep. A long illness followed, when it was at its worst a friend
+came--helped me to pull out. When I was well again, I searched for your
+mother, employed detectives, but we never found her. Neither did we find
+anything upon which to hang a doubt of what she had told me."
+
+"No. She was very clever."
+
+"But _why?_ For God's sake, why? Why should she lie to me? I had never
+harmed her. We were married. I could give you a home. She knew it. I
+told her. Why should she do this senseless, horrible thing?"
+
+She looked at him with wide eyes and stammered,
+
+"Don't--don't you know?"
+
+A sense of some hitherto undreamed horror came to him with that
+stammering whisper. The spur of it brought some of his firmness back.
+
+"I do not know. There must have been a reason. You must tell me."
+
+He forced her, through sheer will, to lift her eyes to his. They were
+startled and sullen. With a start he saw, what he had missed before,
+that this woman, his wife, was a stranger. But he had himself well in
+hand now and his gaze did not falter. There was no escaping its demands.
+Her answer came in a little burst of defiance.
+
+"Yes, there was a reason. You may as well know it. Your letter and your
+coming were both too late. I was married."
+
+The doctor was not quick enough for this--
+
+"Yes, of course you were, but--"
+
+"Oh, not to you! Can't you understand? I was married to another man....
+You need not look like that! What did you expect? I warned you. I knew I
+could never defy mother. I told you so. But you said it wouldn't be
+long--that she need never know. And I waited and waited. I could have
+married more than once but I wouldn't. I faced mother and said I
+wouldn't. But every time it was harder. I couldn't keep it up. And you
+didn't come. Then when he came and we thought he was so rich she made me
+marry him. She _made_ me. I thought you were never coming back anyway. I
+wrote you once telling you to come. You didn't answer."
+
+She paused breathless but he could find nothing to say. It seemed a
+small thing that the letter must have missed him somewhere, his whole
+mind was absorbed in trying to comprehend one stupendous fact. The
+puzzle had shifted into place indeed.
+
+"I thought you didn't care any more," her words raced as if eager to be
+done, "and mother gave me no peace. You will never understand how
+terrified I was of mother. And he seemed so kind and was going to be
+rich. He owned part of a gold mine--mother was sure it would mean
+millions. But it didn't. Mother was fooled there!" with a gleam of
+malice. "The mine turned out to be worthless--after we were married."
+
+Callandar drew a sharp breath and shook himself as if to throw off the
+horror of some enthralling nightmare.
+
+"You married him--this man--knowing that you were a wife already?"
+
+"A fine sort of wife!" He quivered at the coarseness of meaning in her
+tone. "We were never really married."
+
+"What do you mean?"
+
+"I mean that it was all a farce. What's a ceremony? For all I knew it
+wasn't even legal. When you did not answer my letter I thought that was
+what your silence meant. I asked a girl to ask her father who was a
+lawyer if a marriage was legal when the girl was under age and the
+parents didn't know about it. He said sometimes it wasn't."
+
+Callandar groaned. "And you married again--on that?"
+
+"Yes. I had to, anyway. I couldn't hold out against mother. I daren't
+tell her. She left us after the wedding, when the mine failed, and went
+back to Cleveland. It was there she must have got your letter, and the
+note I found last night. And when you came, she told you I was dead--to
+save the scandal. She was always different after that, though I never
+guessed why. It was a lie, you see, and mother was terrified of telling
+lies. It was the only thing she was afraid of. She believed that liars
+go to hell."
+
+The tone in which she spoke of the probable torment of her mother was
+quite without feeling. Callandar listened in fascinated wonder. Was this
+Molly?--Pretty, kind-hearted Molly?
+
+"I cannot understand," he said in a stifled voice. "It is all too
+horrible! This man you married--"
+
+"He is dead. He died a year ago. I thought at first that you must have
+found out and that was why you came. I should have died of fright if you
+had come while he was alive. He would never have understood--never! He
+didn't like mother but he wasn't afraid of her. And I think that at last
+he suspected that she had made me marry him for his money. But he was
+always good. At first I was afraid all the time--oh, it was dreadful! I
+think I have always been afraid--all my life--" Without warning she
+threw her hands out wildly and broke into choking sobs, crying with the
+abandon of a frightened child. Yet no one could have mistaken the
+impulse of her grief. It was for herself she wept.
+
+Was it possible that she was a child still? A child in spite of her
+woman's knowledge, and the dulled lustre of her hair? Callandar
+remembered grimly that Molly's views of right and wrong had always been
+peculiarly simple. She had never wished to do wrong, but when she had
+done it, it had never seemed so very wrong to her. Her greatest dread
+had always been the dread of other people's censure.
+
+"Don't cry," he said gently.
+
+She must have felt the change in his voice, for although her sobs
+redoubled she did not again shrink from the hand he laid upon her hair.
+It was all over. She had told him the truth. Surely he must see that he
+was the one to blame, not she.
+
+After a while she dried her eyes and looked up at him timidly but with
+restored confidence.
+
+"People need never know now!" she said more calmly.
+
+"People? Do people matter?"
+
+She picked a daisy and began nervously to strip it of its petals--a pang
+of agony caught at the man's heart. So, only that morning, had he
+imagined himself consulting the daisy oracle. "She loves me, she loves
+me not." Absolutely he put the memory from him. Molly was speaking.
+
+"People do matter. They make things so unpleasant. Not that I care as
+much about them as I used to; but still, one has to be careful. People
+are so prying, always wanting to know things," she glanced around
+nervously, "but let's not talk about them. I don't understand things
+yet. How did you find me, if you thought I was--dead?"
+
+"Accident, if there be such a thing. I was driving down the road. I am
+living in the town near here--in Coombe!"
+
+"But you can't! I live in Coombe. It is my home. There isn't a Chedridge
+in the place."
+
+"My name is not Chedridge now. I took my uncle's name when I inherited
+his money. I am called Henry Callandar."
+
+"Callandar!" Her voice rose shrilly on the word. "And you are living in
+Coombe? Why you are--you must be--Esther's Dr. Callandar!"
+
+The man went deathly white, yet his enormous self-control, the fruit of
+years, held him steady.
+
+Mary Coombe began to laugh weakly. "Why, of course, that explains it
+all, don't you see? Haven't you placed me yet? Esther is my
+step-daughter. The man I married was Doctor Coombe."
+
+"Good God!" The exclamation was revelation enough had Mary Coombe heard
+it. But she did not hear it; this new aspect of the situation had seemed
+to her so farcical that her laughter threatened to become hysterical.
+"Oh, it's so funny!" she gasped.
+
+It was certainly funny--such a good joke! The Doctor thought he might as
+well laugh too. But at the sound of his laughter, hers abruptly ceased.
+
+"Don't do that!"
+
+He tried to control himself. It was hard. He wanted to shriek with
+laughter. Esther's step-mother, the mysterious Mrs. Coombe, was
+Molly--his wife! Some mocking demon shouted into his ears the words he
+had intended to say to her when he came to tell her that he and Esther
+loved each other. He thought of his own high mood of the morning, of the
+tender regret which he had laid away with the dead of the dead past. It
+seemed as if all the world were rocking with diabolic laughter--Fate
+plans such amusing things!
+
+He caught himself up--madness lay that way.
+
+"Please don't laugh!" said Mrs. Coombe a trifle fretfully. "At least not
+so loudly. You startle me. My nerves are so wretched. And anyway it's
+more serious than you seem to think. We shall have to discuss ways of
+managing so that people will not know. Your being already acquainted
+with Esther will help. It will make your coming to the house quite
+natural. But it will be better to admit that we knew each other years
+ago, were boy and girl friends or something like that. Your change of
+name and my marriage will explain perfectly why we did not know each
+other until we met. Nobody will go behind that. They will think it quite
+romantic. The only one we need be afraid of is Esther. She is so quick
+to notice--"
+
+She did not know about Esther then? She had never guessed that the girl
+was more to him than a mere acquaintance. Thank God for that! And thank
+God, above all, that the worst had not happened--Esther herself did not
+know, would never know now--
+
+"I believe it can come quite naturally after all," Mary went on more
+cheerfully. "No one will wonder at anything if we say we are old
+friends. And we can be specially careful with Esther. I wouldn't have
+her know for anything. She is like her father. She would never
+understand. She doesn't know what it is to be afraid, as I was afraid of
+my mother. Do you think it is wicked that sometimes I'm glad she is
+dead, mother, I mean?"
+
+He answered with an effort. "You used to be fond of your mother, Molly."
+
+"Oh, don't call me Molly. Call me Mary. It will sound much better. No
+one has ever heard me called Molly here. If Esther heard it she would
+wonder at once. You will be careful, won't you?"
+
+"Yes. I shall be careful." He had not heard what she said, save that she
+had mentioned Esther's name. Rather he was thinking with a gratitude
+which shook his very soul that fate had at least spared the innocent.
+Esther was safe. She did not love him. He felt sure of that now. Strange
+irony, that his deepest thankfulness should be that Esther did not
+love him.
+
+A small hand fell like a feather upon his arm.
+
+"Harry!"
+
+"Yes, Molly!"
+
+He looked down into her quivering face and saw in it, dimly, the face of
+the girl in his locket, not a mere outward semblance this time but the
+soul of Molly Weston, reaching out to him across the years. Her light
+touch on his arm was the very shackle of fate. Her glance claimed him.
+Nothing that she had done could modify that claim--the terrible claim of
+weakness upon the strength which has misled it.
+
+Vaguely he felt that this was the test, the ultimate test. If he failed
+now he was lost indeed. Something within him reached out blindly for the
+strength he had dreamed was his, found it, clutched it desperately--knew
+that it held firm.
+
+He took the slight figure in his arms, felt that it still trembled and
+said the most comforting thing he could think of. "Don't worry, Molly.
+No one will ever know."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV
+
+
+Ester was sitting upon the back porch, hulling strawberries and watching
+with absent amusement the tireless efforts of Jane to induce a very fat
+and entirely brainless pup to shake hands. It had been a busy day, for
+owing to the absence of the free and independent "Saturday Help" Esther
+had insisted upon helping Aunt Amy in the kitchen. Now the Saturday pies
+and cakes were accomplished and only the strawberries lay between Esther
+and freedom.
+
+She had intended, a little later, to walk out along the river road in
+search of marguerites, but when Mary, more than usually restless after
+her fainting spell of yesterday, had offered to go instead, she had not
+demurred. It would be quite as pleasant to take a book and sit out under
+the big elm. Esther was at that stage when everything seems to be for
+the best in this "best of all possible worlds." She was living through
+those suspended moments when life stands tiptoe, breathless with
+expectancy, yet calm with an assurance of joy to come.
+
+With the knowledge that Henry Callandar was not quite as other men, had
+come an intense, delicious shyness; the aloofness of the maiden who
+feels love near yet cannot, through her very nature, take one step
+to meet it.
+
+There was no hurry. She was surrounded with a roseate haze, lapped in
+deep content; for, while the doctor had learned nothing from their last
+meeting under the elm, Esther had learned everything. She had not seemed
+to look at him as they parted, yet she had known, oh, she had known very
+well, how he had looked at her! All she wanted, now, was to be alone
+with that look; to hold it there in her memory, not to analyse or
+question, but to glance at it shyly now and again, feeding with quick
+glimpses the new strange joy at the heart.
+
+"D'ye think He ever forgets to put brains into dogs?" asked Jane
+suddenly. "Oh, you silly thing, don't roll over like that! Stop
+wriggling and give me your paw!"
+
+"He, who?" vaguely.
+
+Jane made a disgusted gesture. "You're not listening, Esther! You know
+there is only one Person who puts brains into dogs!"
+
+"But Pickles is such a puppy, Jane. Give him time."
+
+"It's not age," gloomily. "It's stupidness. All puppies are stupid, but
+Pickles is the most abnormously stupid puppy I ever saw."
+
+Esther laughed. "Where did you get the word, ducky?"
+
+"From the doctor. It was something he said about Aunt Amy. Say, Esther,
+isn't he going to take you driving any more? I saw him going past this
+very afternoon. He turned down towards the river road. There was lots of
+room. Next time he takes you, may Pickles and me go too?"
+
+"Pickles and I, Jane."
+
+"Well, may we?"
+
+"I don't know. Perhaps. When did the doctor go past?"
+
+"Nearly two hours ago. I wonder if there's some one kick down there?
+Bubble says they're getting a tremenjous practice. I don't like Bubble
+any more. He thinks he's smart. I don't like Ann, either. I shan't ask
+her to my birthday party."
+
+"I thought you loved Ann."
+
+"Well, I don't. She thinks she's smart!"
+
+"Ann, too? Smartness must be epidemic."
+
+"It's all on account of the doctor," gloomily. "They can't get over
+having him boarding at their place. I told Ann that my own father was a
+doctor, but she said dead ones didn't count. Then I told her that my
+mother didn't have to keep boarders anyway."
+
+"That was a naughty, snobbish thing to say. I'm ashamed of you!"
+
+"What's 'snobbish'?"
+
+"What you said was snobbish. Think it over and find out."
+
+Jane was silent, apparently thinking it over. The fat pup, tired with
+unwonted mental exertions, curled up and went to sleep. Esther returned
+to her dreams. Then, into the warm hush of the late afternoon came the
+quick panting of a motor car.
+
+"There he is!" cried Jane excitedly. "Let's both run down to the gate to
+see him."
+
+"Jane!" Esther's cheeks were the colour of her ripest berry. "Jane, come
+here! I forbid you--Jane!"
+
+"He's stopping anyway. He'll be coming in. You had better take off that
+apron.--Oh, look! Some one's with him. Why," with some disappointment,
+"it's mother! He is letting her out. I don't believe he is coming in at
+all--let go! Esther, you pig, let me go!"
+
+She wriggled out of her sister's firm hold but not before the motor had
+started again; when she reached the gate it was out of sight.
+
+Mrs. Coombe surveyed her daughter coldly. "You are a very ill-mannered
+child," she said, and putting her aside walked slowly up the path and
+around the house to where Esther sat on the back porch.
+
+"Where are the daisies?" asked Esther, looking up from her berries.
+
+"The daisies?" vaguely. "Good gracious! I forgot all about the daisies."
+
+"Didn't you get any?"
+
+"Heaps, but the fact is I didn't bring them home. I felt so tired. I
+don't know how I should have managed to get home myself if Dr. Callandar
+hadn't picked me up."
+
+"Dr. Callandar?" Esther's voice was mildly questioning.
+
+"Yes, why not?"
+
+"I thought you had not met him."
+
+"Neither I had--at least I hadn't met him for a good many years." Mary
+gave a little excited laugh. "But that's the funny part of it--he is an
+old friend."
+
+Esther looked up with her characteristic widening of the eyes. The news
+was genuinely surprising. And how agitated her mother seemed!
+
+"It is really quite a remarkable coincidence," went on Mary nervously.
+"I was so surprised, startled indeed. Although it's pleasant, of course,
+to meet an old schoolmate."
+
+"You and Doctor Callandar schoolmates?" The eyes were very wide now.
+
+Mary grew more and more confused.
+
+"Yes--that is, not exactly. I mean his name wasn't Callandar then. His
+name was Chedridge. Did you never hear me speak of Harry Chedridge?"
+
+"Never."
+
+"Well, you never listen to half I say. And how was I to know that Doctor
+Callandar was the Harry Chedridge I used to know? He took the name of
+Callandar from an uncle--or something. Anyway it isn't his own."
+
+Esther hulled a particularly fine berry and carefully putting the hull
+in the pan, threw the berry away.
+
+"Curiouser and curiouser!" she said, quoting the immortal Alice. "Did
+you recognise him at once?"
+
+If it be possible for a lady of this enlightened age to simper, Mrs.
+Coombe simpered. "He recognised me at once!" with faint emphasis on
+the pronouns.
+
+The girl choked down a rising inclination to laugh.
+
+"Why shouldn't he? I suppose you haven't changed very much."
+
+"Hardly at all, he says; at least he says he would have known me
+anywhere. But it's quite a long time, you know, terribly long. I was a
+young girl then. Naturally, he was much older."
+
+"I should have thought so. That's why it seems queer--your having been
+schoolmates."
+
+Mrs. Coombe looked cross. "I did not mean schoolmates in that sense."
+
+"Oh, merely in a Pickwickian sense!" Esther's laugh bubbled out.
+
+Mary arose. She was afraid to risk more at present, until she had been
+to her room and--rested awhile. "You are rude, as usual," she said with
+dignity. "When I said that Dr. Callandar and I were schoolmates I meant
+simply that we were old friends, that we knew each other when we were
+both younger. I do not see anything at all humorous in the statement."
+
+"No, of course not!" with quick compunction. "It's quite lovely. Just
+like a book. Why didn't he come in?"
+
+The question was so cleverly casual that no one could have guessed the
+girl's consuming interest in the answer. But its cleverness had overshot
+the mark, for so colourless was the tone in which it was asked that Mary
+did not notice it at all. Instead she retreated steadily along her
+own line.
+
+"I hope I always treat your friends with proper courtesy, Esther. And I
+shall expect you to do the same with mine. Dr. Callandar is a very old
+friend indeed. Should he call to-night I wish you to receive him
+as such."
+
+"I'll try," said the girl demurely.
+
+The way of escape was now open, but Mrs. Coombe hesitated. She seemed to
+have something else to say. Something which did not come easily. "It's
+horrid living in a town like Coombe," she burst out. "People always want
+to know everything. We met the elder Miss Sinclair on the river
+road--you know what that means! If people ask you any question--or
+anything--you had better tell them at once that Dr. Callandar is not a
+stranger."
+
+"I should not dream of suppressing the fact."
+
+"You see," again that odd hesitation, "he may call--rather often.
+And--people talk so easily."
+
+Despite her care, Esther's sensitive face flamed in answer to the
+quickened beat of her heart. What an odd thing for her mother to say!
+What did she mean? Was it possible that he had already told her--asked
+her? Or had she merely guessed? There was a moment's pause, and then,
+"Let them talk!" said the girl softly. "It can't make any difference, to
+them, how often Dr. Callandar calls."
+
+Mrs. Coombe looked doubtful, hesitated once more, but finally turned
+away without speaking. As she went, she cast a careless glance at Aunt
+Amy, who stood just within the kitchen doorway, a curiously watchful
+look in her usually expressionless eyes.
+
+"Berries all ready, Auntie," said Esther cheerfully. "What's the matter
+with me as a Saturday Help?"
+
+But Aunt Amy did not smile as she usually did.
+
+"She's gone to get dressed," she said abruptly, indicating with a
+backward gesture Mrs. Coombe's retiring figure.
+
+"Well?"
+
+"For him. She's gone to get dressed for him."
+
+Esther was puzzled. "Why shouldn't she? Oh, I forget you didn't know!
+It's quite a romance. Mother used to know Dr. Callandar when she was a
+girl. 'We twa hae rin aboot the braes,' you know. Only it seems so
+funny. Fancy, Dr. Callandar and mother! But we shan't have to worry any
+more about her health. She can't possibly avoid him now."
+
+Aunt Amy was not listening. The curiously watchful look was still in her
+eyes and suddenly, apropos of nothing, she began to wring her hands in
+the strange, dumb way which always preceded one of her characteristic
+mental agonies,--agonies which, far beyond her understanding as they
+were, never failed to awake profound compassion in Esther.
+
+"What is it, dear?" she asked gently. "Are you not so well?"
+
+"Don't you ever feel things, Esther? Don't you ever sense
+things--coming?"
+
+"No, dear. And neither do you, when you are well. You are tired." She
+placed her hands firmly upon the locked hands of Aunt Amy and with
+tender force attempted to separate them. But Jane, who had been a silent
+but interested spectator, spoke eagerly.
+
+"Don't, Esther! Do let her tell us what is coming. You know she always
+tells right when she wrings her hands. Go on, Auntie--"
+
+"Jane, be quiet! I'll tell you why afterwards. Auntie dear, sit down."
+
+'Aunt Amy's hands relaxed and the strange look faded. "It's nothing,"
+she said. "It's gone! I must be more careful. Do not mention it to your
+mother, children. She might think me queer again, and I am not at all
+queer any more. You have noticed that I'm not, haven't you, Esther? I'll
+do anything you say, my dear."
+
+"Then lie out in the hammock while I get supper. The berries are all
+ready. Then we'll all get dressed. Jane may wear one of her new frocks
+and you shall wear your grey voile. It will be quite a party."
+
+"Will there be ice cream? Because if there isn't I don't want to get
+dressed," sighed Jane. "My new things don't fit. They look like bags."
+
+"It will soon be holidays and then I'll fix them for you."
+
+Jane laid a childish cheek to her sister's hand.
+
+"Nice Esther," she cooed. "I'm sorry I called you a pig." Then, in a
+change of tone as they left Aunt Amy resting in the hammock, "Esther,
+why is Auntie so afraid of mother lately? She says such queer things I
+don't know what she means."
+
+"Neither do I, dear. But I think it is just a passing fancy. She was
+very much hurt about the ring being sold. When she gets it back she will
+forget about it."
+
+"She looks at mother as if she hates her."
+
+"Oh, no!" in a startled tone. "How can you say such a thing, Jane?"
+
+"But she does. I've seen her. I don't blame her. I think it was
+horrid--"
+
+"That's enough. You know nothing about it. Little girls who do not
+understand have no right to criticise."
+
+"Fred says it was the most underhan--"
+
+"Jane, one word more and you shall have no berries to-night. Duck, don't
+you realise that you are speaking in a very unkind way of your
+own mother."
+
+The child's eyes filled with ready tears, but her little mouth was
+stubborn. "Auntie's more my mother, Esther, and so are you. And it was
+mean to take the ring and I don't care whether I have any berries
+or not."
+
+Supper was a very quiet meal that night. Mrs. Coombe, interrupted in the
+process of dressing, came down in an old kimono, but ate almost nothing,
+Jane was sullen, Aunt Amy silent and Esther happily oblivious to
+everything save her own happy thoughts.
