“I joined a woman’s club
in the Federation a little over two years ago,”
said Mrs. Hardy. “I didn’t know what
was the object then; and to tell you the truth, I
am no wiser now.”
“You know as much as I,”
was her neighbor’s reply, politely given, the
neighbor, however, feeling no real interest, at the
moment, in anything outside the approaching election
of president, and the gossip regarding a possible
“dark horse” which was buzzing behind her,
between some better informed members of the delegation.
The babble of mighty waters is like
the noise that filled the theater. It surged
from the plant-bedecked platform (where it might be
likened to nothing more resonant than the hum of insects
of a summer night) through the auditorium, to the
dais under the balconies. The dais was noisy,
always, not because its occupants were any more inclined
to talk than other women, but because it was the rarest
thing in the world for them to hear anyone either
on the stage or the floor; and generally, they had
to vote by their eyes, watching the advocates of their
pet measures; and rising or sitting by their example;
hence they solaced themselves with conversation.
At this moment, however, the quiet
gentlewoman with the gavel, behind the long table,
had not lifted her hand; and the upper part of the
hall (which being in good hearing distance, was used
to keep silence and criticise the talkers) was as
busy with tongues and hands as its neighbors.
So Mrs. Hardy, smiling a little at her neighbor’s
absent glance, listened until her thoughts wandered
far afield. She only half caught the enthusiasm
of the neighbor to her right, over an address on village
improvement, or the indignation of the dames to
the left, who were rehearsing the political baseness
of Massachusetts. She was recalling a day thirty-three
years ago. She did not see the secretary behind
the table, whispering to the president; she did not
notice a little group to the left near where the silk
banner of Massachusetts fluttered, putting their heads
together and gesticulating above their whispers.
She forgot her surroundings and saw only a tall young
man whose ardent eyes sank as they met her own, a
handsome young fellow, who caught her hand in his,
as they sat alone in the carriage, driving to the
depot, and kissed the fingers and the wedding-ring,
crying out he was not half good enough for her.
“He was in love with me, then!”
she thought. But now? Well, it was not to
be expected a man with a great business and cares
and money to think about and political affairs (for
they were importuning Darius to go to the senate) should
be paying romantic compliments to his middle-aged
wife. Nevertheless, Darius had never forgotten
their anniversary until last year. On her reminding
him, he had whistled and laughed. “So it
is,” says he, “we ought to spend it together;
it’s a shame I have to go to Chicago; why don’t
you come with me?”
Smiling (yet a foolish something not
merry was twitching at her nerves), she had declined.
But she made a good excuse; Darius never guessed that
she was so silly as to mind; and he brought her a sweet
pigeon-blood ruby ring, set in diamonds, from Chicago;
and he kissed her when he slipped it on her finger kissed
her cheek, not her hand. She wondered, at this
minute, why she should wish that he had kissed the
hand instead; an elderly woman ought to be content
with a calm, assured, faithful affection, and let
beautiful youngsters have the frills. That evening,
she planned a dinner carefully to his liking, and she
would not let herself be disappointed when he brought
a political magnate, who talked politics, from the
terrapin to the coffee. She smiled again, as she
thought how much more of interest she would have found
in the conversation, to-day, after the club’s
year on Our Colonial Policies. This last anniversary
Darius had clean forgotten. In fact, he had advised
her to go to the Federation meeting; saying, lightly,
that it came at an opportune moment because he must
be away that week, himself. “Milwaukee
is a pretty city,” he ended amiably, “and
there will be lots of hen-functions and you’ll
enjoy yourself; but what’s the object of it
all, your Federation?”
“I don’t know” she
astonished him with her frank levity “when
I do, I’ll tell you.”
“Well, don’t get into
any rows you can help,” said he easily; “want
any more money? Got plenty?”
“Plenty, thank you,” said
she, “although I am going to be rather extravagant
and get some very smart toilets.”
He looked over his glasses at her;
and she was not able to decipher his smile. Didn’t
he approve of her clothes? She sent her fine eyes
into the mirror of her dressing-table, after he had
gone, and studied the picture there with a frown and
a smile, at last with a moisture over her eyes.
But, although he said nothing, when
she next examined her bank-book she found her credit
larger. “Maybe he does like my spending
more money on my gowns,” she thought.
