A CHARIOT OF FIRE
BY
ELIZABETH STUART PHELPS
When the White Mountain express to
Boston stopped at Beverly, it slowed op reluctantly,
crashed off the baggage, and dashed on with the nervousness
of a train that is unmercifully and unpardonably late.
It was a September night, and the
channel of home-bound summer travel was clogged and
heaving.
A middle-aged man a plain
fellow, who was one of the Beverly passengers stood
for a moment staring at the tracks. The danger-light
from the rear of the onrushing train wavered before
his eyes, and looked like a splash of blood that was
slowly wiped out by the night. It was foggy,
and the atmosphere clung like a sponge.
“No,” he muttered, “it’s
the other way. Batty’s the other way.”
He turned, facing towards the branch
road which carries the great current of North Shore
life.
“How soon can I get to Gloucester?”
he demanded of one who brushed against him heavily.
He who answered proved to be of the baggage staff,
and was at that moment skilfully combining a frown
and a whistle behind a towering truck; from this two
trunks and a dress-suit case threatened to tumble
on a bull-terrier leashed to something invisible,
and yelping in the darkness behind.
“Lord! This makes ’leven
dogs, cats to burn, twenty-one baby-carriages, and
a guinea-pig travellin’ over this blamed road
since yesterday What’s that? Gloucester? 6.45
to-morrow morning.”
“Oh, but look here!” cried
the plain passenger, “that won’t do.
I have got to get to Gloucester to-night.”
“So’s this bull-terrier,”
groaned the baggage-handler. “He got switched
off without his folks and I’ve got
a pet lamb in the baggage-room bleatin’ at the
corporation since dinner-time. Some galoot forgot
the crittur. There’s a lost parrot settin’
alongside that swears in several foreign languages.
I wish to Moses I could!”
The passenger experienced the dull
surprise of one in acute calamity who wonders that
another man can jest. He turned without remark,
and went to the waiting-room; he limped a little,
for he was slightly lame. The ticket-master was
locking the door of the office, and looked sleepy
and fagged.
“Where’s the train to Gloucester?”
“Gone.”
“’Tain’t gone?”
“Gone half an hour ago.”
The official pointed to the clock,
on whose face an ominous expression seemed to rest,
and whose hands marked the hour of half-past twelve.
“But I have got to get to Gloucester!”
answered the White Mountain passenger. “We
had an accident. We’re late. I ain’t
much used to travellin’ I supposed
they’d wait for us. I tell you I’ve
got to get there!”
In his agitation he gripped the arm
of the other, who threw the grasp off instinctively.
“You’ll have to walk,
then. You can’t get anything now till the
newspaper train.”
“God!” gasped the belated
passenger. “I’ve got a little boy.
He’s dying.”
“Sho!” said the ticket-master.
“That’s too bad. Can you afford
a team? You might try the stables. There’s
one or two around here.”
The ticket-master locked the doors
of the station and walked away, but did not go far.
A humane uneasiness disturbed him, and he returned
to see if he could be of any use to the afflicted
passenger.
“I’ll show you the way
to the nearest,” he began, kindly.
But the man had gone.
In the now dimly lighted town square
he was, in fact, zigzagging about alone, with the
loping gait of a lame man in a feverish hurry.
“There must be hosses,”
he muttered, “and places. Why, yes.
Here’s one, first thing.”
Into the livery-stable he entered
so heavily that he seemed to fall in. His cheap
straw hat was pushed back from his head; he was flushed,
and his eyes were too bright; his hair, which was
red and coarse, lay matted on his forehead.
“I want a team,” he began,
on a high, sharp key. “I’ve got to
get to Gloucester. The train’s gone.”
A sleepy groom, who scowled at him,
turned on a suspicious heel. “You’re
drunk. It’s fourteen miles. It would
cost you more’n you’re worth.”
“I’ve got a little boy,”
repeated the lame man. “He’s dying.”
The groom wheeled back. “That
so? Why, that’s a pity. I’d
like to ’commodate you. See?
I’m here alone see? I darsen’t
go so far without orders. Boss is home and abed.”