+
+As soon as she could, she slipped away to her own room, and, choosing
+everything with care, began to dress herself as a maiden dresses for the
+eye of her lover. She was to be all in white, her dainty dress, her
+petticoats, stockings and shoes. White made her look younger than ever,
+absurdly young. He had never seen her all in white and she knew quite
+well how soft it made the shadows of her hair, how startlingly blue her
+eyes, how warm and living the ivory of her lovely neck.
+
+"Oh, I am glad I am pretty!" she whispered to her mirror. "Glad, glad!"
+Then with a laugh at her own childishness she "touched wood" to
+propitiate the jealous fates and ran down stairs to hide herself in the
+duskiest corner of the veranda.
+
+It was delightful there. The cooling air was sweet with the mingled
+perfumes of the garden border below, an early star had fallen,
+sparkling, upon the blue-grey train of departing day, a whispering
+breeze crept, soft-footed, through the shrubbery. Esther lay back in the
+long chair and closed her eyes. For thirty perfect moments she waited
+until the click of the garden gate announced his coming. Then she sprang
+up, smiling, blushing,--peering through the screen of vines--
+
+A man was coming up the path. At first sight he seemed a stranger, some
+one who walked heavily, slowly--the doctor's step was quick and
+springing. Yet it was he! She drew back, shyly, yet looked again. Some
+one, in a pretty green silk gown, had slipped out from under the big elm
+and was meeting him with outstretched hands.
+
+"Mother," thought Esther, "how strange!"
+
+They had paused and were talking together. Mary's high, sweet laugh
+floated over the flowers, then her voice, a mere murmur. His voice,
+lower still. Then silence. They had turned back, together, down the
+lilac walk.
+
+Esther sat down again. She felt numb. She closed her eyes as she had
+done before. But all the dreams, all the happy thoughts were gone. She
+opened them abruptly to find Aunt Amy staring down upon her, dumbly,
+wringing her hands. In the warm summer air the girl shivered.
+
+"What is it?" she asked a little sharply. But Aunt Amy seemed neither to
+see nor hear her. She flitted by like some wandering grey moth into the
+dim garden, still wringing her hands.
+
+Esther sat up. "How utterly absurd," she said aloud. Indeed she felt
+heartily ashamed of herself. To behave like a foolish child, to startle
+Aunt Amy into a fit and all because her mother and Dr. Callandar had
+gone for a stroll down the lilac walk--the most natural thing in the
+world. They would return presently. She had only to wait. But the
+waiting was not quite the same. Those golden moments already sparkled in
+the past. Nothing could ever be quite the same as if he had come
+straight up the path to where she waited for him in the dusk.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In the living-room, Jane who had small patience with twilight, had
+lighted the lamp. Its shaded beams fell in golden bars across the
+veranda floor. The sky was full of stars, now, but the voice of the
+breeze was growing shrill, as if whistling up the rain.
+
+They were coming back along the side of the house. Esther rose quickly
+and slipped into the safety of the commonplace with Jane and the lighted
+lamp. Mrs. Coombe entered first, there was an instant to observe and
+wonder at her. She seemed a different woman, young, pretty, sparkling;
+even her hair seemed brighter. Behind her came Callandar and when Esther
+saw his face her heart seemed to stop. It was the face, almost, of a man
+of middle age, a firm, quiet face with cold eyes.
+
+"Esther!" Mrs. Coombe's voice held incipient reproof.
+
+The girl came forward and offered her hand. The doctor, this new doctor,
+took it, let it drop and said, "Good evening, Miss Esther," then turned
+to Jane with a politely worded message from Ann and Bubble.
+
+"You can tell them I won't go," said Jane crossly. "They think they are
+smart. Just because--"
+
+Esther slipped quietly from the room. In the hall outside she paused,
+breathless. She felt as if she had run a long way. Shame enveloped her,
+a shame whose cause she could not put into words. She only knew that she
+had, in the few seconds of that cold greeting, been profoundly
+humiliated. She quivered with the sting of unwarranted expectancy. But
+if this had been all, it would have been well. There was something else,
+some deeper pain surging through the smart of wounded pride, something
+which led her with blind steps into a dark corner of the stairs where
+she sat very quiet and still.
+
+Through the open front door, she could see the bars of lamplight on the
+deserted veranda, and hear from the open windows of the living-room a
+hum of conversation in which Jane seemed to be taking a leading part.
+Then came the tinkle of the old piano and Mary's voice, singing, or
+attempting to sing, for it was soon apparent that her voice sagged
+pitifully on the high notes.
+
+Presently Jane came out, banging the door. Jane's manners, Esther
+thought, were really very bad. She had probably banged the door because
+she had been sent to bed and she had probably been sent to bed because
+she had been saucy. Esther wondered what particular form her sauciness
+had taken, but when Jane called softly, "Esther!" she did not answer.
+She did not want to put Jane to bed to-night. The child flashed past her
+up the stairs and soon could be heard from an upstair window calling
+imperatively for Aunt Amy. But Aunt Amy, flitting through the dim garden
+wringing her hands, did not hear. Jane, much injured, went to bed by
+herself that night.
+
+In the lamp-lit room there was no more music. The murmur of voices grew
+less distinct. There were intervals of silence. (Only very old friends
+can support a silence gracefully--but of course these two were very old
+friends.) Esther wondered, idly, how it would be best to explain her
+absence to her mother. Toothache, perhaps? Not that the excuse mattered.
+Mary never listened to excuses. She would be cross and fretful anyway
+and complain that Esther never treated her friends with proper courtesy.
+The best thing she could do would be to go to bed. But she made no
+movement to go; the moments ticked by on the hall clock unnoticed.
+
+After a time, which might have been long or short, there was a stir in
+the room and her mother's voice called "Esther! Esther!"
+
+The girl stood up, smoothed her white dress, slipped out on to the
+veranda and into the garden. From there she answered the call.
+"Yes, Mother?"
+
+"Where are you? You sound as if you had been asleep. Doctor Callandar is
+going."
+
+Esther came lightly up the steps.
+
+"So soon?"
+
+"It is early," agreed Mrs. Coombe playfully, "but I can't keep him."
+
+Esther, herself in shadow, could see the doctor's face as he stood
+quietly beside his hostess. It was full of an endless weariness. Her
+pride melted. Impulsively she put out a warm hand--
+
+"Good night, Miss Esther. How very sweet your garden is at night. But it
+feels as if our fine weather were over. The wind begins to blow
+like rain."
+
+Esther's hand dropped to her side. Perhaps he had not seen it in the
+dusk.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV
+
+
+We all know that strange remoteness into which one wakes from out deep
+sleep. Though the eye be open, the Ego is not there to use it. For an
+immeasurable second, the awakener knows not who he is, nor why, nor
+where. Only there is, faintly perceptible, a reminiscent consciousness
+whether of joy or sorrow, a certain flavour of the soul, sweet or
+bitter, into which the Ego, slipping back, announces, "I am happy" or "I
+am miserable."
+
+Esther had not hoped to sleep that night but she did sleep and heavily.
+When she awoke it was to blankness, a cold throbbing blankness of
+undefined ill being. Then her Ego, with a sigh, came back from far
+places; the busy brain shot into focus; all the memories, fears,
+humiliation of the night before stood forth clear and poignant. She
+buried her face in the pillow.
+
+Yet, after the first rush of consciousness, there came a difference.
+There always is a difference between night and day thoughts. Fresh from
+its wonder-journey, the soul is braver in the morning, the brain is
+calmer, the spirit more hopeful. After a half-hour's self-examination
+with her face in the pillow Esther began to wonder if she had not been
+foolishly apprehensive and whether it were not possible that half her
+fears were bogies. The weight began to lighten, she breathed more
+freely. Looking over the rim of the sheltering pillow the morning seemed
+no longer hateful.
+
+Foremost of all comforting thoughts was the conviction that instinct
+must still be trusted against evidence. Through all her speculations as
+to the unexplained happenings of the previous day, she found that
+instinct held firmly to its former belief regarding the doctor's
+feelings toward herself. There are some things which one knows
+absolutely and Esther knew that Henry Callandar had looked upon her as a
+man looks upon the woman he loves. He had loved her that night when they
+paddled through the moonlight; he had loved her when he watched for her
+coming along the road, but most of all he had loved her when, under the
+eye of Aunt Amy, they had said good-bye at the garden gate. This much
+was sure, else all her instincts were foresworn.
+
+After this came chaos. She could not in any way read the riddle of his
+manner of last night. Had the sudden resumption of his old friendship
+with her mother absorbed his mind to the exclusion of everything else?
+Impossible, if he loved her. Had purely physical weariness or mental
+worry blotted her out completely for the time being? Impossible, if he
+loved her. Then what had happened?
+
+Doubtless it would all be simple enough when she understood. She sighed
+and raised her head from the pillow. At any rate it was morning. The day
+must be faced and lived through. Any one of its hours might bring
+happiness again.
+
+The rainstorm which had swept up during the night had passed, leaving
+the morning clean. She needed no recollection to tell her that it was
+Sunday. The Sabbath hush was on everything; no milkman's cans jingled
+down the street; no playing children called or shouted; there was a bell
+ringing somewhere for early service. Esther sighed again. She was sorry
+it was Sunday. Work-a-day times are easiest.
+
+A rich odour of coffee, insinuating itself through the half open door,
+testified mutely to the fact that Aunt Amy was getting breakfast. It was
+later than usual. After breakfast it would be time to dress for church.
+Every one in Coombe dressed for church. It was a sacred rite. One and
+all, they had clothes which were strictly Sabbatarian, known indeed by
+the name of Sunday Best.
+
+Esther's Sunday best was a blue, voile, a lovely blue, the colour of her
+eyes when in soft shadow. It was made with a long straight skirt
+slightly high at the waist, round neck and elbow sleeves and with it
+went soft, wrinkly gloves and a wide hat trimmed with cornflowers. She
+knew that she looked well in it--and the doctor would be in church.
+
+On this thought which flew into her mind like a swift swallow through an
+open window, her lethargy fled and in its place came nervous haste; a
+feverish impatience which brought her with a bound out of bed, flushed
+and eager. Philosophy is all very well but it never yet stilled the
+heart-beat of the young.
+
+Aunt Amy looked up in mild surprise as she hurried into the kitchen in
+time to butter toast and poach the eggs.
+
+"Why, Esther!" she said in her bewildered way. "I thought--I didn't
+think that you would get up this morning."
+
+"Why? I am perfectly well, Auntie. Where is mother?"
+
+"Oh, she's up! Picking flowers."
+
+Esther looked slightly surprised. It was not Mrs. Coombe's habit to rise
+early or to pick flowers, but before she had time to comment, Mary
+herself entered the kitchen with an armful of roses.
+
+"Hurry with your breakfast, Jane," she said, "I want you to take these
+over to the doctor's office. I wonder you have not sent some to the poor
+man before this, Esther. Mrs. Sykes' roses never amount to anything.
+Shall I pour the coffee? I suppose you felt that you did not know him
+well enough. But flowers sent in a neighbourly way would have been quite
+all right. If you weren't always so stiff, people would like you better.
+I felt quite ashamed of your behaviour last night. Of course it wasn't
+necessary for you to stay in the room _all_ the evening, but it was
+simply rude to run away as you did. You needn't make Jane an excuse.
+Jane could put herself to bed, for once."
+
+"I did--" began Jane, but catching sight of her sister's face, went no
+further. And Mrs. Coombe, who was always talkative when airing a
+grievance, paid no attention.
+
+"If you are feeling huffy about the motor breaking down, you'll just
+have to get over it," she went on. "It couldn't possibly have been Dr.
+Callandar's fault anyway."
+
+"I am quite sure that it wasn't."
+
+"Then don't sulk. He is rather fine looking, don't you think? Though as
+a boy he was almost ugly. It doesn't seem to matter in men--ugliness, I
+mean. And of course in those days he could not afford to dress; dress
+makes such a difference. I shouldn't be a bit surprised if his clothes
+are English made. That baggy look that isn't really baggy, you know.
+When I knew him his people were quite poor. Only a mother and sister.
+The father shot himself. People said suicide ran in that family. But
+Harry--Henry said that if it did, it was going to stop running. He said
+such odd things. I was staying with friends when I met him, at a church
+social. One meets all kinds at an affair like that. My friends didn't
+ask him to the party they gave for me. For although they were a very
+good family, the Chedridges, Henry was almost a hired man at that time,
+working for old Dr. Inglis, to put himself through college. His mother
+and sister never went out."
+
+"Were they both invalids?"
+
+"Don't be clever, Esther! I mean socially, of course. Jane, run up to my
+dresser and look in the second drawer on the right hand side and bring
+down my small photo case. I think I have a photo somewhere, not a very
+good one, but enough to show how homely he was.... Amy, aren't you going
+to eat any breakfast this morning?"
+
+Aunt Amy, who had been following her niece's unusual flow of talk with
+fascinated attention, returned with a start to her untasted egg. Esther
+tried to eat some toast and choked. In spite of all her resolutions she
+felt coldly and bitterly angry. That her mother should dare to gossip
+about him like that! That she should call him "ugly," that she should
+speak with that air of almost insolent proprietorship of those wonderful
+early years long, long before she, Esther, had come into his life at
+all, it was unendurable!
+
+Do not smile, sophisticated young person. When you are in love you will
+know, only too well, this jealousy of youless years; this tenderness for
+photos and trifling remembrances of the youth of the one you love. You
+will envy his very mother, who, presumably, knew him fairly well in the
+nursery, and that first dreadful picture of him in plaid dress and
+plastered hair will seem a sacred relic.
+
+In the meantime you may take my word for it, and try to understand how
+Esther felt as she bent, perforce, over the photo of a dark-browed lad
+whose very expression was in itself a valid protest against photography.
+
+"Ugly, wasn't he?" asked Mrs. Coombe.
+
+"Very," said Esther.
+
+"Perfectly fierce," said Jane, peering over her shoulder. "Really
+fierce, I mean, not slang. He looks as if he would love to bite
+somebody."
+
+"The photographer, probably."
+
+Esther shrugged her shoulders and laid the photo carelessly upon the
+table. So careless was she, in fact, that a sharp "Look out!" from Jane
+did not prevent a sudden jerk of her elbow upsetting her steaming cup of
+coffee right over the pictured face.
+
+With an angry exclamation, Mary sprang forward to rescue her property
+but Esther had already picked it up and was endeavouring to repair the
+damage with her table napkin.
+
+"Oh, do take care!" said Mary irritably. "Don't rub so _hard_--you'll
+rub all the film off--there! What did I tell you?"
+
+"Dear me! who would ever have dreamed it would rub off that easily?"
+Esther surveyed the crumpled bits of photo with convincing dismay.
+
+"Any one, with sense. It's ruined--how utterly stupid of you, Esther."
+Mary's voice quivered with anger. "You provoking thing! I believe you
+did it on purpose."
+
+The cold stare from the girl's eyes stopped her, but she added
+fretfully, "You are always doing things to annoy me. I can't think why,
+I'm sure."
+
+"She was trying to dry it," declared Jane, belligerently. "She didn't
+mean to hurt the old photo. Did you, darling?"
+
+"I can hardly see what my motive could have been," said Esther politely,
+rising from the table. She had deliberately tried to destroy the
+photograph and was exultantly glad that she had succeeded, yet, so
+quickly does the actress instinct develop under the spur of necessity,
+that her face and manner showed only amused tolerance of such a foolish
+suspicion.
+
+Later, the culprit smiled understandingly at her image in the mirror as
+she dressed for church. "I did not know I could be so catty," she told
+her reflection, "but I don't care. She hadn't any right to have that
+darling picture. Ugly, indeed!" The blue eyes snapped and then became
+reflective. "Only she didn't think it ugly any more than I did. It was
+just talk. She was certainly furious when the film rubbed off. I
+wonder--" She fastened the last dark tress of hair, still wondering.
+
+All the way to church she wondered, walking demurely with Jane up
+Oliver's Hill, while Mary, nervously gay, fluttered on a step or two
+ahead. Jane found her unresponsive that morning. The acquaintances they
+passed found her distant. They wondered if Esther Coombe were becoming
+"stuck up" since she had a school of her own? For although, as Miss
+Agnes Smith said, it is not quite the thing to do more than nod and
+smile on the way to church, one doesn't need to pass one's friends
+looking like an absent-minded funeral.
+
+Poor Esther! She saw nobody because she looked for only one.
+
+"Oh, Esther, Mrs. Sykes has a new bonnet. There she is, Esther, look!"
+
+"Very pretty," murmured Esther absently.
+
+Jane dropped her hand. "You're blind as well as deaf, Esther. It's
+perfectly, dreadfully awful, and you know it!"
+
+Thus abjured, Esther managed to look at Mrs. Sykes' bonnet. And, having
+looked, she laughed. Mrs. Sykes had certainly surpassed herself in
+bonnets. And poor Ann, her skirts were stiffer, her pig-tails tighter
+and her small face more mutinous than ever. The doctor was not of the
+party. Esther had known that, long before Jane had noticed the bonnet.
+
+Still, there was nothing in that. He did not always walk with Ann to
+church. He might not come up Oliver's Hill at all. He might come from
+the opposite direction. He might be in church already. Esther's step
+quickened. But she had no excuse for hurry. Unless one sang in the choir
+or were threatened with lateness it was not etiquette to push ahead of
+any one on Oliver's Hill. Decently and in order was the motto, so Esther
+was sharply reminded when she had almost trodden on the unhastening
+heels of Mrs. Elder MacTavish.
+
+Mrs. MacTavish turned in surprise but, seeing Esther, relaxed into the
+usual Sunday smile and bow.
+
+"Good morning, Esther. Good morning, Mrs. Coombe. Good morning, Jane.
+What perfect weather we are having. You are all well, I hope?"
+
+"Very well, thank you."
+
+"And dear Miss Amy?"
+
+"Very well indeed."
+
+"So sad that she never cares to come to church. But of course one
+understands. And it must be a satisfaction to you all that she keeps so
+well. I said to Mr. MacTavish only last night that I felt sure Dr.
+Callandar was not being called in professionally. That is the worst of
+being a doctor. One can hardly attend to one's social duties without
+arousing fear for the health of one's friends. Not that Dr. Callandar is
+overly sociable, usually."
+
+The last word, delivered as if by an afterthought, said everything which
+she wished it to say. Esther's lips shut tightly. Mary Coombe flushed.
+But she was quick to seize the opening nevertheless.
+
+"Such an odd thing, dear Mrs. MacTavish! Dr. Callandar turns out to be
+quite an old friend of--of my family. We knew each other as boy and
+girl. In his college days, you know."
+
+"How very pleasant. But I always understood your family lived in
+Cleveland. Did Dr. Callandar take his degree in the States?"
+
+"Oh, no, of course not, but I was visiting in Canada when we knew each
+other. Mutual friends and--and all that, you know."
+
+"Very romantic," said Mrs. MacTavish. Her tone was pleasantly cordial,
+yet there was a something, a tinge--her quick glance took in Mrs.
+Coombe's pretty dress and flowered hat, and the beginning of a smile
+moved her thin lips. She said nothing. But then she did not need to say
+anything. Mind reading is common with women.
+
+Mrs. Coombe was furious. Esther laughed suddenly, a bubbling, girlish
+laugh, and then pretended that she had laughed because Jane had stubbed
+her toe. Jane looked hurt, Mrs. Coombe suspicious and Mrs. MacTavish
+amused. So in anything but a properly Sabbatical frame of mind the
+little party arrived at the church door.
+
+Who does not know, if only in memory, that exquisite thrill of fear and
+expectation with which Esther entered the place which might contain the
+man she loved? Another moment, a breath, and she might see him!... And
+who has not known that stab of pain, that awful darkness of the spirit,
+which came upon her as, instantly, she knew that he was not there?
+
+He was not in the church. Mental telepathy is recognised as well by its
+absence as by its presence. Esther knew that the church was empty of her
+lover and that it would remain empty. He was not coming to church
+to-day. Fortunate indeed that Mrs. MacTavish was not looking, for the
+girl's lip quivered, an unnatural darkness deepened the blue of her
+eyes. Then, smiling, she followed her mother up the aisle. Girls are
+wonderfully brave and if language is given us to conceal our thoughts
+smiles are very convenient also.
+
+Mary Coombe settled herself with a flutter and a rustle, and then,
+behind the decorous shield of a hymn book, she whispered,
+
+"Did you see Dr. Callandar as we came in?"
+
+"No."
+
+"Look and see if he is here."
+
+The girl glanced perfunctorily around.
+
+"No," she said.
+
+Mrs. Coombe frowned. She was patiently annoyed and Esther felt cold
+anger stir again. What difference could the doctor's absence possibly
+make to Mary Coombe?
+
+The singing of the psalm and the reading were long drawn out
+wearinesses. Esther had not come to church to worship that morning. We
+do not comment upon her attitude. We merely state it. To-day, church,
+the service and all that it stood for had been absolutely outside of
+her emotions. Yet with the prayer came the thought of God and with the
+thought a thrill of angry fear--a fear which was an inevitable after
+effect of her very orthodox training. God, she felt dimly, did not like
+people to be very happy. He was a jealous God. He was probably angry now
+because she had come to church thinking more of Dr. Callandar than of
+Him. "Thou shalt have no other Gods before me!" Awful, mystical words!
+Did they mean that one couldn't have any human god at all? Not even a
+near, kind protecting god--like the doctor? It frightened her.
+
+She found herself explaining to God that her lover was not really a
+rival. That although she loved him so terribly it was in quite a
+different way and would never interfere with her religious duties. Then,
+feeling the futility of this, she pretended carelessness, trying to
+deceive God into the belief that she didn't think so very much of the
+doctor anyway.
+
+This was in the prayer, while she sat with her eyes decorously shaded by
+her hand. Above her in the pulpit, the minister in an ecstasy of
+petition set forth the needs of the church, the state and the
+individual. Esther did not hear a word until a sudden dropping of his
+voice forced a certain phrase upon her attention. He was praying, with
+an especial poignancy for "that blessing which maketh rich and addeth
+no sorrow."
