<h3 align="center">Chapter VIII</h3>
<p>That evening Lyman Risley came to see Cynthia. He looked at her
anxiously and scrutinizingly when he entered the room, and did not
respond to her salutation.</p>
<p>“Well, I have seen the child,” he said, in a hushed
voice, with a look towards the door as he seated himself before the
fire and spread out his hands towards the blaze. He looked nervous
and chilly.</p>
<p>“How did she look?” asked Cynthia.</p>
<p>“Why in the name of common-sense, Cynthia,” he said,
abruptly, without noticing her query, “if you had to give that
child china for a souvenir, didn't you give her something besides
Royal Sèvres?” Lyman Risley undoubtedly looked younger
than Cynthia, but his manner even more than his looks gave him the
appearance of comparative youth. There was in it a vehemence and
impetuosity almost like that of a boy. Cynthia, with her strained
nervous intensity, seemed very much older.</p>
<p>“Why not?” said she.</p>
<p>“Why not? Well, it is fortunate for you that those people
have a knowledge for the most part of the fundamental properties of
the drama of life, such as bread-and-butter, and a table from which
to eat it, and a knife with which to cut it, and a bed in which to
sleep, and a stove and coal, and so on, and so on, and that the
artistic accessories, such as Royal Sèvres, which is no better
than common crockery for the honest purpose of holding the tea for
the solace of the thirsty mouth of labor, is beneath their
attention.”</p>
<p>“How does the child look, Lyman?” asked Cynthia
Lennox. She was leaning back in a great crimson-covered chair before
the fire, a long, slender, graceful shape, in a clinging white silk
gown which was a favorite of hers for house wear. The light in the
room was subdued, coming mostly through crimson shades, and the
faint, worn lines on Cynthia's face did not show; it looked, with her
soft crown of gray hair, like a cameo against the crimson background
of the chair. The man beside her looked at her with that impatience
of his masculine estate and his superior youth, and yet with the
adoration which nothing could conquer. He had passed two-thirds of
his life, metaphorically, at this woman's feet, and had formed a
habit of admiration and lovership which no facts nor developments
could ever alter. He was frowning, he replied with a certain
sharpness, and yet he leaned towards her as he spoke, and his eyes
followed her long, graceful lines and noted the clear delicacy of her
features against the crimson background. “How the child
looked—how the child looked; Cynthia, you do not realize what
you did. You have not the faintest realization of what it means for a
woman to keep a lost child hidden away as you did, when its parents
and half the city were hunting for it. I tell you I did not know what
the consequences might be to you if it were found out. There is wild
blood in a city like this, and even the staid old New England stream
is capable of erratic currents. I tell you I have had a day of
dreadful anxiety, and it was worse because I had to be guarded. I
dared scarcely speak to any one about the matter. I have listened on
street corners; I have made errands to newspaper offices. I meant to
get you away if— Well, never mind—I tell you, you do not
realize what you did, Cynthia.”</p>
<p>Cynthia glanced at him without moving her head, then she looked
away, her face quivering slightly, more as if from a reflection of
his agitation than from her own. “You say you saw her,”
she said.</p>
<p>“This afternoon,” the man went on, “I got fairly
desperate. I resolved to go to the fountain-head for information, and
take my chances. So down I went to Maple Street, where the Brewsters
live, and I rang the front-door bell, and the child's aunt, a
handsome, breathless kind of creature, came and ushered me into the
best parlor, and went into the next room—the
sitting-room—to call the others. I caught sight of enough women
for a woman's club in the sitting-room. Then Andrew Brewster came in,
and I offered my legal services out of friendly interest in the case,
and in that way I found out what I wanted to. Cynthia, that child has
not told.”</p>
<p>Cynthia raised herself and sat straight, and her face flashed like
a white flame. “Were they harsh to her?” she demanded.
“Were they cruel? Did they question her, and were they harsh
and cruel because she would not tell? Why did you not tell them
yourself? Why did you not, Lyman Risley? Why did you not tell the
whole story rather than have that child blamed? Well, I will go
myself. I will go this minute. They shall not blame that darling.