“He got hurt in an accident,”
pleaded the father. “I come from up to
Conway. I went to bury my uncle. They sent
me a telegraph about my little boy. I ain’t
drunk. They sent me the telegraph. I’ve
got to get home.”
“I’ll let you sleep here
along of me,” suggested the groom, “but
I daresn’t leave. I’m responsible
to the boss. There’s other places you
might get one. I’ll show you. See?
I’d try ’em all if I was you.”
But again the man was gone.
By the time he had found another stable
his manner had changed; he had become deprecating,
servile. He entreated, he trembled; he flung
his emergency at the feet of the watchman; he reiterated
his phrase:
“I’ve got a little boy,
if you please. He’s dying. I’ve
got to get to Gloucester I live in Squam.”
“I don’t like to refuse
you,” protested the night-watchman, “but
two of my horses are lame, and one is plumb used up
carrying summer folks. I’m dreadful short.
I haven’t a team to my name I could put on the
road to Gloucester. It’s why,
to Squam it’s seventeen miles thirty-four
the round trip. It would cost you
“I’ll pay!” cried
the lame man; “I’ll pay. I ain’t
beggin’.”
“I’m sorry I haven’t
got a horse,” apologized the watchman.
“It would cost you ten dollars if I had.
But I hain’t.”
“Ten dollars?”
The traveller echoed the words stupidly.
“I’m sorry; fact, I am,”
urged the watchman. “Won’t you set
‘n’ rest a spell?”
But the visitor had vanished from the office.
Twenty minutes after, the door-bell
of a home in the old residence portion of the town
rang violently and pealed through the sleeping house.
It was a comfortable, not a new-fashioned,
house, sometimes leased to summer citizens, and modernized
in a measure for their convenience; one of the few
of its kind within reach of the station, and by no
means near.
When the master of the family had
turned on all the burglar electricity and could get
the screen up, he put his head out of the window, and
so perceived on his door-step a huddled figure with
a white, uplifted face.
A shaking voice came up:
“Sir? Be you a gentleman?”
“I hope so,” went down
the quiet reply. “But I can’t remember
that I was ever asked that question at this time of
morning before.”
“Be you a Christian?” insisted the voice
from below.
“Sometimes perhaps,” went down
the voice from above.
The voice from below came up:
“Sir! Sir! I’m in great trouble.
For the love of Christ, sir, come down, quick!”
“Why, of course,” said the voice from
above.
The man stood quite still when the
great bolts of the door shot through their grooves.
Against a background of electric brilliance he saw
a gentleman in pajamas and bathrobe, with slippers
as soft as a lady’s on his white feet.
The face of the gentleman was somewhat fixed and
guarded; his features were carefully cut, behind their
heavy coat of seaside tan.
“Well,” he said, “that was a pretty
solemn adjuration. What is it?”
“I want to get a team,”
stammered the figure on the steps. Suddenly,
somehow, his courage had begun to falter. He
felt the enormity of his intrusion. He came
up against the mystery of social distinctions; his
great human emergency seemed to be distanced by the
little thing men call difference of class.
“You want to get a
team?” repeated the gentleman; he spoke slowly,
without irritation. “You have made a mistake.
This is not a livery-stable.”
“Livery-stable!” cried
the intruder, with a swift and painful passion.
“I’ve tried three! Fust one hadn’t
any boss. Next one hadn’t any hoss.
It was ten dollars if he had. Last one wanted
’leven dollars, pay in advance. I’ve
got four dollars ‘n’ sixteen cents in my
pocket. I’ve been up to Conway to bury
my uncle. My folks sent me a telegraph.
My little boy he’s had an accident.
My train was late. I’ve got to get to
Gloucester, sir. So I thought,” added the
traveller, simply, “I’d ask one of the
neighbors. Neighbors is most gener’lly
kind. Up our way they be. Sir could
you let me have a team to see my little boy before in
case he dies?”
“Come inside a minute,” replied the gentleman.
The words, which had began shortly,
ended softly. “Perfectly sober,”
he thought. His fingers stole to the button of
a bell as the stranger stepped into the hall.
“Yes I’ll send you over.
What’s your name?”
“Dryver, sir. Jacob Dryver.”
“Where do you live?”
“Squam.”