+
+Was there such a blessing? A blessing which would make rich and add no
+sorrow? No wonder the minister prayed for it. To Esther, whose mind was
+saturated with the idea of God as the author of chastenings, the
+possibility came with a shock of joy. She, too, began to pray, and she
+prayed for one thing only, over and over--the blessing that maketh rich
+and addeth no sorrow. There was no need, she felt, to specify further.
+God was sure to guess what blessing she meant.
+
+A subdued rustle, a swaying as of barley in a gentle breeze and the
+prayer was over. Esther removed her hand from her eyes and looked up at
+the minister. For a tiny second his glance met hers. A thrill shot
+through her, a thrill of dismay. With all the force of a new idea, it
+came to her that she and he were in the same parlous case. He loved her,
+as she loved--somebody else.
+
+And that meant that he must suffer, suffer as she had suffered last
+night. Last week when he had told her of his love she had been
+surprised, sorry and a little angry. But last week he had spoken of
+unknown things. Love and suffering had been words to her then, now they
+were realities.
+
+Then, for she was learning quickly now, came another flash of
+enlightenment. They had been praying for the same thing. He, too, had
+prayed for the blessing which maketh rich--and he had meant _her_. She
+knew it. He had been asking God to give her to him. Horrible!
+
+Common sense shrank back before the invading flood of fear. What if God
+had listened? What if He had answered? Ministers, she knew, have great
+influence with God. What if He had said, "Yes"? What if all the trouble
+of last night, the blankness of to-day, were part of the answer?
+
+"Never! Never!" she said. She almost said it aloud, so real had her fear
+been. Her eyes, fixed upon the minister's face, were terrified, but her
+soul was strong. Fearful of blasphemy, yet brave, she faced the bogie of
+a God her thought had evoked, saying, "I make my own choice. Take my
+lover from me if you will--I shall never give myself to another."
+
+All this was very wrong, shocking even, especially in church. But it
+really happened and is apt to happen any Sunday in any church so long as
+human love rebels at the idea of a Divine love less tender than itself.
+
+Gradually the panic fear died down. Esther's sane and well-balanced
+nature began to assert itself. Some voice, small but insistent, began to
+say, "God is not like that," and she listened and was comforted. She had
+not yet come to the love which casts out fear, but she was done with the
+fear which casts out love.
+
+So that when on the church steps in the sunshine she felt Angus
+Macnair's hand tremble in hers, she was able to meet his eyes,
+straightly, understandingly, but unafraid.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVI
+
+
+The manner in which Dr. Callandar spent that tragic Sunday is not
+clearly on record. We have watched Esther so closely that he has been
+permitted to escape our observation, and it would be manifestly unfair
+to expect any coherent account of the day from him. He knows that he
+went for a walk, early, and that he walked all day. He remembers once
+resting by the willow-fringed pool which had seen his introduction into
+Coombe, but he could not stay there. Between him and that hot June day
+lay the wreck of a world. Once he stumbled upon the Pine Lake road and
+followed it a little way. But here, too, memory came too close and drove
+him aside into the fields. There he tried to face his future fairly,
+under the calm sky. But it was hard work. With such a riot of feeling,
+it was difficult to think. His mind continually fell away into the
+contemplation of his own misery. It was a bad day, a day which left an
+ineffaceable mark.
+
+With night came the first sign of peace, or rather of capitulation. He
+fought no more because he realised that there was nothing for which to
+fight. There had never been, from the very first moment, a possibility
+of escape, the smallest ray of hope. Fate had met him squarely and the
+issue had never been in doubt.
+
+It was a "wonderful clear night of stars" when, having circled the town
+in his aimless wandering, he found himself opposite the schoolhouse gate
+and calm enough to allow his thoughts to dwell definitely upon Esther.
+She, at least, was safe, and the knowledge brought pure thankfulness.
+Not for anything in the world would he have had her entangled in this
+tragic coil. Leaning over the gate he saw the school steps, faintly
+white in the starlight. It needed small effort of imagination to see her
+there as he had seen her that first day--a happy girl, looking at him
+with the long, straight glance of unawakened youth. A great wave of
+protecting love went out to meet that vision. Self was lost in its
+immensity. As he had found her, so, please God, she was still and so he
+would leave her.
+
+Then, somewhere in the back of his brain, a question sprang to vivid
+life. Was she the same? He knew that all day he had been fighting back
+that question. Last night something had frightened him--something
+glimpsed for a moment in Esther's face when she had come in from the
+garden to say good-night. Fancy, perhaps, or a trick of the lamplight.
+She could not really have changed. He would not allow himself even to
+dream that she had changed.
+
+By this time she would know about himself and Mary--know all that any
+one was to know. He had insisted upon that. Mary had promised to tell
+her to-day that they were to be married soon. Next time he saw her she
+would look upon him with different eyes; eyes which would see not her
+sometime friend and companion but her step-mother's future husband. He
+must steel himself for this. Probably she would laugh a little. He hoped
+she would laugh. Last night she had looked so--she had not looked like
+laughter. If she should laugh it would answer the last doubt in his
+heart. He would know that she was free.
+
+Presently he felt himself to be unbearably weary. Physical needs,
+ignored all day, began to clamour. He must get home at once. No _outre_
+proceedings must raise the easy breath of gossip. He must not flinch, he
+dared not run away, all must be done decently and in order. Let him only
+keep his head now--the bravest man need not look too far into
+the morrow.
+
+It must be late, he knew. The road into Coombe was deserted. All the
+buggies of the country folk returning from evening service had passed
+long ago and even the happy young couples indulging in a Sunday night
+"after church" flirtation had decorously sought their homes. He looked
+at his watch by the clear starlight. It was later even than he had
+thought. No need to avoid passing the Elms, now; they would all be
+asleep--he might perhaps be able to sleep himself if he knew that no
+light burned in Esther's window.
+
+There was no light in the house anywhere. It stood black in the shadow
+of its trees. The doctor found himself walking softly. His steps grew
+slower, paused. Irresistibly the "spirit in his feet" drew him to the
+closed gate from where he could see the black oblong of her window.
+
+"She is asleep," he thought. "Of course she is asleep. Thank God!"
+
+Then, on the instant of dropping his eyes from the window, he saw her.
+She was standing quite near, in the shadow of the elm.
+
+"Esther!" The one word leaped from his lips like a cry.
+
+"Yes, it is I," she said.
+
+She offered no word of explanation nor did any need of one occur to
+him. Moving from the shadow into the soft starlight she came toward him
+like the spirit of the night. But when she paused, so close that only
+the gate divided them, he saw that her eyes were wide and dark
+with trouble.
+
+"I am so glad you came. I wanted to see you. I--I could not sleep." She
+spoke with the direct simplicity of a child, yet nothing could have
+shown more plainly that she was a child no longer. All her pretty
+girlish hesitation, all her happy shyness had passed away on the breath
+of the great awakening. It was a woman who stood there, pale, remote,
+with a woman's question in her eyes.
+
+The keen shock of the change in her filled Callandar with rebellious
+joy; it would be pain presently, but, just for the moment, love exulted
+shamelessly, claiming her own. He tried to answer her but no words came.
+
+"You look very tired." She seemed not to notice his silence. "I must not
+keep you. But there is a question I want to ask. Mother told me to-night
+that you and she are to be married. Is it true?"
+
+How incredible she was, he thought. How perfect in her direct and simple
+dignity. Yet there had crept into her tone a wistfulness which broke
+his heart.
+
+"Yes. It is true." He could do no less than meet her on her own high
+ground.
+
+"She said," the girl's sweet, remote voice went on, "that you had loved
+each other all your lives. Is that true, too?"
+
+He had hoped that he might be spared the bitterness of this, but since
+only one answer was possible, "It is true," he said hoarsely, "it is
+true that we loved each other--long ago."
+
+"Long ago--and now?" He was to be spared nothing, it seemed. Her wide
+eyes searched his face. Lest she should read it too plainly, he
+bowed his head.
+
+Then suddenly, even as she drew back from him, hurt to the heart, some
+trick of moonlight on his half-hidden face, linked to swift memory,
+showed her another moonlight night, a canoe, a story told--and in a
+flash the miracle had happened. Intuition had leaped the gulf of his
+enforced silence--Esther knew.
+
+A great wonder grew in her eyes, an immense relief.
+
+"Why," she spoke whisperingly, "I see, I know! She, my mother, is the
+girl you told me of. The girl you married--"
+
+She did not need the confirmation of his miserable eyes. It was all
+quite plain. With a little broken sigh of understanding, she leaned her
+head against the gate post and, all child again, began to cry softly
+behind the shelter of her hands.
+
+"Esther!"
+
+He could say nothing, do nothing. He dared not even touch the dark, bent
+head. But we may well pity him as he watched her.
+
+The girl's sobbing wore itself out and presently she lifted
+tear-drenched eyes, like the blue of the sky after rain. Her tragic,
+unnatural composure had all been wept away.
+
+"I understand--now," she faltered. "Before, I didn't. I thought dreadful
+things. I thought that I--that you--oh, I couldn't bear the things I
+thought! But it's better now. You did love me--didn't you?"
+
+"Before God--yes!"
+
+She went on dreamily. "It would have been too terrible if you hadn't--if
+you had just pretended--had been amusing yourself--been false and base.
+But I felt all along that you were never that. I knew there must be
+some explanation and it didn't seem wrong to ask. Instead of pretending
+that I didn't know all the things you had not time to say. Forgive me
+for ever doubting that you were brave and good."
+
+"Spare me--"
+
+She was not yet old enough to understand the tragic appeal. For she
+leaned nearer, laying her soft hand over his clenched ones.
+
+"It is all so very, very sad," she said with quaint simplicity which was
+part of her, "but not so bad--oh, not nearly so bad as if you had been
+pretending--or I mistaken. Think!--How terrible to give one's love
+unworthily or unasked!"
+
+"But you do not love me," he burst out, "you cannot! You must not!"
+
+Never had he seen her eyes so sweet, so dark.
+
+"I do love you. And I honour you above all men."
+
+Before he could prevent her, she had stooped--her lips brushed his hand.
+
+"Oh, my Dear!"--He had reached the limit of his strength--instant flight
+alone remained if he would keep the precious flower of her trust. And
+she, too, was trembling. But in the soft starlight they looked into each
+other's eyes, and what they saw there helped. Their hands clasped, but
+in that moment of parting neither thought of self, so both were strong.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVII
+
+
+Mrs. Sykes thought much about her boarder in those days and, for a
+wonder, said very little. Gossip as she was, she could, in the service
+of one she liked, be both wise and reticent. Perhaps she knew that
+oracles are valued partly for their silences. At any rate her prestige
+suffered nothing, for the less she said, the more certain Coombe became
+that she could, if she would, say a great deal. Of course her pretence
+of seeing nothing unusual in the doctor's engagement was simply absurd.
+Coombe felt sure that like the pig-baby in "Alice," she only did it "to
+annoy because she knows it teases."
+
+One by one the most expert gossips of the town charged down upon the
+doctor's landlady and one by one they returned defeated.
+
+"True about the doctor and Mary Coombe? Why, yes of course it's true.
+Land sakes, it's no secret." Mrs. Sykes would look at her visitor in
+innocent astonishment. "Queer? No. I don't see anything queer about it.
+Mary Coombe's a nice looking woman, if she is sloppy, and I guess she
+ain't any older than the doctor, if it comes to that. No, the doctor
+doesn't say much about it. He ain't a talking man. Sudden? Oh, I don't
+know. 'Tisn't as if they'd met like strangers. As you say, they _might_
+have kept company before. But I never heard of it. I always forget,
+Mrs. MacTavish, if you take sugar? One spoon or two? As you say, old
+friends sometimes take up with old friends. But sometimes they don't. My
+Aunt Susan found her second in a man who used to weed their garden. But
+it's not safe to judge by that. Ann, hand Mrs. MacTavish this cup, and
+go tell Bubble Burk that if he doesn't stop aggravating that dog, it'll
+bite him some day, and nobody sorry."
+
+In this manner did Mrs. Sykes hold the fort. Not from her would Coombe
+hear of those "blue things of the soul" which her quick eye divined
+behind the quiet front of her favourite. But with the doctor himself she
+had no reserves, it being one of her many maxims that "what you up and
+say to a person's face doesn't hurt them any." The doctor was made well
+aware that her unvarnished opinion of his prospective marriage was at
+his disposal at any time.
+
+"I'm not one as gives advice that ain't asked," declared Mrs. Sykes with
+sincere self-deception. "But what sensible folks see in Mary Coombe I
+can't imagine. I may be biased, not having ever liked her from the very
+first, but being always willing to give her a chance--which I may say
+she never took. There's a verse in the Bible she reminds me of,
+'Unstable as water'--Ann, what tribe was it that the Lord addressed them
+words to?"
+
+"I don't know, Aunt."
+
+"There, you see! She doesn't know! That's what happens along of all
+these Sunday Schools. In my day I'd be spanked and sent to bed if I
+didn't know every last thing about the tribes."
+
+"Ann and I will go and look it up," said the doctor hastily, hoping to
+escape; "it will be good discipline for both of us."
+
+"Land sakes! I'm not blaming you, Doctor. Naturally you haven't got your
+mind on texts, and I don't blame you about the other thing either. Men
+are awful easy taken in. My Aunt Susan used to say that the cleverer a
+man was the more he didn't understand a woman. Dr. Coombe was what you'd
+call clever, too, but it didn't help him any. Mind you, I'm not
+criticising, far from it, but I suppose a person may wonder what a man's
+eyes are for, without offence. No one knows better than you, Doctor,
+that I'm not an interfering woman and I'd never dream of saying a word
+against Mary Coombe to the face of her intended husband, but if I did
+say anything it would have to be the truth and the truth is that a more
+thorough-paced bit of uselessness I never saw."
+
+"Mrs. Sykes," the doctor's voice was dangerously quiet, "am I to
+understand that you are tired of your boarder?"
+
+Mrs. Sykes jumped.
+
+"Land, Doctor, don't get ruffled! I'm real sorry if I've hurt your
+feelings. I didn't mean to say a word when I set out. My tongue just
+runs away. And naturally you have to stand up for Mrs. Coombe. I see
+that. That'll be the last you'll hear from me and 'tisn't as if I'd ever
+turn around and say 'I told you so' afterwards."
+
+This was _amende honorable_ and the doctor received it as such; but when
+he had gone into his office leaving his breakfast almost untouched, Mrs.
+Sykes shook her head gloomily.
+
+"You needn't tell me!" she murmured, oblivious of the fact that no one
+was telling her anything. "You needn't tell me!" Then, with rare
+self-reproach, "Perhaps I hadn't ought to have said so much, but such
+blindness is enough to provoke a saint. If he'd any eyes--couldn't he
+see Esther?" Mrs. Sykes sighed as she emptied the doctor's untasted cup.
+
+More frankly disconsolate, though not so outspoken, were Ann and Bubble.
+Not only did they dislike the bride elect but they objected to marriage
+in general. "A honeymoon will put the kibosh on this here practice,
+sure," moaned Bubble.
+
+"Look at me. I'm not thinking of getting married, am I? No, and I'm
+never going to get married either."
+
+"I am," said Ann, "and I'm going to have ten sons and the first one is
+going to be called 'Henry' after the doctor."
+
+"Huh!" said Bubble, "bet you it isn't. Bet you go and call it after its
+father. They all do."
+
+"No chance! Bet you I won't. I wouldn't call it 'Zerubbabel' for
+anything."
+
+For an instant they glared at each other, and then as the awful
+implication dawned upon Bubble his round face grew crimson and his voice
+thrilled with just resentment.
+
+"Well, if you think you're going to marry me, Miss Ann, you're jolly
+well mistaken."
+
+"Will if I like," said Ann, retiring into her sun-bonnet.
+
+Upon the whole, however, their affection for the doctor kept them
+friendly. Both children felt that something was wrong somewhere. Their
+idol was not happy. Bubble whispered to Ann of long hours when the
+doctor sat in his office with an open book before him, a book the pages
+of which were never turned. Ann told of weary walks when she trotted
+along by his side, wholly forgotten. Only between themselves did they
+ever speak of the change in him, and Henry Callandar was well repaid
+for the careless kindness of his brighter hours by a faithful
+guardianship, a quick-eyed consideration and a stout line of defence
+which protected his privacy and ignored his moods without his ever being
+aware of such a service.
+
+Esther he seldom saw. She was remarkably clever, he thought, with a
+tinge of bitterness, in arranging duties and pleasures which would take
+her out of his way. It was better so, of course. It was the worst of
+injustice to feel hurt with her for doing what of all things he would
+have had her do. But one doesn't reason about these things, one feels.
+
+Sometimes he wondered if that midnight interview with her at the gate
+had ever really taken place--or had it been midsummer madness, too sweet
+to exist even in memory? Certainly, in the Esther he saw now there was
+nothing of the Esther of the stars. She wore her mask well. School had
+closed for the holidays and the summer gaieties of Coombe were in full
+swing. Esther boated, picnicked, played croquet and tennis. If there was
+any change in her at all it showed only in a kind of feverish gaiety
+which seemed to wear her strength. She was certainly thinner. Callandar
+ventured to suggest to Mary that she was looking far from well. But Mary
+laughed at the idea. She was very much annoyed with Esther. The girl
+appeared to care nothing at all for the great event, refused to discuss
+it, declined absolutely to put herself out in the slightest for the
+entertainment of her mother's prospective husband, seemed to avoid him
+in fact. Moreover, she openly expressed her intention of leaving home
+immediately after the wedding. Mrs. Coombe was afraid people would talk.
+
+Of them all, Aunt Amy was the only one who understood. How her poor,
+unsound brain arrived at the knowledge we cannot say. Perhaps Esther was
+more careless in her presence, dropping her mask almost as if alone, or
+perhaps Aunt Amy's strange psychic insight took no note of masks, or
+perhaps--account for it as you will, Aunt Amy knew! Esther and Dr.
+Callandar loved each other, and Mary stood between. This latter fact was
+not at all surprising to Aunt Amy. Was it not the special delight of the
+mysterious "They" to bring misery to all Aunt Amy loved, and was not
+Mary their accredited agent? The affair of the ruby ring had proved her
+that, though no one else must guess it. What would come of it all, Aunt
+Amy could not tell. Wring her hands as she might she could not see into
+the future. Often she would mutter a little as she went about her work,
+or stand still staring, straining into the dark. No one noted any
+difference in her save Jane, for Jane was as yet happily free to
+observe. The others, caught up in the whirl of their own destinies, saw
+nothing save the problems in their own anxious hearts.
+
+"Esther," said Jane one evening, "Aunt Amy is odder and odder and you
+don't seem to care a bit."
+
+Esther, who was preparing to go to a garden party, turned back, a little
+startled.
+
+"What do you mean, Jane?"
+
+"I don't know. Can't you see that she isn't happy?"
+
+"But she is better. She never complains. She almost never fancies things
+now."
+
+"She goes into corners and stares--and she wrings her hands."
+
+"But she always did that, duck."
+
+Jane was not equal to a more lucid explanation.
+
+"It's not the same," she insisted. "I know it isn't. Esther, when you
+go away, will you take Aunt Amy and me?"
+
+"How could I, dear? Your home is here. And you like Dr. Callandar, don't
+you?"
+
+"I used to. But he never plays with the pup any more. He's different.
+And you're different and mother's different. I don't want to live with
+mother. That was a fib I told you the other day about the cut on my
+head. I didn't fall and hurt it. It was mother She threw her clothes
+brush at me."
+
+"Jane!" There was pure horror in her sister's voice.
+
+"Yes, she did. I went into her room when she was taking some medicine in
+a glass and I asked her what it was. Honest, Esther, that is all I did.
+And she screamed at me--and threw the brush."
+
+Esther came back into the room and sat down.
+
+"When was this?" in businesslike tones.
+
+Jane considered. "It was that day she wasn't down stairs at all, and
+sent word to Dr. Callandar not to come--three days ago I think."
+
+"Yes, I remember. O Janie dear, it looks as if things were going to be
+bad again! It must have been one of her very bad headaches. She was
+probably in great pain. Of course she did not mean to throw the brush
+Are you sure it was medicine she was taking?"
+
+"It was something in a glass," vaguely, "she was mixing it--look out,
+Esther! You are spoiling your new gloves."
+
+The girl threw the crumpled gloves aside and drawing the child to her
+knee kissed her gently.
+
+"It seems to me," she said slowly, "that big sister has been losing her
+eyes lately. She must find them again; it isn't going to help to be a
+selfish pig."
+
+"Help what, Esther?"
+
+Esther's only answer was another kiss, but when she had hurried out of
+the room, Jane found something round and wet upon her hand.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVIII
+
+
+Jane was still looking at the wet place on her hand when the doctor
+entered.
+
+"Esther's been crying," she told him. In her voice was the awe which
+children feel at the phenomenon of tears in grown-ups.
+
+Callandar felt his heart contract--Esther crying! But he could not
+question the child.
+
+"I don't know why," went on Jane obligingly. "Esther's so strange
+lately. Every one is strange. You are strange too. Am I strange?"
+
+"A little," said Callandar gravely.
+
+"Perhaps it's catching? Do you want mother? She is upstairs and her door
+is locked. Perhaps she'll be down in a little while. She said Esther was
+to stay in and entertain you, but Esther wouldn't. She has gone to a
+garden party. I'll entertain you if you like."
+
+"That will be very nice."
+
+"Shall I play for you on the piano?"
+
+"Thanks. And you won't mind if I sit in the corner here and close my
+eyes, until your mother comes?"
+
+"No. You may go quite to sleep if you wish. I'm not sensitive about my
+playing. Bubble says you are nearly always tired now. He says you have
+such a 'normous practice that you hardly ever get a wink of sleep.
+That's what makes you look so kind of hollow-eyed, Bubble says."
+
+"So Bubble has been diagnosing my case, has he?"
+
+"Oh, he doesn't talk about professional cases usually. He said that
+about you because Mrs. Atkins said that being engaged didn't seem to
+agree with you. She said she was just as glad you didn't take a fancy to
+her Gracie if prospective matteromony made you look like the dead
+march in Saul."