She went to Milwaukee. She did
not remind him of the anniversary. She said to
herself that she would seriously try to discover the
object of the Federation; then she would tell Darius.
Her daughter-in-law accompanied her, and her daughter
was to meet her. “Quite a family party,”
said her son; “well, I hope you girls will have
a good lark! And, I say, Hester, find out what
it’s all about if you can!”
At first, Myrtle Hardy was more bewildered
than excited. The scene was unlike anything in
her experience. The hotels glittering with feminine
finery and humming with feminine voices; the placards
over doorways in rotundas or corridors, announcing
headquarters; the vast crooning bulk of the lake,
the iridescent gleam of water that came to one in glimpses
as one was whirled down the wide and breeze-swept avenues,
amid a dazzle of lovely fabrics and smiling faces,
blooming like flowers in swiftly passing victorias
or rattling cabs, or rippling over the sidewalks into
the wide vestibules where Milwaukee welcomed her
guests; the noisy rush of the city; the ceaseless
rattle and clang of the electric-cars which were like
an orchestral accompaniment to the magnetic excitement
pulsing under the decorous calm of the meetings, in
the flower-decked theaters, or eddying through the
foyer; these at first dazed the woman unused to clubs.
But only for a brief time. Presently, she began
to be consulted; her advice was asked; she made a
speech in a meeting of the state delegation.
There was, in the speech, her natural clear sense which
goes for something always and everywhere there
was, also, the mark in voice and speech and pose,
of her years’ training with the teachers.
“I believe you could be heard all right, in
the theater,” said the president of the state
delegation, afterward, “will you make a motion
or two for us, this afternoon?” She made the
motions; and, strangely enough, she wasn’t so
frightened as she had been in the state delegation;
in fact, she proposed a simple short cut through an
unnecessary dilemma with not much feeling beyond wonderment
that so many clever women could get themselves into
such a tangle. The applause and delight of her
companions of the delegation touched her. “I’m
in it, again,” she thought, railing at her own
vanity, but curiously pleased. Now, her thoughts
were back, groping through the years when she was not
“in it.” Not the days of her youth,
not at all; she had been the leader of her mates,
an ingenious, tolerant, easy-going leader, admired
and loved, shining among them by right of two years
in an eastern boarding-school and a trip to Europe.
Not in her early married life, either;
although, at first, Darius was poor and the great
wagon manufactory was but a daring experiment.
In those days she knew all her husband’s hopes
and plans as well as his troubles. He used to
say, often, that she had a good business head.
Those days they lived in a little brown wooden house
with a five-foot piazza; and Darius mowed the tiny
lawn himself; and she put up her own preserves and
made all the children’s clothes pretty
clothes they were, too; she was a housewife whose
praise was in all the churches. But it does not
follow that she had ceased to be a leader, far from
it; she was the president of the “Ladies’
Sewing Society” of her church; and of the first
woman’s club, classically named the “Clionian.”
She was a progressive spirit; she it was who introduced
the regular motion into the business meetings; before
her reign it having been the artless custom of the
societies to talk until the discussion either languished
or grew too violent, when some promoter of harmony
would call out, “Let us put it to vote,”
whereupon there would be a few timid ayes and a self-respecting
silence instead of no; and the measure would be adopted.
Pertaining to this custom was an inevitable sequel
of plaintive criticism from all the modest souls who
“didn’t like to speak,” but who
were full of foreboding wisdom. Myrtle Hardy was
one of the few who could speak; and she was considered
to speak very much to the point. Those days,
she was keenly interested in all the life of a young,
hopeful, bustling little western city. She belonged
to a musical society and would rise at five in the
morning to practice, and she was one of an anxious
band of women who had bought a library and were running
an amateur entertainment bureau to support it.
