Erhalten Sie Zugang zu diesem und mehr als 300000 Büchern ab EUR 5,99 monatlich.
THE baby was born at Whitewater Farms about nine in the morning, April 19, 1900. Two pure-breed calves,-one a heifer, the other a bull,-were dropped the same day at nearly the same hour. Odell came in toward noon, heard these farm items from his foreman, Ed Lister. For twenty years Odell's marriage had been childless. He had waited in vain for a son,-for several sons,-and now, after twenty sterile years of hardship, drudgery, and domestic discord, Fanny had given him a girl. He stood in silence, chewing the bitter news. "Awright," he said, "that's that ! Is Queen doin' good?" Whitewater Queen was doing as well as could be expected and her fourth heifer-calf was a miracle of Guernsey beauty.
Sie lesen das E-Book in den Legimi-Apps auf:
Seitenzahl: 403
Das E-Book (TTS) können Sie hören im Abo „Legimi Premium” in Legimi-Apps auf:
IT is a long lane that has no turning, either for cattle or for men.
When Fanny died Odell was forty. Two months later he married the strapping daughter of Ed Lister. And came to the turn in the long, long lane he had travelled for twenty years.
For, as Whitewater Queen was a breeder of heifer-calves, Mazie Lister proved to be a breeder of men.
Every year, for the first four years, she gave Odell a son.
There was no fuss made about these events. Mazie Lister was the kind of girl who could eat cabbage for breakfast, wad it down with pie, drive it deeper with a quart of buttermilk.
Once, to prove she could do it, she ate a whole roast sucking pig, five boiled potatoes, six ears of corn, a dish of cranberry sauce, and an entire apple pie; and washed it down with three quarts of new cider.
Her feed never fattened her; it seemed to make her skin pinker, teeth whiter, long, slanting black eyes more brilliant.
No cares worried her. She laughed a great deal. She was busy from dawn to dark. Unfatigued but sleepy, she yawned frightfully toward nine o’clock. It was her time to roost.
Mazie’s instincts concerning progeny were simple. She nursed each arrival as long as necessary, then weaned it. Then the youngster had to learn to shift for himself—wash and dress, turn up at meal hours, turn in with the chickens, rise with the crows.
It was a little different, however, with Eris, whom Mazie
had inherited. Eris, of course, was bottle-fed. Whitewater Queen’s heifer-calf, White Princess, had no better care. Whatever was advisable was completely and thoroughly done in both cases.
White Princess grew to beautiful Guernsey symmetry, with every promise of conformation to classic type; and was duly registered. Little Eris, small boned, with delicately fashioned limbs, looked out on the world from a pair of crystal-blue, baby eyes, which ultimately became a deep, limpid grey.
Unlike White Princess, Eris did not promise to conform to the Odell type. There seemed to be little of that breed about her. Fanny had been bony and shiny-skinned, with a high-bridged, pinkish nose, watery eyes—a wisp of a woman with a rodent’s teeth and every articulation apparent as a ridge under a dry, tightly stretched epidermis.
Odell, with his even, white teeth, coarse, highly-coloured skin and brown eyes, was a compact, stocky, heavy-handed, broad-footed product of Scotch-Irish pioneer stock. But Fanny’s grandmother, a Louisiana Creole, had run away from school to go on the stage, and had married a handsome but dissolute Southern planter who died of drink.
Sundays Fanny used to wear her grandmother’s portrait painted in miniature on ivory, as a breast-pin.
“ Hand-painted,” she used to explain. And always added: “Creoles are all white.” Which was true. But, when quarrelling with his wife, Odell pretended to believe otherwise.
Rummaging through Fanny’s effects a day or two after her marriage, Mazie discovered a painted fan, a mother-of-pearl card-case, and this breast-pin. She carried the miniature to Odell.
“ Looks like baby,” she explained, with her care-free laugh.
“ She’ll be lucky if she favours that pitcher,” said Odell.
“ But like as not she’ll take after Fanny.” He was wrong in his guess.
When Eris was five her resemblance to the miniature had become marked. And Mazie’s boys looked like their mother and father.