+
+"Observing woman!"
+
+"What," resumed Jane, "is a dead march in Saul?"
+
+"It is a musical composition."
+
+Jane considered this and then dismissed it with a shrug. "It sounded as
+if it was something horrid. Mrs. Atkins thinks she's smart. Anyway, I
+didn't tell mother."
+
+"Well, suppose you run now and tell her that I am here."
+
+"Can't. The door is locked."
+
+"Then let us have some of the music you promised. I'll sit here and
+wait."
+
+Strange to say, Jane's music was not unsoothing. She had a smooth, light
+touch and the little airs she played tinkled sweetly enough from the old
+piano. The weary, nerve-wrung man was more than half asleep when she
+grew tired of playing and slipped off to bed without disturbing him. The
+moments ticked themselves away on the big hall clock. Mrs. Coombe did
+not come, nor did the doctor waken.
+
+He was aroused an hour later by a voice upon the veranda. It was
+Esther's voice and in response to it he heard a deeper murmur, a man's
+voice without doubt. There was a moment or two of low-toned talk, then
+"Good-night," and the girl came in alone.
+
+She did not see him as she came slowly across to the table. He thought
+she looked grave and sad, older too--but, so dear! With a weary gesture
+she began to pull off her long gloves.
+
+"Who was it with you, Esther?" He tried hard to make the inquiry, so
+devouringly eager, sound carelessly casual.
+
+She looked up with a start.
+
+"Oh--I didn't see you, Doctor! Mr. Macnair was with me. Did you wish to
+see him?" She could play at the game of carelessness better than he.
+"Where is mother?" she added quickly.
+
+"In her room, I think. Esther, are you going to marry Macnair?"
+
+The girl slipped off her second glove, blew gently into its fingers,
+smoothed them and laid it with nice care upon the table beside
+its fellow.
+
+"I do not know."
+
+He realised with a shock that he had expected an indignant denial.
+
+"You do not love him!"
+
+"No. Not now. He knows that. And I do not expect ever to love him. But
+perhaps, after a long while, if I could make him happy--it is so
+terrible not to be happy," she finished pathetically.
+
+Callandar could have groaned aloud; the danger was so clear. And how
+could he, of all men, warn her. Yet he must try. He came quickly across
+to where she stood and compelled her gaze to his.
+
+"Do not make that mistake, Esther! It is fatal. Try to believe that in
+spite of--of everything, I am speaking disinterestedly. You are young
+and the young hate suffering. You would marry him, out of pity. But I
+tell you that no man's happiness comes to him that way. You will have
+sacrificed yourself to no purpose. The risk is too awful. Wait. Time is
+kind. You will know it, some day. But even though you do not believe it
+now--wait. Wait forever, rather than marry a man to whom you cannot give
+your heart."
+
+"That is your advice?" She spoke heavily. "You would like some day to
+see me marry a man I could--love?"
+
+"Yes, a thousand times yes!"
+
+"I shall think over what you say." She was still gravely controlled but
+it was a control which would not last much longer. She glanced around
+the empty room with a quick caught breath. "Why are you left all alone?"
+
+"Is a keeper necessary?" Then, ashamed of his irritation and willing to
+end a scene which threatened to make things harder for both of them, he
+added in his ordinary tone, "I really do not know who is responsible for
+such unparalleled neglect. Jane played me to sleep, I fancy. She said
+her mother was upstairs but would be down presently. It must be late. I
+had better go."
+
+"Wait a moment, I will see if there is any message from mother."
+
+As she left the room her light scarf slipped from her shoulders and fell
+softly across his arm. Callandar crushed it passionately to his lips and
+then, folding it carefully, laid it beside the gloves upon the table.
+Even the scarf was not for him. Aunt Amy, passing through the hall on
+her way upstairs, saw the dumb caress and shivered anew at the
+mysterious power of "They" which could tear such a man as Callandar from
+the woman he loved.
+
+Esther was gone only a moment and when she returned she brought with her
+a change of atmosphere. Something had banished every trace of
+self-consciousness from her manner. She looked anxious but it was an
+anxiety with which no embarrassment mingled.
+
+"Doctor," she said at once, "mother seems to be ill. The door is locked
+and she did not answer my knocking. Yet she is not asleep. I could hear
+her talking. I think you ought to come up."
+
+An indescribable look flitted across the doctor's face. He looked at the
+girl a moment in measuring silence and then pointed to a chair.
+
+"Sit down," he said briefly, "I thought that this would come. I have
+been afraid of it for some time. Is it possible that you have no
+suspicion at all in regard to these peculiar--illnesses--of your
+mother's?"
+
+The startled wonder in her eyes was answer enough even without the
+quick, "What do you mean?"
+
+Callandar's face grew gravely compassionate. "I think you ought to
+know," he said. "I have put off saying anything because I was not
+absolutely sure myself. And I have never had quite the right opportunity
+of finding out. But I have had fears for some time now that your mother
+is in the habit of taking some drug which--well, which is certainly not
+good for her. Do not look so frightened. It may not be serious. Do you
+remember when you first consulted me about your mother and how we both
+agreed that the medicine she was taking for her nervous attacks might be
+harmful? I was suspicious then, but there was little to go on, only her
+fear of any one seeing the prescription, and a few general symptoms
+which might be due to various causes. Since then I--I have noticed
+things which have made me anxious. I think for her own sake as well as
+yours and mine, the sooner the truth is known the better. Are you sure
+the door is locked?"
+
+"Yes," the girl's voice was tense, "but the window is open. It opens on
+the top of the veranda. You could enter there."
+
+"If that is the only way, I must take it. I thought, I hoped that if
+things were as I feared she would tell me herself, but she never has. It
+is useless, now, to hope for her confidence. The instinct is so strongly
+for concealment. We must help her in spite of herself."
+
+"Hurry then! I shall wait here. You will call me if necessary?"
+
+She did not ask him exactly what it was that he feared nor did he tell
+her, but for the first time in many weeks they were able to look at each
+other as comrades look. The eruption of the old trouble into the new
+obscured the latter so that, for the time at least, the sick woman
+behind the locked door held first place in both their thoughts.
+
+It seemed to Esther that she waited a long time before the summons came.
+Then she heard him call, "Esther!" It was a doctor's call, cool,
+passionless, commanding. She flew up the stairs, closing Jane's door as
+she hurried by. The door to her mother's room was open. It was brightly
+lighted. The shade of the lamp had been removed and its garish yellow
+fell full upon the bed and the strange figure which lay there.
+
+Mary Coombe had apparently thrown herself down fully dressed--but in
+what a costume! Surely no nightmare held anything more bizarre. Esther
+had no time to notice details but she remembered afterwards how the feet
+were clothed in different coloured stockings and that while one
+displayed a gaily buckled slipper, the other was carefully laced into a
+tan walking boot. Just now she could see nothing but the face, for the
+greatest shock was there. It did not look like Mary's face at all--it
+was strange, old, yellow and repulsive. Her unbrushed, lustreless hair
+hung about it in a dull mat, one of her hands was clutched in it--the
+hand was dirty.
+
+A terrible thought struck every vestige of colour from Esther's cheek.
+Her terrified gaze swept over the disordered room, up to the face of the
+man who stood there so silently, then down again to the inert woman upon
+the bed. Once, not long ago, she had seen a drunken man asleep upon the
+roadside grass--like this.
+
+"Is it--is it drink?" The words were a whisper of horror.
+
+The doctor shook his head.
+
+"I wish it were. I wish it were only that. Have you never heard of the
+drug habit--morphia, opium? That is what we have to fight--and it is
+what I feared."
+
+"Oh!" It was a breath of relief. To Esther, who knew nothing of drugs,
+or drug habits, the truth seemed less awful than the thing she
+had imagined.
+
+"Is--is it serious?" she asked timidly.
+
+The doctor smiled grimly. "You will see. No need to frighten you now.
+But it will be a fight from this on." He threw a light coverlet over the
+helpless figure and replacing the shade on the lamp, turned down the
+flaring wick. "I will tell you what I can, but at present it is very
+little. Probably this began long ago, before your father's death. In the
+first place there may have been a prescription--I think you said she had
+had an illness in which she suffered greatly. The drug, opium in some
+form probably, may have been given to reduce the pain--and continued
+after need for it was gone without knowledge of its dangerous qualities.
+Nervous people form the habit very quickly. Then--I am only
+guessing--as the amount contained in the original prescription ceased to
+produce the desired effect, she may have found out what drug it was that
+her appetite craved. If she saw the danger then, it was already too
+late. She could not give up voluntarily and was compelled to go on,
+shutting her eyes to the inevitable consequences, if indeed she ever
+clearly knew them."
+
+"But now that you know? It ought not to be hard to help her now that you
+know. There are other drugs--"
+
+"Yes. There is a frying-pan and a fire. In fact I fear that she has
+already tried that expedient herself. Some of the symptoms point to
+cocaine. No, our best hope is in the decreasing dose with proper
+auxiliary treatment. I cannot tell yet how serious the case may be. At
+any rate there must be an end of the mystery. Every one in the house
+must know, even Jane; for in this fight ignorance means danger. But," he
+hesitated and his face grew dark, "you cannot realise what this is going
+to mean. It is my burden, not yours. At least I have the right to save
+you that. We must have a nurse--"
+
+A little eager cry burst from her. "Oh, no! Not that! You wouldn't do
+that. You can't mean not to let me help."
+
+"You do not know--"
+
+"I do not care what it means. But if you won't let me help, if you shut
+me out--" Her voice quivered dangerously, but with a spark of her old
+fire she recovered herself. "You cannot," she added more firmly,
+"because it is my burden as well as yours. Whatever she is to you, she
+was my father's wife and I am responsible to him. Unless extra help is
+really needed, no nurse shall take my place."
+
+"Very well," quietly. "Call Aunt Amy, then, and search the room. She
+will sleep for a long time yet. When she wakes there must be no more of
+the drug within her reach. I must find out the amount to which she has
+been accustomed and arrange a decreasing dose. But if you are to be a
+nurse, you know, you must expect a bad time. It will not be easy."
+
+Esther's reply was to call Aunt Amy and while the doctor explained to
+the bewildered old lady the danger in which her niece stood and the
+absolute importance of keeping all "medicine" away from her, Esther
+quietly and swiftly searched the room. Boxes and drawers she unlocked
+and opened, the dresser, the writing-table, the bureau, the long unused
+sewing basket, all were examined without success. But in the locked box
+which contained her father's portrait, she made another discovery which
+woke a little throb of angry pity in her heart. There, still wrapped in
+its carelessly torn off postal wrappings, lay the box containing the
+ruby ring which Jessica Bremner had returned. Mary must have got it from
+the post herself and had immediately hidden it, careless of the fact
+that all Esther's careful savings had been necessary to make the return
+possible. Without comment she slipped the ring into the bosom of
+her dress.
+
+"Have you found anything?"
+
+"Nothing yet."
+
+Aunt Amy took a fascinated step nearer the figure on the bed. If
+Callandar could have intercepted the look she cast upon it he might have
+been warned of the subtle change which had taken place in her of late,
+but the doctor had turned to help Esther. Aunt Amy could gaze
+undisturbed.
+
+"She looks like Richard," said Aunt Amy suddenly. "Do you remember
+Richard?" She brushed her hand over her eyes in a painful effort of
+memory. "He was a bad man, a very bad man."
+
+"She means her brother Richard," explained Esther. "He has been dead for
+ages. I believe he was not a family ornament."
+
+"Just like Richard," murmured Aunt Amy again with a quickly checked
+chuckle. "But you ought to be glad of that. You won't have to marry her
+now. You can marry Esther."
+
+If a shell had burst in the quiet room, it could scarcely have caused
+more consternation. The doctor's stern face quivered, Esther's searching
+hand dropped paralysed. Here was a danger indeed! Was their secret
+really so patent? Or had it been but a vagrant guess of a clouded mind?
+
+Callandar recovered himself first. Without glancing at the girl he
+walked quietly over to the bed and placing his hand upon Aunt Amy's
+shoulder compelled wavering eyes to his.
+
+"Aunt Amy, you must never say that again." He spoke with the crisp
+incisiveness of a master, but for once his subject did not immediately
+respond. With a sulky look she tried to wrench herself free.
+
+"Why?" she questioned. But Callandar knew his business too
+well to argue. "You must never say it again," he repeated.
+"You--must--never--say--it--again!"
+
+The poor, weak lips began to quiver. Her own boldness had frightened her
+quite as much as his vehemence. Her eyes fluttered and fell.
+
+"Very well, Doctor," she answered meekly.
+
+They searched now in silence and presently Esther emerged from the
+closet with a pair of dainty slippers in her hand.
+
+"I think I have found something," she said. "There are three pairs of
+party slippers and the toes of them are all stuffed with these." She
+handed the doctor a package of innocent looking tablets done up in
+purplish blue paper.
+
+Callandar glanced at them, shook them out and counted their number.
+
+"You are sure you have them all?"
+
+"I can find no trace of more."
+
+"Then I think we have a strong fight coming--but a good hope, too."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIX
+
+
+Miss A. Milligan stood before the door of her select dressmaking
+parlours, meditatively picking her teeth with a needle. We hasten to
+observe that her teeth were quite clean and that this was merely a
+harmless habit denoting intense mental concentration. Miss Milligan was
+tall and full of figure with an elegant waist and a bust so like a
+pin-cushion that it fulfilled the duties of that article admirably. Her
+small bright eyes set in a wide expanse of face suggested nothing so
+much as currants in an underdone bun, and just now, as she watched the
+graceful figure of Mrs. Coombe, bride to be, disappear around the
+corner, they gave the impression of having been poked too far in while
+the bun was soft.
+
+The door of Miss Milligan's select parlours did not open upon the main
+street, it being far from her desire to attract promiscuous trade. The
+parlours, indeed, were situated upon one of the "nicest" streets in
+Coombe and occupied a corner lot, so that a splendid view down two of
+the most genteel residential streets was obtainable from their windows.
+The only sign of business anywhere was a board of chaste design over the
+doorway, bearing the simple legend, "A. MILLIGAN." Even the word
+"Dressmaker" was considered superfluous. Also there was one window, near
+the door, which from time to time displayed wonderfully coloured plates
+of terribly twisting and elegantly elongated females purporting to be
+the very latest from Paris (_France_).
+
+Mrs. Coombe was getting some "things" made at Miss Milligan's. It had
+been rumoured at first that she had contemplated running down to Toronto
+and Detroit, buying most of her trousseau there, but for some
+unexplained reason the plan had been given up. Doctor Callandar, it
+appeared, believed in patronising local tradesmen and had been
+sufficiently ungallant to veto the Detroit visit altogether. Everybody
+wondered why Mary Coombe stood it. Surely it was bad enough when a man
+sets up to be a domestic tyrant after marriage. They were surprised at
+Dr. Callandar--they hadn't thought it of him.
+
+"It is women like Mary Coombe who submit tamely to such indignities,"
+declared the eldest Miss Sinclair, "who have held back the emancipation
+of women from the beginning of time."
+
+"She looks so poorly, too," agreed Miss Jessie. "I am sure she needs a
+change. I should think that Esther would insist upon it."
+
+But Esther appeared in all things to back up Dr. Callandar. People
+admitted that they were disappointed in Esther and only hoped that the
+day would never come when she would be sorry. For if all the world loves
+a lover, all the world is indulgent to a prospective bride and any one
+could see that this particular bride was being denied her proper
+privileges. Any one would think she was a child and not to be trusted
+alone. Esther went with her everywhere, simply everywhere. Of course it
+was sweet of Esther to be so attentive, but people didn't wonder that
+her mother didn't like it.
+
+Such were the current comments of the town, sent out somewhat in the
+nature of feelers, for behind them all, Coombe, having a very sensitive
+nose for gossip, was uneasily aware that their cleverest investigators
+were not yet in possession of the root of the matter. Every one seemed
+to know everything, and yet--no wonder that Miss Milligan picked her
+teeth in agonies of mental tumult at finding herself sole possessor of a
+satisfactory explanation which she was bound in honour not to disclose.
+
+Mrs. Coombe had just been in. She had been having a "first fitting" and
+in the privacy of the fitting room she had been perfectly frank with
+Miss Milligan. She had told Miss Milligan "things." She had told her
+things which would move a heart of stone, regardless of the fact that
+Miss Milligan's heart was made of the softest of soft materials and beat
+warmly under her spiky pin cushion. The fact that her eyes were hard and
+black had nothing to do with it; mistakes in eyes occur constantly in
+the best regulated families. At this very moment when her eyes were more
+like currants than ever she was making up her mind that, come what
+might, doctors or no doctors, she was not going to see a fellow
+creature put upon.
+
+For, you see, Mrs. Coombe, poor little thing, had confided in Miss
+Milligan. She had told her all about it, and like most mysteries, it had
+turned out to be very simple. It seemed that Dr. Callandar, such a
+perfectly charming man in most respects, had a most absurd prejudice
+against patent medicines. This prejudice, common to the medical
+profession on account of patents interfering with profits, was, in Dr.
+Callandar's case, almost an obsession. Miss Milligan, being a sensible
+person, knew very well that there are patents _and_ patents. Some of
+them are frauds, of course, but there are others which are better than
+any prescription that any doctor ever wrote. Miss Milligan did not speak
+from hearsay, she had had an extensive experience the results of which
+lent themselves to conversational effort. Therefore it is easy to see
+how she understood and sympathised at once when Mrs. Coombe told her of
+a remedy which she had found to be quite excellent but which the doctor
+absolutely forbade her to use.
+
+"Not that he means to be inconsiderate, dear Miss Milligan, only he is
+so very sure of his own point of view. Doctors have to be firm of
+course. But you can see it is rather hard on me. The trouble is that I
+cannot obtain the remedy I need in Coombe. It is a remedy very little
+known and useful only in obscure nerve troubles. I have been in the
+habit of getting it from a certain firm in Detroit, not a very
+well-known firm, and now, of course, that is impossible--without
+upsetting the doctor, which I hesitate to do."
+
+Miss Milligan was of the opinion that a little upsetting was just what
+the doctor required.
+
+"No--o." The visitor shook her head. She could not bring her mind to it.
+She would prefer to suffer herself. But did not Miss Milligan think
+that, in face of such an unreasonable and violent prejudice, a little
+innocent strategy might be justified?
+
+Miss Milligan thought so, very emphatically.
+
+Mrs. Coombe sighed. "I do so want to look well for the wedding, you
+know. And really, nothing seems to help me like my own particular
+medicine. It is hard, very hard, to be without it."
+
+Miss Milligan did not doubt it. It seemed, to her, a perfect shame. But
+had Mrs. Coombe ever tried "Peebles' Perfect Pick-me-ups" for the
+nerves? They were certainly very excellent.
+
+Yes. Mrs. Coombe had heard of them and no doubt they were very good for
+some people. But constitutions differ so. On the whole she felt sure
+that even "Peebles' Perfect Pick-me-ups" would not suit her nearly as
+well as her own particular remedy.
+
+It was at this point that Miss Milligan stopped fitting and began to
+pick her teeth, a sign, as we have before stated, of great mental
+activity. If nothing would suit Mrs. Coombe but this one medicine and if
+the medicine could be obtained in Detroit and if Mrs. Coombe had the
+correct address--why not write for it? It was a brilliant idea, but Mrs.
+Coombe shook her head.
+
+She had the address, naturally, and she had also thought of writing, but
+it would be of no use. Esther and the doctor actually watched her mail.
+
+"Incredible!"
+
+"Oh, not in any offensive way. They did not mean to be tyrannous. They
+were quite convinced that patent medicines were very injurious. But
+women suffering from nerves (like yourself, dear Miss Milligan) know
+that relief is often found in the least likely places and from remedies
+not mentioned in the Materia Medica."
+
+Miss Milligan knew that very well. And people are so hard to convince.
+When Mrs. Barker, over the hill, had first recommended that new
+blood-purifier to Miss Milligan, Miss Milligan had laughed. But after
+taking only six bottles she had thanked Mrs. Barker with tears in her
+eyes. "And I must say," added she in a burst of virtuous indignation,
+"that if I were going to Detroit to-morrow I would bring you back all
+the patent medicine you wanted, Mrs. Coombe, and be very glad to
+do it."
+
+This was most satisfactory save for one small fact, namely that Miss
+Milligan was not going to Detroit to-morrow. Mrs. Coombe thanked her
+very much and raised her arm (which shook sadly) while Miss Milligan
+pinned in the underarm seam.
+
+"Even as it is," went on Miss Milligan, "I don't see why--a little
+higher please, and turn a trifle to the light, thank you!--I don't see
+why it can't be done. Nobody inspects my mail, thank heaven! and one
+address is as good to a druggist as another."
+
+What a bright idea! Strange that it had never occurred to Mrs. Coombe to
+arrange things so easily. It was very, very clever and kind of Miss
+Milligan to think of it. But--people might talk! Think how upset the
+doctor would be if their innocent little plot were spoken of abroad.
+People are so unkind, quite horrid in fact. And as Esther and the doctor
+were doing it all for her good they would naturally hate to have their
+actions misunderstood. Of course, Mrs. Coombe knew that Miss Milligan
+herself would never mention it to a soul. She felt quite sure of that,
+still--as it did not appear how the little plot could be spread abroad
+under those circumstances unless the lay-figure in the corner should
+become communicative, Mrs. Coombe's sentence remained plaintively
+unfinished. Miss Milligan, in spite of its being so very unnecessary,
+found herself promising solemnly never to mention it.
+
+As the whole thing was entirely unpremeditated it seemed like a special
+piece of good luck that Mrs. Coombe should have at that moment in her
+pocket a note to the druggists (who were not called druggists, exactly)
+and that all she needed to do was to add Miss Milligan's address, and
+hand to that lady sufficient money to secure a postal note as an
+enclosure. She did this very quickly and the whole little affair was
+satisfactorily disposed of when Esther was seen coming hurriedly down
+the street.