What do you think I care for myself? Let them lynch me if they want
to. I will go this minute!” Cynthia sprang to her feet, but
Risley, with a hoarse shout under his breath, caught hold of her and
forced her back.</p>
<p>“For God's sake, sit down, Cynthia!” he said.
“Didn't you hear the door-bell? Somebody is coming.”</p>
<p>The door-bell had in fact rung, and Cynthia had not noticed it.
She lay back in her chair as the door opened, and Mrs. Norman Lloyd
entered. “Good-evening, Cynthia,” she said, beamingly.
“I thought I would stop a few minutes on my way to meeting. I'm
rather early. No, don't get up,” as Cynthia rose. “Don't
get up; I can only stay a minute. Never mind about giving me a chair,
Mr. Risley—thank you. Yes, this is a real comfortable
chair.” Mrs. Lloyd, seated where the firelight played over her
wide sweep of rich skirts, and her velvet fur-trimmed cloak and
plumed bonnet, beamed upon them with an expansive benevolence and
kindliness. She was a large, handsome, florid woman. Her
grayish-brown hair was carefully crimped, and looped back from her
fat, pink cheeks, a fine shell-and-gold comb surmounted her smooth
French twist, and held her bonnet in place. She unfastened her cloak,
and a diamond brooch at her throat caught the light and blazed red
like a ruby. She was the wife of Norman Lloyd, the largest
shoe-manufacturer in the place. There was between her and Cynthia a
sort of relationship by marriage. Norman Lloyd's brother George had
married Cynthia's sister, who had died ten years before, and of whose
little son, Robert, Cynthia had had the charge. Now George, who was a
lawyer in St. Louis, had married again. Mrs. Norman had sympathized
openly with Cynthia when the child was taken from Cynthia at his
father's second marriage. “I call it a shame,” she had
said, “giving that child to a perfect stranger to bring up, and
I don't see any need of George's marrying again, anyway. I don't know
what I should do if I thought Norman would marry again if I died. I
think one husband and one wife is enough for any man or woman if they
believe in the resurrection. It has always seemed to me that the
answer to that awful question in the New Testament, as to whose wife
that woman who had so many husbands would be in the other world,
meant that people who had done so much marrying on earth would have
to be old maids and old bachelors in heaven. George ought to be
ashamed of himself, and Cynthia ought to keep that child.”</p>
<p>Ever since she had been very solicitously friendly towards
Cynthia, who had always imperceptibly held herself aloof from her,
owing to a difference in degree. Cynthia had no prejudices of mind,
but many of nerves, and this woman was distinctly not of her sort,
though she had a certain liking for her. Every time she was brought
in contact with her she had a painful sense of a grating adjustment
as of points of meeting which did not dovetail as they should. Norman
Lloyd represented one of the old families of the city, distinguished
by large possessions and college training, and he was the first of
his race to engage in trade. His wife came from a vastly different
stock, being the daughter of a shoe-manufacturer herself, and the
granddaughter of a cobbler who had tapped his neighbor's shoes in his
little shop in the L of his humble cottage house. Mrs. Norman Lloyd
was innocently unconscious of any reason for concealing the fact, and
was fond, when driving out to take the air in her fine carriage, of
pointing out to any stranger who happened to be with her the house
where her grandfather cobbled shoes and laid the foundation of the
family fortune. “That all came from that little shop of my
grandfather,” she would say, pointing proudly at Lloyd's great
factory, which was not far from the old cottage. “Mr. Lloyd
didn't have much of anything when I married him, but I had
considerable, and Mr. Lloyd went into the factory, and he has been
blessed, and the property has increased until it has come to
this.” Mrs. Lloyd's chief pride was in the very facts which
others deprecated. When she considered the many-windowed pile of
Lloyd's, and that her husband was the recognized head and authority
over all those throngs of grimy men, walking with the stoop of daily
labor, carrying their little dinner-boxes with mechanical clutches of
leather-tanned fingers, she used to send up a prayer for humility,
lest evil and downfall of pride come to her. She was a pious woman, a
member of the First Baptist Church, and active in charitable work.