On Saturday nights, after immersing her own unwilling brunette brats in the weekly bath, Mazie found the slim white body of little Eris an ever-increasing amusement and a pique to her curiosity. The child’s frail yet healthy symmetry, the fine skin, delicate, perfect limbs, lovely little hands and feet, remained perennial sources of mirth and surprise to this robust young woman who was equally healthy, but built on a big, colourful, vigorous plan.
Solid and large of limb and haunch, deep-bosomed, ruddy-skinned, the young stepmother always bred true to type. Her sons were sons of the soil from birth. There could be no doubt about her offspring. What wasn’t Lister was Odell. They belonged to the land.
But when Mazie looked at her husband and looked at the child, Eris—and when she remembered Fanny—then she wondered and was inclined to smile. And she was content that her sons’ thick, sturdy bodies and slanting, black eyes so plainly advertised the stock they came from. Utility. Health. Strength.
Fanny had had a pink nose. Even a Guernsey ought to have one. But the nose of Eris was snow white. To what stock did this child throw back?
When Eris was seven she was sent to the village school, leading her eldest stepbrother thither by the hand. Both were scared and tearful. Nobody went with little Eris to mitigate the ordeal; and she was a most sensitive child.
Hers had been a deathless curiosity since she was old enough to ask her first question. An unquenchable desire for information seemed to possess her. Her eternal, “Will you tell me why?” became a nuisance.
“ Dang it, send her to school!” shouted Odell at last. And that was how.
At her small desk, rigid, bewildered, terribly intent on the first teacher in human form she had ever gazed upon, she found herself on the verge of tears. But, before she could dissolve, her brother forestalled her, bursting into vigorous yells, bawling like a calf; and would not be comforted. Which allowed Eris no time for private grief while wiping his eyes with her pinafore.
Noonday recess and lunch baskets and the wildly gyrating horde of children let loose on a sandy playground ended the first encounter between Eris Odell and the great god Education in His Local Temple at White Hills Village.
Eris learned little in school. There is little to learn in American schools. No nation is more illiterate. And in the sort of school she went to the ignorant are taught by the half educated.
None of her teachers could speak English as it should be spoken. In their limited vocabulary there was no room for choice of words. Perhaps that was why negatives were doubled now and then.
As for the rest, she was stuffed with falsified history and unessential geographical items; she was taught to read after a fashion, and to spell, and to juggle figures. There was a nature class, too, full of misinformation. And once an owlish, elderly man lectured on physiology; and told them in a low and solemn voice that “there is two sects in the phenonemy of natur, and little boys are made diffrunt to little girls.”
That ended the lecture, leaving every little boy and little girl mad with unsatisfied curiosity, and some of the older children slightly uncomfortable.
But The Great American Ass dominates this splendid land of ours. Heknows. He’ll tell the world. And that’s that—as Odell was accustomed to say. And early in
her career little Eris caught the cant phrase of finality from her father, and incorporated it with her increasing lingual equipment.
When one of the boys tried to kiss her, she kicked his shins. “And that’sthat!” she added breathlessly, smoothing out her rumpled pinafore.
In Mazie she had a stepmother who made no difference between Eris and her own progeny. She kissed them all alike at bedtime; dosed them when necessary, comforted their sorrows with stock reassurances from a limited vocabulary, darned, sewed, mended, washed for all alike.
Mazie gave her children and her husband all she had time to give—all she had the capacity to give—the kindly, cheerful offices and understanding of a healthy female.
Whitewater Queen was as good a mother. Both lacked imagination. But Whitewater Queen didn’t need any.
For a time, however, the knowledge imbibed at school nourished Eris, although there were few vitamines in the feed.
When she was thirteen her brothers—twelve, eleven, ten and nine—alternately bullied her, deferred to her, or ran bawling to her with their troubles.
When she was fourteen the world met its own weird at Armageddon. The old order of things began to change. A new earth and a newly interpreted Heaven replaced the “former things” which had “passed away.”
At eighteen Eris looked out over the smoking débris of “former things”—gazed out of limpid grey eyes upon “a new Heaven and a new Earth”; and saw the cloudy, gigantic spectre of all-that-had-once-been receding, dissolving, vanishing from the world where it had reigned so tyrannically and so long.