+
+"I thought," said Esther, who entered a little out of breath and with a
+worried pucker between her eyes, "I thought that I would just run in and
+see how the linings look."
+
+"You can never tell anything from linings," said Miss Milligan in an
+injured tone. "Gracious! I don't suppose any one would ever want a dress
+if they went by the way the linings look. I always advise my customers
+never to look in the glass until I get to the material, what with seams
+on the wrong side and all!"
+
+"There is really nothing at all to see as yet," assented Mrs. Coombe
+crossly.
+
+Esther seated herself by the open window.
+
+"Very well," she said quietly. "I won't look. I'll just wait."
+
+Mrs. Coombe shrugged her shoulders and displaced a pin or two. There was
+an injured look upon her face and Miss Milligan, replacing the pins,
+wondered how it is that nice girls like Esther Coombe never see when
+they're not wanted.
+
+The fitting went quickly forward. Mrs. Coombe seemed to have lost all
+her genial expansiveness. Miss Milligan's pins had overflowed from her
+pin-cushion into her mouth and Esther, who appeared tired, gazed
+steadily out of the window. Only the humming of the machines in the
+adjoining workroom and the subdued talk and laughter of Miss Milligan's
+young ladies saved the silence from becoming oppressive. Occasionally,
+when her supply of pins became exhausted, Miss Milligan would
+contribute a cooing murmur to the effect that it did "set beautiful
+across the shoulders" or that "the long line over the hip was
+quite elegant."
+
+Without doubt the atmosphere had changed with the coming of Esther. Mrs.
+Coombe became each moment more fidgety, she became, in fact, jerky! Her
+hands twitched, her head twitched, she could not stand still and
+suddenly she twitched herself out of Miss Milligan's hands altogether
+and flinging herself into a chair declared that she couldn't stand any
+more fitting that day. Even Miss Milligan's black currant eyes could see
+that her nerves were terribly wrong--she looked ghastly, poor thing! And
+all on account of a silly prejudice regarding patent medicines.
+
+Esther, who exhibited no surprise at her mother's sudden collapse,
+helped Miss Milligan to unpin the linings.
+
+"My mother has been a little longer than usual without her tonic," she
+calmly explained. "The other fittings can wait," and quickly, yet
+without flurry, she found Mary's hat, bag, gloves and parasol and picked
+up her handkerchief which she had flung upon the floor.
+
+Mrs. Coombe accepted these services without thanks, indulging indeed in
+a little spiteful laugh which Miss Milligan obligingly attributed to her
+poor nerves. Things had come to a pretty pass indeed, thought the
+sympathetic dressmaker, when a grown woman is obliged to have her
+medicine chosen for her like a baby.
+
+As she stood in the doorway watching the two ladies out of sight, a just
+indignation grew within the breast so strongly fortified outside, so
+vulnerable within; and without even waiting to call her giggling young
+ladies to order, she pinned on her hat and departed to send Mrs.
+Coombe's postal note to the Detroit druggist, who, oddly enough, was not
+a druggist at all.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXX
+
+
+Esther and her step-mother set out upon their homeward walk in silence.
+The older woman's face was drawn and bitter, Esther's thoughtful and
+sad. Though there seemed no reason for haste, Mrs. Coombe's steps grew
+constantly quicker until she was hurrying breathlessly.
+
+More than once the girl glanced at her anxiously as if about to speak,
+yet hesitating. Then when the walk threatened to become a run she laid a
+detaining hand upon her arm.
+
+"If you walk so very rapidly, mother, people will notice." It was the
+only argument which never failed of effect. Mrs. Coombe's steps
+slackened.
+
+"Besides," went on Esther eagerly, "every moment is a gain. Ten minutes
+more will make this the longest interval yet. Don't you think you
+could try...."
+
+"No!"
+
+The word was only a gasp and the face Mary turned for a moment on the
+girl was livid. The eyes shone with hate. "You--you beast!" she muttered
+chokingly.
+
+Esther turned a shade paler, but otherwise gave no sign that she had
+heard. "Mother, just try, you are doing so well, so splendidly. The
+doctor says ..."
+
+"Be quiet--be quiet! I hate him. I won't try. I won't be tortured--oh,
+why can't you all leave me alone!" She began to sob and moan under her
+breath, careless even of a possible passerby. Fortunately there was no
+one, and they were already within sight of home. Esther, very white,
+supported the shaking woman with her arm and they hurried on together.
+At the door she would still have accompanied her but Mary flung herself
+angrily from her hold and ran up the stairs with sudden feverish
+strength. Esther turned into the living room and dropped into the
+nearest chair.
+
+She was still sitting there without having removed either hat or gloves
+when, a little later, Callandar entered.
+
+"Well, nurse," with a faint smile, "how are things to-day?" His quick
+eye had noticed in a moment the girl's closed eyes and listless
+attitude, but nothing in his tone betrayed it.
+
+"Very well, I think, until a little while ago. We were late in getting
+home from the dressmaker's--"
+
+"I see. You look rather done up. The fact is you are overdoing things.
+Rather foolish, don't you think?"
+
+"No," stubbornly. "I am all right."
+
+"You are exhausted and there is no need. Things are going well. The dose
+is steadily diminishing, more quickly than she suspects. It looks as if
+we might begin to breathe again. It is a great gain to feel reasonably
+sure that she has no more of the stuff hidden anywhere. If she had, she
+would have used it during that last crisis."
+
+The girl in the chair winced. She hated even to think of the night to
+which his words referred. "Yes," she said, "but--but there won't be any
+more times like that, will there?"
+
+"Yes," grimly. "We are not through yet. But every crisis will be a
+little easier--if things go as they are going."
+
+Esther sighed. "It is very terrible, isn't it?" she said. "And really it
+doesn't seem fair, for it wasn't her fault; in the beginning she didn't
+know. And she does suffer so."
+
+"We must not think of it in that way. It helps more to think of the
+suffering she is escaping. What she is going through now is saving her,
+body and soul. It is taking her out of torment and leading her back to
+life, and sanity. You don't know, but I do, and any struggle, any
+suffering is mild compared to the horrors before her if she kept on. She
+was taking some cocaine too. The word means nothing to you, but to a
+physician it spells hell. So you see--it gives one strength."
+
+Esther sat up and straightened her collar. "I'm ashamed of myself," she
+said. "No wonder you want another nurse. But I won't resign yet. And I
+wanted to ask you--do you think it is necessary now to be with her
+whenever she goes out? She hates it so. I think she is getting to hate
+me, too. Where could she possibly get the stuff? None of our local
+stores would sell it without a prescription."
+
+"I know. But in a case like this you can never be sure of anything. No,
+we must not relax in the slightest. Even as it is, I am continually
+afraid." He began to pace the room restlessly. "There may be a weak spot
+somewhere, some loop-hole we have forgotten. I think the druggists are
+safe and the mail is watched. That last supply, you are sure it was all
+destroyed?"
+
+"Yes, I burned it. At least I gave it to Aunt Amy to burn. I couldn't
+leave mother."
+
+"Well, let us call Aunt Amy, and make sure. I believe I am foolishly
+nervous, but--" without finishing his sentence the doctor walked to the
+door and waited there until Aunt Amy answered his call.
+
+"Auntie," said Esther, "you remember the little package I gave you that
+night when mother was so ill? It was done up in purplish blue paper."
+
+"Yes, Esther."
+
+"Do you remember what you did with it, dear?"
+
+Aunt Amy looked frightened.
+
+"I--I don't know. I've a very good memory, Esther. But somehow I'm not
+quite sure."
+
+"You will remember presently," said Callandar kindly. "We want to be
+quite sure that it was destroyed. You know, I explained to you, that
+Mary must take no more of that medicine. It is very dangerous...."
+
+"What does it do?" unexpectedly.
+
+"It is a kind of poison. It makes people very ill, so ill that in time
+they die."
+
+"Mary likes it. She says it makes her nerves better and puts her to
+sleep."
+
+"When did she say that?"
+
+"When she asked me if I had any."
+
+The doctor and the girl exchanged a quick look.
+
+"And you gave her some?"
+
+"Oh, no, I couldn't. I had burned it in the stove--I remember now."
+
+They both drew a breath of intense relief. But when she had left them,
+Callandar looked very sober. "There, you see," he said, "was a
+possibility we had overlooked."
+
+"Yes, and it would have been my fault. I should have made sure long ago.
+It is hard to get out of the habit of taking things for granted."
+
+"Yet it is the one thing we must never do. In this we must trust no one,
+and nothing. Then we shall win. If there is no relapse now, the worst,
+the slowest part, is over. Soon you will be free, dear girl--and God
+bless you forever for what you have been to her and to me."
+
+She answered him only with a wistful smile and when he had gone, she
+sighed. She would be free soon, he said. Strange that he could not see
+that it was her freedom that she dreaded. Hard as it had been, hard as
+it was, there was a still harder time coming--the time when she would be
+free--free, to leave forever the man she loved.
+
+The present with its load of duty and anxiety, the constant strain of
+watching, its bearing of poor Mary's thousand ingratitudes seemed dear
+and desirable when she thought of the black gulf of separation at the
+end of the tortuous way. But of course he could not guess. How could he?
+Men are so different from women.
+
+She knew, though, that she was coming to the end of her strength. Not
+even the doctor guessed how great the strain of those past weeks
+had been.
+
+When Mary had awakened to find that her secret was discovered she had
+been like a mad thing. There had been rage, tears, protestations,
+hysterical denials--finally confession and anguished promises. That she
+had never realised the reality of her danger, nor the extent of her
+servitude was plain. It seemed easy enough to promise. Esther and the
+doctor were making a terrible fuss about nothing, as usual. She grew
+sulky under Callandar's warnings and her fury knew no bounds when she
+found that certain of her hidden stores had been confiscated. She
+demanded that the supply be left in her hands; was not her
+promise enough?
+
+But all this was before she knew what denial meant, before she realised
+that the way back along the path she had trodden so easily was
+thick-set with suffering; that every backward inch must be fought for
+with agony and tears. Then she had broken down altogether, had raved and
+pleaded. The very knowledge of the depth to which she had fallen,
+threatened to send her deeper still. Callandar soon realised that if she
+were to be saved it must be in spite of herself. There were but two
+points of strength in her weak nature; one the newly awakened, yet
+capricious passion for himself, and the other that ruling terror of her
+life, which of all her inherent safeguards was the last to give way
+under the assaults of the drug, namely, "What will people say?" but
+neither of these, nor both of them together, could stand for a moment
+before the terrible appetite when once its craving was denied.
+
+Twice she failed her helpers just when they were beginning to hope. In
+her first search Esther had not exhausted the hiding places of the
+poison and, to retain the temptation by her, Mary had lied and lied
+again. Twice when the crises of her desire had come upon her she had
+given way, helplessly, completely; and twice they had begun all over
+again. The third time she had not been able to procure the drug, had
+been compelled to fight through on the decreasing dose which the doctor
+had allowed.
+
+No wonder Esther shuddered when she thought of that night! Yet at the
+time she had stood beside the moaning woman, white and firm, when even
+Callandar had staggered for a moment from the room.
+
+Next morning they had taken heart of hope again. Undoubtedly Mary had
+exhausted the supply, and the possibility of its being replenished
+seemed remote. It was only a matter of time now; of care, of
+unremitting, yet gentle vigilance and Mary would be cured. The bride
+could go to her husband, clean and in her right mind. And Esther
+would be free.
+
+Strangely enough, it was Mary herself who objected to a hastening of
+their remarriage. Perhaps in spite of her inevitable deterioration there
+was that in her still which forbade her going to him as she was. Perhaps
+it was only another and more obscure effect of the drug; some downward
+instinct which made her dread the putting of herself within the circle
+of her husband's strength. She would fight her fight outside. Why? Was
+it because she would conquer of herself, or because she did not really
+wish to conquer at all?
+
+To Esther, Mary's refusal came as a reprieve. But to Callandar it was
+but a lengthening out of torture. Man's love must always, in its
+essence, be different from woman's; though many women seem incapable of
+recognising this fact. To Esther, now that she had put aside her first
+half-understood glimpse of passion, it was sweet to be near him, to hear
+his voice, to touch his hand and, above all, to spend her strength in
+his service. But to him the strain was almost intolerable. The sight of
+her, the touch of her, the whole soul-shattering nearness of her beauty
+meant constant conflict; all the fiercer since it must be unsuspected.
+
+Willits, the only man who had been told the truth, watched the fight
+with admiration, sharply touched with anxiety. Expert in the moulding of
+buttons, he knew very well that Callandar was drawing rather recklessly
+upon his newly acquired strength. If the tension did not slacken soon
+there might be another physical breakdown, and then--Willits shrugged
+his shoulders. It would be entirely too bad if this very fine button
+were to be spoiled after all. His heart was sore for his friend.
+
+"You see," Callandar had written in one of his rare letters, "it was a
+right instinct which warned me that no man escapes the consequences of
+his own acts. There did come a short, golden time when I put the voice
+of instinct behind me and dared to think that I, at least, had shaken
+myself free. Closing the door of yesterday, I boldly knocked open the
+door of to-morrow--and lo, to-morrow and yesterday were one!
+
+"I know, now, that even had poor Mary been dead, as I believed, the
+payment would have been exacted in some other way. When my brain is
+clear enough to think, I have flashes of thankfulness that payment is
+permitted to take the form of expiation. I can save Mary, and I will. In
+some strange and rather dreadful way her need is my salvation.
+
+"I have said nothing of Esther. How can I? The other day I heard Miss
+Sinclair say that Esther Coombe was losing all her good looks. 'Thin as
+a rail, and peeked as a pin' were the words she used. To me she has
+never been so lovely. She is thinner; there are hollows in her cheeks;
+her lips are no longer a thread of scarlet. The transparent lids of her
+deep, wonderful eyes droop often and her hair seems to have lost its
+life and hangs soft and very close to her face. I love her. I love her
+as a man loves a woman, as a knight loves his lady, as a Catholic loves
+the Madonna! This terrible strain must soon be over for her. I am doing
+all in my power to hurry on the marriage. She is young. She is bound to
+forget. When she leaves here she goes out of my life--and may God
+speed her!
+
+"She is to go to Toronto. Lorna Sinnet has good friends there and they
+will take her into their circle. She will begin to taste a fuller life,
+and as her interests expand the old wound will heal. She will find
+happiness yet. When Mary recovers, she and I will return to Montreal. I
+am quite fit now. I feel that I can never work hard enough. Mary will
+like the excitement of city life, and I rely upon you and Lorna to make
+our coming as easy as possible. How is Lorna? A talk with her will be
+a tonic.
+
+"Does not all this sound admirably lucid and sensible? I want you to see
+that I am not losing my hold--that I have finally faced down the problem
+of the future. And there is one thing that has come to me out of all
+this, a wonderful thing; I have forgotten Fear. It seems to me that all
+my life I have lived in fear. Now I am not afraid...."
+
+It was when Bubble was entering the post office for the purpose of
+posting this letter that he met Miss Milligan, coming out. Miss Milligan
+was evidently in a hurry, so great a hurry that she had not time to
+question Bubble upon affairs in general as was her usual custom. Instead
+she asked him to do something for her. It was a trifling service, only
+to deliver to Mrs. Coombe a small postal packet which she held in
+her hand.
+
+"It will only take you a few moments, Zerubbabel," she said. "I was
+going to deliver it myself but Mrs. Stanton wants a fitting right away.
+I ought not to have come down to the post at all. But I promised Mrs.
+Coombe--does Dr. Callandar permit you to run messages in your
+spare time?"
+
+"Sure," declared the youth, "only I don't get much spare time. The
+doctor's terrible busy. Since we got the phone in, it's ringing all the
+time! But I guess I can slip over to Mrs. Coombe's or if I see Jane I
+can give the parcel to her."
+
+"No!" Miss Milligan seemed struck with a sudden hesitancy. "You must
+not give it to Jane, you must give it to Mrs. Coombe. Dear me, I believe
+I had better take it myself."
+
+Without listening to the boy's polite protests she hurried off again.
+Bubble gazed after her with relieved astonishment.
+
+"Guess it must be something for the wedding," declared he, sapiently.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXI
+
+
+The next day was the day of the Presbyterian Sunday school picnic. It
+was bound to be beautiful weather, because it always was. The
+Presbyterians seemed to have an understanding with Providence to that
+effect. But Jane, who must have been born a sceptic, was up very early
+just to see that there was no mistake.
+
+There was a hint, just a hint, of autumn in the air. On the window-sill
+lay a golden leaf. It was the forerunner. The garden lay quiet,
+brooding; the rising sun shone softly through a yellow haze.
+
+Jane shivered deliciously in her thin night gown. It was going to be a
+perfectly glorious, scrumptious day. She leaned farther out to make sure
+that the leaves of the small silver maple beneath her window were not
+turned wrong side up--a sure sign of rain. And as she looked, she
+noticed a curious thing--the side door was open.
+
+Somebody else must be up. If it were Esther, Jane decided that she would
+call "Boo" very loudly and surprise her; but it was her mother and not
+Esther who came out of the open door. Jane drew back, watching through
+the curtains. She thought her mother looked very pretty in her dressing
+gown with her hair down and her bare feet thrust into pink satin mules.
+It was a pity, Jane thought, that she wasn't as nice as she looked. And
+how curiously she was acting. She was actually climbing up the little
+ladder which led to the bird house by the side of the lawn. Jane knew
+there was nothing at all in the bird house, for she herself had placed
+the ladder there the day before. Whatever was she doing? Jane giggled,
+for one of Mary's slippers had fallen off leaving her foot bare. But she
+didn't seem to care. She was putting her hand far into the bird house.
+Jane watched the hand carefully to see what it might bring out. But it
+came out empty. Mary hurriedly climbed down the ladder, picked up her
+slipper, glanced quickly around the empty garden and ran back into the
+house closing the door without a sound.
+
+Jane was puzzled. What had her mother hoped to find in the bird house?
+She crept back into bed, wondering, and just as she was slipping off to
+sleep, the solution came. "She was hiding something," thought Jane,
+sleepily, "and when I get up I'll find out what it is."
+
+Little things are the levers which move the big things of life. Had it
+been any other day save the day of the picnic, Jane would certainly have
+found out what Mary hid in the bird house and many things might have
+been different. But there was so much to do that morning and Ann and
+Bubble came over before Jane finished breakfast so that in the
+delightful hurry of getting ready and packing baskets, she forgot
+all about it.
+
+There was a disappointment, too, at the last moment, for just when they
+were all ready and the doctor had come with the motor, Mrs. Coombe
+decided that she really did not feel equal to going and that meant that
+Esther had to stay behind. Jane showed signs of tears. Ann and Bubble
+protested volubly. Even the doctor did his best to change
+Mary's decision.
+
+"You really ought to come, Mary," he said, "the drive alone will do you
+good, and if you get tired of it, I can bring you home early." He looked
+at her rather anxiously as he spoke but she did not seem ill. She looked
+better than usual for her eyes were brighter and her face was
+faintly flushed.
+
+"No, I won't come to-day. I'm tired. There is not the slightest need for
+Esther to stay. I am going to stay in my room with a good book."
+
+"Oh, Esther, do come! Oh, Esther, you promised!" Thus Ann and Bubble,
+while Jane pulled at her frock.
+
+Mary looked on with a slightly acid smile. The doctor drew her aside.
+
+"Won't you come?" he asked patiently. "You see how disappointed the
+children are."
+
+"Yes, about Esther. And Esther does not need to stay. It's absurd. Are
+you never going to trust me?"
+
+"You know it isn't you that we distrust. It is something stronger than
+you, or any of us. Mary, be patient, just a little longer. You want to
+be free, don't you?"
+
+She hid the glitter in her eyes, against his coat. "Yes, of course. Only
+don't ask me to go to-day. It excites me. I want to be quiet."
+
+"Very well, and you promise--"
+
+"Yes, I'll promise anything. And if Esther stays I'll be decent to her.
+Though why you bother about her so much, I don't see. She is nothing
+to you."
+
+"She is very much to you," sternly.
+
+"Yes--a spy! Oh, well, don't let's quarrel. Be sure to be back early for
+the supper party to-night. Mr. Macnair and Annabel are invited. You can
+bring them with you in the motor. It is just as well Esther isn't
+going. There'll be lots of little things to attend to."
+
+"That's settled then." Knowing that further persuasion was useless, he
+kissed her and turned to quiet the eager children.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Almost she held her breath as she watched him go. Her small hands
+twisted, a pulse beat visibly in her temple, her lips worked, she shook
+from head to foot. Nevertheless she stood there, controlling herself,
+until the motor horn had honked its farewell to a chorus of children's
+laughter. Then, as one released from some desperate strain, she turned
+and fled to her room....
+
+"Mother!" Esther came in slowly, unpinning her hat. There was no answer
+to her call. But she had not expected any. In her sulky moods Mrs.
+Coombe often went for days without speaking to her step-daughter. When
+the girl saw that she had gone to her room she was rather relieved than
+otherwise; it meant at least a peaceful afternoon. Mary, in her room,
+was considered safe and all that Esther need do was to be ready in order
+to accompany her if she decided to go out.
+
+She was not disappointed at missing the picnic. It was getting rather
+hard to be gay. And it would be nice to have everything ready when the
+party returned.
+
+It was a quietly beautiful afternoon and as the girl went about her
+simple tasks she was not unhappy. Already she was learning the great
+lesson which many more fortunate lovers miss, that the rarest fragrance
+of love lies in its bestowal. That is why love is of all things most
+securely ours.
+
+Once she called up to the blowing curtains of Mrs. Coombe's window.
+
+"Mother, won't you come and help me with the flowers?" But no hand
+pushed the curtain aside, nor did she receive any answer. Perhaps Mary
+was really asleep. In that case she was sure to be amiable at
+supper time.
+
+Everything was daintily ready and Esther had had time to slip on her
+prettiest frock when the "honk" of the returning motor brought a faint
+colour into her pale cheeks.
