A few minutes later Julia Cloud watched
them go off into the dusk to the Christian Endeavor
meeting. She was to follow them in a little while
and meet them for the evening service. She wondered
as she saw them disappear into the shadows of the
long maple-lined avenue whether perhaps she was not
overdoing the matter a little in the way of meetings,
and was almost sorry she had not suggested staying
home from the evening service. It would not do
to make them weary of it all on this first Sunday.
As they walked along together, the
brother and sister were thinking deeply.
“Say, Allison, isn’t this
the very funniest thing we ever did, going off like
this to a prayer meeting alone? What did we do
it for?” asked the sister.
“Well, I guess just because
Cloudy wanted it,” replied the brother.
“She’s given up her home and everything
for us; we ought to. But say, Les, there’s
a whole lot in what Cloudy was reading this afternoon.
If it’s all true, it’s a wonder more people
don’t try it. I’ve often wondered
why we were alive, anyway, haven’t you?
There doesn’t seem much sense to it unless there’s
something like this.” “Oh, I don’t
know, Allison; it’s nice to be alive. But
of course we never will feel quite as if this is the
only place since Mother and Dad aren’t here
any more. Aren’t things queer, anyway?
I wish there was some way to be sure.”
“Well, I s’pose the Bible
claims to be sure. Perhaps we could find out
a lot if we read it.”
“We’re likely to read
it quite a good deal, don’t you think?”
asked the sister archly. “But really, now,
it was interesting, and isn’t Cloudy a dear?
If Christians were all like that, I’d believe
in them.”
“Perhaps they are, real Christians.
Perhaps the ones we mean aren’t anything but
shams.”
“Well, there’s a good many shams, then.”
The big, noisy bell began to bang
out a tardy summons now; but the two young people
did not feel the same antipathy toward it that they
had felt the night they heard it first. It seemed
somehow to have a homely, friendly sound. As
they neared the open door, they grew suddenly shy,
however, and drew back, lingering on the corner, watching
the few stragglers who walked into the pathway of light
that streamed from the doorway.
“Some bunch!” growled
Allison. “I should say they did need waking
up, but I don’t hanker for the job.”
They slipped in, and followed the
sound of voices, through a dimly-lighted hall, smelling
of moldy ingrain carpet, into a wide, rather pleasant,
chapel room. There were branches of autumn leaves
about the walls, reminiscent of some recent festivity,
and a bunch of golden-rod in a vase on the little
table by the leader’s chair.
Two girls were turning over the hymn-book,
picking out hymns for the evening; and a tall, shy,
girlish young fellow was making fancy letters on a
blackboard up in front. Three more girls with
their arms about one another had surrounded him, and
were giggling and gurgling at him after the manner
of that kind of girl. Another plain-faced, plainly-dressed
young woman sat half-way up at one side, her hands
folded and a look of quiet waiting on her face.
That was all that were in the room.
Allison and Leslie found a seat half-way
up on the other side from the plain-faced girl, and
sat down. No one noticed them save for furtive
glances, and no one came near them. The three
giggling girls began to talk a little louder.
One with her hair bobbed and a long view of vertebrae
above her blue dress-collar began to prattle of a dance
the night before.
“I thought I’d die!”
she chortled. “Bob had me by the arm; and
here was my dress caught on Archie’s button,
and he not knowing and whirling off in the other direction;
and the georgette just ripped and tore to beat the
band, and me trying to catch up with Archie, and Bob
hanging on to me, honest.-You’d uv
croaked if you could uv seen me. Oh, but Mother
was mad when she saw my dress! She kept blaming
me, for she knew I hated that dress and wanted a new
one. But me, I’m glad. Now
I’ll get after Dad for a new one. Say, when’s
Mary’s surprise? Is it true it’s
put off till next week?”
“I’m going to have a new
dress for that and silver slippers,” declared
the girl next her, teetering back and forth on her
little high-heeled pumps. “Say, Will, that
letter’s cock-eyed. What are you giving
us? What’s the old topic, anyway?
I don’t see any use in topics. They don’t
mean anything. I never can find a verse with the
words in. I just always ask for a hymn, and half
the time I give out any old number without knowing
what it is, just to see what it’ll turn out.”
