She looked up when he entered, and there was in her young girl face the

very slightest shade of recognition. She could not help it, for Clemency

was candor itself. Then she bowed very formally, and shook hands

sedately when Doctor Gordon introduced James as Doctor Elliot, his new

assistant, and carried off her part very well. James was not so

successful.

He colored and was somewhat confused, but nobody appeared to

notice it. Clemency went on relating how glad she was that Uncle Tom met

her as she was coming home from Annie Lipton's. "I am never afraid,"

said she, and her little face betrayed the lie, "but I was tired, and

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besides I was beginning to be cold, for I went out without my fur."

"You should not have gone without it. It grows so cold when the sun goes

down," said Mrs. Ewing. Then a chime of Japanese bells was heard which

announced dinner.

"Doctor Elliot will be glad of dinner," said Doctor Gordon. "He has

walked all the way from Gresham."

Clemency looked at him with approval, and tried to look as if she had

never seen him walking in her life. "That is a good walk," said she.

"Twenty-five miles it must be. If more men walked instead of working

poor horses all the time, it would be better for them."

"That is a hint for your Uncle Tom," said Gordon laughingly.

"I never hint," said Clemency. "It is just a plain statement. Men are

walking animals. They could travel as well as horses in the course of

time if they only put their minds to it."

"Well, your old uncle's bones must be saved, even at the expense of the

horse's," said Doctor Gordon.

"Bones are improved by use," said Clemency severely, as she took her

seat at the dinner-table. They all laughed. The girl herself relaxed her

pretty face with a whimsical smile. It was quite evident that Clemency

was the spoiled and petted darling of the house, and that she traded

innocently upon the fact. The young doctor, although his first

impression of the elder woman was still upon him, yet realized the

charm of the young girl. The older woman was, as it were, crowned with

an aureole of perfection, but the young girl was crowned with

possibilities which dazzled with mystery. She looked prettier, now that

her outer garments were removed, and her thick crown of ash-blonde hair

was revealed. The lamp lit her eyes into bluer flame. She was a darling

of a young girl, and more a darling because she had the sweetest

confidence in everybody thinking her one.

However, James Elliot, sitting in the well-appointed dining-room, which

was more like a city house than a little New Jersey dwelling, did not

for a second retreat from his first impression of Mrs. Ewing. Behind the

coffee-urn sat the woman with whom he had not fallen in love, that was

too poor a term to use. He had become a worshipper. He felt himself,

body and soul, prostrate before the Divinity of Womanhood itself. He

realized the grandeur of the abstract in the individual. What was any

spoiled, sweet young girl to that? And Mrs. Ewing was, in truth, a

wonderful creature. She was a large woman with a great quantity of

blue-black hair, which had the ripples one sees in antique statues. Her

eyes, black at first glance, were in reality dark blue. Her face gave

one a never-ending surprise. James had not known that a woman could be

so beautiful. Vague comparisons with the Greek Helen, or Cleopatra, came

into his head. Now and then he stole a glance at her. He dared not

often. She did not talk much, but he was rather pleased with that fact,

although her voice was so sweet and gracious. Speech in a creature like

that was not an essential. It might even be an excrescence upon a

perfection. It did not occur to the dazed mind of her worshipper that

Mrs. Ewing might have very simple and ordinary reasons for not

talking--that she might be tired or ill, or preoccupied. But after a

number of those stolen glances, James discovered with a great pang, as

if one should see for the first time that the arms of the Venus were

really gone, when his fancy had supplied them, that the woman did not

look well. In spite of her beauty, there was ill-health evident in her

face. James was a mere tyro in his profession as yet, but certain

infallible signs were there which he could not mistake. They were the

signs of suffering, possibly of very great suffering. She ate very

little, James noticed, although she made a pretense of eating as much

as any one. James saw that Doctor Gordon also noticed it. When the maid

was taking away Mrs. Ewing's plate, he spoke with a gruffness which

astonished the young man. "For Heaven's sake, why don't you eat your

dinner, Clara?" said he. "Emma, replace Mrs. Ewing's plate. Now, Clara,

eat your dinner." To James's utter astonishment, Mrs. Ewing obeyed like

a child. She ate every morsel, although she could not restrain her

expression of loathing. When the salad and dessert were brought on she

ate them also.

Doctor Gordon watched her with what seemed, to the young man, positive

brutality. His mouth under his heavy beard quivered perceptibly whenever

he looked at his sister eating, his forehead became corrugated, and his

deep-set eyes sparkled. James was heartily glad when dinner was over,

and, at Doctor Gordon's request, he followed him into his office.

