Thus the struggle went on, Mr. Howland’s
power to control his boy growing less and less every
year. Naturally, considering the relation of
the two families of Mr. Howland and Mr. Winters, and
the bad reputation of the son of the former, the intercourse
between Andrew and Emily was more and more restricted.
Still their friendship for each other remained, to
a certain extent, undiminished, and they met as often
as favorable circumstances would permit. To Emily,
the kind feelings entertained for the wayward boy
proved sources of frequent unhappiness. Few opportunities
for speaking against him were omitted by her parents,
and she never heard his name coupled with words of
censure without feeling pain. One half that was
said of him she did not believe; for she saw more
of the bright side of his character than did any one
else.
As before intimated, by the time Emily
gained her sixteenth year, she had developed so far
toward womanhood, that Andrew, who still remained
a slender boy in appearance, felt his heart tremble
as he looked upon her, and thought of the distance
this earlier development had placed between them.
And even a greater distance was beginning to exist—the
distance that lies between a pure mind and one that
is corrupt. As Andrew grew older, he grew worse,
and the sphere of his spiritual quality began to be
felt, oppressively, at times, by Emily, during the
periods of their brief intercourse. Moreover,
she was ever hearing some evil thing laid to his charge.
At length their intimate intercourse came to an end,
and, with the termination of this, was removed the
last restraint that held the lad in bounds of external
propriety. The cause of this termination we will
relate: As Andrew grew older, he grew more and
more self-willed, and strayed farther and farther
from the right way. Social in his feelings, he
sought the companionship of boys of his own age, and
by the time he was seventeen, had formed associations
of a very dangerous character. Though positively
forbidden by his father to be out after night, he
disregarded the injunction, and went from home almost
every evening. At home there was nothing to attract
him; nothing to give him pleasure. A shadow was
ever on the brow of his father, and this threw a gloom
over the entire household. But, abroad, among
his companions, he found a hundred things to interest
him. All license tends toward further extremes.
It was not long before Andrew found ten o’clock
at night too early for him. The theatre was a
place positively interdicted by his parents; and,
restrained by some lingering respect for his mother’s
feelings, Andrew had, up to the age of seventeen, resisted
the strong desire he felt to see a play. At last,
however, he yielded to temptation, and went to the
theatre. On returning home about eleven o’clock,
he found his father sitting up for him. To the
stern interrogation as to where he had been so late,
he replied with equivocation, and finally with direct
falsehood.
“Andrew,” said Mr. Howland,
at length, speaking with unusual severity of tone,
and with a deliberation and emphasis that indicated
a higher degree of earnestness than usual, “if
you are out again until after ten o’clock, you
remain out all night. To this my mind is fully
made up. So act your own good pleasure.”
The father and son then separated.
Ten o’clock came on the next
night, and Andrew had not returned. For the half
hour preceding the stroke of the clock, Mr. Howland
had walked the floor uneasily, with his ear harkening
anxiously for the sound of the bell that marked his
son’s return; and, as the time drew nearer and
nearer, he half repented the utterance of a law, that,
if broken, could not, he feared, but result in injury
to the disobedient boy. At last the clock struck
ten. He paused and stood listening for over a
minute; then he resumed his walk again, and continued
his measured paces for over ten minutes longer, intending
to give his erring son the benefit of that space of
time. But he yielded thus much in his favor in
vain. Anger at this deliberate disobedience of
a positive order then displaced a portion of anxiety,
and he closed, mentally, the door upon his child for
that night.
Of his purpose, Mr. Howland said nothing
to his wife. He hoped that she would be asleep
before Andrew returned, if he returned at all before
morning. But in this his hope was not realized.
The fact of Andrew’s having staid out so late
on the night before had troubled her all day, and
she had made up her mind to sit up for him now until
he came home.
“Come, Esther, it is time to
go to bed,” said Mr. Howland to his wife, seeing
that she made no motion towards retiring.
“You go. I will sit up for Andrew,”
was replied.