“Oh, say! Did you hear
Chauncey Cramer singing last Sunday night?”
broke out the third girl with a side glance at the
strangers. “He was perfectly killing.
He was twisting the words all around in every hymn.
He had girls’ names and fellers’ all mixed
up, and made it rhyme in the neatest way. I thought
I’d choke laughing, and Dr. Tarrant was just
coming in, and looked at me as if he’d eat me.
Oh, my goodness! There he comes now. We
better beat it, Hattie. Come on, Mabel. Let’s
sit back in the last row.”
The three girls toppled down the aisle
on their high-heeled pumps, and rustled into the back
row just as the pastor entered and looked about the
room. His eyes brightened when he saw the brother
and sister, and with a pleasant “Good-evening”
to the three whispering misses in the back seat he
came over to shake hands with Allison and Leslie.
But, when he expressed a most cordial hope that the
two would come in and help in the young people’s
work, Allison was wary. He said they would have
to see how much time they had to spare after college
opened. It was altogether likely that they would
be exceedingly busy with their college work.
The minister, watching their bright
faces wistfully, and knowing their kind, sighed, and
thought how little likelihood there was that his Christian
Endeavor society would see much of them.
A few more people straggled in, and
one of the girls who had been picking out hymns went
and sat down at the piano. The other girl sat
near her. The young man at the blackboard took
his place at the little table in front of the desk,
and the elaborate colored letters which he had just
made were visible as a whole for the first time.
“The Great Companion: How to Live with
Him.”
There was something startling and
solemn in the words as they stood out in blue and
gold and crimson and white on the little blackboard.
Allison and Leslie looked and turned wonderingly toward
the young leader. He had corn-colored hair, light,
ineffective blue eyes, and a noticeably weak chin.
He did not look like a person who would be putting
forth a topic of that sort and attempting to do anything
about it. His face grew pink, and his eyelashes
seemed whiter in contrast as he stood up to give out
the first hymn. It was plain that he was painfully
embarrassed. He glanced now and then deprecatingly
toward the visitors with an anxious gasp as he announced
that they would open the meeting by singing number
twenty-nine. The two young strangers opened their
hymn-books and found the place, marvelling how such
a youth had ever been persuaded to get himself into
such a trying situation. Allison found himself
thinking that there must be some power greater than
the ordinary influences of life that made him do it.
He seemed so much out of his element, and so painfully
shy.
“All to Jesus I surrender!”
chirped the little gathering gayly. They had
good voices, and the harmony was simple and pleasing.
Allison and Leslie joined their beautiful voices in
with the rest, and liked it, felt almost as if they
were on the verge of doing something toward helping
on the kingdom of heaven.
They sang another hymn, and more young
people came in until there were twenty-four in the
room. Then the leader called upon Tom Forbes to
read the Scripture, and a boy about fourteen years
old read in a clear voice the story of the walk to
Emmaus. To the brother and sister whose Bible
knowledge was limited to the days of their very young
childhood, it was most interesting. They listened
intently, but were surprised to notice a tendency
to whisper on the part of some, especially the girls
in the back seat, who had been joined by three young
fellows of about their own age and caliber. Leslie,
glancing over her shoulder at the whisperers, saw
they had no thrill over the story, no interest save
in their own voluble conversation. The story went
on to the point where Jesus at the table blessed the
bread, and the two men knew Him, and He vanished out
of their sight, without an interruption in the whispering.
The Great Companion had come into the room and gone,
and they had not even known it.
The leader rose, and cleared his voice
with courage; and then in a tone of diffidence he
recited the few words he had learned for the occasion.
“Our topic to-night is ‘The
Great Companion: How to Live with Him.’
It seems hard to realize that Christ is still on the
earth. That He is with us all the time.
We ought to realize this. We ought to try to
realize it. It would make our lives different
if we could realize that Christ is always with us.
I expect some of us wouldn’t always feel comfortable
if we should find Him walking along with us, listening
to our talk. We ought to try to live so we would
feel all right if we should find Christ walking with
us some day. And I heard a story once about a
boy who had been a cripple, and he had been a great
Christian; and, when he came to die, they asked him
if he was afraid; and he said no, he wasn’t
afraid, that it was only going into another room with
Jesus. And I think we ought to all live that way.