Doctor Gordon's office was a small room at the back of the house. It had

an outer door communicating with a path which led to the stable. Two

sides of the room were lined with medical books, and two with bottles

containing diverse colored mixtures. A hanging lamp was over the center

of a long table in the middle of the room. Around it dangled prisms,

which cast rainbow colors over everything. The first thing which struck

one on entering the room was the extraordinary color scheme: the dull

gleams of the books, the medicine bottles which had lights like jewels,

and over all the flickers of prismatic hues. The long table was covered

with corks, empty bottles, books, a medicine-case, and newspapers,

besides a mighty inkstand and writing materials. There were also a box

of cigars, a great leather tobacco pouch, and, interspersed among all, a

multitude of pipes. The doctor drew a chair beside this chaotic table

lit with rainbow lights, and invited James to sit down. "Sit down a

moment," he said. "Will you have a pipe or a cigar?"

"Cigar, please," replied James. The doctor pushed the box toward him.

James realized immediately a ten-cent cigar at the least when he began

to smoke. Doctor Gordon filled a pipe mechanically. His face still wore

the gloomy, almost fierce, expression which it had assumed at table. He

was a handsome man in a rough, sketchy fashion. His face was blurred

with a gray grizzle of beard. He wore his hair rather long, and he had

a fashion of running his fingers through it, which made it look like a

thick brush. He dressed rather carelessly, still like a gentleman. His

clothes were slouchy, and needed brushing, but his linen was immaculate.

Doctor Gordon smoked in silence, which his young assistant was too shy

to break. The elder man finished his pipe, then he rose with an

impatient gesture and shook himself like a great shaggy dog. "Come,

young man," said he, "we don't want to spend the evening like this. Get

your hat and coat."

James obeyed, and the two men left the office by the outer door which

opened on the stable. As they came around by the front of the house

Clemency stood in the doorway.

"Are you going out, you and Doctor Elliot, Uncle Tom?" she called.

"Yes, dear; why?"

"Patients?"

"No; we are going down to Georgie K.'s. Tell your mother to go to bed at

once."

When the two men were out in the street, walking briskly in the keen

frosty air, James ventured a question. "Mrs. Ewing is not well, is she?"

he said. He fairly started at the way in which his question was

received. Doctor Gordon turned upon him even fiercely.

"She is perfectly well, perfectly well," he replied.

"She does not look--" began James.

"When you are as old as I am you can venture to diagnose on a woman's

looks," said Gordon. "Clara is perfectly well."

James said no more. They walked on in silence under a pale sky. Above a

low mountain range on their right was a faint light which indicated the

coming of the moon. The ground was frozen in hard ridges. James walked

behind the doctor on the narrow blue stone walk which served as

sidewalk.

"This town has made no provision whatever for courting couples," said

Doctor Gordon suddenly, and to James's astonishment his whole manner and

voice had changed. It was far from gloomy. It was jocular even.

James laughed. "Yes, it would be difficult for two to walk arm in arm,

however loving," he returned.

"Just so," said the doctor, "and the funny part of it is that this

narrow sidewalk was intentional."

"Not for such a purpose?"

"Exactly so. It was given to the town by a rich spinster who died about

twenty years ago. It was given in her will on condition that it should

not be more than two feet wide."

"For that reason?"

"Just that reason. She had been jilted in her youth, and her heart had

been wrung by the sight of her rival passing her very window where she

sat watching for her lover, arm in arm with him. It was in summer, and

the dirt sidewalk was dry. She made up her mind, then and there, that

that sort of thing should be prevented."

They had just reached a handsome old house standing close to the narrow

sidewalk. In fact, its windows opened directly upon it.

"This is the house," the doctor said in corroboration. James laughed,

but he wondered within himself if he were being told fish tales. Doctor

Gordon made him feel so very young that he resented it. He resented it

the more when he realized the new glow of adoration in his heart for

that older woman whom they had left behind. He began wondering about

her: how much older she was. He said to himself that he did not care if

she were old enough to be his mother, his grandmother even, there was no

one in the whole world like her.

Then they came to the hotel, the Evarts House. It was rather

pretentious, well built, with great columns in front supporting double

verandas. It was also well lighted. It was evidently far above the usual

order of a road house. Doctor Gordon entered, with James at his heels.

They went into the great low room at the right of the door, which was

the bar-room. Behind the bar stood an enormous man, yellow haired and

yellow bearded, dispensing drinks. The whole low interior was dim with

tobacco smoke, and scented with various liquors and spices. There was on

one side a great fireplace, in which stood earthen pitchers, in which

cider was being mulled with red-hot pokers, eager vinous faces watching.