“Andrew can’t come in, to-night,”
said Mr. Howland.
The mother sprung to her feet instantly;
her face flushing, and then becoming very pale.
“I told him, last night, that
if he staid out again until after ten o’clock,
there would be no admission for him until morning.
And I shall assuredly keep my word!”
“Oh, Andrew! Don’t,
don’t do this!” pleaded the unhappy mother,
in a low, choking voice. “Would you turn
an erring son from your door, when danger is hovering
around him?”
“He turns himself away.
The act is his, not mine,” replied Mr. Howland,
coldly.
As he spoke, the bell rung.
“There he is, now!” exclaimed the mother,
starting toward the door.
“Esther!” Mr. Howland
stept in front of his wife, and, looking sternly in
her face, added, “Havn’t I just said that
there was no entrance for him, to-night?”
“But it’s early!
It’s only a few minutes after ten,” eagerly
replied the mother.
“It’s past ten o’clock,
and that settles the matter,” returned Mr. Howland.
“But where will he go?” asked the mother.
“To the Station House, if he
can find no better place. To-morrow he will most
probably have a higher appreciation of the comforts
of home.”
As Mr. Howland closed this sentence,
the bell rung again.
“Andrew! I must let him
in!” exclaimed the mother, in a tone of anguish,
and she made a movement to pass her husband. But
a strong hand was instantly laid upon her arm, and
a stern voice said—
“Don’t interfere with
me in this matter, Esther! As the father of that
wayward boy, it is my duty to control him.”
“This is driving him from his
home; not controlling him!”
“I’ll bear the responsibility
of what I am doing,” said Mr. Howland, impatiently.
“Why will you interfere with me in this way?”
“Is he not my son also?”
inquired Mrs. Howland, passing, in her distress of
mind, beyond the ordinary spirit of her intercourse
with her self-willed husband.
“I am his father,” coldly
replied the latter, “and knowing my duty toward
him, shall certainly do it.”
The bell was rung again at this moment,
and more loudly than before.
“Oh, Andrew! let me beg of you
to open the door!” And Mrs. Howland clasped
her hands imploringly, and lifted her eyes running
over with tears to her husband’s face.
“It cannot be opened to-night,
Esther!” was the firm reply. “Have
I not said this over and over again. Why will
you continue these importunities? They are of
no avail.”
A loud knocking on the street door
was now heard. By this time, a servant who had
retired came down from her room and was moving along
the passage, when Mr. Howland intercepted her, with
the question—
“Where are you going?”
“Some one rung the bell,” replied the
servant.
“Never mind; go back to your room. You
needn’t open the door.”
“Andrew isn’t in yet,” said the
servant, respectfully.
“Didn’t I say, go back
to your room?” returned Mr. Howland, in a sharp
voice.
Twice more the bell was rung, and
twice more the knocking was repeated. Then all
remained silent.
“Come, Esther!” said Mr.
Howland to his wife, who was sitting on a sofa, with
her face buried in her hands. “Let us go
up stairs. It is late.”
The mother did not stir.
“Esther! did you hear me?”
Slowly, more like a moving automaton
than a living creature, did Mrs. Howland arise from
her place, and follow her husband up to their chamber.
There, without uttering a word, she partially disrobed
herself, and getting into bed, buried her tearful face
in a pillow. Mr. Howland was soon by her side.
Both lay without moving for nearly half an hour, and
then the heavy respiration of the husband told that
he was asleep. The moment this was apparent, Mrs.
Howland, who had lain as still as if locked in deep
slumber, crept softly from the bed, and then, with
a quick, eager motion, commenced putting on a wrapper.
This done, she drew a pair of slippers on her feet,
glided noiselessly from the room, and hurried down
to the street door, which she softly opened.
The mother had hoped to find her erring
son still there. But, as she looked anxiously
forth into the darkness, no human form was perceived.
“Andrew!” she called,
in a low voice, as she stepped from the door, and
threw her eyes up and down the street: “Andrew!”