Then, Darrie was in home-made knickerbockers; Myrtie
was a sweet, little, loving hoyden who was her mother’s
despair because she would climb trees in her white
frocks; Ralph was a baby, and the two little girls
that died were their mother’s tiny helpers,
with the willingest little hands and feet. Sitting
there in the crowded and noisy theater, a quiver ran
over the mother’s face. Her friends had
forgotten, the brothers and sisters had forgotten,
even Darius seemed to forget; but, day and night, she
remembered the eager little faces, lighting so happily
at her praise, the shining little heads that used
to nestle against her heart. The two died of
scarlet fever in one terrible week. In that week,
the first gray threads had crept into Myrtle Hardy’s
beautiful brown hair. She was nurse and comforter
and helper, then, to Darius. She felt her eyes
cloud with the vision of him, as he flung himself
on the babies’ little bed, sobbing in the terrible,
racking passion of a man’s grief. “Not
now, dear, not now, not till the others are safe,”
she had whispered; “we have them still; they
need us.”
She wondered was it after the babies
went that she began to drop out of things. Somehow
she was so busy comforting Darius and nursing the others
back to health, and crowding back her own ceaseless
grief out of sight; and thinking of cheerful things
to say and new interests for the others, that the
library passed out of corporate existence and into
endowed rest with hardly a thought from her.
Nearly at the same time, the musical society perished
in a cataclysm, due to the sensitive musical temperament,
and the literary society died of inanition, after browsing
through literature from Milton to Dante; and after
each member had written one or two papers, thus sating
the natural curiosity of the other members. Myrtle
did not lift a hand to save either of the societies.
She heard the wrathful accusations of the musical warriors,
and put in the unappreciated word for peace, but did
not resent its failure. She consoled the literary
mourners with the reflection that they could read
up about things in the magazines or the books of the
new library; and masked her secret listlessness with
perfunctory regret. Long after, she came to wonder
whether it was not she who went into prison, then;
rather than the world that left her on one side.
Did she not gently but rigidly exclude the friends
who would have called upon her and shut herself apart
with her own? Continually, she used to pray for
cheerfuless, for patience; but it never occurred to
her to pray for interest. When other societies
were formed, she did not care to join them; she followed
her own advice and read apart by herself. By and
by, although so much more of a personage, she was
no longer beset with invitations. The younger
women organized a new club with new methods; and Myrtle
Hardy read her books, peacefully, on her wide piazzas,
amid her plants and flowers. When Myrtie came
back from college, Darius asked her wasn’t she
going to help Myrtie by joining the club with her?
“Dear, no,” said she, blithely, “they
are all so young.”
“Why don’t you get up
a club of your own, then, and take in the other left
outs?” said he.
“I don’t fancy women’s
clubs much; you know I did belong to them; they are
half-baked things, and they take their own improvement
with such deadly seriousness. And it is such
a smattering that you get in them. A smattering
is always forgotten; unless you know a lot about a
thing you forget it all.”
“Oh, well, you know best what
you like,” said Darius, easily; “I only
thought you seemed a little dull.” He dropped
the subject; but she repeated his words, often to
herself; he never had thought her dull, before.
She noticed that Myrtie did not talk of her club.
She was puzzled. Outwardly, Myrtie was a handsome
young woman with a highbred repose of manner which
she had acquired as a college editor and the protector
of new girls; inwardly, she was still shy, desperately
in dread of awkwardness, and brimming with enthusiasms.
Not until she was about to be married did her mother
find a trace of her little girl in this gently haughty
young creature. And, then, there remained only
Myrtie’s last photographs and Myrtie’s
empty chamber, and the weekly letters for her mother’s
hungry heart. “I am not sure I know her,”
she would often muse, those days, “I am only
sure she doesn’t know me!”
Myrtie lived in Chicago; she had married
very well indeed; and had a prosperous husband who
was a graduate of Harvard and dallied with reform;
and there were two sweet little children who called
Mrs. Hardy “Granny”; and Myrtie always
consulted her mother when they were ill; she was a
devoted daughter. “When my dear mother was
alive,” said Mrs. Hardy, smiling rather grimly,
“grannies were not very nice old cronies who
smoked pipes in the chimney corner; and ‘Grandma’
was good enough for any grandmother; now, ‘Grandma’
is provincial and I am a granny, myself.
It is a little puzzling.”
The children were all out of the house,
now. Ralph, the youngest, was at college; she
was well acquainted with him; she used to write him
about the books she read and he wrote her about the
boys and football; she knew a great deal about football.