We will now listen to a solo by Mame Beecher, after
which the meeting will be open, and I hope that all
will take part.”
It was a crude little speech, haltingly
spoken, and the speaker was evidently relieved when
it was over. Yet there had been amazing truth
in what he had said, and it came to the two visitors
with the force of newness. As he mopped his perspiring
brow with a large handkerchief and sat down, adjusting
his collar and necktie nervously, they watched him,
and marvelled again that he had been willing to be
put in so trying a position. There had been a
genuineness about him that brought conviction.
This young man really believed in Christ and that He
walked with men.
Allison, always ready to curl his
lips over anything sissified, sat watching him gravely.
Here was a new specimen. He didn’t know
where to place him. Did he have to lead
a meeting? Was he a minister’s son or something,
or did he just do it because he wanted to, because
it seemed his duty to do it? Allison could not
decide. He knew that he himself could have made
a much better speech on the subject, but he would
not want to. He would hate it, talking about sacred
things like that out to the world; yet he was frank
enough to see that a better speech might not have
been so acceptable to God as this halting one full
of repetition and crudities.
The girl up by the piano was singing
the solo. Why did she let herself be called “Mame”
in that common way? She was a rather common-looking
girl, with loud colors in her garments and plenty of
powder in evidence on her otherwise pretty face; but
she had a good voice, and sang the words distinctly.
“In the secret of His presence
how my soul delights to hide!
Oh, how precious are the lessons
which I learn at Jesus’ side!”
The words were wonderful. They
somehow held you through to the end. The girl
named Mame had that quality of holding attention with
her voice and carrying a message to a heart.
There were two lines that seemed particularly impressive,
“And whene’er you leave
the silence of that happy meeting-place,
You must mind and bear the image
of the Master in your face.”
Leslie found herself looking around
the room to see whether any one present bore that
image, and her eyes lingered longest on the quiet
girl in the plain garments over on the other side of
the room. She had a face that was almost beautiful
in its repose, if it had not worn that air of utter
reticence.
There was a long pause after the soloist
was done, and much whispering from the back row, which
at last terminated in a flutter of Bible leaves and
the reading of three Bible verses containing the word
“companion,” without much reference to
the topic, from the three girls on the back seat,
passing the Bible in turn, with much ado to find their
respective places. Another hymn followed, and
a prayer from a solemn-looking boy in shell-rimmed
spectacles. It was a good prayer, but the young
man wore also that air of reticence that characterized
the girl on the other side of the room, as if he were
not a part of these young people, had nothing in common
with them. Allison decided that they were all
dead, and surely did need some one to wake them up;
but the task was not to his liking. What had he
in common with a bunch like that? In fact, what
had any of them in common that they should presume
to form themselves into a society? It was rank
nonsense. You couldn’t bring people together
that had nothing in common and make them have a good
time. These were his thoughts during another painful
pause, during which the pastor in the back seat half
rose, then sat down and looked questioningly toward
the two visitors. The young leader seemed to
understand the signal; for he grew very red, looked
at Allison and Leslie several times, cleared his throat,
turned over his hymn-book, and finally said with painful
embarrassment:
“We should be glad to hear from
our visitors to-night. We’d like to know
how you conduct things in your society.”
He lifted agonized eyes to Allison,
and broke down in a choking cough.
Allison, chilled with amazement, filled
with a sudden strange pity, looked around with growing
horror to see whether it was really true that he had
been called upon to speak in meeting. Then with
the old nonchalance that nothing ever quite daunted
he rose to his feet.
“Why, I,” he began, looking
around with a frank smile, “I never was in a
Christian Endeavor meeting before in my life, and I
don’t know the first thing about it. My
sister and I only came to-night because somebody wanted
us to; so I can’t very well tell about any other
society. But I belong to a college frat, and I
suppose it’s a good deal the same thing in the
long run. I’ve been reading that pledge
up there on the wall. I suppose that’s
your line. You’ve got good dope all right.
If you live up to that, you’re going some.