About that time she dreamed, for the first time, that dream which so often re-occurred in after years—that she
stood at her open window, naked, winged, restless for flight to some tremendous height where dwelt the aged god of Wisdom all alone, cutting open a human heart that was still faintly pulsating.
At eighteen—the year the world war was ended—Eris “graduated.”
She wrote a little act for herself, designed her own costume, made it, acted, sang, and danced the part. It was the story of a poor girl who prays for two things—a pair of wings so that she may fly to the moon, and a new hat for the journey. Suddenly she discovers a new hat in her hands. The next instant two beautiful little wings sprout on her shoulders. Instantly she takes scissors and snips off the wings and trims her new hat with them. Ready for her journey, suddenly she realises that now she cannot fly. She tears the wings from the hat. Too late. She can’t fasten them to her shoulders again. They flutter to her feet. She falls on her knees in a passion of tears. The moon rises, grinning.
It was a vast success—this little act of Eris Odell—and while its subtler intent was quite lost on the honest folk of White Hills Village, the story itself was so obvious and Eris did it so prettily that even her father grunted approval.
That evening he promised her the next heifer-calf for her own. If it proved a good one the sale of it should provide a nice nest-egg for Eris when she married.
The next heifer-calf promised well. Eris named her White Iris and she was so registered.
In the yearling pure-breeds she was first at the Comity Fair. But Eris refused to sell. At the State Fair White Iris beat every Guernsey and every other heifer, pure-breed and grade.
Brookvale Manor offered her three thousand dollars. Odell made her take it, and put the money into the local bank. So, with tears blinding her grey eyes, Eris sold
White Iris out of the county. And would not be comforted even by the brand new cheque-book sent to her by the cashier of the White Hills Bank.
The account, however, was in her father’s name.
Now, the horizon of Eris Odell had narrowed as her sphere of activity dwindled after graduation.
Whitewater Farms became her world. Within its confines lay her duties and diversions, both clearly defined.
They were her heritage. No loop-holes offered escape—excepting marriage. And that way out was merely the way in to another and similar prison the boundary of which was a barbed wire fence, and its mathematical centre a manure pit.
She continued to dream of wings. An immense, indefinable longing possessed her in waking hours. But she was only one of the youthful, excited millions, waking after æons to the first instincts that had ruled the human race.
It was the restlessness of the world’s youth that stirred her—Modern Youth opening millions of clear young eyes to gaze upon the wonders of a new Heaven and a new earth, and mad to explore it all from zenith to depths—sky, sea, land, and the waters under the earth. Youth, suddenly crazed by an overwhelming desire for Truth, after æons and æons of lies.
Explore, venture, achieve, live—demand Truth, exact it, face it, andknow!—the mighty, voiceless cry of the World’s Youth—claiming freedom to seek, liberty to live, fearless, untrammelled, triumphant. A terrible indictment of Age, and of those age-governed æons which forever have passed away.
Already the older, duller generation caught the vast vibration of young hearts beating to arms, young voices swelling the tremulous, universal cry of insurgence, a clear, ceaseless,
sea-like sound of laughter proclaiming the death of Sham—ringing an endless, silvery requiem.
Odell shoved up his spectacles and lowered the newspaper to glance at Eris.
“ What say?” he repeated fretfully.
“ I’d like to study dancing.”
“ Can’t you dance? You go to enough socials and showers ’n’one thing ’n’other.”
“ I mean—stage dancing.”
“ Stage!” he thundered. “Be you crazy?”
“ Why, Eris, how you talk!” said her stepmother, too astounded to laugh.
“ I could go to New York and work in a store by day; and take stage-dancing lessons evenings,” murmured the girl. “I want to be somebody.”
“ You stay here and do your chores and try to act as if you ain’t a little loonatic!” shouted Odell. “I’m sicka hearing about the capers and kickups of young folks nowaday. Them gallivantins don’t go in my house. I’m sicka reading about ’em, too. And that’sthat!”
“ After all,” said Eris, “why do I have to do what I don’t care to do?”
“ Dang it,” retorted her father, “didn’t you never hear of dooty? What d’they teach you in school?”
“ Nothing much,” she replied listlessly. “Did you always want to be a farmer, daddy?”
“ Hey?”
“ Are you a farmer because you wanted to be? Or did you want to be something else?”