She lived in a stately new colonial house with quaint
little window-panes wherever they would not obstruct
the view, and snowy tiled bath-rooms, such as no colonial
ever knew; and terraces decked with pink and blue
hydrangeas; and dazzling window gardens. Myrtie
had been as kind as possible about the house; and
Myrtie’s taste was charming; it had been an education
in colonial history as well as architecture to have
Myrtie help build the house; even the architect was
deferential to her. Across the street was Darrie’s
less costly but no less correctly charming house.
Hester had done Myrtie’s architectural bidding,
also. Darrie was the best of sons. She was
proud of him; and his father depended more and more
on him. She loved his wife; and his children
were her vivid delight. Darrie used to fetch
her flowers and new plants for the window gardens;
and tell her about the children’s funny sayings.
Darius, her husband, grew kinder and more generous
all the time; he gave her a check-book of her own;
she told her old friends that she had the best husband
and children in the world; and that she was a grateful
woman; she duly remembered her abundant mercies in
her prayers; and yet and yet she began to
feel herself retired. A most respectable position,
that of a retired officer; but, somehow, generals
and admirals do not covet it. Nor did Myrtle
Hardy. She had been in the center of her own stage;
now she felt herself most gently, most civilly, pushed
into the wings. Her daughter-in-law, with all
her admiration and her dutiful respect, had interests
which she never discussed; had a point of view and
ideals which were outside her comprehension.
She felt fatigued and puzzled when she heard the younger
generation’s familiar speech with itself.
“I am not in it,” she said to herself.
Darius, too, no longer consulted her; the old fashion
of confidence had somehow slipped away; he had not
very much to say when they were alone; and he was
beginning to call her “Mother.” Myrtle
Hardy considered. She thought for weeks and thought
hard. She sat in her sewing-room, up-stairs,
where were the only two rocking-chairs that Myrtie’s
impeccable taste had allowed to abide in the house.
She sat first in one and then in the other of the
chairs, her needlework unheeded in her lap; and watched
her little grandson and his sister playing while the
nurse made an interminable German lace on the back
porch; and just across from her window, Hester, her
daughter-in-law, sat amid a heap of books, reading
and making notes. “That child has been
studying for three months, every spare moment, on her
paper about ‘Scientific Plumbing in the Modern
Mansion.’” Mrs. Hardy muttered, with a
frown, “well, I hope she will know something,
if she keeps her mind! That was not the way we
prepared club papers in my day; we decided on our
subjects one meeting and we read our essays on them
the next; and two weeks was enough for us; now, they
spend a half year making a programme and have it hanging
over them a year in advance.” She watched
her daughter-in-law, smiling grimly; then, suddenly,
she rose, with the motion of one who has come to a
decision. “At least they are not superficial,
nowadays,” she said, “and perhaps it is
better to take one’s self too seriously than
not seriously enough. And after all, Hester did
find out what was the matter with the laundry faucets.”
One day she told her daughter-in-law
that she wanted to join a class in parliamentary law.
“But we haven’t any,”
objected Mrs. Darius Hardy, Jr., meekly.
“Then get up one,” said
the one time president of clubs. “Get all
you can to join a class, send for a teacher, and I
will make up the deficit, in the subscription list.”
A parliamentary teacher of renown
came. She was also a teacher of expression that
was her poetical word. Hester caught her breath
the first time her mother-in-law rose in the class
to “speak to the motion.” She embraced
her with beaming eyes and the prettiest rose of delight
on her cheeks. “Oh, how did you learn it?”
she sighed, happily, “you are the best of us
all!”
“I took some private lessons
in Chicago,” said Mrs. Hardy her quiet
manner did not betray an unexpected thrill.
“You’re beautiful!” cried
Hester.
After that, Hester always seconded
her mother-in-law’s motions; and fought in the
mimic debates as valiantly on her side as a natural
reticence would let her. It was odd (to Mrs. Hardy)
what a different relation grew up between them; a
sense of comradeship and the pleasures of partisanship,
wherein it is not only the leader who exults in the
winning fray, the follower has a simpler and a nobler
joy. The first natural consequence of Hester’s
admiration was that she begged her mother-in-law to
join her club. Before the end of the year, Mrs.
Hardy was elected president of the club; before the
end of the next year, she was burrowing in books and
magazines, as absorbed as Hester, in the conduct of
Great Britain to her colonies. She found herself
suddenly interested in the newspapers; Darrie talked
politics with her; and they were no longer unintelligible.
