The spring, when they traveled back
to the north, was so perceptibly nearer that the
fugitive soft days strayed in advance at intervals
that were briefer. They chose one for their
journey, and its clear sunshine and hints at faint
greenness were so exhilarating to Miss Alicia that
she was a companion to make any journey an affair to
rank with holidays and adventures. The strange
luxury of traveling in a reserved first-class carriage,
of being made timid by no sense of unfitness of dress
or luggage, would have filled her with grateful rapture;
but Rose, journeying with Pearson a few coaches behind,
appeared at the carriage window at every important
station to say, “Is there anything I may do
for you, ma’am?” And there really never
was anything she could do, because Mr. Temple Barholm
remembered everything which could make her comfort
perfect. In the moods of one who searches the
prospect for suggestions as to pleasure he can give
to himself by delighting a dear child, he had found
and bought for her a most elegant little dressing-bag,
with the neatest of plain-gold fittings beautifully
initialed. It reposed upon the cushioned seat
near her, and made her heart beat every time she
caught sight of it anew. How wonderful it would
be if poor dear, darling mama could look down and
see everything and really know what happiness had been
vouchsafed to her unworthy child!
Having a vivid recollection of the
journey made with Mr. Palford, Tembarom felt that
his whole world had changed for him. The landscape
had altered its aspect. Miss Alicia pointed
out bits of freshening grass, was sure of the breaking
of brown leaf-buds, and more than once breathlessly
suspected a primrose in a sheltered hedge corner.
A country-bred woman, with country-bred keenness
of eye and a country-bred sense of the seasons’
change, she saw so much that he had never known that
she began to make him see also. Bare trees would
be thick-leaved nesting-places, hedges would be
white with hawthorn, and hold blue eggs and chirps
and songs. Skylarks would spring out of the
fields and soar into the sky, dropping crystal chains
of joyous trills. The cottage gardens would
be full of flowers, there would be poppies gleaming
scarlet in the corn, and in buttercup-time all the
green grass would be a sheet of shining gold.
“When it all happens I shall
be like a little East-Sider taken for a day in the
country. I shall be asking questions at every
step,” Tembarom said. “Temple Barholm
must be pretty fine then.”
“It is so lovely,” said
Miss Alicia, turning to him almost solemnly, “that
sometimes it makes one really lose one’s breath.”
He looked out of the window with sudden wistfulness.
“I wish Ann—”
he began and then, seeing the repressed question in
her eyes, made up his mind.
He told her about Little Ann.
He did not use very many words, but she knew a great
deal when he had finished. And her spinster soul
was thrilled. Neither she nor poor Emily had
ever had an admirer, and it was not considered refined
for unsought females to discuss “such subjects.”
Domestic delirium over the joy of an engagement in
families in which daughters were a drug she had seen.
It was indeed inevitable that there should be more
rejoicing over one Miss Timson who had strayed from
the fold into the haven of marriage than over the ninety-nine
Misses Timson who remained behind. But she had
never known intimately any one who was in love—
really in love. Mr. Temple Barholm must be.
When he spoke of Little Ann he flushed shyly and his
eyes looked so touching and nice. His voice
sounded different, and though of course his odd New
York expressions were always rather puzzling, she
felt as though she saw things she had had no previous
knowledge of—things which thrilled her.
“She must be a very—very
nice girl,” she ventured at length. “I
am afraid I have never been into old Mrs. Hutchinson’s
cottage. She is quite comfortably off in her
way, and does not need parish care. I wish I
had seen Miss Hutchinson.”
“I wish she had seen you,” was Tembarom’s
answer.
Miss Alicia reflected.
“She must be very clever to have such—sensible
views,” she remarked.
If he had remained in New York, and
there had been no question of his inheriting Temple
Barholm, the marriage would have been most suitable.
But however “superior” she might be,
a vision of old Mrs. Hutchinson’s granddaughter
as the wife of Mr. Temple Barholm, and of noisy old
Mr. Hutchinson as his father-in-law was a staggering
thing.
“You think they were sensible?”
asked Tembarom. “Well, she never did anything
that wasn’t. So I guess they were.
And what she says goes. I wanted you to
know, anyhow. I wouldn’t like you not to
know. I’m too fond of you, Miss Alicia.”
And he put his hand round her neat glove and squeezed
it. The tears of course came into her tender eyes.
Emotion of any sort always expressed itself in her
in this early-Victorian manner.
“This Lady Joan girl,”
he said suddenly not long afterward, “isn’t
she the kind that I’m to get used to—the
kind in the pictorial magazine Ann talked about?
I bought one at the news-stand at the depot before
we started. I wanted to get on to the pictures
and see what they did to me.”
He found the paper among his belongings
and regarded it with the expression of a serious
explorer. It opened at a page of illustrations
of slim goddesses in court dresses. By actual
measurement, if regarded according to scale, each
was about ten feet high; but their long lines, combining
themselves with court trains, waving plumes, and
falling veils, produced an awe-inspiring effect.
Tembarom gazed at them in absorbed silence.
“Is she something like any of
these?” he inquired finally.
Miss Alicia looked through her glasses.