“ What dinged trash you talk,” he said, disgusted. “I didn’t wanta be a blacksmith or I’da been one.”
“ Why can’tIbe what I’d like to be? Will you tell me why?”
Odell, speechless, resumed his newspaper. It was nearly
nine o’clock and he hadn’t read half the local news and none of the column devoted to the Grange.
Eris looked wistfully at him, loitering still in the doorway, slim, grey-eyed, undeveloped.
Her stepmother laughed at her: “Notions,” she said. “Don’t you know you’d go to rack and rooin that way? You go to bed, Eris.... There’s fresh ginger snaps in the pantry.”
UNTIL the Great War turned the world upside down, Whitewater Farms made money after Odell married Ed Lister’s daughter.
Shortage of labour during the war cut into profits; taxes wiped them out; the ugly, Bolshevik attitude of labour after the war caused a deficit.
It was the sullen inertia of the mob, conscious of power. Men did not care whether they worked at all. If they chose to work, mills and factories would pay them enough in three days to permit them to remain idle the remainder of the week. No farmer could pay the swollen wages demanded for field labour, and survive financially.
Every village was full of idle louts who sneered at offered employment.
Fruit rotted in orchards, grain remained uncut, cattle stood neglected. The great American loafer leered at the situation. The very name of Labour stank. It stinks still. The Great American Ass has made the term a stench in the nostrils of civilisation.
The next year mills and factories began to lay off labour. Odell and Lister scraped together a few sulky field hands, mainly incompetents, men who had spent all their wages. Fields were sullenly tilled, crops gathered, cattle cared for.
Except for profiteers, reaction had set in. War profligacy, asinine finance, crushing taxes already were doing their work.
Rather than pay for feed, farmers sold their stock. The demand for pork started everybody hog-raising. Prices
fell; loss followed. Then stagnation. It was the bitter aftermath of war—the deluge. Dead water.
Only one star of hope glimmered over the waste,—the New Administration.
Spring was a month early that year. Odell, at sixty, unimpaired by pie and the great American frying pan, his gaitered legs planted sturdily in the new grass, looked out over his domain and chewed a clover stem.
“ I ain’t afraid,” he said to Lister. “I’m going the hull hog. Every acre.”
“ Where’s your help?” remonstrated Lister.
“ I got ’em.”
“ Some on ’em is quitters. They’ll lay down on yeh, Elmer.”
Odell spat out the clover stem: “Every acre, Ed!” he repeated. “And six cows on test.”
“ We ain’t got the help——”
“ Six cows,” growled Odell; “White Lady, Snow Queen, Silver Maid, Thistledown, Milkweed Lass, and Whitewater Lily.... I gotta make money. I’m aimin’ to and I’m a-going to. I got four sons. And that’s that!”
“ Elmer——”
“ Awright. I know all what you gonna say, Ed. But where does it get you to go around with a face a foot long? How’s things to start unless somebody starts ’em? Awright, prices is bad. You can’t sell a pure-breed caaf in this dinged country. There isn’t no market for a fancy heifer. Everybody’s breedin’ Holsteins ’n’sloshin’ around after grades. Awright; nobody wants Guernsey quality; everybody wants Holstein bulk ’n’watery milk ’n’everything. I know. And my answer is,every acre, Ed; and six cows on test; and higher prices on every danged caaf that’s dropped.
“ If I sell a heifer it’s a favour to be paid for through the nose. And I feed every bull-caaf and no vealin’ this year. Enough hogs to turn out till October; not another danged
snout! If the Bank don’t see me through I’ll blow it up. Now, g’wan and make your plans.”
He went into the creamery where his wife stood beside the separator, watching a cat lap up some spilled cream.
“ Your pa’s timid, Mazie,” he said. “I tell him I cal’late t’start under full steam. What do you say?”
She laughed: “Pa’s got notions. He allus was a mite slow. I guess you know best, Elmer.”
“ We all gotta work,” he said. “That means Eris, too.”
“ She allus helps me,” remarked Mazie, simply.
“ I dunno what she does,” grunted Odell; “—sets a hen or two, fools around the incubators, digs up a spoonful of scratch-feed—what does she do, anyhow?”