But all was silent. Descending
to the pavement, she passed along a few yards to the
steps of the next house, a faint hope in her mind
that Andrew might have seated himself there in his
disappointment and fallen asleep. But this hope
was not realized. Then she passed on to the next
house, and the next, with the same purpose and the
same result. She was near the corner of the street,
when the sound of a closing door fell upon her ear,
and the thought that the wind might have shut her
own door upon her, filled her with sudden alarm.
Running back, she found that what she had feared was
too true. She was alone in the street, half-dressed
and with her head uncovered, and the door, which closed
with a dead-latch, shut against her.
To ring the bell was Mrs. Howland’s
first impulse. But no one answered to the summons.
Every ear was sealed in slumber, and, even were that
not the case, no one would come down, unless her husband
should awaken, and discover that she was not by his
side. Again and again she pulled the bell.
But eagerly though she listened, with her ear to the
door, not the slightest movement was heard within.
While the mother shrunk close to the
door in a listening attitude, the sound of a slow,
heavy step was heard approaching along the street.
Soon the form of a man came in view, and in a little
while he was in front of Mrs. Howland, where he paused,
and after standing and looking at her for a few moments,
said,
“What’s the matter here?”
Mrs. Howland trembled so, that she could make no answer.
The man put his hand on the iron railing,
and lifted one foot upon the stone steps leading to
the door of the house, saying as he did so,
“Do you live here?”
“Yes!” was replied in a low, frightened
voice.
Mrs. Howland now looking at the man
more closely, perceived, by his dress, that he was
one of the night policemen, and her heart took instant
courage.
“Oh,” said she, forgetting,
for the moment, the unpleasant circumstances by which
she was surrounded, and turning to the man as she
spoke, “have you seen anything of my son—of
Mr. Howland’s son—about here to-night?”
“Mrs. Howland! Is it possible!”
replied the man, in a respectful voice. Then
he added, “I saw him go down the street about
half an hour ago.”
“Did you! And do you know where he has
gone?”
“No, ma’am. He passed on out of sight.”
A low moan escaped the mother’s
lips at this intelligence. A few moments she
stood silent, and then placed her hand upon the bell-pull
and rung for admittance.
“Is the door locked?” asked the watchman,
manifesting surprise.
“No; the wind blew it to, and
it has become fastened with the dead-latch.”
Both stood silent for some time, but
no one answered the bell. The night dews were
falling upon the mother’s head, and the night
air penetrating her thin garments. A shiver ran
through her frame, and she felt a constriction of
the chest as if she had inhaled sulphur. Again
she rung the bell.
“Does no one know of your being
out?” asked the watchman.
“All are asleep in the house,” replied
Mrs. Howland.
At this the watchman came up the steps,
and struck two or three heavy blows upon the door
with his mace, the sound of which went reverberating
through the house, and startling Mr. Howland from his
slumber. But not perceiving immediately that his
wife was absent from her place by his side, and thinking
that his son had renewed his efforts to gain admission,
the latter did not make a motion to rise. In
a few moments, however, the repeated strokes of the
mace, to which was added the loud call of a man in
the street below caused him to start up in bed.
He then perceived that his wife was not by his side.
With an exclamation, he sprang upon the floor, and
throwing up the window, called out—
“Who’s there?”
“Come down and open the door,” was answered
by the watchman.
“Who wants to come in?”
asked Mr. Howland, his mind beginning by this time
to get a little clear from the confusion into which
it was at first thrown.
“I do,” replied a voice that threw all
into bewilderment again.
“Bless me! What does this
mean!” exclaimed Mr. Howland, aloud, yet speaking
to himself.
“Open the door, quickly,”
called out Mrs. Howland, in a tone of distress.
“Come down and let me in.”
Hurriedly Mr. Howland now dressed
himself and went down. As he opened the door,
his wife glided past him, and ran up stairs. The
watchman retired without speaking to the confused and
astonished husband, who, recovering his presence of
mind, reclosed the door and followed his wife to their
chamber.