Mrs. Norman Lloyd adored her husband, and her estimate of him was
almost ludicrously different from that of the grimy men who flocked
to his factory, she seeing a most kindly spirited and amiable man,
devoting himself to the best interests of his employés, and
striving ever for their benefit rather than his own, and the others
seeing an aristocrat by birth and training, who was in trade because
of shrewd business instincts and a longing for wealth and power, but
who despised, and felt himself wholly superior to, the means by which
it was acquired.</p>
<p>“We ain't anything but the rounds of the ladder for Norman
Lloyd to climb by, and he only sees and feels us with the soles of
his patent-leathers,” one of the turbulent spirits in his
factory said. Mrs. Norman Lloyd would not have believed her ears had
she heard him.</p>
<p>Mrs. Lloyd had not sat long before Cynthia's fire that evening
before she opened on the subject of the lost child. “Oh,
Cynthia, have you heard—” she began, but Risley cut her
short.</p>
<p>“About that little girl who ran away?” he said.
“Yes, we have; we were just talking about her.”</p>
<p>“Did you ever hear anything like it?” said Mrs. Lloyd.
“They say they can't find out where she's been. She won't tell.
Don't you believe somebody has threatened her if she does?”</p>
<p>Cynthia raised herself and began to speak, but a slight, almost
imperceptible gesture from the man beside her stopped her.</p>
<p>“What did you say, Cynthia?”</p>
<p>“There is no accounting for children's freaks,” said
Risley, shortly and harshly. Mrs. Lloyd was not thin-skinned; such a
current of exuberant cordiality emanated from her own nature that she
was not very susceptible to any counter-force. Now, however, she felt
vaguely and wonderingly, as a child might have done, that for some
reason Lyman Risley was rude to her, and she had a sense of
bewildered injury. Mrs. Lloyd was always, moreover, somewhat anxious
as to the relations between Cynthia and Lyman Risley. She heard a
deal of talk about it first and last; and while she had no word of
unkind comment herself, yet she felt at times uneasy. “Folks do
talk about Cynthia and Lyman Risley keeping company so long,”
she told her husband; “it's as much as twenty years. It does
seem as if they ought to get married, don't you think so, Norman? Do
you suppose it is because the property was left that way—for
you know Lyman hasn't got anything besides what he earns—or do
you suppose it is because Cynthia doesn't want to marry him? I guess
it is that. Cynthia never seemed to me as if she would ever care
enough about any man to marry him. I guess that's it; but I do think
she ought to stop his coming there quite so much, especially when
people know that about her property.”</p>
<p>Cynthia's property was hers on condition that her husband took her
name if she married, otherwise it was forfeited to her sister's
child. “Catch a Risley ever taking his wife's name!” said
Mrs. Lloyd. “Of course Cynthia would be willing to give up the
money if she loved him, but I don't believe she does. It seems as if
Lyman Risley ought to see it would be better for him not to go there
so much if they weren't going to be married.”</p>
<p>So it happened when Risley caught up her question to Cynthia in
that peremptory fashion, Mrs. Lloyd felt in addition to the present
cause some which had gone before for her grievance. She addressed
herself thereafter entirely and pointedly to Cynthia. “Did you
ever see that little girl, Cynthia?” said she.</p>
<p>“Yes,” replied Cynthia, in a voice so strange that the
other woman stared wonderingly at her.</p>
<p>“Ain't you feeling well, Cynthia?” she asked.</p>
<p>“Very well, thank you,” said Cynthia.</p>
<p>“When did you see her?” asked Mrs. Lloyd. Cynthia
opened her mouth as if to speak, then she glanced at Risley, whose
eyes held her, and laughed instead—a strange, nervous laugh.
Happily, Mrs. Lloyd did not wait for her answer. She had her own
important information to impart. She had in reality stopped for that
purpose. “Well, I have seen her,” she said. “I met
her in front of Crosby's one day last summer. And she was so
sweet-looking I stopped and spoke to her—I couldn't help it.