“I remember when I first went
to college the fellows began to rush me. I had
bids from two or three different frats, and they had
me going so hard I got bewildered. I didn’t
know which I wanted to join. Then one day one
of the older fellows got hold of me, and he saw how
it was with me; and he said: ’You want
to look around and analyze things. Just you look
the fellows over, and see how they size up in the
different frats. Then you see what they stand
for, and how they live up to it; and lastly you look
up their alumni.’ So I began to size things
up, and I found that one frat was all for the social
doings, dances, and dinners, and always having a good
time; and another was pretty wild, had the name of
always getting in bad with the faculty, and had the
lowest marks in college; three fellows had been expelled
the year before for drunkenness and disorderliness.
Then another one was known as ranking highest in scholarship
and having the most athletes in it. I looked
over their alumni, too, for they used to come around
a good bit and get in with us boys; and you could see
just which were making good out in the world, and
which were just in life for what they could get out
of it; and I made my decision one day just because
of one big man who had been out of college for ten
years; but he had made good in the world, and was
known all over as being a successful man and a wonderful
man, and he used to come back to every game and everything
that went on at the college, and sit around and talk
with the fellows, and encourage them; and, if anybody
was falling down on his job, he would show him where
he was wrong and how to get into line again, and even
help him financially if he got in a tight place.
And so I thought with men like that back of it that
frat was a pretty good thing to tie up to, and I joined
it, and found it was even better than I expected.
“And I was thinking as I looked
at the blackboard, and heard you talking about the
Great Companion, it was something like that man.
If all that’s true that you’ve been reading
and saying to-night, why, you’ve got pretty
good things back of you. With an Alumnus like
that”-nodding toward the blackboard-“and
a line of talk like that pledge, you sure ought to
have a drag with the world. All you’ve got
to do is to make everybody believe that it is really
so, and you’d have this room full; for, believe
me, that’s the kind of dope everybody wants,
especially young people, whether they own it or not.”
Allison sat down abruptly, suddenly
realizing that he had just made a religious speech
and had the interest of the meeting in his hands.
His speech seemed to set loose something in the heart
of the young leader; for he rose eagerly, alertly,
his embarrassment departed, and began to speak:
“I’m glad our friend has
spoken that way. I guess it’s all true what
he has just said. We’ve got the right dope;
only we aren’t using it. I guess it looks
mighty like to the world as if we didn’t really
believe it all, the way we live; but believe me, I’m
going to try to make things different in my life this
week, and see if I can’t make at least one person
believe we have something here they want before next
Sunday.”
He seemed about to give out another
hymn, but the plain girl spoke up and interrupted
him. She was sitting forward in her chair, an
almost radiant look upon her face that quite changed
it; and she spoke rapidly, breathlessly, like a shy
person who had a great message to convey. She
was looking straight at Allison as if she had forgotten
everyone else in the room.
“I’ve got to speak,”
she said earnestly. “It isn’t right
to keep still when I’ve had such a wonderful
experience, and you spoke as if it might not all be
true about Christ’s being our companion every
day.” In spite of himself Allison met her
eyes as though they were talking alone together, and
waited for what she should tell.
“I’ve always been just
a quiet Christian,” she went on; “and I
don’t often speak here except to recite a Bible
verse. I’m sort of a stranger myself.
But you all ought to know what Christ has done for
me. When my people died and everything in my life
was changed, and troubles came very thick and fast,
there wasn’t anybody in the world I could turn
to for every-day help and companionship but Jesus;
and one day it came to me how my mother used to feel
about Him, and I just went to Him, and asked Him to
be my companion, as He used to be hers. I didn’t
half believe He would when I asked Him; but I was so
hurt and alone I had to do something; and I found
out it was all true! He helped me in so many
little every-day ways, you wouldn’t believe it,
perhaps, unless you could have lived it out yourself.
I guess you really have to live it out to know it,
after all. But I found that I could go to Him
just as if I could see Him, and I was so surprised
the first day when He answered a prayer in a perfectly
wonderful way. It all came over me, ‘Why,
He loves me!’ And at first I thought it was
just happening; but I tried it again and again, and
every day wonderful things began to come into my life,
and it got to be that I could talk with Him and feel
His answer in my heart. If it were not for Him,
I couldn’t stand life sometimes. And I’m
sure He’ll talk with any one that way who wants
Him enough to try and find Him,” she finished;
and then, suddenly conscious of herself, she sat back,
white and shy again, with trembling lips.