“Whew, isn’t mother getting
cultivated!” Darius whispered to his boy; and
they both grinned.
“She’s growing handsomer, too,”
said Darius the younger.
“I hope she won’t go to
any of those fakirs in the newspapers who paint
you all over, so’s you crack when you laugh,”
commented Darius, anxiously, “and, say, Darrie,
there’s a way they have, nowadays, of burning
off your skin and giving you a new skin they
call it being ‘done over’; it must
be frightful torture I’m not going
to have your mother’s face sizzled up, that
fashion.”
“She doesn’t need it;
mother’s skin is lovely,” said the loyal
son.
“Her not needing it is no reason
why she won’t want it being a woman Darrie.
Your mother is the most sensible woman in the world,
Darrie; but she’s a woman. And I’m
not sure whether a woman ought to monkey with her
age, the way mother is doing. What do you suppose
I saw with my own eyes, yesterday? There was
mother, swinging her arms over her head and bowing
like a heathen Chinee, until her slender fingers touched
the floor; and then she went to kicking over the chairs high
kicks!”
“Oh, that’s only Delsarte they
only do that to limber up and make themselves graceful.
Hetty can kick the chandelier.”
Myrtle caught echoes of this conversation;
and was base enough to listen behind her sewing-room
curtains, giving no sign. It was true that a
change had come over her, and that her mirror reflected
smarter toilets, a different carriage, and a fresher
charm. For one reason, she looked younger because
she was much more cheerful. “I am a child
with a new toy,” she would say to herself.
But there is no question that she found a pungent
enjoyment in her new activity. One of the perpetual
wonders of life is how small a figure the stake cuts
in the game. It is infinitely more exciting to
make money, for example, than to have it. To keep
our souls in repair they need exercise; and the vicissitudes,
the emotions, the excitement of a career, happily
do not depend on the size of the stage. The great
stake, the large stage, count; but they count less
than their claims. What comes to more than the
pomp of success (as the vulgar name an intangible
thing) is the elation of using all one’s powers;
nor is there any tawdry applause comparable to the
rich and fine content of accomplishment. But
often Myrtle caught Darius’s pondering eyes and
wondered to herself what he was thinking. Really,
Darius was experiencing the rather piquant emotions
of a man who discovers an entirely new creature in
his own wife. By a natural transition his thoughts
went back to the days when he was courting Myrtle Danforth,
and “couldn’t make her out;” by
an equally natural process of selection, he fumbled
through dim passages in his soul, striving to see the
relation between this assured and graceful woman of
affairs and the joyous young beauty that he had won,
the high-hearted comrade of his poverty and struggles,
the tender comforter of his sorrows. A hundred
little trivial, affecting incidents rose out of the
hazy years to gripe his heart. He felt a novel
shyness, however; and the only token of his feelings
(outside the check-book) was a habit he had fallen
into of watching his wife when she was not looking.
Of course, she was aware of it; she
was thinking of it at this moment, while the Massachusetts
woman behind her unpacked her conscience on her nearest
Indiana neighbor.
“And how does Indiana stand?”
said the evangelist, finally.
“Well, if you ask me,”
said the Indianian, wearily, “we have troubles
of our own; and we are not thinking much about it!”
At this, her companion (also from
Massachusetts, but with a sense of humor), giggled
and essayed to cover her indecorum by asking Mrs. Hardy
if she had attended the industrial sessions. “I
have tried to go to them,” she confessed, later,
after they had become confidential. “My
husband is a manufacturer, and I was anxious to see
whether they would try to get light on the questions
that they are tackling, or would simply form an opinion
beforehand and talk about it.”
“Well, how did they strike you?”
“They didn’t strike me
at all; I went to two of them; but the first one,
two southern acquaintances of mine lured me out into
a committee-room, to tell me the dreadful things Massachusetts
was going to do about the color question not
one of which had entered our heads, by the way and
the other meeting, I sat back in the hall and couldn’t
hear anything, and a Massachusetts friend came in,
very calm but deeply excited, and got me out in the
hall to tell me the plots of the Georgia delegation.