“Annisquam? That is several
miles beyond Gloucester. Your trouble is too
swift for horses. I have rung for my chauffeur.
I’ll send you in the automobile. Be so
good as to step around to the stables, Mr. Dryver.
I’ll join you outside.”
Now the voice of a sleepy child could
be heard overhead; it seemed to be trying to say “Popper!
Popper!” A woman’s figure drifted to
the top of the padded stairs. The intruder caught
a gleam of delicate white drapery floating with laces,
closely gathered at the throat, and held with one
ringed hand as if it had been hastily thrown
on. The door shut, and the bolts shot again.
Jacob Dryver felt that he was at once trusted and
distrusted; he could not have said why he did not go
to the stables, but sat down on the broad granite steps.
His knees hung apart; his elbows dropped to them;
his face fell into his hands.
The child above continued to call:
“Popper! Popper!” Then the little
voice trailed away.
“It’s smaller ’n Batty,” Jacob
said.
When he lifted his head from his hands,
up the curving avenue an automobile was sweeping upon
him. Its acetylene lanterns blazed like the
eyes of some prehistoric thing; but this simple fellow
knew nothing about prehistoric things. The lanterns
reminded him of the living creatures that Ezekiel
saw. Such imagination as he had was Biblically
trained, and leaped from Ezekiel to Elijah easily.
“It’s a chariot of fire,”
thought Jacob Dryver, “comin’ for to carry
me home.”
As he gathered himself and went to
meet the miracle, a dark figure, encased in rubber
armor from foot to head, brought the carriage to a
swift and artistic stop.
“Are you the shove-her?” asked Jacob,
timidly.
“I am not the shove-her,”
replied the figure at the brake, “and I hope
I sha’n’t have to be. I am Mr. Chester.
My chauffeur is not at home, I find. I shall
drive you to Annisquam myself.”
“You’re takin’ some
trouble, sir,” said Jacob, slowly. His
head reeled. He felt that he was growing stupid
under the whirlwind of events. He went down
the long steps like a lame blind man. As he did
so the bolts of the door behind him leaped back again,
and the lady ran down and slid into the automobile.
The fog glittered on the laces of her white woollen
garment. Her husband thought of it as a negligee,
but Jacob called it a wrapper. She was a dainty
lady, and fair to look upon; her hair lay in long,
bright braids upon her shoulders; she had caught up
an automobile coat and cap, which she flung across
her arm. Dryver heard her say: “I
shall be a little anxious. After all,
you know nothing about him. Mayn’t I go?”
“And leave Bert? I don’t
think I would, Mary. I’ve told James to
sit up and watch. Draw the big bolt on top,
and keep the lights all on. If I have good luck
I shall be back in less than two hours. Good-bye,
Mary dear.”
The last word lingered with the caressing
accent which only long-tried marriage love ever puts
into it. The lips of the two met silently, and,
drooping, the lady melted away. Jacob Dryver
found himself in the automobile, speeding down the
avenue to the silent street. He looked back
once at the house. Every pane of glass was blazing
as if the building were on fire.
“You’ll find it colder
than you expect,” observed Mr. Chester.
“I brought along Thomas’s coat.
Put it on and hold on. Never in one
of these before, were you?”
“N-no, sir,” chattered
Jacob Dryver. “Thank you, sir. I
n-never was.”
He clung to the side of the seat desperately.
In fact, he was very much frightened. But he
would have gone under the heavy wheels before he would
have owned it. Spinning through the deserted
Beverly streets the automobile took what seemed to
him a startling pace.
“I’m going slowly till
we get out of town,” remarked Mr. Chester.
“Once on the Manchester road I’ll let her
out a bit.”
Jacob made no reply. What had
seemed to be fog drenched and drowned him now like
driving rain. There had been no wind, but now
the powers and principalities of the air were let
loose. He gasped for breath, which was driven
down his throat. That made him think of Batty,
whom, for the moment, he had actually forgotten.
When people died they could not
Had Batty by this time it was
so long should he find that Batty
“What ails your boy?”
asked the half-invisible figure from the depths of
its rubber armor.
“I had a telegraph,” said
Jacob, monotonously. “I never was away
from home so far I ain’t used to
travellin’. I supposed the train would
wait for the accident. The telegraph said he
was hurt bad. I got it just as the fun’ril
was leavin’ the house. I had to quit it,
corpse ‘n’ all for Batty.