+
+"Dear me, you've got quite a colour, Esther," said Miss Annabel Macnair
+in a slightly injured voice. She had come intending to tell Esther how
+badly she was looking and to recommend a tonic.
+
+"I don't see why you didn't come to the picnic."
+
+"Oh, Esther," Jane's plain little face was radiant, "you missed it! It
+was the nicest picnic yet. I won one race and Bubble won another, and
+Ann won't speak to either of us. She says she hates her aunt because
+she'd have won a race too if she hadn't had so much starch in her
+petticoats. But Mrs. Sykes says she wouldn't be a mite surprised if Ann
+has a bad heart--not a wicked heart, just a bad one, the kind that makes
+you drop down dead. Some of Ann's folks died of bad hearts, Mrs. Sykes
+says. But the doctor says it's all nonsense. He agreed with Ann that it
+wasn't anything but petticoats--Oh, say! how pretty the table looks. Did
+mother say you could use the best china?"
+
+"Seeing that it's Esther's china on her own mother's side, I guess she
+can use it if she likes," said Aunt Amy, mildly belligerent. "I thought
+you might want to set the table before we got home, Esther, and I was so
+afraid you might forget and use the sprigged tea set. But the doctor
+said you'd be sure not to."
+
+"That's one of her queer notions, I suppose?" said Miss Annabel in a
+stage whisper plainly heard by every one. "How odd! Can you come
+upstairs with me, Esther? I want to speak to you most particularly and I
+haven't seen you for ages.
+
+"Not that I haven't tried," she continued in her jerky way as they went
+up the stairs together; "but you seem to be always with your mother.
+Going to lose her soon. Natural enough. I said to Mrs. Miller, 'There's
+real devotion.' Possible to overdo it though. Marriage is terribly
+trying. For relatives. But long engagements are worse. How was it you
+didn't get to the picnic?"
+
+Esther murmured that she hadn't quite felt like going to the picnic.
+
+"Well, you didn't miss much. Even Angus wasn't as cheerful as usual.
+Inclined to be moody. And that brings me to what I wanted to tell you.
+Remember that last time you had lunch with us?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Remember me saying that I never ask questions, but that I always find
+out? Well--I have."
+
+"Have what?" asked Esther, who had not been following.
+
+"Found out. Found out what is the matter with my brother. Exactly what I
+thought. He is the victim of an unhappy attachment. Unreciprocated!"
+
+"But--"
+
+"You remember you laughed at me, Esther. Suggested liver. And when I
+mentioned your mother you almost convinced me that I was wrong. Although
+I am never wrong. It _is_ your mother, Esther. My poor brother,
+brokenhearted, quite--utterly!"
+
+This was so amazing that Esther waited for more.
+
+"I suppose he felt certain of her until Dr. Callandar stepped in. Could
+hardly believe it. When I told him of your mother's reputed engagement
+he was not in the least disturbed. Said 'Pshaw!' Couldn't imagine such a
+possibility. I said, 'I assure you it is the truth, Angus,' and he
+merely remarked, 'Well, what if it is?' in a most matter of fact way.
+Quite calm!"
+
+"And you think--"
+
+"My dear, I am sure. All put on. To deceive me. Although I never am
+deceived. So I waited. And then one night last week I happened to get
+home from a business session of the Ladies' Aid, early. I went in
+quietly. Angus was in his study, without a light, but the door was a
+little bit open, and I could hear his voice quite plainly. He was
+praying--"
+
+"Oh, please--"
+
+"My dear, I couldn't help hearing. I didn't listen. I was rooted to the
+spot. Positively! He--"
+
+"You must not tell me, Miss Annabel, I won't listen."
+
+"Very well, my dear. Perhaps you are right. Couldn't tell you his very
+words anyway. I cannot remember them. He was very eloquent, terribly
+worked up! And he was praying for Her. That's what he called your
+mother, just Her. It sounded almost--almost popish, you know! Then
+suddenly he stopped as if something had cut him off--sharp. There was a
+silence. So long I began to be frightened and then he cried out loud,
+'Not for me! Not for me!' It was dreadful! But it proves my point, I
+think. Why, my dear, whatever is the matter?"
+
+Esther, leaning against the window frame, was sobbing weakly.
+
+"Dear me! I had no idea you would feel it so badly. Take a sip of
+water--do!"
+
+Esther struggled to regain her self-control.
+
+"It seems so--sad," she faltered.
+
+"Yes, of course. It is sad. And I have great sympathy with my poor
+brother," went on Miss Annabel pinning down her hair net. "But do you
+know, I sometimes think," she hesitated and a slow blush arose in her
+middle-aged cheek, "I sometimes think that people in love aren't to be
+pitied after all. Though it is hardly a thought to express to a young
+girl like you.
+
+"You know," she went on awkwardly as Esther still made no remark, "they
+feel a great deal, of course, but it must be so very _interesting_. A
+little cold cream for my nose, Esther. If I leave it until I get home I
+shall certainly peel."
+
+Esther provided the cream and a powder puff. She felt sick at heart. Her
+calmer world of the afternoon burst like a bubble leaving only a tear
+behind. The vision of Angus Macnair in the dark study reaching out
+frantic hands for the thing he knew could never be his, seemed a last
+touch of unendurable irony. Surely some one, somewhere, must be moved to
+dreadful mirth at these blunders of the fates. From the echo of such
+laughter commonplace was the only refuge. Esther bathed her eyes and
+called to Jane to let her mother know that supper was ready.
+
+The sounds of the child's cheerful tattoos upon Mrs. Coombe's door
+accompanied them down the stairs, but when they had waited a few
+minutes, Jane came quietly into the room alone.
+
+"Mother doesn't answer me, Esther."
+
+Miss Annabel looked surprised, then curious. Esther felt her face flame.
+It was really too bad of Mary to make things so much harder than she
+need. Her refusal to answer could only mean that she had determined to
+be thoroughly disagreeable; and with company in the house. But her
+annoyance was abruptly checked by the effect of the news upon the
+doctor. It was not annoyance she read in his eyes. It was dismay. With a
+murmured sentence, which may or may not have been excuse, he turned
+from the room.
+
+"I am so sorry," explained Esther smoothly. "Mother is not at all well,
+one of her old headaches. The doctor has gone up to see if he can be
+of any use."
+
+Miss Annabel shook her head gloomily. "Mark my words," she said, "your
+mother ought to take those headaches of hers more seriously. A headache
+seems a little thing, but I know of a case--"
+
+With Esther's sympathetic encouragement the good lady launched upon a
+recital of melancholy happenings more or less connected with headaches
+which occupied her attention very pleasantly and prevented any one else
+from saying anything until the return of the awaited guest. He came in
+looking as usual and bearing an apology from the hostess for her sudden
+indisposition. "Nothing at all serious," he added lightly. "It is
+possible that she may join us later." But it was noticeable that as he
+spoke he did not look at Esther nor could her anxious glance read the
+impassive sternness of his face.
+
+It was not a successful meal. In spite of the pretty table, the dainty
+food, the well kept up fire of conversation, the beautiful evening out
+of doors, the softly shaded light inside, from first to last the supper
+was a nightmare. Of what avail the careful pretence that nothing was
+wrong? A very miasma of dread enveloped that table, a thing so palpable
+that Miss Annabel found herself starting at a sound, the minister's
+ready tongue faltered on a favourite phrase, Esther's clear voice grew
+blurred, Aunt Amy wrung her hands, Jane's eyes were wide with
+unchildlike care. Only Callandar seemed undisturbed, courteous,
+interested.
+
+It was a relief to them all when after an uncomfortable half-hour with
+coffee on the veranda the minister suddenly remembered a forgotten
+committee meeting and hurried Miss Annabel away with half her parting
+words unspoken. The doctor, still courteous and interested, walked down
+with them to the gate. He would wait, he said, a little longer to see
+how Mrs. Coombe found herself. Esther carried off a subdued and silent
+Jane to bed.
+
+"Esther," whispered Jane as her sister bent to kiss her, "why do lovely,
+lovely days always end so badly?"
+
+"They don't, Janie."
+
+The child sighed. "Mine do. I never had a perfect day in all my life."
+
+"You will have. Every one has perfect days--sometime."
+
+"Have you, Esther?"
+
+"Yes, dear."
+
+Jane looked up sleepily. "Perhaps mine will come to-morrow!"
+
+Esther went slowly down stairs and out into the garden. Callandar was
+coming up the path from the gate. He walked slowly. When they met, he no
+longer avoided her glance.
+
+"Well?" She had no need to ask. Yet she did ask, falteringly.
+
+"We have failed," he said briefly.
+
+The quiet hopelessness of his voice left no room for argument. Esther
+opened her lips to protest, but found nothing to say.
+
+"She has outwitted us," he went on. "How? who can say? They have the
+cunning of the devil! There is only one thing to do now. Only one way--"
+
+"You mean?--"
+
+"The wedding must take place at once. I suppose the farce is really
+necessary. But there must be no more delay. Only the unsparing use of a
+husband's authority can save her now. I shall take her away. I must be
+with her day and night. In France there is a place I know, beautiful,
+isolated. I shall take her there. If all else fails there is the
+treatment of hypnotic suggestion. But--I shall not fail, I dare not!"
+
+Blindly she put out her hand--he clasped it gently--yet not as if he
+knew whose hand it was. Then, laying it aside, he passed by, and,
+leaving her sobbing in the dusk, went on into the house and up the
+stairs to the closed room.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXII
+
+
+It became quickly known in Coombe that, owing to Mrs. Coombe's delicate
+health, the wedding would take place much sooner than had been expected.
+A sea voyage, it was conceded, was the necessary thing and as Dr.
+Callandar would not allow his fiancee to go away alone it seemed only
+fair that he should make haste to go with her. Comment on all these
+points was much more restrained than usual because, just at this time,
+Coombe withstood the shock of finding out that Dr. Callandar was no less
+than Dr. Henry Chedridge Callandar of Montreal. No, not his brother, nor
+his cousin, but the man himself!
+
+Of course Coombe had suspected this all along. Never for a moment had it
+been really deceived. Over and over again it had said: "My dear, that
+young man is not a mere local practitioner, mark my words!" From the
+first, Coombe had observed the marks of true distinction in him. He was
+so odd! He seemed to care nothing at all for appearances, and, as
+everybody knows, this comfortable attitude of mind is the privilege of
+the famous few. Besides, there was the matter of the marriage. Coombe
+had been right in thinking that Mary Coombe had not gone into the matter
+blindfold. She had known very well upon which side her bread was
+buttered, and as to her giving way to his whims in the absurd way she
+did--that, too, was understandable under the circumstances.
+
+What puzzled Coombe, now, was how she had managed it. She was not
+pretty, at least not very pretty. She was not young, at least only
+comparatively young. And goodness knows, she was not clever! Hardly a
+mother in Coombe but had at least one daughter prettier, younger and
+cleverer; a daughter, in fact, who could give Mary Coombe aces and kings
+and still win out. Why had the doctor not been attached to one of these?
+It was incomprehensible. Even if, through a misplaced devotion to his
+profession, he had determined to marry into a doctor's family--there was
+Esther! Esther Coombe was a fine girl and quite nice looking before she
+had begun to "go off." Even as it was she had more to recommend her than
+her step-mother. There seemed to be a general impression that all men
+are fools.
+
+"If they would only let some woman with sense choose their wives for
+them," declared the eldest Miss Sinclair in a burst of confidence, "they
+might get along fairly well. But if ever a man gets married to the right
+woman, it happens by accident."
+
+Nevertheless, at a special meeting of the Ladies' Aid, called for the
+purpose, it was decided to give the bride a present. They had not
+intended to do it for fear of establishing a precedent. But when it came
+out who Dr. Callandar was, it hardly seemed right to let one of their
+best known members go from them to a more exalted sphere in a city
+(which many of them might, from time to time, feel inclined to visit)
+without showing her by some small token how very highly she was held in
+their regard. Every one could see the sense of this and the vote was
+unanimous. In regard to the nature of the gift there was more diversity
+of opinion, but it was finally decided that, as the value of this kind
+of thing lies not in the gift but in the spirit of the giving, a brown
+jar with the word "Biscuits" in silver lettering would do very well.
+Carving knives were thought of but as Mrs. Atkins very fitly said,
+"Everybody is sure to give carving knives"--a phenomenon which all the
+ladies accepted as a commonplace.
+
+Of the prospective bride herself, Coombe saw little. She remained very
+much at home. She had lost much of her spasmodic energy, was inclined to
+be moody and even rude. Her state of health accounted naturally for this
+and also for the arrival of a new inmate at the Elms, a cool and capable
+looking person who was discovered, after much amazed enquiry, to be a
+trained nurse. Not a hospital nurse exactly but a kind of special nurse
+whose duties included massage, and the giving of certain baths and
+things which the doctor thought strengthening. Her name was Miss Philps.
+Coombe never got behind that. No one could ever boast that she knew more
+of Miss Philps than her name. She was, and remains to this day,
+a mystery.
+
+There are people like that, although this was Coombe's first experience
+of one. Miss Philps was not a recluse. Everywhere Mrs. Coombe went, Miss
+Philps went too. Even Esther was not more assiduous in her attentions.
+She was not a silent person either, far from it. She bubbled over with
+precise and cheerful comment, she appeared to talk even more than was
+absolutely necessary and it was only upon her departure that her
+entertainers noticed that she had said nothing at all. A very baffling
+person to deal with. Coombe could not manage to "take to" her at all and
+great sympathy was felt for Mrs. Coombe when she was reported to have
+said to Miss Milligan that going out with Miss Philps felt exactly like
+a jail delivery--whatever that might be!
+
+But if Miss Philps was not appreciated at large it was different in her
+own immediate circle. She had not been at the Elms a day before Esther
+recognised the doctor's wisdom in getting her. She was discreet,
+capable, kindly. The burden upon the girl's shoulders grew momentarily
+lighter. Miss Philps, with her matter of fact cheeriness, her strength
+and her experience, was exactly what that house of overstrained
+nerves needed.
+
+"Dear me," she said, "you're all as fidgety as corn in a popper. And no
+need for it. I've nursed dozens worse than your mother, Miss Esther, and
+had them right as a trivet before I got through. As long as we can keep
+her hands off the stuff--and that's what I'm here for. So don't worry!"
+
+Esther drew a deep breath. It was certainly good to feel the strain
+lifting, to have time for dreams again. The time was so pitifully short
+now. Two more weeks and she would leave Coombe behind her. The old life
+would be definitely over and done with. Looking back, she could see that
+it had been a happy life, and the future looked so dark. In youth, all
+life's happenings seem so terribly final. Every parting feels like a
+parting forever. Esther felt quite sure that she would never return
+to Coombe.
+
+In the week before the wedding, freed from her continual attendance upon
+her mother, she unobtrusively paid farewell to all her old haunts and
+favourite places. It was a sweet sadness. She did not taste the sweet,
+but it was there. As one grows older, one does not linger over sad
+moments. It is because the sweet has vanished, only the bitter remains.
+But in untried youth sadness has a touch of beauty, a glamour of
+romance which shrouds its deepest pain. It is as if something within us,
+infinitely wise, were smiling, knowing well that for the young there is
+always to-morrow.
+
+The maple by the schoolhouse turned early that year. When Esther, in her
+pilgrimage, came to say good-bye it welcomed her with all the glory of
+autumn. Against its greener brothers it stood out, naming, defiant.
+Beside it, the red pump seemed no longer red. Red and yellow, its
+falling leaves tossed themselves into the girl's lap as she sat upon the
+porch steps. It is almost certain that, as Esther gathered them, she
+compared her sad heart to a leaf which had fluttered from the tree of
+happy life. There seemed no outlook for her. She could not see through
+winter into spring.
+
+The school children with their new teacher (whom Esther could not help
+but feel was sadly incompetent) had all gone home and it was very quiet
+on the porch steps. She closed her eyes and dreamed and clearly through
+her dream she heard, as she had heard that first morning in early
+summer, a determinedly cheerful, yet husky, voice singing. Some one was
+coming down the hill.
+
+ "From Wimbleton to Wombleton is fifteen miles;
+ From Wombleton to Wimbleton is fifteen miles;
+ From Wimbleton to Wombleton, from Wombleton to Wimbleton,
+ From Wimbleton to Wombleton,--"
+
+The song trailed off into silence as it had done before. The girl's
+closed eyes smarted with tears--"Oh, it is a very long way!" she
+murmured, and burying her face in fallen leaves she felt that at last
+she knew the meaning of despair.
+
+But though his voice had echoed through Esther's dream, Callandar was
+not on the long hill nor anywhere near it. Unlike Esther, he paid no
+farewells during these last days. He avoided the hill particularly and
+drove past the schoolhouse seldom and always at top speed. If the sight
+of the turning maples moved him at all it was not because he compared
+his lost happiness to a fallen leaf. Callandar was long past such gentle
+sadnesses as these. Every day he filled as full of work as possible. He
+walked far and hard in hope of tiring himself into dreamless sleep at
+night. And every day his face grew older, greyer, more sternly set.
+
+At the very last, and as if inspired by some special imp of the
+perverse, Mary declared that she must have a church wedding. Opposition
+was useless. With all the distorted force of her drug-ridden brain, she
+desired this one thing. She wept, she coaxed, she raved. Every woman,
+she stormed, had a right to a proper wedding. She had always been
+cheated, she had been a pawn shoved about at the bidding of others, her
+own wishes never consulted. Was there any reason, any reason at all, why
+she should not be properly married in the church?
+
+He ventured quietly to remind her that there were peculiar circumstances
+in the case. But she burst out at that. He was ashamed of her. Ashamed
+of his own wife. If there were peculiar circumstances whose fault were
+they? Not hers, surely? Would she be where she was now if he had not
+neglected her all those years? Anyway, peculiar circumstances or not,
+she would be married decently or she would not be married at all.
+
+With set lips, the doctor gave in. Opposition maddened her, and, after
+all, one farce more or less could not matter much.
+
+"Very well," he said, "make your own arrangements."
+
+Immediately, Mary became amiable. She was quite polite to Miss Philps,
+almost pleasant to Esther. Into the preparations for the wedding she
+entered with some of her old spasmodic energy. The occasion, she
+determined, should be a talked of one in Coombe. She made plans, a fresh
+one every day, and talked of them continually.
+
+Only--there was one plan of which she did not speak. There was one
+unsaid thing which matured quietly, covered by the noise of much
+talking. Yet this plan more than any other would have to do with the
+success of her last appearance in Coombe. It would be foolish indeed,
+she decided, to let any promise, however well-meant, stand in the way of
+this success. She could not, and would not, face a crowded church
+feeling as she felt now. That was absurd! She would need some little
+stimulant to help her carry it off. A very slightly increased dose would
+do it. Only sufficient to banish that horrible craving, to give her a
+long, satisfying sleep and then just a touch more, very little, to brace
+her in the morning. Enough to send warm tingling thrills of well being
+through her tired body, to brighten her eyes, to clear her brain and
+steady her shaking nerves--to make her young again, young and a bride.
+
+Only this once! Never again.
+
+Of what use to continue the sophistries which justified her treachery to
+herself! Perhaps of the three it was she who suffered most during that
+last week. She lived in an agony of anticipation, a hell of desire for
+which a sane pen has no description. Yet no one must suspect that she
+anticipated or desired anything--not the cool-eyed Miss Philps, not
+Esther, not the doctor, not even Jane. The mask must not slip for one
+single moment. So far, they suspected nothing; but they were always on
+their guard, always. A careless look, an unconsidered movement might
+betray her, and then--! She raved in her room sometimes when she thought
+of a possible balking of her purpose.
+
+She was very clever. She still had self-control when it was necessary to
+have it in the furtherance of the one devouring passion. Only when she
+was quite alone did she ever give way. The doctor thought her
+wonderfully docile and took heart of hope. A month or two alone with her
+in Prance and all would be well. In the meantime, patience! Naturally
+she was full of childish whims. He smiled at her indulgently when she
+asked him to request Miss Philps to stay outside of the fitting room at
+Miss Milligan's. "For you know," she said, "it is bad luck, very bad
+luck, for any person to see one, in one's wedding gown before the proper
+time. And anyway," the grey eyes filled with easy tears, "I'm sure it
+isn't good for me never to be trusted, not even with silly Miss
+Milligan."
+
+The plea seemed genuine. It was like Mary to be concerned about the
+wedding-dress superstition. And what possible danger could there be?
+Miss Milligan in all probability had never heard the fatal names of
+opium and cocaine save as unpleasant things associated with Chinese and
+tooth-drawing. It was absurd to imagine Mary coming to harm there.
+
+From this you will see that, upon the occasion of the last discovery,
+Mary had lied desperately and well. The "cache" in the bird-house had
+been found, but Miss Milligan's name had never been connected in the
+most remote way with that relapse. Mary had sworn that the new supply
+had not been new at all but had formed part of an old cache which she
+had hidden, in a place which even she had forgotten, all quite
+accidentally. And although many supplementary enquiries were made, the
+real truth had remained undiscovered.
+
+So in the simplest way in the world, Mary secured several uninterrupted
+"fittings" with Miss Milligan while the excellent Miss Philps sat
+without and waited.
+
+"This is positively the last time I shall have to trouble you, dear Miss
+Milligan," said her customer sweetly. "Of course, as soon as we are
+married, I am going to tell Dr. Callandar all about it and when he sees
+how very much better my medicine has made me, he will be quite ready to
+withdraw his objections. In the meantime I am sure you feel, as I do,
+that our little ruse has been quite justifiable!"
+
+Miss Milligan did. She felt quite proud of her part in it. It is
+something to help a fellow woman and still more to get the better of a
+fellow man. Especially such a celebrated man as Dr. Callandar! She would
+order the fresh supply at once, that very afternoon, by the first mail.
+And as soon as the packet came she would see that Mrs. Coombe had it in
+person. "There is certain to be a few last touches necessary to the
+dress after it has been sent home," she remarked with a smile of truly
+Machiavellian subtlety.