Between them, I didn’t hear a word of the industrial
question. I’m told Missouri has been studying
preventive legislation in regard to woman and child
labor for the last year; what did they decide to recommend?”
“Well,” said Mrs. Hardy,
drily, “you see they were studying for a year;
if they had taken the subject for a month or two, no
doubt they would have had opinions; but as it was,
they didn’t recommend anything. But what
you say about the sessions made me think. I find
that there are two classes of delegates, those who
are interested in the meetings and those who simply
go to the meetings to get a better chance to pull
wires. It makes me more at sea than ever about
the object of the federation. What do you
think it is?”
The Massachusetts woman meditated.
She was a handsome woman, a woman with ancestors,
it was evident, for the blue and gold of the Colonial
Dames badge, and the enamel star and scarlet ribbon
of the Order of Colonial Governors illuminated the
white chiffon of her bodice; and there were five bars
on the scarlet ribbon. “My idea of the object
is simply that it is a clearing-house,” said
she; “and so far it is democratic, for it brings
us all together; and I,” said the descendant
of governors and warriors, “I’m
democratic. Look at us. It is not only that
we represent so many different classes, we represent
so many sections of the country. In fact, about
this color question, I feel that it is more important
for the north and the south to get acquainted and
friendly, working together, than it is for us to give
the opportunities of the federation to a few colored
people.”
“I don’t look at it that
way, it is a question of right and wrong” thus
the ardent soul from Massachusetts unfurled her banner
to the breeze “are you going to do
what is right or what is expedient?” The smouldering
fire which had made the deck hot walking all through
the meetings, showed signs of breaking out of cover;
everybody in hearing craned her neck; there were murmurs
of approval and polite sniffings of dissent to the
right and to the left. The Massachusetts woman
said “Life is a compromise;” and shrugged
her shoulders. Mrs. Hardy put up the white flag
in a mild sentence: “Mrs. Lowe is calling
us to order, I think.”
The convention had passed safely to
the ballot. The opposition had sprung its mines;
and the regulars had discharged their heavy artillery
behind the proper parliamentary subterfuges. The
undecided voters had, as usual, asked to take back
their ballots, and as usual had been refused.
The excitement had risen until it showed in white or
flushed faces and strained voices, in clapping, and
hisses; but the chairman’s inscrutable calm
never changed, and through it all she held the convention
perfectly in hand.
Two men had safely run the gauntlet
of ticket takers, and were seated in the lower gallery.
They were a middle-aged man, dark, portly, carefully
dressed in silver-gray tweeds, with a silk shirt;
and a young man, dark, slender, in a lighter suit,
with a stiff white collar on his pink negligee shirt.
There was an air of distinction about both men; they
looked to be men of importance in their own locality,
men accustomed to command and deference; but nothing
of gentler modesty and meekness than their demeanor
can be imagined. They shrank back in their seats
and sat close to each other, as one will observe timid
children sitting, who have wandered into a strange
house.
“You you don’t
suppose they will put us out? eh, Darrie?” said
the elder, in a low voice, “not now?”
“Of course not,” responded
Darrie, with simulated lightness; “look there
to the left, there’s Myrtie. That president
is a good presiding officer; you would not guess all
this row is over her, she’s absolutely impartial by
Jove!”
“What’s the matter? Do you see mother
anywhere?”
“No, sir; did you catch that,
the secretary’s explanation of the parliamentary
question? Pretty clear, I call it; but they’re
getting in all their points, I observe, working questions
of privilege for all they are worth.”
“Very clever, very clever,”
assented Darius; “there’s Hester, mother
isn’t with her; you don’t suppose
mother would stay away, this afternoon?”
“Never; this is the election afternoon.”
“Myrtie said mother was very
much admired and sought after, lots of invitations;
maybe she has gone out to some tea ”
“They wouldn’t have anything
this afternoon; don’t you see how keyed up they
all are?”
“I thought I was monstrous clever
planning all this,” pursued Darius, with a knitted
brow; “your mother forgot this was our anniversary,
but I didn’t; I have her present in my pocket;
and the dinner ordered; and I was expecting to surprise
her; but if she isn’t here she couldn’t
have gone home?”
“Of course not there
she is, don’t you see her? looking fresh as
paint!”