I ran all the way to the depot. I just got
aboard, and here I be becalmed all night and
there is Batty. His name is Batwing,”
added the father. “He was named after the
uncle I went to bury. But we call him Batty.”
“Any more children?” inquired
Mr. Chester, in the cultivated, compassionate voice
which at once attracted and estranged the breaking
heart of Jacob Dryver.
“We haven’t only Batty, sir,” he
choked.
The hand on the lever tightened; the
throttle opened; the dark figure in the rubber coat
bent, and its muscles turned to iron. The automobile
began to rock and fly. It was now whirling out
upon the silent, sleeping road that goes by the great
houses of the North Shore.
“I’ll let her out a little,”
said Mr. Chester, quietly. “Don’t
worry. We’ll get there before you know
it.”
The car took on a considerable pace.
Jacob’s best straw hat flew off, but he did
not mention it. His red hair stood endwise, all
ways, on his head; his eyes started; his hands gripped one
at the rail, one at the knee of his companion.
The wind raised by the motion of the car became a
gale and forced itself into his lungs. Jacob
gasped:
“It’s on account of
Batty.”
“I have a little boy of my own,”
observed Mr. Chester. Plainly thinking to divert
the attention of the anguished father, he continued:
“He had an accident this summer he
was hurt by a scythe; he slipped away from his nurse.
He was pretty badly hurt. I was away I
hurried from Bar Harbor to get to him. I think
I know how you feel.”
“Did you have a telegraph, sir?”
asked Dryver, rousing to the throb of the common human
poise.
“Yes, there was a telegram.
But I was a good while getting it. I understand
your position.”
“Did he ever get over it your
little boy? Oh, I see; that was him I heard.
‘Popper,’ he says ’Popper.’”
Above the whir of the automobile,
above the chatter of the exhaust, above the voice
of the wind, the sound of a man’s muffled groan
came distinctly to the ear that was fine enough to
hear it.
“Trust me,” said Chester,
gently. “I’ll get you there.
I’ll get you to your boy.”
The gentleman’s face was almost
as white now as Jacob Dryver’s. The fog
glistened upon his mustache and made him look a gray-haired
man, as he emerged from gulfs of darkness and shot
by widely scattered dim street lamps. Both men
had acquired something of the same expression the
rude face and the finished one; both wore the solemn,
elemental look of fatherhood.
The heart of one repeated piteously: “It’s
Batty.”
But the other thought: “What if it were
Bert?”
“I’ll let her out a little
more,” repeated Chester. The car throbbed
and rocked to the words.
“How do you like my machine?”
he added, in a comfortable voice. He felt that
the mercury of emotion had mounted too far. “Mrs.
Chester has named her,” he proceeded.
“We call her Aurora.”
“Hey?”
“We’ve named the machine Aurora, I said.”
“‘Roarer,’ sir?”
“Oh, well, that will do ’Roarer,’
if you like. That isn’t bad. It’s
an improvement, perhaps. By-the-way, how did
you happen on my place to-night? There are a
good many nearer the station; you had quite a walk.”
“I see a little pair o’
reins an’ bells in the grass alongside such
as little boys play horse with. We had one once
for Batty, sir.”
“Ah! Was that it?
What’s your business, Dryver? You haven’t
told me. Do you fish?”
“Winters, I make paving-stones.
Summers, I raise vegetables,” replied Jacob
Dryver. “I’m a kind of a quarry-farmer.
My woman she plants flowers for the summer folks,
and Batty bunches ’em up and delivers ’em.
Batty he God! My God!
Mebbe there ain’t any Batty
The sentence broke. In truth,
it would have been hard to find its remnants in the
sudden onset of sound made by the motion of the machine.
The car was freed now to the limit
of her mighty strength. She took great leaps
like those of a living heart that is overexcited.
Powerfully, perfectly, without let or hindrance, without
flaw or accident, the chariot of fire bounded through
the night. A trail of smoke like the tail of
a comet followed her. The dark scenery of the
guarded shore flew by; Montserrat was behind; Prides’
was gone; the Farms blew past.