+
+"Yes!" said Mary. "That night--after the dress comes home!" She spoke
+sharply, unnaturally. Her face turned a dull, pasty white. She shook so
+that Miss Milligan was thoroughly frightened. But presently she
+controlled herself and forced a pathetic smile.
+
+"You see, dear Miss Milligan, how much I need it."
+
+"Indeed a blind bat could see that!" said the dressmaker pityingly.
+"Shall I call the nurse?"
+
+But Mrs. Coombe would not hear of Miss Milligan calling the nurse!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIII
+
+
+It is the onlooker who sees most of the game and Aunt Amy was an ideal
+onlooker. Always self-effacing and silent, she was now more silent and
+self-effacing still. Consequently the principal actors tended to forget
+their parts when in her presence. No one explained anything to Aunt Amy
+but no one concealed anything from her. She simply "didn't matter." So
+far as the playing out of the little drama was concerned, Aunt Amy was
+supposed to be safely off the stage. She looked and listened, had her
+strange flashes of psychic insight and came to her own conclusions about
+it all, quite undisturbed by facts as they appeared to others. Her
+conclusions were very simple. Esther loved the doctor. The doctor loved
+Esther. That, in spite of this, Callandar was deliberately planning to
+marry Mary she considered a purely arbitrary matter arranged by those
+mysteriously malignant powers known as "They." Callandar, himself, had
+clearly no choice, Esther was helpless, and Mary triumphed easily and
+inevitably because Mary was one of "Them" herself. Aunt Amy had become
+firmly convinced of this latter fact. Everything went to prove it--the
+theft of the ring, the threat to shut her (Amy) up, the easy triumph
+over Esther, and a thousand and one trifles all "confirmation strong as
+proofs of holy writ." Of course it would be impossible to make this
+clear to Esther or the doctor. Amy realised that and did not try. But in
+her own mind she thought of it continually. And her little pile of proof
+mounted higher day by day.
+
+Esther, absorbed in the care of her step-mother, was not even aware that
+Aunt Amy noticed her growing listlessness, her heavy eyes, her fits of
+brooding. She did not know that a silent foot paused before her closed
+door, listening. All she knew was that it was relief unspeakable to be
+with Aunt Amy, to let drop the mask of cheerful energy without fear of
+questioning or of wonder. Aunt Amy didn't matter.
+
+Mary, too, felt that it was needless to hoodwink Amy. No need to pretend
+with her. She might show herself as irritable, as conscienceless, as
+nerve-racked and disagreeable as she chose without fear of displaying
+"symptoms." Aunt Amy was not looking for symptoms, indeed Mary thought
+she grew more stupid daily. After her marriage something would really
+have to be done about Amy. She hoped the doctor wouldn't be silly
+about it.
+
+Even Dr. Callandar was not careful to hide his burden from those faded
+eyes. He was more self-conscious even with Ann or Bubble than he was
+with her. What matter if she did see his mouth harden or his eyes
+burn?--Poor Aunt Amy, such things could have no meaning for her. She was
+a soul apart.
+
+A soul apart indeed, how far apart none of them quite realised; yet near
+enough to love--and hate. As the days went by and Esther drooped like a
+graceful plant athirst for water there grew in Aunt Amy's twisted brain
+a slow corroding anger. The timid, bitter anger of a weak nature which
+is often more deadly than the lordly passion of the strong.
+
+If she could only do something. If she could only outwit "Them"! She
+would do anything at all, if she could only find the thing to do. It was
+terrible to be so helpless. It was maddening to have to be so careful.
+Yet careful she must be, she never forgot that. Often as she went about
+the house or stood in the sunny kitchen rolling out her flaky pie-crust,
+she pondered over ways and means. But none seemed suitable. Some of her
+plans were fantastic to a degree, but she always had sense enough to
+reject them in the end. In her planning she was conscious of no sense of
+right or wrong but only of suitability. There could be no question of
+right or wrong in dealing with "Them." They were outside the pale. No.
+What she wanted was something simple and effective. A little poison,
+now--in a pie? But Amy knew nothing of poison, nor how to obtain any,
+nor how to use it effectively in a pie when once obtained. She might
+consult the doctor perhaps? But something warned Aunt Amy that the
+doctor would not take kindly to the idea of a little poison in a pie. So
+this beautiful scheme had to be given up. She sighed.
+
+"What a big sigh, Auntie!" Esther, who was sitting at the table peeling
+apples, looked up questioningly. "A penny for your thoughts."
+
+A look of cunning came over Aunt Amy's face. And instead of speaking her
+real thoughts she said, "I was thinking of weddings, Esther."
+
+"But why the sigh?"
+
+"I don't like weddings. Once there was a young girl going to be married.
+She was very happy. She was so happy that she was afraid to look at her
+own face in the glass. And it was eleven o'clock on Tuesday. I mean she
+was waiting for eleven o'clock on Tuesday. She was to be married then.
+But just one minute before the time, something happened--the clock
+stopped, I think. Anyway eleven o'clock on Tuesday never came. So she
+could not get married. And she grew old and her flowers fell to pieces.
+It was very sad."
+
+"Poor Auntie!"
+
+Aunt Amy moved uneasily. "Do you know who the girl was, Esther?"
+
+"Don't you know, Auntie?"
+
+"No, that is, I am never sure. Sometimes I think I used to know her. But
+she's gone. I never see her now. I'd like to find her if I could."
+
+"You will find her some day, Auntie. Try not to fret about it."
+
+It was seldom indeed that Aunt Amy spoke even thus vaguely of that other
+self of hers which she had lost in the tragedy of her youth. Esther's
+heart was full of pity as she listened. What was her own trouble
+compared to this? She at least would have her memories.
+
+"There is just one chance," went on Aunt Amy, now gently excited. She
+had never spoken of this chance before but she felt that Esther might
+like to hear of it. "Just one chance! You see, the world being
+round--the world is round, isn't it, Esther?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Well, the world being round there is a chance that, if she waits long
+enough, eleven o'clock on Tuesday may come around again. Then if she is
+ready and if she has the ring he gave her, the red ring, and if they are
+both very quick they may be married after all."
+
+"Oh, Aunt Amy, _dear_! That is why you love the ruby ring?"
+
+But the old lady's memory was clouding again. She looked bewildered and
+would say no more. Esther kissed her with new tenderness. "I am so glad
+you have it safely back," she whispered. "You need never be afraid of
+losing it again."
+
+Aunt Amy found it hard to make the pies that morning. She was enveloped
+in a deep sadness, a sadness which in some misunderstood way seemed
+inseparable from the idea of that lost friend of hers, the girl-bride
+whose marriage hour had never struck. It seemed to Aunt Amy that the
+girl had been waiting a very long time and was tired. Even if the world
+were round, it was a very big world and eleven o'clock on Tuesday took a
+wearisome time to travel around it. She could not understand why she
+should feel so terribly sorry for the waiting girl, but she did. A hot
+tear fell into the pie-crust. That would never do! The pie-maker
+furtively dried her eyes and came back to the consideration of more
+immediate problems.
+
+It may seem strange that no one noticed the morbid state of Aunt Amy at
+this time. But it would have been more strange if any one had noticed
+it. Of outward signs there were practically none. Even the silent
+hand-wringing had ceased. She ceased to rebuke Jane for stepping upon
+the third stair; she ceased to talk of the peculiarities inherent in
+sprigged china. She was more and more careful not to mention "Them,"
+and, as always, her housekeeping was a wonder and a delight.
+
+She even offered to make Mary's wedding-cake. An offer which Mary
+received graciously. No one could make fruit cake like Aunt Amy and if
+it proved too big for the house oven the baker could bake it in his.
+Jane was delighted. She told Bubble that it was to be a "hugeous" cake,
+the like of which was never seen in Coombe and she defied Ann to produce
+any relative or ancestor whatever whose wedding-cake had even faintly
+approached such dimensions. Ann retorted that big wedding-cakes were
+vulgar and that her Aunt Sykes did not think it proper for a widow woman
+to have a wedding-cake at all.
+
+The making of the cake was a great mental help to Aunt Amy. It seemed to
+ease her mind and aid her to think clearly. She thought of many things
+as she prepared the materials, made most clever plans. That all the
+plans had to do with the preventing of the marriage and the final
+circumventing of "Them" goes without saying. There was one especially
+good plan which came to her while she stoned the raisins. Still another,
+while the currants were being looked over, and a third, more brilliant
+than either, while she chopped the candied peel. The trouble was that
+when she came to mix all her ingredients into the batter, her plans
+began to mix up too, until all was hopeless confusion. It was most
+disheartening! And the wedding, now, only a few days off. She wanted to
+go away into a corner and wring her hands, but if she did, some one
+might notice--and then "They" would have the chance they were looking
+for. Aunt Amy was too clever for that!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIV
+
+
+The day before the wedding, the wedding dress came home. No one had seen
+it. Mary's superstition in regard to this point was indulgently smiled
+at by everybody.
+
+"But hadn't I better see it on you just once," suggested Esther. "Some
+trifle may have been forgotten and a missing hook and eye might spoil
+the effect of the whole thing."
+
+"Oh, I have thought of that. Miss Milligan is going to run in after
+supper to see that everything is right. Then if anything is needed she
+can attend to it at once. Of course, it doesn't matter about Miss
+Milligan seeing it--for bad luck I mean."
+
+"How about me?" asked Callandar, smiling.
+
+"You!" with a playful shriek, "you would be worse than anybody. You
+would hoodoo it entirely!"
+
+"How about little girls?" asked Jane coaxingly.
+
+Mary turned suddenly peevish. "Don't bother me, Jane. I shall not let
+any one see it and that's enough." But their combined suggestions had
+disturbed her, and it was only upon their serious assurance that of
+course her wishes would be respected that her amiability returned.
+
+Yet it was apparent that she felt rather worried about the dress herself
+for she had worked herself into a small fever of nervous anxiety before
+the promised appearance of Miss Milligan for the last fitting. When at
+last that lady arrived, a trifle late, and very much out of breath, Mary
+would hardly let her say good evening to the others, before hurrying
+her upstairs.
+
+"And I think," said she hesitatingly, "that I shan't come down again
+to-night. I am tired. If the doctor calls in, tell him that I am trying
+to get a good rest for to-morrow. Good night, Miss Philps. Good
+night, Esther!"
+
+To the girl's astonishment she kissed her. A light, hot kiss which fell
+on her cheek like a fleck of glowing ash. Yet it was a real kiss and may
+have meant that the giver was not ungrateful. Jane, too, had a good
+night kiss that night; but Aunt Amy had already gone upstairs.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"Well?" They were safely in the upstairs room now and the door was
+closed.
+
+"I've got it. It came on the afternoon mail. I went down to the post
+office specially. I knew you kind of counted on it for to-morrow."
+
+With the glee of a child playing conspirator Miss Milligan dived into
+the recesses of the reticule she carried. "Here it is. No, that's
+peppermints. But it's here somewhere--"
+
+"Oh, hurry!" Mary almost snatched the packet from the friendly hand. At
+sight of it she turned deathly white and began to shake as she had
+shaken that day in the fitting-room. But this time she recovered
+quickly, almost before Miss Milligan had noticed it.
+
+"Thank you so much," she said. With the last effort of her self-control
+she forced herself to place the packet upon the dresser. She wanted to
+snatch at it to tear it open, to scream with the relief of the tablets
+in her hand, but she did none of these things. Instead she thanked Miss
+Milligan again and proceeded to talk of other things, anything that
+would do to fill up the short time necessary to conceal the real purpose
+of the visit so that Esther and Miss Philps would not suspect--never for
+a moment suspect!
+
+"Do you think we really need try on the dress?" asked the conscientious
+Miss Milligan.
+
+Mrs. Coombe thought not. It was quite all right, she felt sure of that.
+And really she was a little tired. It had been a trying day. She
+moistened her lips and tried to smile, keeping her eyes well away from
+the tempting heaven in the little pasteboard box. Would the woman
+never go!
+
+Fortunately Miss Milligan was a lady who prided herself upon her good
+sense and also upon her proper pride. She always knew, she declared,
+when she was not wanted, and, strange as it may seem, it began to dawn
+upon her that this was one of those rare occasions. Mrs. Coombe was very
+pleasant, of course, but Miss Milligan missed something, a certain
+cordiality which might have tempted her to prolong her stay. She was not
+offended, for if she considered that her self-denying journeys to the
+post office were meeting with less than their just deserts, she was not
+a woman to insist upon gratitude where gratitude was not freely given.
+She stayed therefore no longer than the fiction of dress-fitting
+required and then with a somewhat strained "good night" passed down the
+stairs and out of the house.
+
+Mary waited, rigid as a statue, until she heard the front gate close,
+then, the last defence down, she sprang to the dressing table--tearing
+off the paper from the package as a puppy dog might tear the covering
+from a bone. A glass of water stood ready. Her shaking hands reached for
+it, counted the number of tablets and slipped them in. Then, with a long
+breath of relief, the tension relaxed. She raised her eyes, triumphing
+eyes, to the mirror and saw--Aunt Amy watching her from the doorway.
+
+She had forgotten to lock the door!
+
+But it was only Aunt Amy.
+
+Fear and relief came in almost the same breath. She steadied herself
+against the dresser.
+
+"Shut the door!"
+
+Aunt Amy obeyed. But she shut herself inside the door. "What do you
+want?" Mary never wasted words on Amy--"Ah!"
+
+With a motion so swift that it seemed like a conjuror's miracle, Aunt
+Amy had slipped from her stand by the door, snatched up the open box,
+and was back again before the choking cry on the other's lips had
+formed itself.
+
+"Esther says you musn't take these," said Aunt Amy in her colourless
+voice.
+
+For a second Mary hesitated. If she made the murderous spring which
+every baffled nerve in her tortured body urged her to make, Amy would
+scream. A scream would mean, Miss Philps--Esther--the doctor: agony and
+defeat. With a mighty effort she held herself. She tried to
+speak quietly.
+
+"Don't be a fool, Amy. This is some medicine the doctor gave me himself.
+Hand it to me at once."
+
+Aunt Amy smiled. It was a sly little smile. It made Mary want to rave,
+for it said more plainly than words that Aunt Amy knew. Swiftly she
+changed her tactics. Her face softened, became gentle, entreating--
+
+"Amy--dear. I am only going to use a little. If you love me, give me the
+box."
+
+Useless! Aunt Amy still smiled. She put the box behind her. With her
+other hand she felt for the door knob.
+
+"Amy, give it to me! What have I ever done to you?"
+
+"You stole my ring." In exactly the same tone she might have said, "You
+are a murderess."
+
+The ring! Mary had forgotten the ring. Wait, perhaps it was not hopeless
+even yet. Amy placed an absurd value on that ring--and she, Mary, had
+the gem in her possession. She did not know that Esther had found and
+restored it. To her it was still in the box at the bottom of her drawer.
+A dazzling plan flashed through her excited brain. She would bribe Amy
+with the ring. The thought nerved her.
+
+"Do you really want your ring back?" she asked sweetly.
+
+Aunt Amy paused with her hands on the door knob.
+
+"I have it back."
+
+"Oh, no. You haven't. It is in a box in my drawer."
+
+"It is not. Esther gave it to me!" But there was a spark of fear in
+Amy's eyes. Contradiction so easily confused her. _Had_ Esther given her
+the ring? She felt oddly uncertain.
+
+Mary laughed, and the laugh increased Aunt Amy's confusion. After all it
+was quite possible that Mary had taken the ring again. It had been
+locked away and hidden, but locks and hiding-places were never an
+obstacle to "Them."
+
+"I've got it safe enough!" taunted Mary, tormentingly.
+
+The spark of fear flamed. Amy took a swift step forward. "Give it to
+me!"
+
+"Give me the box--and I will."
+
+Aunt Amy had ceased to care about the box. Almost she placed it in the
+outstretched hand, then, with quick cunning, caught it back.
+
+"The ring first."
+
+Mary shrugged her shoulders. She felt cool enough now. It was going to
+be easy. She turned to the bureau and began to pull things out of the
+drawer, scattering them anywhere. She could not remember exactly where
+she had put the ring. As she searched, she talked.
+
+"There is nothing to be tragic about," she said. "I intended to give you
+your ring anyway--some day. And the medicine is nothing that will hurt.
+It is only something to make me sleep so that I shan't look a sight
+to-morrow. I am taking only a little. No one will know. I shall not even
+oversleep. But if Esther or any of them knew, they would make a fuss.
+You must promise not to tell them--before I give you the ring. Just tell
+Esther that I do not want to be disturbed early. I'll wake myself, in
+plenty of time for the wedding."
+
+"In plenty of time for the wedding!" For a moment Amy wondered what it
+was about the phrase which sounded familiar? Then she seemed to see, as
+in a dream, the vision of a young girl all in white, with flowers in her
+hands, sitting alone in a room waiting, watching a clock--a clock which
+never quite came round to the hour of eleven on Tuesday. Time has a
+great deal to do with weddings, evidently. People who wish to be married
+must be ready at the fateful moment, otherwise they have to
+wait--forever, perhaps. "Plenty of time"--suddenly a flash of direct
+inspiration seemed to coordinate her scattered faculties. She saw
+clearly a plan, a beautiful, simple plan to prevent the marriage. What
+if Mary should _not_ wake in plenty of time for the wedding? What if the
+hour, the wedding hour, should not find her ready? The thing was so
+simple! If one tablet would make Mary sleep, two would make her sleep
+longer. For the moment she forgot even the ruby ring in her childish
+pleasure at such a clever idea. Her worn face was lit by a satisfied
+smile as she swiftly, quietly dropped more tablets from the box into the
+glass--one--two--she was not quite sure how many!
+
+"Here is the ring," said Mary turning at last from the disturbed drawer
+with a cardboard box in her hand. It was the box from which Esther had
+taken the ring long before, but Mary was in too great a hurry to open
+it. She did not doubt that it contained the ring. For once in her life
+Mary thought she was playing fair.
+
+They completed the exchange in silence, Mary wondering a little at the
+pleasant change which she saw in Amy's face. But she was too hurried to
+enquire into the cause of it. She hardly waited to hear her promise not
+to tell Esther but fairly pushed her from the room. Then, secure behind
+her locked door, she wiped the perspiration from her forehead and sank
+exhausted into the nearest chair.
+
+When her strength came back her first care was to hide the remaining
+tablets in a safe place in her travelling bag, she never intended to use
+them again, never! But it would do no harm to feel that she could trust
+herself to leave them alone, as of course she could. Then she loosened
+her hair, not pausing to brush it, and, slipping off her dress, wrapped
+herself in a certain flowered dressing gown. Not one of the dainty new
+ones, but a gown whose lace was yellowed and torn, a gown which felt
+like an old friend but which, after to-night, she would wear no more--
+
+Listen! Was that some one at the door?
+
+Only Miss Philps calling good-night. Mary answered "Good-night" in a
+sleepy voice, and the step passed on. It left her shaking like a leaf in
+the wind. What else indeed was she? A fluttering, fading leaf shaken in
+the teeth of a wind of dread and mad desire.
+
+All was quiet now. She would be disturbed no more that night. Her
+shaking hands rattled the spoon which stirred the mixture in the glass.
+The familiar motion quieted her. Here, right in her hands, was peace,
+rest, a swift and magical release from the torment of appetite denied.
+To-morrow--but why think of to-morrow? She might be stronger then.
+Everything might be easier. All she really needed was a long
+night's sleep.
+
+She turned out the light and throwing up the blind stood for a moment
+looking out into the soft moonlight. The moon was clear. It would be a
+beautiful day for the wedding! Smiling, she picked up the glass and
+with a whispered, "Here's to the bride!" raised it to her eager lips
+and drank.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Silence settled down upon the Elms. There was a harvest moon that night,
+a glorious rounded moon more golden than silver. The garden slumbered,
+wrapped in mellow light, even the shadows gleamed faintly luminous. The
+breeze, roaming at will, shook drowsy perfume from the lingering
+flowers, but for all it aped the summer it was unmistakably an autumn
+breeze, melancholy, earth-scented. It stirred the curtains at Mary's
+window; rustled through the great bowlful of crimson leaves upon
+Esther's writing table and softly stirred the dark hair of the girl as
+she sat with her face hidden in her curved arms. For a very long time
+she sat there while the moon looked in and looked away again and who
+can tell what her thoughts were, or if she thought at all.
+
+By and by she rose and went to the window, looking out to where a month
+ago she had stood by the garden gate under the stars. It was drenched
+with moonlight now and the shadow under the elm tree was dark.
+
+What was that? A darker shadow in the shadow? Esther's hand caught at
+the curtain, her heart gave a great leap and then grew still. She knew
+who stood there. This was the good-bye he could not speak. Tears fell
+unheeded down the girl's pale cheeks. If during those last days she had
+had any doubt of the love which loyalty to Mary had helped him hide so
+well, they were all swept away now. A warm spot grew and glowed in her
+heart and a line from that old immortal love lyric which she had learned
+in her school days came back vivid with eternal truth.
+
+ "I had not loved thee, dear, so much
+ Loved I not honour more."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXV
+
+
+It was a perfect day for the wedding. Autumn at her brightest and gayest
+before her new bright robes began to brown. Soft air, mellow sun,
+cool-lipped breeze, horizon veiled in tinted mist--a gem of a day, the
+jewel of a season.
+
+"Them as has, gets," murmured Mrs. Sykes, gloomily, as she tied on her
+Sunday bonnet. She rather resented the kindness of nature upon this
+present occasion. A nice rain would have suited her mood better.
+
+Nevertheless, much as her mind misgave her in regard to the wedding, she
+was early on her way to the Elms to see if she could help.
+
+"They're sure to be flustrated," she told herself. "Aunt Amy's just as
+likely as not to lose what little bit of head she has and hired help are
+broken reeds. Esther will have the brunt of it. She'll be glad enough to
+see me, I'll be bound."
+
+Do not imagine that Mrs. Sykes was curious. Curiosity was a failing
+which she systematically repudiated. But she was a very helpful person
+and it was wonderful how many opportunities of helpfulness she found
+upon solemn or joyous occasions. If, while helping, her ears were open,
+and her eyes shrewd, can she be blamed for that? There may be people
+with ears who hear not but they do not live in Coombe. The only
+difficulty is to manage to be, like Mr. Micawber, on the spot.