A lady had risen, her voice, mellow
and clear, dove through the sonorous buzz of the hall.
“Why it’s mother!”
cried Darius, “and if she isn’t taking
an appeal from the chair; mother has her nerve with
her, to-day.”
Darrie grinned; but as he watched
his father’s face kindle, his own changed; he
laid his hand on his father’s, nodding, softly:
“I tell you, mother’s great,”
said he.
“That little dark-eyed lady
is speaking on mother’s side” Darius
was leaning forward with excited interest “isn’t
she a pretty creature, she’s little but,
oh my! How clearly she puts it; these southerners
have a natural gift of oratory. Don’t think
much of that woman who’s trying to call mother
down!”
He was as eager as a boy, the man
whose cool head and hard sense had won him a great
fortune; his eyes glistened, the color crept into his
cheek; and he drew a long sigh when the appeal was
withdrawn. “Very pretty, Darrie,”
he said, “appeal withdrawn, but they have got
in their work on the voters; chairman had to decide
against her own friends, and did it like a Roman soldier.
The extraordinary thing to me, Darrie, is how well
they are all keeping their temper. Darrie, didn’t
you think mother’s voice was good when she spoke;
how’d she learn to speak so well?”
“Oh, she took lessons,”
returned Darrie, easily; “Hester got her into
them; Hester and mother are great pals.”
“I know; Hester’s a remarkable
girl, Darrie; she has always appreciated your mother.
Begun again, have they? Started something else
while the ballots are counted. Like a continuous
show, isn’t it?”
He listened with a slackened zest
while the questions of reorganization and details
of the duties of chairmen pattered through the hour,
the rain after the thunder-storm. Then, unexpectedly,
Mrs. Hardy made her little speech. It was an
excellent little speech, good-natured, full of sense,
and with a dash of humor. At first, she was a
little nervous, but she was too interested in her
subject to be nervous more than an instant. Had
she known of the presence of two auditors in the gallery,
perhaps her composure had wavered. There could
be no doubt regarding their agitation. They turned
pale and clutched each other; then, first on Darrie’s,
next on his father’s features, dawned and spread
a light of exceeding confidence; with shameless effrontery considering
their relationship they stimulated the
applause; they beamed over the hits; and at the close
they were radiant. Without a word Darius held
out his hand to his son, who wrung it. Then,
they both took a long, long breath of relief and satisfaction.
Darius was the first to speak: “My son,”
said he, “I have known your mother for forty
years and have been her husband for thirty-three,
but she can surprise me still!”
“Mother certainly is
great,” assented Darrie, solemnly; he added his
own little feather of marital triumph: “Hetty
always told me so,” said he.
“Look at those women all around
her,” said Darius, “patting her on the
shoulder and whispering; they know. Darrie,
I’ll bet you anything, there hasn’t been
another speech in this convention that has put things
as clearly as mother’s.”
Myrtle started when she saw her husband
and son smiling in the doorway. Her daughter-in-law
was on one side, her daughter on the other, half a
dozen of her delegation radiated complacency in her
wake. “Hasn’t she covered us with
glory?” one of the followers called, gleefully
to another. And a little din of compliments fell
upon Darius’ ears. It is pleasant to reflect
that all over the hall similar groups were exulting
unselfishly over their own prowess and their own heroines.
Little did Darius Hardy concern himself with them.
He took his wife under his arm with a proud and blissful
smile. He waved a direction at Darrie: “You
take the girls, Darrie, you’ll find a cab, somewhere;
I want your mother to myself. Now, Myrtle, if
sated vanity can demand any more, I’ll give
it to you in the carriage!”
A few minutes later, she was gazing,
through a happy mist, at the gems on her heart-shaped
locket, murmuring: “And I thought you had
forgotten the day. And you planning this lovely,
lovely surprise for me. Oh, I am so glad, Dar,
I didn’t know you were there, I couldn’t
have said a word! Did I were
you was it passable?”
“You’re fishing!”
chuckled he; and he kissed her hand. But he whispered
in her ear; and she blushed like a young girl.
Presently he laughed. “By
the way, Myrtle, you haven’t told me! Have
you discovered what is the object of the federation?”
“Certainly,” said she,
“I don’t know what it is for others, but
in my case it is to help me find myself and
my husband!”