They were now well out upon the beautiful,
silent Manchester road, where the woods, solemn at
noonday, are sinister at dead of night. The
automobile, flying through them, encountered no answering
sign of life. Both men had ceased to speak.
Awe fell upon them, as if in the presence of more
than natural things. Once it seemed to Dryver
as if he saw a boy running beside the machine a
little fellow, white, like a spirit, and, like a spirit,
silent. Chester’s hands had stiffened to
the throttle; his face had the stern rigidity of those
on whom life or human souls absolutely depend.
Neither man spoke now aloud.
To himself Jacob Dryver repeated:
“It’s Batty! It’s my Batty!”
And Hurlburt Chester thought: “What if
it were Bert?”
Now the great arms of the sea began
to open visibly before them. The fog on their
lips grew salter, and they seemed to have entered the
Cave of the Winds. Slender beach and sturdy
headland slid by. West Manchester, Manchester,
Magnolia rushed past. In the Magnolia woods
they lost the sea again; but the bell-buoy called from
Norman’s Woe, and they could hear the moan of
the whistling-buoy off Eastern Point. In the
Cape Ann Light the fog bell was tolling.
At the pace which the car was taking
there was an element of danger in the situation which
Jacob Dryver could not measure, since he feared safety
ignorantly and met peril with composure. Chester
reduced the speed a little, and yet a little more,
but pushed on steadily. Once Jacob spoke.
“I’ll bet your shove-her
couldn’t drive like you do,” he said, proudly.
Fresh Water Cove slipped by; Old Stage
Fort was behind; the Aurora bumped over the pavement
of the Cut, and reeled through the rough and narrow
streets of Gloucester. He of Beverly was familiar
with the route, and asked no questions. The
car, now tangled among electric tracks, swung around
the angle from Main Street carefully, jarred across
the railroad, and took the winding, dim road to Annisquam.
Bay View flew behind the
bridge the village the pretty
arcade known as Squam Willows. The automobile
dashed into it and out of it as if it were a tunnel.
Then Dryver gripped the other’s arm and, without
a word, pointed.
The car followed the guidance of his
shaking finger, and, like a conscious creature, swung
to a startling stop.
There were lights in the quarryman’s
cottage, and shadows stirred against drawn shades.
Jacob Dryver tumbled out and ran. He did not
speak, nor by a gesture thank his Beverly “neighbor.”
Chester slowly unbuttoned his rubber coat and got
at his watch. The Aurora had covered the distance in
dark and fog, over seventeen miles in fifty-six
minutes. Now, Jacob, dashing in, had left the
door open, and Chester, as he put his watch back into
its pocket, heard that which sent the blood driving
through his arteries as the power had driven the pumps
of the car. The sound that he heard was the fretful
moan of a hurt child.
As he had admitted, he was a Christian sometimes;
and he said, “Oh, thank God!” with all
his generous heart. Indeed, as he did so, he
took off his heavy cap and bared his head.
Then he heard the sobbing of a shaken
man close beside him.
“Sir! Oh, sir! The
God of Everlastin’ bless you, sir. Won’t
you come and look at him?”
Batty lay quietly; he had put his
little fingers in his father’s hand; he did
not notice the stranger. The boy’s mother,
painfully poised on one elbow in the position that
mothers take when they watch sick children, lay upon
the other side of the bed. She was a large woman,
with a plain, good face. She had on a polka-dotted,
blue cotton wrapper which nobody called a negligee.
Her mute, maternal eyes went to the face of the visitor
and reverted to the child.
There was a physician in the room a
very young, to the trained eye an inexperienced, man;
in fact, the medical situation was unpromising and
complicated. It took Chester but a few moments
to gauge it, and to perceive that his mission to this
afflicted household had not ended with a lost night’s
sleep and an automobile record.
The local doctor, it seemed, was away
from home when Batty’s accident befell; the
Gloucester surgeon was ill; some one had proposed the
hospital, but the mother had the prejudices of her
class. A neighbor had suggested this young man a
new-comer to the town one of the flotsam
practitioners who drift and disappear. Recommended
upon the ground that he had successfully prescribed
headache pills to a Swedish cook, this stranger had
received into his unskilled hands the emergency of
a dangerously wounded lad. The accident, in fact,
was more serious than Chester had supposed.