“Esther! What is the meaning
of all this?” asked Mr. Howland, with much severity
of manner.
But there was no reply.
“Will you speak?” said he, in a tone of
authority.
The home-tyrant had gone a step too
far. The meek, patient, long-suffering, much
enduring wife, was in no state of mind to bear further
encroachments in the direction from which they were
now coming. Suddenly she raised herself up from
whence she had fallen across the bed, and looking
at her husband with an expression that caused him
to step back a pace, involuntarily answered.
“By what authority do you speak to me thus?”
“By the authority vested in
me as your husband,” was promptly answered.
“I was on God’s errand,
Mr. Howland; searching after the weak, the simple,
and the erring! Have you anything to say against
the mission? Does your authority reach above
His?”
And the mother, lifting her hand,
pointed trembling finger upward, while she fixed an
eye upon her husband so steady that his own sunk beneath
its gaze.
For the space of nearly a minute,
the attitude of neither changed, nor was the silence
broken. Twice during the time did Mr. Howland
lift his eyes to those of his wife, and each time did
they fall, after a few moments, under the strange
half-defiant look they encountered. At last he
said firmly, yet in a more subdued, though rebuking
voice,
“This to me, Esther?”
“Am I not a mother?” was
asked in response to this, yet without a perceptible
tremor in her voice.
“You are a wife, as well as
a mother,” replied Mr. Howland, “and, as
a wife, are under a sacred obligation to regard the
authority committed to your husband by God.”
“Have I not just said to you,”
returned Mrs. Howland, “that I was on God’s
errand? Does your authority go beyond His?”
“When did He speak to you?”
There was a covert sneer in the tone with which this
half impious interrogation was made.
“I heard his still, small voice
in my mother’s heart,” replied Mrs. Howland,
meekly, “and I went forth obedient thereto, to
seek the straying child you had so harshly and erringly
turned from your door: thus does God shut the
door of Heaven against no wandering one who comes
to it and knocks for entrance.”
“Esther! I will not hear
such language from your lips!” There was an
unsteadiness in the voice of Mr. Howland, that marked
the effect his wife’s unexpected and searching
words had produced.
“Then do not seek to stand between
me and my duty as a mother,” was her firm reply.
“Too long, already, have you placed yourself
between me and this duty. But that time is past.”
As Mrs. Howland uttered these words,
she passed across the room to a window, which she
threw up, and leaning her body out, looked earnestly
up and down the street. For a reaction like this
Mr. Howland was not prepared. He was, in fact,
utterly confounded. Had there been the smallest
sign of irresolution on the part of his wife—the
nearest appearance of weakness in the will so suddenly
opposed to his own—he would have known what
to do. But nothing of this was apparent, and
he hesitated about advancing again to the contest,
while there was so strong a doubt as to the issue.
For a long time Mr. Howland moved
about the room, while his wife continued to sit, listening,
at the window.
“Come, Esther,” said the
former, at length, in a voice greatly changed from
its tone when he last spoke. “You had better
retire. It is useless to remain there. Besides,
you are in danger of taking cold. The air is
damp and chilly.”
“You can retire—I
shall sleep none, to-night,” was answered to
this. And then Mrs. Howland looked again from
the window. “Where—where can
he have gone?” she said aloud, though speaking
to herself. “My poor, unhappy boy!”
Mr. Howland made no answer to this.
He had no satisfying intelligence to offer, nor any
words of comfort that it would be of avail to speak.
Thus the greater portion of that long
remembered night was passed—Mrs. Howland
sitting at the window, vainly waiting and watching
for her son, and Mr. Howland walking the floor of the
room, his mind given up to troubled and rebuking thoughts.
In his hardness and self-will he had justified himself
up to this in his course of conduct pursued toward
his children; but he was in doubt now. A question
as to whether he had been right or not had come into
his mind, and disturbed him to the very centre.