“Far more beautiful, I believe,”
she answered. “These are only fashion-plates,
and I have heard that she is a most striking girl.”
“A beaut’ from Beautsville!”
he said. “So that’s what I’m
up against! I wonder how much use that kind
of a girl would have for me.”
He gave a good deal of attention to
the paper before he laid it aside. As she watched
him, Miss Alicia became gradually aware of the existence
of a certain hint of determined squareness in his boyish
jaw. It was perhaps not much more than a hint,
but it really was there, though she had not noticed
it before. In fact, it usually hid itself behind
his slangy youthfulness and his readiness for any good
cheer.
One may as well admit that it sustained
him during his novitiate and aided him to pass through
it without ignominy or disaster. He was strengthened
also by a private resolve to bear himself in such a
manner as would at least do decent credit to Little
Ann and her superior knowledge. With the curious
eyes of servants, villagers, and secretly outraged
neighborhood upon him, he was shrewd enough to know
that he might easily become a perennial fount of
grotesque anecdote, to be used as a legitimate source
of entertainment in cottages over the consumption
of beans and bacon, as well as at great houses when
dinner-table talk threatened to become dull if not
enlivened by some spice. He would not have thought
of this or been disturbed by it but for Ann.
She knew, and he was not going to let her be met on
her return from America with what he called “a
lot of funny dope” about him.
“No girl would like it,”
he said to himself. “And the way she said
she ‘cared too much’ just put it up to
me to see that the fellow she cares for doesn’t
let himself get laughed at.”
Though he still continued to be jocular
on subjects which to his valet seemed almost sacred,
Pearson was relieved to find that his employer gradually
gave himself into his hands in a manner quite amenable.
In the touching way in which nine out of ten nice,
domesticated American males obey the behests of the
women they are fond of, he had followed Ann’s
directions to the letter. Guided by the adept
Pearson, he had gone to the best places in London
and purchased the correct things, returning to Temple
Barholm with a wardrobe to which any gentleman might
turn at any moment without a question.
“He’s got good shoulders,
though he does slouch a bit,” Pearson said
to Rose. “And a gentleman’s shoulders
are more than half the battle.”
What Tembarom himself felt cheered
by was the certainty that if Ann saw him walking
about the park or the village, or driving out with
Miss Alicia in the big landau, or taking her in to
dinner every evening, or even going to church with
her, she would not have occasion to flush at sight
of him.
The going to church was one of the
duties of his position he found out. Miss Alicia
“put him on” to that. It seemed that
he had to present himself to the villagers “as
an example.” If the Temple Barholm pews
were empty, the villagers, not being incited to devotional
exercise by his exalted presence, would feel at liberty
to remain at home, and in the irreligious undress
of shirt-sleeves sit and smoke their pipes, or, worse
still, gather at “the Hare and Hounds”
and drink beer. Also, it would not be “at
all proper” not to go to church.
Pearson produced a special cut of
costume for this ceremony, and Tembarom walked with
Miss Alicia across the park to the square-towered
Norman church.
In a position of dignity the Temple
Barholm pews over-looked the congregation. There
was the great square pew for the family, with two
others for servants. Footmen and house-maids gazed
reverentially at prayer-books. Pearson, making
every preparation respectfully to declare himself
a “miserable sinner” when the proper moment
arrived, could scarcely re- strain a rapid side glance
as the correctly cut and fitted and entirely “suitable”
work of his hands opened the pew-door for Miss Alicia,
followed her in, and took his place.
Let not the fact that he had never
been to church before be counted against him.
There was nothing very extraordinary in the fact.
He had felt no antipathy to church-going, but he
had not by chance fallen under proselyting influence,
and it had certainly never occurred to him that he
had any place among the well- dressed, comfortable-looking
people he had seen flocking into places of worship
in New York. As far as religious observances
were concerned, he was an unadulterated heathen,
and was all the more to be congratulated on being a
heathen of genial tendencies.
The very large pew, under the stone
floor of which his ancestors had slept undisturbedly
for centuries, interested him greatly. A recumbent
marble crusader in armor, with feet crossed in the
customary manner, fitted into a sort of niche in
one side of the wall. There were carved tablets
and many inscriptions in Latin wheresoever one glanced.
The place was like a room. A heavy, round table,
on which lay prayer-books, Bibles, and hymn-books,
occupied the middle. About it were arranged
beautiful old chairs, with hassocks to kneel on.
Toward a specially imposing chair with arms Miss
Alicia directed, him with a glance. It was apparently
his place. He was going to sit down when he
saw Miss Alicia gently push forward a hassock with
her foot, and kneel on it, covering her face with
her hands as she bent her head. He hastily drew
forth his hassock and followed her example.
That was it, was it? It wasn’t
only a matter of listening to a sermon; you had to
do things. He had better watch out and see that
he didn’t miss anything. She didn’t
know it was his first time, and it might worry her
to the limit if he didn’t put it over all right.