He had now been told that the child was crushed by
an automobile racing through Annisquam Willows the
day before.
The boy, it was plain, was sorely
hurt, and ignorant suffering lay at the mercy of ignorant
treatment, in the hopeless and helpless subjection
to medical etiquette which costs so many lives.
“Dryver,” said Chester,
quietly, “you need a surgeon here at once.
Your physician is quite willing to consult with any
one you may call.” He shot one stern glance
at the young doctor, who quavered a frightened assent.
“I know a distinguished surgeon he
is a friend of mine; it was he who saved my boy in
that accident I told you of, this summer. He
is not far away; he is at a hotel on Eastern Point.
I can have him here in twenty well, say
twenty-five minutes. Of course, we must wait
for him to dress.”
The woman raised her head and stared
upon the gentleman. One swift, brilliant gleam
shot from her heavy eyes. She had read of angels
in the Bible. She had noticed, indeed, that
they were men angels. But she had never heard
of one in a rubber touring-coat, drenched from head
to foot with fog, spattered from foot to head with
mud, and with a wedding-ring upon his fine hand.
Jacob Dryver began: “Sir!
The God of Everlastin’ ” but
he sobbed so that he could not finish what he would
have said. So Chester went out and oiled the
Aurora, opened the throttle, and started off again,
and dashed through the rude streets of Gloucester
to her summer shore.
Dawn was rose-gray over Eastern Point,
and the tide had turned upon the harbor, when the
“Roarer” curved up quietly to the piazza
of the hotel.
It was rose-gray upon Annisquam, and
the tide was rising up the river, when the great surgeon
went into the little place where the lad lay fighting
for his mangled life. There had been some delay
in rousing the sleeper it was a trip of
six rough miles twice taken and it was
thirty-five minutes before his “merciless merciful”
hands went to work upon the mortal need of the boy.
The child had been crushed across
the hips and body, and only an experienced or only
an eminent skill could have saved the little fellow.
In the blossoming day Jacob Dryver
limped out and stood in the front yard among his wife’s
flowers that Batty “bunched up” and sold
to summer people. He could not perceive the
scent of the flowers only that of the ether.
His big boot caught in a sweet-pea vine and tore
it. One of the famous carmine dahlias of Cape
Ann seemed to turn its large face and gaze at him.
An old neighbor a cross-eyed
lobsterer, going to his traps came by,
cast a shrewd look, and asked how the boy was.
Jacob did not reply to the lobsterer; he lifted his
wet eyes to the sky, then they fell to a bed of blazing
nasturtiums, which seemed to smoke before them.
His lips tried to form the words which close like
a strangling hand upon the throat of the poor in all
the emergencies of life. Till he has answered
this question a poor man may not love a woman or rear
a child; he may not bury his dead or save his living.
“What will it cost?”
asked Jacob Dryver. He looked piteously at the
great surgeon, whose lips parted to speak. But
Hurlburt Chester raised an imperious hand.
“That,” he said, “is my affair.”
It was broad, bright day when the
Aurora came whirring home. Chester nodded to
his wife at the window, but went directly to the stables.
It was a little longer than she expected before he
returned. She waited at the head of the stairs,
then hurried half-way down to meet him. Her
white robe was ungirdled and flowing; it fell apart the
laces above from the laces below and the
tired man’s kiss fell upon her soft throat.
She was naturally a worrier in a sweet-natured
way, but he had always been patient with her little
weakness; some men are, with anxious women.
“No,” he smiled, but rather
feebly; “you’ve missed it again.
The boy is saved. St. Clair’s got hold
of him. I’ll talk presently, Mary not
just now.”
In fact, he would say no more till
he had bathed and taken food. He looked so exhausted
that she brought his breakfast to his bed, serving
it with her own hands, and asking no questions at all;
for, although she worried, she was wise. She
sent for the baby, too a big baby, three
years old and Chester enfolded the chin
of the child in his slender brown hand silently.
Then he said: “Lock the
door, Mary. I’ve something to tell you.”