“ The child mends and irons——”
“ When she ain’t readin’ or tendin’ her flowers or moonin’ ’round the woods ’n’fields,” retorted Odell. “Eris reckons she’s too fine a lady for farm folk, I guess. I want her to keep busy. And that’s that.”
“ Somebody’s got to tend the flowers,” remonstrated Mazie. “You don’t want we should have no posy bed, Elmer—like poor folks down to the Holler, do you?”
“ I can git along ’n’eat dinner without posies. Why don’t Erie read theGrange Journal? Oh, no; it’s fancy novels and highfalutin’ books she studies onto. And she’s allus cuttin’ out these here fashions into these here magazines with coloured pitchers outside. Did you ever see Eris studyin’ into a cook-book? Or a seed catalogue? Or theGuernsey Cattle Magazine? Or theBreeder’s Guide——”
“ You let her be,” said Mazie, good-naturedly. “The housework’s done and that’s all you need to know. She can cook and make a bed if she’s a mind to.”
“ Mind,” growled Odell, “—what’s a girl want of a mind? All she uses it for is to plan how to play-act on the stage or gallivant into moving pitchers. All she thinks about is how to git to New York to hunt up some fancy job so she can paint her face and dance in bare legs——”
“ Now, Elmer, Eris is too smart to act foolish; and she’s educated real well. You liked to see her act in school, and you thought she danced nicely. She’s only a child yet——”
“ She’s twenty!”
“ She’s no more’n sixteen in her way of thinking, Elmer. She’s a good girl.”
“ I didn’t say she’s bad. But she’s twenty, and she ought to be more help to us. And she ought to quit readin’ and moonin’ and dreamin’ and lazin’——”
“ You quityourlazin’, too,” laughed Mazie, setting a pan of cream in the ice chest. “Why don’t you go down to the barn and ring that new herd-bull? You can’t get him into the paddock without a staff any more. And if you don’t watch out Whitewater Chieftain will hurt somebody.... ’N’I’ll be a widow.”
As Odell went out the dairy door, preoccupied with the ticklish job before him, he met Eris with her arms full of new kittens.
“ Mitzi’s,” she explained, “aren’t they too cunning, daddy? I hope they’re not to be drowned.”
“ I ain’t runnin’ a cat-farm,” remarked Odell. “Did you mend my canvas jacket?”
“ Yes; it’s on your bed.”
“ Did you coop them broody hens? I bet you didn’t.”
“ Yes. There are seventeen in three coops.”
“ Housework done?”
“ Yes.”
“ Awright. Why don’t you get the cook-book and set in the hammock a spell?”
The girl laughed: “Don’t you like mother’s cooking?”
“ S’all right forme. But I don’t cal’late your mother’s going to cook for the fella you hitch up with.”
Eris turned up her nose: “Don’t worry. I shan’t ever marry. Not any boy inthistown, anyway. Probably I’ll never marry.... I’ll not have time,” she added, half to herself.
Odell, who was going, stopped.
“ Why not?” he demanded.
“ An actress ought not to marry. She ought to give every moment to her art,” explained the girl naïvely.
“ Is—that—so? Well, you can chase that idea outa your head, my girl, because you ain’t never going to be no actress. And that’sthat!”
“ Some day,” said Eris, with a flushed smile, “I shall follow my own judgment and give myself to art.... And that’sthat!”
As they stood there, father and daughter, confronting each other in the pale April sunshine, the great herd-bull bellowed from the cattle-barn, shaking the still air with his thunderous reverberations. He was to be shot that evening.
Eris sighed: “He misses his companions,” she said, “and he tells us so.... Poor White Lightning.... And I, also, miss the companionship of all I have never known.... Some day I shall tell you so.... I hope you’ll understand.”
“ You talk like a piece in a magazine,” said Odell; “you better quit reading them danged love stories and movin’ pitcher magazines and study into theFarm Journal.”
“ You’d be very proud of me if I became a great actress,” she said seriously.
“ I’d be a danged sight prouder if you was a great cook,” he grunted. And he went toward the cattle-barn, spinning the patent self-piercing nose ring on his horny forefinger.
Eris called after him: “Have yougotto shoot Lightning?”
“ Yes, I gotta beef him. He’s no good any more.”
So the great herd-bull, like all “Former Things,” was doomed to “pass away.”