Nobody was intoxicated, but there was a general hum of hilarity and

gusto of life about the place, an animal enjoyment of good cheer and

jollity. It was in truth not respectable to get entirely drunk in Alton.

It was genteel to become "set up," exhilarated, but the real gutter form

of inebriety was frowned upon to a much greater extent than in many

places where there was less license.

"Hullo!" sang out Doctor Gordon as he entered. Immediately a grin of

comradeship overspread the pink face of the yellow-haired giant behind

the bar. "Hullo!" he responded. "Just step into the other room, and I'll

be there right away."

James followed Doctor Gordon into what was evidently the state parlor of

the hotel. There was haircloth furniture, and a mahogany table, with

various stains of conviviality upon its polished surface. There was a

fire on the hearth, and on the mantel stood some gilded vases and a

glass case of wax-flowers, also a stuffed canary under a glass shade,

pathetic on his little twig. Doctor Gordon pointed to the flowers and

the canary. "Poor old man lost his wife, when he had been married two

years," he said. "She and the baby both died. That was before I came

here. Damned if I wouldn't have pulled them through. That was her bird,

and she made those fool flowers, poor little thing. I suppose if the

hotel were to take fire Georgie K. would go for them before all the cash

in the till."

"He hasn't married again?"

"Married again! It's my belief he'd shoot the man that mentioned it."

Then Georgie K. entered, his rosy face distended with a smile of the

most intense hospitality, and before Doctor Gordon had a chance to

introduce James, he said, "What'll you take, gentlemen?"

"This is my new assistant, from Gresham, Doctor Elliot," said Gordon.

Georgie K. made a bow, and scraped his foot at the same time with a

curiously boyish gesture. "What'll you take?" he asked again. That was

evidently his formula of hospitality, which must never be delayed.

"Apple-jack," responded Doctor Gordon promptly. "You had better take

apple-jack too, young man. Georgie K. has gin that beats the record, and

peach brandy, but when it comes to his apple-jack--it's worth the whole

State of New Jersey."

"All right," answered James.

Soon he found himself seated at the stained old mahogany table with the

two men, and between two glasses, a bottle, and a pitcher of hot water.

Doctor Gordon dealt a pack of dirty cards while the hotel keeper poured

the apple-jack. James could not help staring at the elder doctor with

more and more amazement. He seemed to assimilate perfectly with his

surroundings. The tormented expression had gone from his face. He was

simply convivial, and of the same sort as Georgie K. He no longer

looked even a gentleman. He had become of the soil, the New Jersey soil.

As they drank and played, he told stories, and roared with laughter at

them. The stories also belonged to the soil, they were folk lore, wild,

coarse, but full of humanity. Although Doctor Gordon drank freely of the

rich mellow liquor, it did not apparently affect him. His cheeks above

his gray furze of beard became slightly flushed, that was all.

James drank rather sparingly. The stuff seemed to him rather fiery, and

he remembered the goddess in the doctor's house. He could imagine her

look of high disdain at him should he return under the influence of

liquor. Besides, he did not particularly care for the apple-jack.

It was midnight before they left. Georgie K. went to the door with them,

and he and the doctor shook hands heartily. "Come again," said Georgie

K., "and the sooner the better, and bring the young Doc. We'll make him

have a good time."

Until they were near home, Doctor Gordon continued his strangely

incongruous conversation, telling story after story, and shouting with

laughter. When they came in sight of the house Gordon stopped suddenly

and leaned against a great maple beside the road. He stared at the

house, two of the upper windows of which were lighted, and gave a great

sigh, almost a groan. James stopped also and stared at him. He wondered

if the apple-jack had gone to the doctor's head after all. "What is the

matter?" he ventured.

"Nothing, except the race is at a finish, and I am caught as I always

am," replied Doctor Gordon.

"The race--" repeated James vaguely.

"Yes, the race with myself. Myself has caught up with me, God help me,

and I am in its clutches. The time may come when you will try to race

with self, my boy. Let me tell you, you will never win. You will tire

yourself out, and make a damned idiot of yourself for nothing. I shall

race again to-morrow. I never learn the lesson, but perhaps you can, you

are young. Well, come along. Please be as quiet as you can when you go

into the house. My sister may be asleep. She is perfectly well, but she

is a little nervous. I need not repeat my request that you do not

mention your adventure with Clemency this afternoon to her."

"Certainly not," said James. He walked on beside the doctor, and entered

the house, more and more mystified. James was not sure, but he thought

he heard the faintest little moan from upstairs. He glanced at Doctor

Gordon's face, and it was again the face of the man whom he had seen

before going to Georgie K.'s.




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