When she had drawn the brass bolt
and returned, somewhat pale herself with wonder and
alarm, to the side of the bed, her husband spoke abruptly:
“Mary, you’ve got to know
it may as well have it over. I found
this pinned on the stable wall. It was the Aurora
that ran over the that that
poor little fellow.”
His hand shook as he laid the piece
of paper in her own. And while she read it he
covered his face; for he was greatly over-worn, and
the strain which he had undergone seemed now to have
leaped again with the spring of a creature that one
supposes one has left lifeless behind.
Mrs. Chester read the writing and
laid it down. It ran like this:
MR. CHESTER:
Sir, - Ime goin away while
I can. It was me run over that boy while you
was in town. I took Her out for a spin.
I let Her out some racin with another one in the
Willows an he got under Her someways. I see it
in the papers so I was afraid of manslorter.
Ime awful cut up about it so Ime goin to lite
out while I can.
Your obedient servant,
-
THOMAS.
The eyes of the husband and wife met
silently. She was the first to speak.
“Do they know?”
Chester shook his head.
“You’ll tell them, of course?”
“I haven’t made up my mind.”
The baby was jabbering loudly on the
bed he was very noisy; it was not easy
for her to hear what was said.
“I’m sure you ought to tell them!”
she cried, passionately.
“Perhaps so. But I’d like to think
it over.”
A subtle terror slid over her face.
“What can they do to you? I don’t
know about such things. Is there any law?”
“Laws enough laws
in plenty. But I’m not answerable for the
crimes of my chauffeur. It’s only a question
of damages.”
The wife of the rich man drew a long
breath. “Oh, if it’s nothing but
money!”
“Not that it would make any
difference if they could touch me,” he
continued, with a proud motion of his tired head.
“It’s purely a question of feeling it’s
a question of right within a right, Mary. It’s
to do what is really kind by these people
Why, Mary, if you could have seen it! From
beginning to end it was the most beautiful, the most
wonderful thing. Nothing of the kind ever happened
to me before. Mary, if an angel from the throne
of God had done it they couldn’t
have felt they couldn’t have treated
me it was enough to make a fellow a better
man the rest of his days. Why, it was worth
living for, I tell you! ... And now to
let them know...”
Hurlburt Chester was very tired, as
we say. He choked, and hid his pale face in
his pillow. And his wife laid hers beside it
and cried as women do without
pretending that she didn’t. But the baby
laughed aloud. And then there drove through the
father’s mind the repeated phrase which followed
the race of the “Roarer” all the way from
Beverly to Annisquam:
“What if it were Bert?”
Chester’s head whirled yet from
the fatigue and jar of the trip, and the words seemed
to take leaps through his brain as the car leaped when
she was at the top of her great speed. So he
kissed the child, and dashed a drop from his cheek
quite openly since only Mary saw.
A constraint unusual to their candid
relations breathed like a fog between the husband
and the wife; indeed, it did not lift altogether as
the autumn opened and closed.
Chester’s visits to Annisquam
(in which she once or twice accompanied him) were
many and merciful; and the distinguished surgeon took
the responsibility of the case till the boy was quite
convalescent. The lad recovered slowly, but
St. Clair promised that the cure would be complete.
The touching gratitude of Jacob Dryver
amounted to an idealization such as the comfortable,
undramatic life of Chester had never experienced.
He seemed to swim in it as an imaginative person dreams
of swimming in the air, tree-high above the heads
of the crowd on the earth. The situation had
become to him a fine intoxicant but it had
its reactions, as intoxicants must.
September and October burned to ashes
upon the North Shore. Fire of maple, flash of
sumac, torch of elder, flare of ivy, faded into brown
November, and the breakers off the Beverly coast took
on the greens and blues of north-wind weather below
the line of silver surf.
The Chesters closed “their
own hired house” and moved to town. The
Aurora remained in her stable, nor had she left it
since the morning when she came wearily back from
Annisquam.
His wife had noticed, but had not
seemed to notice, that Chester rode no more that fall.
She noted too, but did not seem to note, that he
continued his visits to the injured lad after they
had returned to the city.