One of the things he had noticed in her was her fear
of attracting attention by failing to do exactly
the “proper thing.” If he made a fool
of himself by kneeling down when he ought to stand
up, or lying down when he ought to sit, she’d
get hot all over, thinking what the villagers or
the other people would say. Well, Ann hadn’t
wanted him to look different from other fellows or
to make breaks. He’d look out from start
to finish. He directed a watchful eye at Miss
Alicia through his fingers. She remained kneeling
a few moments, and then very quietly got up.
He rose with her, and took his big chair when she sat
down. He breathed more freely when they had
got that far. That was the first round.
It was not a large church, but a gray
and solemn impression of dignity brooded over it.
It was dim with light, which fell through stained-glass
memorial windows set deep in the thick stone walls.
The silence which reigned throughout its spaces seemed
to Tembarom of a new kind, different from the silence
of the big house. The occasional subdued rustle
of turned prayer-book leaves seemed to accentuate it;
the most careful movement could not conceal itself;
a slight cough was a startling thing. The way,
Tembarom thought, they could get things dead-still
in English places!
The chimes, which had been ringing
their last summons to the tardy, slackened their
final warning notes, became still slower, stopped.
There was a slight stir in the benches occupied by
the infant school. It suggested that something
new was going to happen. From some unseen place
came the sound of singing voices— boyish
voices and the voices of men. Tembarom involuntarily
turned his head. Out of the unseen place came
a procession in white robes. Great Scott! every
one was standing up! He must stand up, too.
The boys and men in white garments filed into their
seats. An elderly man, also in white robes, separated
himself from them, and, going into his special place,
kneeled down. Then he rose and began to read:
“When the wicked man turneth away from his wickedness—”
Tembarom took the open book which
Miss Alicia had very delicately pushed toward him.
He read the first words,—that was plain
sailing,— then he seemed to lose his place.
Miss Alicia turned a leaf. He turned one also.
“Dearly beloved brethren—”
There you were. This was once
more plain sailing. He could follow it.
What was the matter with Miss Alicia? She was
kneeling again, everybody was kneeling. Where
was the hassock? He went down upon his knees,
hoping Miss Alicia had not seen that he wasn’t
going to kneel at all. Then when the minister
said “Amen,” the congregation said it,
too, and he came in too late, so that his voice sounded
out alone. He must watch that. Then the
minister knelt, and all the people prayed aloud with
him. With the book before him he managed to get
in after the first few words; but he was not ready
with the responses, and in the middle of them everybody
stood up again. And then the organ played, and
every one sang. He couldn’t sing, anyhow,
and he knew he couldn’t catch on to the kind
of thing they were doing. He hoped Miss Alicia
wouldn’t mind his standing up and holding his
book and doing nothing. He could not help seeing
that eyes continually turned toward him. They’d
notice every darned break he made, and Miss Alicia
would know they did. He felt quite hot more
than once. He watched Miss Alicia like a hawk;
he sat down and listened to reading, he stood up
and listened to singing; he kneeled, he tried to chime
in with “Amens” and to keep up with Miss
Alicia’s bending of head and knee. But the
creed, with its sudden turn toward the altar, caught
him unawares, he lost himself wholly in the psalms,
the collects left him in deep water, hopeless of
ever finding his place again, and the litany baffled
him, when he was beginning to feel safe, by changing
from “miserable sinners” to “Spare
us Good Lord” and “We beseech thee to
hear us.” If he could just have found the
place he would have been all right, but an honest
anxiety to be right excited him, and the fear of
embarrassing Miss Alicia by going wrong made the morning
a strenuous thing. He was so relieved to find
he might sit still when the sermon began that he
gave the minister an attention which might have marked
him, to the chance beholder, as a religious enthusiast.
By the time the service had come to
an end the stately peace of the place had seemed
to sink into his being and become part of himself.
The voice of the minister bestowing his blessing,
the voices of the white-clothed choir floating up
into the vaulted roof, stirred him to a remote pleasure.
He liked it, or he knew he would like it when he
knew what to do. The filing out of the choristers,
the silent final prayer, the soft rustle of people
rising gently from their knees, somehow actually
moved him by its suggestion of something before unknown.
He was a heathen still, but a heathen vaguely stirred.
He was very quiet as he walked home
across the park with Miss Alicia.
“How did you enjoy the sermon?
” she asked with much sweetness.
“I ’m not used to sermons,
but it seemed all right to me,” he answered.
“What I’ve got to get on to is knowing
when to stand up and when to sit down. I wasn’t
much of a winner at it this morning. I guess
you noticed that.”
But his outward bearing had been much
more composed than his inward anxiety had allowed
him to believe. His hesitations had not produced
the noticeable effect he had feared.
“Do you mean you are not quite
familiar with the service?” she said.
Poor dear boy! he had perhaps not been able to go to
church regularly at all.
“I’m not familiar with
any service,” he answered without prejudice.”
I never went to church before.”
She slightly started and then smiled.
“Oh, you mean you have never been to the Church
of England,” she said.
Then he saw that, if he told her the
exact truth, she would be frightened and shocked.
She would not know what to say or what to think.
To her unsophisticated mind only murderers and thieves
and criminals never went to church. She
just didn’t know. Why should she?
So he smiled also.
“No, I’ve never been to the Church of
England,” he said.