+
+Mrs. Sykes was early, but not too early. When she slipped in at the side
+door there was already a stir of unusual movement in the house but the
+final flutter was still measurably distant. Jane dashed past with
+crimped hair and white ribbons flying. Miss Philps, very stately in a
+new gown, was arranging flowers in geometrical patterns. Dr. Callandar,
+self-possessed as ever, talked upon the veranda with Professor Willits
+who had arrived the night before. Aunt Amy was busy in the kitchen.
+Esther, flushed and excited, with eyes that flashed blue fire, seemed
+everywhere at once.
+
+"Oh, Mrs. Sykes," she exclaimed, "how nice of you to come! Won't you
+please get Jane and tie her up--her ribbons, I mean? It is almost time
+to dress."
+
+"Would you like me to assist?" asked Miss Philps, looking up from a
+geometrical pattern.
+
+"Oh, thanks, Miss Philps. There are some hooks I cannot manage. But
+mother will probably need a lot of help. I thought you were with
+her now."
+
+"No. She has not yet sent for me." Miss Philps drew out her watch and
+consulted it. "Dear me!" with slight surprise, "it is much later than I
+thought. Perhaps I had better go up."
+
+Esther looked worried. "I believe you had--if she hurries at the last
+she will be terribly excited. Aunt Amy told me she wished particularly
+not to be disturbed this morning, but surely she has forgotten how late
+it is getting."
+
+"I'll go up," said Miss Philps. "It's time for her tonic anyway, and we
+must persuade her to eat something. When you are ready for me to hook
+your dress, call. I can easily manage you both."
+
+This is all that Mrs. Sykes heard, for just then Jane flew by again like
+a returning comet and had to be captured and properly tied up. Mrs.
+Sykes, as she admitted herself, was no hand at fancy fixings but she was
+painstaking and conscientious and the bow-tying absorbed all her
+energies. She was getting on very well and had almost succeeded in
+adjusting the last bow when a cry from the room above startled her into
+the tying of a double knot.
+
+"What was that?"
+
+It was not a loud cry--but there was something in it which brought Mrs.
+Sykes' heart leaping into her throat, which sent Esther reeling against
+the stair baluster, which brought the doctor, white-faced from the
+veranda--it was the kind of cry which carries in its note the psychic
+essence of terror and disaster.
+
+Mrs. Sykes for all her iron nerve felt suddenly faint. Jane began to
+cry. The doctor and Esther had raced up the stairs. But there was no
+repetition of the cry. Instead there was silence. Then a murmur of
+voices and sounds of ordered activity overhead.
+
+Clearly something had happened. But what? Mrs. Sykes wanted very much to
+go and see. But the glimpse she had caught of Callandar's eyes as he
+sprang to the stair, the look of white horror in Esther's face as she
+followed him, and above all, that strange terrifying Something in the
+cry she had heard seemed to discourage enquiry. The good lady turned her
+attention to the comforting of Jane. After all, if she waited long
+enough she could hardly help hearing all about it. At first hand, too.
+
+It seemed a long time that she waited. Miss Philps came up and down the
+stairs several times but she did not appear to see Mrs. Sykes. Jane
+stopped crying and wandered out into the garden. Still Mrs. Sykes
+waited and presently Aunt Amy came in, looking quite excited and asked
+eagerly what time it was. Mrs. Sykes told her, adding with asperity that
+these were fine goings-on, and that they'd all be late for the wedding
+if they didn't hurry up.
+
+"Yes, I think they will. I'm almost sure they will," said Aunt Amy, and
+she laughed as a child laughs when it is greatly pleased.
+
+"Dear me, she is much madder than I thought," murmured Mrs. Sykes.
+"Whatever is the matter? What are they doing?" she asked in a
+louder tone.
+
+Aunt Amy raised a finger, "Hush! she's asleep. Let us tidy up the room.
+I don't think she is going to wake up for a long time yet. And then
+she'll have to wait till the world goes round again."
+
+"Well of all the--" began Mrs. Sykes, but she was interrupted by the
+entrance of Professor Willits. With the virtuous air of one who strictly
+minds her own business she began to tie her bonnet strings.
+
+"Don't go, Mrs. Sykes," said the professor gravely. "I think--I'm afraid
+you may be needed."
+
+"I hope nothing serious has happened?" faltered Mrs. Sykes, now
+thoroughly disturbed, but he did not seem to hear her. He was listening
+intently to the sounds overhead. They were very slight sounds now and
+presently they ceased altogether. Willits looked more anxious. Then, in
+the midst of a new, heavier silence, Dr. Callandar himself came down
+the stairs.
+
+At first sight he appeared almost as usual. He did not notice Mrs. Sykes
+but went straight across the room to Willits.
+
+"Nothing--any use--" he began haltingly. Then suddenly the words ceased
+to come. His lips moved but there was no sound. With an expression of
+intense surprise he lifted his hand to his head, and swayed awkwardly
+into the nearest chair.
+
+"Land sakes, look out! he's going to fall," cried Mrs. Sykes in terror.
+
+"Breakdown," said the professor briefly. "I expected something of the
+kind. Help me to get him to the car."
+
+"Oh, Land, Land," moaned; Mrs. Sykes, "whatever"--but realising that the
+time for questioning was not yet, she did what she was told without
+more words.
+
+"Better send for Dr. Parker," said Willits crisply to Miss Philps who
+had come in quietly. "Better tell the minister, too. Keep the little
+girl down stairs. I'll be back as soon as I can. Mrs. Sykes, I shall
+want you to come with me."
+
+"Oh, Land--" but she got no further, the car was off like the wind.
+
+Later when the doctor had been put to bed like a child and telegrams
+dispatched which would bring a specialist and a nurse on the afternoon
+train, the good lady drew a long breath and decided that she couldn't
+"last out" a moment longer.
+
+Drawing Willits from the room her questions burst forth in their
+unstemmed torrent.
+
+The tall man listened at first in bewilderment. Then, as the true
+inwardness of the case dawned on him, a look which was almost admiration
+came over his angular countenance.
+
+"Why, Mrs. Sykes," he said, "is it possible that you do not know? I
+would have told you before but I took your knowledge for granted. The
+poor lady whom my friend was to marry was found dead in her bed. She
+died during the night. An overdose of sleeping powder."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVI
+
+
+Autumn that year was short and golden. Winter came early. In November it
+stormed, thawed, stormed again and began to freeze in earnest. The frost
+bit deeply but one night when its grip was sure, the temperature rose a
+little and snow began to fall. For days and nights it snowed, softly,
+steadily, without wind, and then the clouds parted and the sun shone
+out--a far off sun in a sky as blue as summer and cold as polar seas.
+The air tingled and snapped with frost. In the azure cup of the sunlit
+sky it sparkled like golden wine, and, like wine, it thrilled and
+strengthened. People stamped their feet and beat their hands to keep
+warm but smiled the while and murmured: "Glorious!"
+
+So much for the weather--since it was the weather which became the main
+factor in helping Coombe forget the tragedy at the Elms. Wonder is no
+nine-day affair in Coombe. One sensation is carefully conserved until
+the next one comes along, but in this case the early winter with its
+complete change of interests, its sleighing, skating and snow-shoeing,
+its reawakening of business and social bustle proved a distraction
+almost as effective as battle, murder or sudden death. The talk died
+down, the interest slackened, and the principal actors were once more
+permitted to become normal persons living in a normal world.
+
+For a time it had seemed that this desired condition would never be
+obtained. Coombe had felt the breath of a mystery. It was supposed to
+know everything and suspected that it knew nothing--a state of things
+aggravating to any well regulated community.
+
+There had been an inquest, of course, and at the inquest the whole sad
+affair was supposed to have been made plain. It was simplicity itself.
+Simplicity, in fact, was its most annoying characteristic. Mrs. Coombe,
+it appeared, had been for a long time somewhat of a sufferer from an
+obscure trouble, referred to generally as "nerves." For the relief of
+this trouble, one of whose symptoms was insomnia, she had, from time to
+time, had recourse to narcotics which, as everyone knows, are dangerous,
+if not, as many thought, positively immoral. Undoubtedly the poor lady
+had died from an overdose. It was easy, the coroner said, for a
+sympathetic mind to reconstruct the details of the terrible occurrence.
+It was the night before the wedding and the deceased had retired early.
+Miss Milligan, who had run in for a last look at the wedding gown, and
+who had been the very last person to see and speak with her, deposed
+that she had appeared more than ordinarily tired and seemed anxious to
+be alone. Asked if she detected any other signs of disordered nerves the
+witness had said, no. The deceased had not appeared worried about
+anything? No. The wedding gown had been quite satisfactory? Quite.
+
+No more questions were asked and Miss Milligan had not thought it
+necessary to go into the matter of the getting of the nerve tonic. The
+dead woman's harmless little deception was safe in her hands. It hadn't
+anything to do with the case anyway. Although in her own heart Miss
+Milligan blamed Dr. Callandar severely for not allowing the poor woman
+to use her tonic constantly. Had he done so the final tragedy might
+never have happened. Needless to say this good lady never knew what she
+had done. The fact that Mary Coombe had been a drug victim under
+treatment did not come out at the inquest. The coroner knew, but he was
+a sensible man and a very kind one. It hardly needed the logical
+arguments of Miss Philps or the heart-broken entreaties of Esther to
+convince him that knowledge of this fact was not for the general public.
+The only legally necessary information was the cause of death and that
+was simple enough. Easily understood, too, for given a tendency to
+sleeplessness and the excitement incident to a wedding, what more
+natural than that the excited bride should have sought relief in her
+customary sleeping draught.
+
+The mistake, the taking of a lethal dose, was, as all such mistakes are,
+inexplicable. Did her hand shake? Had she miscounted the number of
+tablets? Had she, in her nervous state, deliberately risked a larger
+dose whose danger she did not realise? These questions would never be
+answered. She had been alone in her room, nor was there a thread of
+evidence upon which to hang a theory. Esther, the nurse, Jane, Dr.
+Callandar (poor man!) had noticed nothing out of the ordinary when they
+had parted from her that last time. Aunt Amy's evidence was not taken.
+No one thought to question her and she volunteered no information. Of
+all the household at the Elms she was least disturbed by the tragedy,
+but, naturally, one does not expect the mentally weak to realise sorrow
+like ordinary people. This exemption was, as many did not fail to
+remark, one of their compensations. So in this, as in other things, Aunt
+Amy did not matter. She went her quiet way undisturbed, the one
+contented and peaceful person in that house of shock and horror.
+
+Why, then, since all was so plain, did Coombe scent a mystery? It would
+be hard to say. Perhaps the curious behaviour of Dr. Callandar was
+partly responsible. When the news of his sudden breakdown became known
+the first natural comment was, "So, you see, he did love her after all."
+But, upon longer consideration this did not seem to meet the case. A man
+may be genuinely in love with a woman and yet not be stricken, as had
+the doctor, by her sudden death. Dimly, Coombe felt that there must be a
+cause behind the cause. Miss Sinclair, the eldest, even went so far as
+to quote Shakespeare to the effect that "men have died and the worms
+have eaten them, but not for love." True, the doctor was not dead but
+his illness was proving a very long and stubborn one. In its early
+stages he had been taken away to Toronto for special treatment and had
+been quite unable to see any one, even the minister, before he left.
+Mrs. Sykes alone, with the exception of the trained nurses, had laid
+eyes on him since his sudden collapse on the day of the wedding. And
+Mrs. Sykes, miraculously, had nothing to say.
+
+It was rumoured, however, that his brain was affected, that he was
+paralysed, that he was deaf and blind, that he was dying of slow
+decline. Somehow the town felt that Mary Coombe, living or dead, did not
+loom large enough as a cause of such disintegration.
+
+Esther's actions, too, were part of the puzzle. It had been confidently
+supposed that she would go away at once for a rest and change. Every one
+knew that the Hollises had offered to take her with them on a long trip
+to the Pacific Coast. But Esther had declined to go. She declined to go
+anywhere. Worn out as she was with strain and grief, she persisted in
+disregarding the advice of everybody. ("So headstrong in a young girl!
+But Doctor Coombe, her father, was always like that.") Apparently she
+intended to go on exactly as if nothing had happened and to all
+arguments said nothing save, "I think it will be best," or, "I am not
+fit for strange scenes just now," or something equally futile. Coombe
+was quite annoyed with Esther--so stubborn!
+
+Only to Miss Annabel did the girl attempt to justify her attitude when
+that kind soul had exhausted persuasion and was inclined to feel both
+worried and hurt.
+
+"Don't you see," she explained haltingly, "I can't go away. I don't want
+to. I can't make the effort. Here every one understands and will make
+allowances. I want to be quiet, to rest, to think. I want to get back to
+where I was before--if I can."
+
+"Before what, my dear?"
+
+"Before--everything! I can't explain. But I know it is the only way I
+shall ever be content. I want to take my school again and to go on
+working and looking after Jane and Aunt Amy. Although," with a little
+smile, "it is really Auntie who looks after Jane and me. Won't you help
+me, dear Miss Annabel? I am quite sure that this is the only thing
+to do."
+
+"You are a strange girl, Esther. One would think you would be crazy to
+get away. Look at Angus! He's going. He has suddenly found out that a
+trip to the Holy Land is necessary if one is to speak intelligently upon
+many portions of the Bible. Absurd! But I never let him dream that I
+know that isn't his reason. And I hope you won't. It is all over now and
+the sooner he forgets the better. But I think even you are convinced,
+now, that I was right about--you know to what I refer!"
+
+Esther murmured something indistinguishable and Miss Annabel departed
+much pleased with her own perspicacity. And she did help. She let it be
+known at the Ladies' Aid that she quite understood Esther and approved
+of her. After all, it was senseless to run away from trouble since
+trouble can run so much faster. And it was natural and right of Esther
+to feel that nowhere could she find so much sympathy and consideration
+as in her own town. Travelling was fatiguing anyway.
+
+As for the school, that was easily arranged. A little discreet wire
+pulling and Esther was once more established as school mistress of
+District Number Fifteen. People shook their heads, but by the time of
+the first snowstorm they had ceased to prophesy nervous prostration, and
+by the time sleighing was fairly established they were ready to admit
+that the girl had acted sensibly after all.
+
+No one guessed that there was another reason for Esther's refusal to go
+away. It was a simple reason and had to do with the fact that in Coombe
+the mails were sure and regular. Travellers miss letters and strange
+addresses are uncertain at best, but in Coombe there was small chance of
+any untoward accident befalling a certain weekly letter in the
+handwriting of Professor Willits. Esther lived upon these letters. Brief
+and dry though they were, they formed the motive power of her life and
+indeed it was from one of them that she had received the impetus which
+roused her from her first trance of grief and horror.
+
+"My dear young lady (Willits had written).
+
+"I believe that there are times when the truth is a good thing. It might
+be tactful to pretend that I do not know the real reason of Calendar's
+collapse but it would also be foolish. I think he is going to pull
+through. Now the question is--how about you? Are you going to be able to
+do your part?
+
+"Let me be more explicit. It may be a long time before our friend is
+thoroughly re-established in health but it is quite probable that he
+will be well enough, and determined enough, to face some of his problems
+in the spring. He will turn to you. Are you going to be able to help
+him? When he comes to you will he find a silly, nervous girl, all
+horrors and regrets and useless might-have-beens or will he find you
+strong and sane, healthily poised, ready to face the future and let the
+dead past go? For the past is dead--believe me!
+
+"You have seemed to me to be an excellently normal young person, but no
+doubt the shock and trouble of late events have done much to disturb
+your normality. Can you get it back? On the answer to that, depends
+Callandar's future. I shall keep you informed, weekly, of his progress."
+
+Esther had thought deeply over this letter. Its brief, stern truth was
+exactly the tonic she needed. Like a strong hand it reached down into
+her direful pit of morbid musings, and, clinging to it, she struggled
+back into the sunlight. Above all and in spite of everything, she must
+not fail the man she loved!
+
+At first she had to fight with terrors. She feared she knew not what.
+The vision of Mary upon the bed, still and ghastly in the golden light
+of morning, came back to shake her heart. The memory of Callandar's
+face, of the frantic struggle to drag the dead woman back to life, made
+many a night hideous. The endless questioning, Could it have been
+prevented? Could I have done more? tortured her, but by and by, as she
+faced them bravely, these terrors lost their baleful power. Her youth
+and common-sense triumphed.
+
+The school helped. One cannot continue very morbid with a roomful of
+happy, noisy children to teach and keep in order. Jane's need of her
+helped, for she, dared not give way to brooding when the child was
+near. Aunt Amy helped--perhaps most of all. She was a constant wonder
+to the girl, so cheerful was she, so thoughtful of others, so forgetful
+of herself. Her little fancies seemed to have ceased to fret her, there
+was a new peace in her faded eyes. Sometimes as she went about the house
+she would sing a little, in a high thready voice, bits from songs that
+were popular in her youth. "The Blue Alsatian Mountains" or "When You
+and I Were Young, Maggie" or "Darling Nellie Grey." She told Esther that
+it was because she felt "safe." "The blackness hardly ever comes now,"
+she said. "I don't think 'They' will bother me any more."
+
+"Why?" asked Esther, curious.
+
+But Aunt Amy did not seem to know why--or if she knew she never told.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVII
+
+
+A robin hopped upon the window sill of School-house Number Fifteen and
+peered cautiously into the room. He had no business there during lesson
+hours and the arrival of Mary's little lamb could not have been more
+disturbing. The children whispered, fidgeted, shuffled their feet and
+banged their slates.
+
+"Perhaps they do not know it is spring," thought the robin and ruffling
+his red breast and swelling his throat he began to tell them.
+
+"It is spring! It is spring! It is spring!"
+
+The effect was electrical. Even the tall young teacher turned from her
+rows of figures on the blackboard.
+
+"Come out! come out! come out!" sang the robin.
+
+The teacher tapped sharply for order and the robin flew away. But the
+mischief was done. It was useless to tell them, "Only ten minutes more."
+Ten minutes--as well say ten years. The little fat boy in the front seat
+began to cry. A long sigh passed over the room. Ten minutes? The teacher
+consulted her watch, hesitated, and was lost.
+
+"Close books," she ordered. "Attention. Ready--March." The jostling
+lines scrambled in some kind of order to the door and then broke into
+joyous riot. It was spring--and school was out!
+
+Their teacher followed more slowly, pausing on the steps to breathe
+long and deeply the sweet spring air. In a corner by the steps there was
+still a tiny heap of shrinking snow, but in the open, the grass was
+green as emerald, violets and wind flowers pushed through the tangle of
+last year's leaves. The trees seemed shrouded in a fairy mist of green.
+Robins were everywhere.
+
+The girl upon the steps was herself a vision of spring--the embodiment
+of youth and beautiful life. Coombe folks admitted that Esther Coombe
+had "got back her looks." Had they been less cautious they might have
+said much more, for the subtle change which had come to Esther, the
+change which marks the birth of womanhood, had left her infinitely
+more lovely.
+
+From the pocket of the light coat she wore she brought forth a handful
+of crumbs and scattered them for the saucy robins and then, unwilling to
+hasten, sat down upon the steps to watch their cheerful wrangling.
+Peeling for more crumbs she drew out a letter--a single sheet covered
+with the crabbed handwriting of Professor Willits. At sight of it a soft
+flush stole over her face. She forgot the crumbs and the robins for,
+although her letter was two days old and she knew exactly what it
+contained, the very sight of the written words was joy to her. Like all
+Willits' notes it was short and to the point.
+
+"Our friend has gone," she read. "We wanted to keep him for a month yet,
+but the robins called too loudly. He left no word of his destination,
+only a strange note saying that at last he was up the hill and over. May
+he find happiness, dear lady, on the other side."
+
+One thing I notice--this recovery of his is different from his former
+recovery. If I were not afraid of lapsing into sentiment, I should say
+that he has achieved a soul cure. The morbid spot which troubled him so
+long is healed. A psychologist might explain it, but you and I must
+accept the result and be thankful. It is as if his subconscious self
+had removed a barrier and signalled 'Line clear--go ahead.' It is more
+than I had ever dared to hope.
+
+ Your friend,
+ E.P. Willits.
+
+"P.S.: Are you ready?"
+
+Esther looked at the postscript and smiled--that slow smile which lifted
+the corner of her lips so deliciously.
+
+"May we wait for you, Teacher?"
+
+"Not to-day, dears."
+
+The children moved regretfully away. Presently the school yard was
+deserted. The busy robins had finished quarrelling over their crumbs and
+were holding a caucus around the red pump. In the quietness could be
+heard the gurgle of the spring rivulets on the hill.
+
+Was there another sound on the hill, too? A far off whistling mingled
+with the gurgling water and twittering birds? Esther's hand tightened
+upon the letter--she leaned forward, listening intently. How loud the
+birds were! How confusing the sound of water! But now she caught the
+whistling again--
+
+ "_From Wimbleton to Wombleton is fifteen miles_"--
+
+The familiar words formed themselves upon the girl's lips before the
+message of the tune reached her brain and brought her, breathless, to
+her feet. He was coming--so soon!
+
+Panic seized her. Her hand flew to her heart--she would hide in the
+school-room, anywhere! Then she remembered Willits' postscript, the
+postscript which she had thought so needless. Her hand fell to her side.
+The panic died. Next moment, head high and eyes smiling, she walked down
+to the gate.
+
+He was coming along the road under the budding elms--hatless, carrying a
+knapsack. His tweeds were splashed with mud from the spring roads, his
+face was thin, his hair was almost grey. Yet he came on like a conqueror
+and there was nothing old or tired in the bound wherewith he leaped the
+gate he would not pause to open.
+
+"Esther!"
+
+She looked up into his eyes and found them shadowless. Her own eyes
+veiled themselves,
+
+Neither found anything to say.
+
+But overhead a robin burst into heavenly song.
+
+
+
+***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK UP THE HILL AND OVER***
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