On all the great holidays he made
a point of going down Thanksgiving, Christmas,
and New-Year’s Day. Mrs. Chester had wished
to duplicate for the quarryman’s boy the Christmas
gifts of her own child (such had been her pretty fancy),
but Batty was quite a lad ten years old;
and Bert, like a spoiled collie, was yet a baby, and
likely to remain so for some time to come. So
the mother contented herself, perforce, with less
intimate remembrances. Once, when she had packed
a box of miracles toys and books, clothes
and candy she thrust it from her with a
cry: “They would never touch these if
they knew! Hurlburt! Hurlburt! don’t
you think they ought to know?”
“Do what you think best, Mary,”
he said, wearily. “I have never been able
to decide that question. But you are free to
do so if you prefer.”
He regarded her with an expression
that went to her heart. She flung herself into
his arms and tried to kiss it away.
Now, Mary Chester, as we have said,
was a worrier, and the worrier never lets a subject
go. As the winter set in, her mind closed about
the matter which had troubled her, and it began to
become unbearable, like a foreign substance in the
flesh.
On a January afternoon it
was one of those dark days when souls cloud over she
flung on her furs, and leaving a pencilled line to
her husband saying what she had done, she took the
train to Gloucester, and a dreary electric-car to
Annisquam.
The flowers in the front yard were
knee-deep in snow, and Batty sat in the window busy
with a Sorrento wood-saw of her providing. He
laughed outright when he saw her, and his mother flung
open the door as if she had flung open her heart.
“Land!” she cried. “In all
this snow!”
She finished tying a fresh white apron
over her polka-dotted blue wrapper, and joyously led
the lady in.
Batty was a freckled little fellow,
with red hair like his father’s; he had the
pretty imperiousness of a sick and only child who has
by all the sorceries contrived to escape petulance.
When he had greeted the visitor, he ran back to his
jig-saw. He was carving camwood, which stained
his fingers crimson.
“I want to see you alone,”
began Mrs. Chester, nervously. It had been one
of Chester’s pleasures to warm the entire house
for the convalescent lad, and big coal fires were
purring in Batty’s bedroom and in the ten-foot
“parlor,” whither his mother conducted
her guest. The doors were left open. The
scent of the camwood came across, pungent and sickening.
The fret of the jig-saw went on steadily.
“He’s makin’ a paper-cutter for
Mr. Chester,” observed Batty’s mother.
“He made a watch-case last week for
Mr. Chester.”
Mary Chester paled, and she plunged at once:
“There’s something I’ve
come to tell I’ve got to tell
you. We can’t keep it to ourselves any
longer. I have come to tell you how it happened that
Batty We thought you’d rather not
know
“Lord! my dear,” said
the quarryman’s wife, “we’ve known
it all the while.”
The visitor’s head swam.
She laid it down upon her gloved hands on Mrs. Dryver’s
centre-table. This had a marble top, and felt
as the quarries look in winter on Cape Ann.
What were tears that they should warm it? The
sound of the jig-saw grew uneven and stopped.
“Hush!” said the boy’s
mother. “Batty don’t know; he’s
the only one that don’t.”
She tiptoed and shut the doors.
“You never seen Peter Trawl,
did you? He’s a neighbor cross-eyed sells
lobsters well, it was him picked Batty up
to the Willows that day. So he seen the number
runnin’ away, an’ so he told. We’ve
known it from fust to last, my dear.”
“And never spoke!” said
Mary Chester. “And never spoke!”
“What’s the use of jabberin’?”
asked Batty’s mother. “We thought
Mr. Chester ’d feel so bad,” she added.
“We thought he didn’t know.”
The worrier began to laugh, then cry first
this, then that; for her nerves gave way beneath her.
She sat humbly in her rich furs before the quarryman’s
wife. She felt that these plain people had outdone
her in nobility, as they had rivalled her in delicacy her,
and Hurlburt, too.
“Oh, come and see my baby!”
she cried. It was the only thing that occurred
to her to say.
Now at that moment Batty gave a little
yelp of ecstasy, threw down his jig-saw, and got to
the front door. His father was there, stamping
off the snow, and the lad’s idol, his ideal,
his man angel, stood upon the threshold nervous,
for an angel, and with an anxious look.
But when the two men saw the women
crying together upon the quarry-cold centre-table,
they clasped hands and said nothing at all.