As the Dionysia became the Mithraic Rites, so was taurian glory doomed to pass.... A bullet where Aldebaran shows the way. The way of all bulls.
Neither Odell nor Eris had ever heard of Aldebaran. And the tombs of the Magi were no more tightly sealed than the mind of the father. But the child’s mind hid a little lamp unlighted. A whisper might reveal to her Aldebaran shining in the midnight heavens. Or the Keys of Life and Death hanging on the Rosy Cross....
The bull died at the appointed hour. Eris stood in her bed-room closing both ears with trembling palms.
She did not hear the shot. Mazie found her there; laughed at her good-naturedly.
Eris’ lips formed the words: “Is he dead?”
“ My dear, he’s Polack beef by now.”
Gloria tauri—gloria mundi. But whatever ends always begins again.
What was the Dionysia is now Rosicrucian ... and shall again be something else ... and always the same.
As for the Bull of Mithra—and Mithra, too—bull-calves are born every day. And there are a million million suns in the making.
It’s only the Old Order that changes, not what orders it.
BULLS die; men die; the old order dies,—slowly sometimes, sometimes in the twinkling of an eye.
The change came swiftly upon Eris; passed more swiftly still, leaving no outward trace visible. But when it had passed, the heart and mind of Eris were altered. All doubt, all hesitation fled. She understood that now the road to the stars was open, and that, one day, she would do what she had been born to do.
The World War was partly responsible for the affair. The dye situation in the United States resulted. In Whitewater Mills, both dyes and mordants remained unsatisfactory. The mill chemist could do nothing and they let him go.
Where cotton was used in shoddy combination with wool, permanency of colour scarcely mattered—the poor always getting the dirty end of everything in a nation that has always laughed at a swindle.
But before the war, Whitewater Mills had built a separate plant for fine hosiery, lisle and silk, and had specialised in mauves and blues—fast, unfading, beautiful colours, the secret of which remained in Germany.
Now, desiring to resume, and unable to import, the directors of the mill sent a delegation to New York to find out what could be done.
There the delegates discovered, dug out, and engaged a chemist named E. Stuart Graydon.
It appeared that the secrets of German dyes and mordants were known to Mr. Graydon. How they became known to
him he explained very frankly and eloquently. Candour, an engaging smile, pale smooth features full of pale bluish shadows,—these and a trim figure neatly clothed made up the ensemble of Mr. Graydon.
Permanent colour was his specialty. Anyway, his long, steady fingers were permanently stained with acid and nicotine. He was employed by a photographer when they discovered him. Or, to be accurate,hediscoveredthemat their third-class hotel on Broadway.... And never left them until he had signed a contract.
It was after church that somebody introduced E. Stuart Graydon to Eris.
He walked home with the family; and his talent for general conversation earned him an invitation to remain to midday dinner.
Quiet, convincing eloquence was his asset. There appeared to be no subject with which he was not reasonably familiar. His, also, was that terrible gift for familiarity of every description; he became a friend over night, a member of the family in a week. He was what Broadway calls “quick study,” never risking “going stale” by “letter perfect” preparation for an opening.
He took a deep interest in Guernsey breeding. But Odell did the talking. That was how Graydon acquired a reputation for an astonishing versatility;—he started the subject and kept it kindled while others did the talking. And in ten minutes he was able to converse upon the theme with a skilful and convincing fluency entirely irresistible.
After dinner Mazie showed him Fanny’s miniature on ivory.
He smilingly sketched for the family a brief history of miniature painting. It happened that he was minutely familiar with all methods and all branches of Art. Indeed,
that was how the entire affair started. And Art accounted for the acid stains, also.
To Eris, Art included the drama, and all that her ardent mind desired. It took Mr. Graydon about five minutes to discover this. And of course it transpired that he knew everything connected with the drama, spoken and silent.
The next evening he came to supper. He talked cattle, ensilage, rotation of crops, sub-soils, inoculation, fertilisers, with Odell until the hypnotised farmer was loth to let him go.
He talked to Mazie about household economy, labour-saving devices, sanitary disposal plants, water systems, bleaches—with which he was dreadfully familiar—furniture polish, incubators.