She had beautiful eyes, and the softest light curls, and she was
dressed so pretty, and the flowers on her hat were nice. The
embroidery on her dress was very fine, too. Usually, you know, those
people don't care about the fineness, as long as it is wide, and
showy, and bright-colored. I asked her what her name was, and she
answered just as pretty, and her mother told me how old she was. Her
mother was a handsome woman, though she had an up-and-coming kind of
way with her. But she seemed real pleased to have me notice the
child. Where do you suppose she was all that time,
Cynthia?”</p>
<p>“She was in some safe place, undoubtedly,” said
Risley, and again Mrs. Lloyd felt that she was snubbed, though not
seeing how nor why, and again she rebelled with that soft and gentle
persistency in her own course which was the only rebellion of which
she was capable.</p>
<p>“Where do you suppose she was, Cynthia?” said she.</p>
<p>“I think some woman must have seen her, and coaxed her in
and kept her, she was such a pretty child,” said Cynthia,
defiantly and desperately. But the other woman looked at her in
wonder.</p>
<p>“Oh, Cynthia, I can't believe that,” said she.
“It don't seem as if any woman could be so bad as that when the
child's mother was in such agony over her.” And then she
added, “I can't believe it, because it seems to me that if any
woman was bad enough to do that, she couldn't have given her up at
all, she was such a beautiful child.” Mrs. Norman Lloyd had no
children of her own, and was given to gazing with eyes of gentle envy
at pretty, rosy little girls, frilled with white embroidery like
white pinks, dancing along in leading hands of maternal love.
“It don't seem to me I could ever have given her up, if I had
once been bad enough to steal her,” she said. “What put
such an idea into your head, Cynthia?”</p>
<p>When the church-bell clanged out just then Lyman Risley had never
been so thankful in his life. Mrs. Lloyd rose promptly, for she had
to lead the meeting, that being the custom among the sisters in her
church. “Well,” said she, “I am thankful she is
found, anyway; I couldn't have slept a wink that night if I had known
she was lost, the dear little thing. Good-night, Cynthia; don't come
to the door. Good-night, Mr. Risley. Come and see me,
Cynthia—do, dear.”</p>
<p>When Mrs. Norman Lloyd was gone, Risley looked at Cynthia with a
long breath of relief, but she turned to him with seemingly no
appreciation of it, and repeated her declaration which Mrs. Lloyd's
coming had interrupted: “Lyman, I am going there
to-night—this minute. Will you go with me? No, you must not go
with me. I am going!” She sprang to her feet.</p>
<p>“Sit down, Cynthia,” said Risley. “I tell you
they were not harsh to her. You don't seem to consider that they love
the child—possibly better than you can—and would not in
the nature of things be harsh to her under such circumstances. Sit
down and hear the rest of it.”</p>
<p>“But they will be harsh by-and-by, after the first joy of
finding her is over,” said Cynthia. “I will go and tell
them the first thing in the morning, Lyman.”</p>
<p>“You will do nothing so foolish. They are not only not
insisting upon her telling her secret, but announced to me their
determination not to do so in the future. I wish you could have seen
that man's face when he told me what a delicate, nervous little thing
his child was, and the doctor said she must not be fretted if she had
taken a notion not to tell; and I wish you could have seen the mother
and the aunt, and the grandmother, Mrs. Zelotes Brewster. They would
all give each other and themselves up to be torn of wild beasts
first. It is easy to see where the child got her extraordinary
strength of will. They took me out in the sitting-room, and there was
a wild flurry of feminine skirts before me. I had previously
overheard myself announced as Lawyer Risley by the aunt, and the
response from various voices that they were ‘goin' if he was
comin' out in the sittin'-room.’ It always made them nervous
to see lawyers. Well, I followed the parents and the grandmother and
the aunt out. I dared not refuse when they suggested it, and I hoped
desperately that the child would not remember me from that one scared
glance she gave at me this morning. But there she sat in her little
chair, holding the doll you gave her, and she looked up at me when I
entered, and I have never in the whole course of my existence seen
such an expression upon the face of a child. Remember me? Indeed she
did, and she promised me with the faithfulest, stanchest eyes of a
woman set in a child's head that she would not tell; that I need not
fear for one minute; that the lady who had given her the doll was
quite safe. She knew, and she must have heard what I said to you this
morning. She is the most wonderful child I have ever seen.”</p>
<p>Cynthia had sank back in her chair. Lyman Risley put his cigar
back between his lips; Cynthia was quite still, her delicate profile
towards him.</p>
<p>“I assure you there is not the slightest danger of their
troubling the child because of her silence, and you would do an
exceedingly foolish thing, and its consequences would react not upon
yourself only, but—upon others, were you to confess the truth
to them,” he said after a little. “You must think of
others—of your friends, and of your sister's boy, whose loss
led you into this. This would—well, it would get into the
papers, Cynthia.”</p>
<p>“Do you think that the doll continued to please her?”
