Jack had almost finished his breakfast
when Betty entered the dining-room. He looked
beyond her with the surprised and sulky frown of the
neglected husband.
“Where on earth is Harriet?”
he asked. “Her natural inclination is to
lie in bed all day. What induced her—”
“She wanted to go to the camp-meeting,”
said Betty, not without apprehension. “You
know she always went with her adopted father, who
was a Methodist clergyman—”
“Great heaven!” Her apprehension
was justified. His face was convulsed with disgust.
“My wife at a camp-meeting! And you let
her go?”
“Harriet is not sixteen.
And when a person has been brought up to a thing,
you cannot expect her to change completely in a few
months. Poor Harriet lived in a forsaken village
where she had no sort of society; I suppose the camp-meeting
was her only excitement. And you know how emotionally
religious the—the Methodists are—You
glare at me so I scalded my throat.”
“I am sorry, and I am afraid
I have been rude. But you must—you
must know how distasteful it is for me to think of
my wife at a camp-meeting. Great heaven!”
“It is even worse than my going
over to politics, isn’t it? Don’t
take it so tragically, my dear. The truth is,
I suspect, Harriet worries about having deceived Molly
and me, and the camp-meeting is probably to the Methodist
what the confessional is to the Catholic. Both
must ease one’s mind a lot.”
“Harriet will have to ease her
mind in some other way in the future. And it
will be some time before I can forget this.”
“Thank heaven I am not married. Are you
going after her? Shall you march her home by the
ear?”
“I certainly shall not go after
her—that is, if she is in no danger.
Where is this camp-meeting?”
“Oh, there are five hundred
or so of them, and it is near a farmhouse.”
It was evident that he had forgotten the colour of
the camp. “Seriously, I would let her alone
for to-day. That form of hysteria has to wear
itself out. I did not like the idea of her going,
and told her so, but I saw what it meant to her, and
took her. When you get her over to Europe, settle
in some old town with a beautiful cathedral and a
dozen churches, where the choir boys are ducky little
things in scarlet habits and white lace capes, and
there are mediaeval religious processions with gorgeous
costumes and solemn chants, and the bells ring all
day long, and there is a service every five minutes
with music, and a blessed relic to kiss in every church.
She will be a Catholic in less than no time, and look
back upon the camp-meeting with a shudder of aristocratic
disgust.”
“I hope so. If you will
excuse me I will go out and smoke a cigarette.”
She said to Senator North as they
approached the head of the lake that evening, “A
tempest is brewing in our matrimonial teapot.
He looked ready to divorce her when I told him where
she had gone.”
“I hope he won’t divorce
her when she gets home. Keep them apart if you
can. She has developed more than one characteristic
of the race to which she is as surely forged as if
her fetters were visible. If she has all its
religious fanaticism in her, she is quite likely to
work up to that point of hysteria where she will proclaim
the truth to the world.”
“Ah!” cried Betty, sharply.
“Why did I not think of that? What a poor
guardian I am! If I had warned her, she never
would have gone—but probably she won’t,
as we have thought of it. The expected so seldom
happens.”
“Don’t count too much
on that when great crises threaten,” he said
grimly. “The law of cause and effect does
not hide in the realm of the unexpected when intelligent
beings go looking for it. To tell you the truth,
I have been apprehensive ever since I saw her face
this morning. All the intelligence had gone out
of it. With her race, religion means the periodical
necessity to relapse into barbarism, to act like shouting
savages after the year of civilized restraints.
I will venture to guess that Harriet has forgotten
to-day everything she has learned since she entered
your family. Within that sad, calm, high-bred
envelope is—I am afraid—a mind
which has the taint of the blood that feeds it.”
“I have thought that for a long
while. Poor thing, why was she ever born?”
“Because sin has a habit of
persisting, and is remorseless in its choice of vehicles.
I do not see anything of her.”
They waited almost an hour before
she came hurrying down the path. She barely recognized
them, but dropped on her seat in the bow and crouched
there, sobbing and groaning.
It was a cheerless journey through
the forest and down the lake, and the element of the
grotesque did nothing to relieve it. Betty, distracted
at first, soon realized that upon her lay the responsibility
of averting a tragedy, and she ordered her brain to
action. She leaned forward finally and whispered
to Senator North:
“Row me to my boat-house and
I will ask Jack to row you home. He is too courteous
to suggest sending a servant if I make a point of his
taking you.”
He nodded. She saw the confidence
in his eyes, and even in that hour of supreme anxiety
her mind leapt forward to the winning of his approval
as the ultimate of her struggle to save the happiness
of two human beings who were almost at her mercy.
Jack was walking on the terrace.
Betty called to him, and he consented with no marked
grace to be boatman. He had taken the oars before
he noticed that his wife, whom he was not yet ready
to forgive, was being hurried off by his cousin.
“Mrs. Emory is very tired and
her head aches,” said Senator North. “Miss
Madison is anxious to get her into bed. Can’t
you dine with me to-night? It would give me great
pleasure, and men are superfluous, I have observed,
when women have headaches.”
And Jack, who was not sorry to punish
his wife, accepted the invitation and did not return
home till midnight.