With the boys he discussed guns and ammunition, traps and trapping, commercial education, the relation of labour to capital, baseball in the State League, ready-made clothing, the respective merits of pointers, setters, bull terriers and Airedales.
Hypnotised yawns protested against the bed hour in the household of Odell. Nobody desired to retire. The spell held like a trap.
As for Eris, she decided to stay in the sitting room with Mr. Graydon when the family’s yawns at last started them blinking bedward.
Odell, yawning frightfully, got into his night-shirt and then into bed; and lay opening and shutting his eyes like an owl on the pillow while Mazie, for the first time in months, did her hair in curl papers.
“ A nice, polite, steady young man,” she said, nodding at Odell’s reflection in the looking glass. “My sakes alive, Elmer, what an education he’s got!”
“ Stew Graydon knows a thing or two, I guess,” yawned Odell. “You gotta be mighty spry to get a holt onto that young fella.”
“ I’ve a notion they pay him a lot down to the mill,” suggested Mazie.
“ You can’t expec’ to hire a Noo York man like that fer nothin’,” agreed Odell. “He’s smart, he is. And there’s allus a market fer real smartness. Like as not that young fella will find himself a rich man in ten years. I guesso.”
A silence; Mazie busy with her lustrous hair,—the plump, rosy, vigorous incarnation of matronly health.
In the mirror she caught Elmer’s sleepy eye and laughed, displaying her white teeth.
“ You think he kinda favours Eris?” she asked.
“ Hey?”
“ I don’t know why else he come to supper.”
“ He come to supper to talk farmin’ with me,” said Odell gruffly.
“ Maybe. Only I guess not,” laughed Mazie.
“ Well, why did he come, then? He wanted I should show him the new separator and them samples of cork-brick. He’s a chemist, ain’t he? He’s int-rested in cork-brick and separators ’n’ all like that.”
Mazie twisted a curl paper around a thick brown tress.
“ When he talked about the theatre and acting,” she remarked, “did you notice how Eris acted?”
“ She gawked at him,” grunted Odell. “She’d better get that pitcher idee outa her fool head,—lazin’ around readin’ them pitcher magazines ’n’ novels, ’n’ moonin all over the place instid of findin’ chores to occupy her ’n’ doin’ them——”
“ Oh, hush,” interrupted Mazie; “you talk and take on awful foolish, Elmer. When Eris marries some bright, steady boy, all that trash in her head will go into the slop-pail.”
Odell scowled:
“ Well, why don’t she marry, then? She ain’t no help to you——”
“ Sheis! Hush up your head. You’ll miss her, too,
when she marries, and some strange man takes her away. I guess I know who aims to do it, too.”
“ Well, who aims to do it? Hey? She don’t have nothin’ to say to our Whitewater boys. She allus acts proud and highmighty and uppish. Dan Burns he come sparkin’ her ’n’ she stayed in her room and wouldn’t even come down to supper. ’N’ there was Clay Wallace, ’n’ Buddy Morgan——”
“ It looks like she’s willing to be sparked to-night, don’t it?” said Mazie, with an odd little laugh.
Elmer rose on one elbow: “Say, you don’t thinkhewants our Eris, do yeh?”
“ Why not? Isn’t Eris good enough for any man?”
“ Well, well, dang it all, Stew Graydon seems diff-runt.... He’s too educated ’n’ stylish for plain folks—’n’ he’s got a big position in the mill. He don’t want our Eris——”
“ Whynot?” repeated Mazie.
Odell shook his frowsy head: “He’ll want a rich girl. Eris hain’t got only that heifer-money. I can’t give her more’n a mite——”
“ That don’t count with me, Elmer.” She flushed, “—it didn’t count withyou.”
“ Well, you was worth consid’ble more’n cash,” he grunted.
“ So’s any girl—if a boy likes her.”
“ You think a smart man like Stew Graydon——”
“ How do I know?” drawled Mazie. “She’s downstairs yet with him, ain’t she? I never knew her to act that way before. Nor you, either.”
She never had “acted that way before.”
The drowning swimmer and his straw—Eris and the first man she ever had met who had been actually in touch with the mystery of the moving pictures—that was the situation.