asked Cynthia.</p>
<p>“Cynthia, I want you to promise,” said her friend,
persistently.</p>
<p>“Very well, I will promise, if you will promise to let me
know the minute you hear that they are treating her harshly because
of her silence.”</p>
<p>Suddenly Cynthia turned her face upon him. “Lyman,”
said she, “do you think that I could do anything for
her—”</p>
<p>“Do anything for her?” he repeated, vaguely.</p>
<p>“Yes; they cannot have money. They must be poor: the father
works in the factory. Would they allow me—”</p>
<p>The lawyer laughed. “Cynthia,” he said, “you do
not realize that pride finds its native element in all strata of
society, and riches are comparative. Let me inform you that these
Brewsters, of whom this child sprung, claim as high places in the
synagogue as any of your Lennoxes and Risleys, and, what is more,
they believe themselves there. They have seen the tops of their
neighbors' heads as often as you or I. The mere fact of familiarity
with shoe-knives and leather, and hand-skill instead of brain-skill,
makes no difference with such inherent confidence of importance as
theirs. The Louds, on the other side—the handsome aunt is a
Loud—are rather below caste, but they make up for it with
defiance. And as for riches, I would have you know that the Brewsters
are as rich in their own estimation as you in yours; that they have
possessions which entirely meet their needs and their æsthetic
longings; that not only does Andrew Brewster earn exceedingly good
wages in the shop, and is able to provide plenty of nourishing food
and good clothes, but even by-and-by, if he prospers and is prudent,
something rather extra in the way of education—perhaps a piano.
I would have you know that there is a Rogers group on a little
marble-topped table in the front window, and a table in the side
window with a worked spread, on which reposes a red plush photograph
album; that there is also a set of fine parlor furniture, with
various devices in the way of silken and lace scarfs over the corners
and backs of the chairs and sofa, and that there is a tapestry
carpet; that in the sitting-room is a fine crushed-plush couch, and a
multiplicity of rocking-chairs; that there is a complete dining-set
in the next room, the door of which stood open, and even a side-board
with red napkins, and a fine display of glass, every whit as elegant
in their estimation as your cut glass in yours. The child's father
owns his house and land free of encumbrance. He told me so in the
course of his artless boasting as to what he might some day be able
to do for the precious little creature of his own flesh and blood;
and the grandmother owns her comfortable place next door, and she
herself was dressed in black silk, and I will swear the lace on her
cap was real, and she wore a great brooch containing hair of the
departed, and it was set in pearl. What are you going to do in the
face of opulence like this, Cynthia?”</p>
<p>Cynthia did not speak; her face looked as still as if it were
carved in ivory.</p>
<p>“Cynthia,” said the man, in a harsh voice, “I
did not dream you were so broken up over losing that little boy of
your sister's, poor girl.”</p>
<p>Cynthia still said nothing, but a tear rolled down her cheek.
Lyman Risley saw it, then he looked straight ahead, scowling over his
cigar. He seemed suddenly to realize in this woman whom he loved
something anomalous, yet lovely—a beauty, as it were, of
deformity, an over-development in one direction, though a direction
of utter grace and sweetness, like the lip of an orchid.</p>
<p>Why should she break her heart over a child whom she had never
seen before, and have no love and pity for the man who had laid his
best at her feet so long?</p>
<p>He saw at a flash the sweet yet monstrous imperfection of her, and
he loved her better for it.</p>
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