The meeting closed then; but, while
they were singing the last hymn Allison and Leslie
were watching the face of the quiet girl with the
holy, uplifted light on it.
“I think she is lovely, don’t
you?” whispered Leslie after the benediction,
as they turned to go out. “I’d like
to know her.”
“H’m!” assented
Allison. “Cloudy would like her, I guess.”
“I mean to find out who she is,” declared
Leslie.
The minister came up just then with
cordial greeting and urgent appeal that the young
people would at once join their Christian Endeavor.
“That was a great talk you gave
us to-night,” he said with his hand resting
admiringly on Allison’s shoulder. “We
need young blood. You are the very one to stir
up this society.”
“But I’m not a Christian,”
said Allison, half laughing. “I don’t
belong here.”
“Oh, well,” answered the
smiling minister, “if you take hold of the Endeavor,
perhaps you’ll find you’re more of a Christian
than you think. Come, I want you to meet some
of our young people.”
The young people were all gathered
in groups, looking toward the strangers, and came
quite willingly to have a nearer glimpse of them.
Last of all, and by herself, came the plain-faced girl;
and the minister introduced her as Jane Bristol.
He did not speak to her more than that, and it occurred
to Allison that she seemed as if she came more at
the instigation of some higher power than at the call
of her pastor; for she passed quietly on again in
a pleasant dignity, and did not stop to talk and joke
with her pastor as some of the other young people
had done.
“Who is she?” asked Allison,
hardly aware that he was asking.
“Why, she is the daughter of
a forger who died in prison. Her mother, I believe,
died of a broken heart. Sad experience for so
young a girl. She seems to be a good little thing.
She is working at housework in town, I believe.
I understand she has an idea of entering college in
the fall. You are entering college here?
That will be delightful. My wife and I will take
pleasure in calling on you as soon as you are ready
to receive visitors.”
Leslie’s eyes were on Jane Bristol
as she moved slowly toward the door, lingering a moment
in the hall. None of the other girls seemed to
have anything to do with her. With her usual impulsiveness
Leslie left Allison, and went swiftly down the aisle
till she stood by Jane Bristol’s side.
“We are going to meet my aunt
and stay to church. Would you come and sit with
us to-night?” she asked eagerly. “I’d
like to get acquainted with you.”
Jane Bristol shook her head with a wistful smile.
“I’m sorry,” she
said. “I wish I could. But I take care
of a little girl evenings, and I only get off long
enough for Christian Endeavor. It’s dear
of you to ask me.”
“Well, you’ll come and
see me when I get settled in my new home, won’t
you?”
Jane looked at her thoughtfully, and
then gave her a beautiful smile in answer to Leslie’s
brilliant one.
“Yes, if you find you want me
when you get settled, I’ll come,” she
answered, and, giving Leslie’s little gloved
hand an impulsive squeeze, she said, “Good-night,”
and went away.
Leslie looked after her a minute,
half understanding, and then turned to find her brother
beside her.
“She thinks I won’t want
her because she works!” she said. “But
I do. I shall.”
“Sure you will, kid,”
said her brother. “Just tell Cloudy about
her. She’ll fix things. That old party-I
mean, the reverend gentleman -”
“Look out, Allison, that isn’t
any better; and there comes Cloudy. Don’t
make her feel bad again.”
“Well, parson, then-doesn’t
seem to have much use for a person who’s had
the misfortune to have her father commit forgery and
her mother die of a broken heart, or is it because
she has to work her way through college? He may
be all right, sister; but I’d bank on that girl’s
religion over against his any day in the week, Sundays
included.”
Then Julia Cloud came up the steps,
and they went in to a rather dreary evening service
with a sparse congregation and a bored-looking choir,
who passed notes and giggled during the sermon.
Allison and Leslie sat and wondered what kind of a
shock it would be to them all if the Great Companion
should suddenly become visible in the room. If
all that about His being always present was true, it
certainly was a startling thing.