For Graydon’s personality she had only the virginal interest
which is reassured by a pleasant manner, a pleasing voice, and the trim, neat inconspicuousness of face, figure, and apparel which invites neither criticism nor particular admiration,—nor alarm.
But for his education, his knowledge, his wisdom, his fluency,—above all for his evident sympathy and ability to understand her desire,—she had an excited and passionate need.
As he talked, he looked her over, carefully, cautiously—preoccupied with odd and curious ideas even while conversing about other things.
That evening, when taking leave, he pressed her slender fingers together, gently, not alarming her—scarcely even awaking self-consciousness. He was always the artist, first of all.
After a month, even Elmer understood that Graydon was “sparking” Eris.
And, from the time that Eris first was made to understand that fact she lived in a continuous, confused dream, through the unreality of which sometimes she was aware of her own heart beating with excitement.
He had said to her, one evening, after the family had gone to bed, that the stage was her vocation and that God himself must have ordained that she should, one day, triumph there.
She listened as in a blessed trance. All around her the night air grew heavy with the scent of honeysuckle. A moon was shining. The whippoorwill’s breathless cry came from the snake-fence hedge.
When he had had his mental will of her—excited her almost to blissful tears, soothed her, led her on, deftly, eloquently—he took her smooth hand of a child. All set for the last act, he drew the girl against his shoulder, taking plenty of time.
Her head was still swimming with his eloquence. Hope intoxicated her. His lips meant nothing on her cheek—but her mind was all a-quiver—and it was her mind alone that he had stimulated and excited to an ecstasy uncontrollable; and which now responded and acquiesced.
“ And after we marry I am to study for the stage?” she repeated, tremulously, oblivious of his arm tightening around her body.
It transpired, gently and eloquently, that it was for this very reason he desired to marry her and give her what was nearest her girl’s heart—what her girl’s mind most ardently desired in all the world—her liberty to choose.
But he warned her to keep the secret from her family. Trembling, enchanted, almost frightened by the approaching splendour of consummation, she promised in tears.
Then the barrier burst under an overwhelming rush of gratitude. She was his. She would surrender, now, to this man who had suddenly appeared from nowhere;—an emissary of God sent to understand, sympathise, guide her to that destiny which, even he admitted, God had ordained as hers.
Eris was married to E. Stuart Graydon in her twentieth year at the parsonage of the Whitewater Church, at ten o’clock in the morning. All Whitewater attended and gorged. No rural precedent was neglected—neither jest nor rice nor old shoes,—everything happened, from the organ music and the unctuous patronage of “Rev. Styles,” to the thick aroma of the “bounteous repast” at Whitewater Farms, where neighbours came, stuffed themselves, and went away boisterously all that rainy afternoon.
Bride and groom were to depart on the six o’clock train for Niagara.
About five o’clock, the groom, chancing to glance out of the window, saw two men,—strangers in Whitewater but
perfectly well known to him,—walking up the path that led to the front door.
For a second he sat motionless; the next, he turned and looked into the grey eyes of his bride.
“ Eris,” he said calmly, “if anybody asks for me say I’ve run down to the mill and I’ll be back in fifteen minutes.”
She smiled vaguely as he rose and went out the back way where the automobiles were parked.
A few minutes later Odell was called from the room by one of his sons:
“ Say, pop, there’s a party out here inquiring for someone they call Eddie Graydon.”
Odell went out to the porch: “What name?” he demanded, eyeing the two strangers and their dripping umbrellas.
“ You Elmer Odell?” demanded the taller man.
“ That’s what my ma christened me,” replied Odell, jocosely.
“ Your daughter marrying a man who calls himself E. Stuart Graydon?”
“ She ain’t marryin’ him. She’s done it.”
“ Where is he?”
“ He jest stepped out. Gone to the mill to fix up sunthin’ before leavin’.”
The taller man said to his companion: “Run down to the mill, will you?” And, as the other turned and walked rapidly away in the rain:
“ I’ve got a warrant for Eddie Graydon when he comes back. That’s one of his names. Eddie Carter is the right one. Sorry for you, Mr. Odell; sorrier for your daughter.”
Odell stared at him, the purple veins beginning to swell on his temples.
“ D-dang it!” he stammered,—“what’s all this dinged junk about? Who be you?”
And, when the tall, quiet man had terribly convinced him,