<h3 align="center">Chapter XXVIII</h3>
<p>Andrew Brewster, lying in the dewy grass under the apple-trees,
giving way for almost the first time since his childhood to impulses
which had hitherto, from his New England heredity, stiffened instead
of relaxed his muscles of expression, felt as if he were being stung
to death by ants. He was naturally a man of broad views, who felt the
indignity of coping with such petty odds. “For God's sake, if I
had to be done to death, why couldn't it have been for
something?” he groaned, speaking with his lips close to the
earth as if it were a listening ear. “Why need it all have been
over so little? It's just the little fight for enough to eat and wear
that's getting the better of me that was a man, and able to do a
man's work in the world. Now it has come to this! Here I am runnin'
away from a woman because she wants me to pay her three dollars, and
I am afraid of another woman because—I've been and fooled away
a few hundred dollars I had in the savings-bank. I'm
afraid—yes, it has come to this. I am afraid, afraid, and I'd
run away out of life if I knew where it would fetch me to. I'm afraid
of things that ain't worth being afraid of, and it's all over things
that's beneath me.” There came over Andrew, with his mouth to
the moist earth, feeling the breath and the fragrance of it in his
nostrils, a realization of the great motherhood of nature, and a
contempt for himself which was scorching and scathing before it. He
felt that he came from that mighty breast which should produce only
sons of might, and was spending his whole life in an ignominy of
fruitless climbing up mole-hills. “Why couldn't I have been
more?” he asked himself. “Oh, my God, is it my
fault?” He said to himself that if he had not yielded to the
universal law and longing of his kind for a home and a family, it
might have been better. He asked himself that question which will
never be answered with a surety of correctness, whether the
advancement of the individual to his furthest compass is more to the
glory of life than the blind following out of the laws of existence
and the bringing others into the everlasting problem of advance. Then
he thought of Ellen, and a great warmth of conviction came over the
loving heart of the man; all his self-contempt vanished. He had her,
this child who was above pearls and rubies, he had her, and in her
the furthest reach of himself and progression of himself to greater
distances than he could ever have accomplished in any other way, and
it was a double progress, since it was not only for him, but also for
the woman he had married. A great wave of love for Fanny came over
him. He seemed to see that, after all, it was a shining road by which
he had come, and he saw himself upon it like a figure of light. He
saw that he lived and could never die. Then, as with a remorseless
hurl of a high spirit upon needle-pricks of petty cares, he thought
again of the dressmaker, of the money for Ellen's watch, of the
butcher's bill, and the grocer's bills, and the money which he had
taken from the bank, and again he cowered beneath and loathed his
ignoble burden. He dug his hot head into the grass. “Oh, my
God! oh, my God!” he groaned. He fairly sobbed. Then he felt a
soft wind of feminine skirts caused by the sudden stoop of some one
beside him, and Ellen's voice, shrill with alarm, rang in his ears.
“Father, what is the matter? Father!”</p>
<p>Such was the man's love for the girl that his first thought was
for her alarm, and he pushed all his own troubles into the background
with a lightning-like motion. He raised himself hastily, and smiled
at her with his pitiful, stiff face. “It's nothing at all,
Ellen, don't you worry,” he said.</p>
<p>But that was not enough to satisfy her. She caught hold of his arm
and clung to it. “Father,” she said, in a tone which had
in it, to his wonder, a firm womanliness—his own daughter
seemed to speak to him as if she were his mother—“you are
not telling me the truth. Something is the matter, or you wouldn't do
like this.”</p>
<p>“No, there's nothin', nothin' at all, dear child,”
said Andrew. He tried to loosen her little, clinging hand from his
arm. “Come, let's go back to the house,” he said.
“Don't you mind anything about it. Sometimes father gets
discouraged over nothin'.”</p>
<p>“It isn't over nothing,” said Ellen. “What is it
about, father?”</p>
<p>Andrew tried to laugh. “Well, if it isn't over nothin', it's
over nothin' in particular,” said he; “it's over jest
what's happened right along. Sometimes father feels as if he hadn't
made as much as he'd ought to out of his life, and he's gettin'
older, and he's feelin' kind of discouraged, that's all.”</p>
<p>“Over money matters?” said Ellen, looking at him
steadily.</p>
<p>“Over nothin',” said her father. “See here,
child, father's ashamed that he gave way so, and you found him. Now
don't you worry one mite about it—it's nothing at all. Come,
let's go back to the house,” he said.</p>
<p>Ellen said no more, but she walked up from the field holding
tightly to her father's poor, worn hand, and her heart was in a
tumult. To behold any convulsion of nature is no light experience,
and when it is a storm of the spirit in one beloved the beholder is
swept along with it in greater or less measure. Ellen trembled as she
walked. Her father kept looking at her anxiously and remorsefully.
Once he reached around his other hand and chucked her playfully under
the chin. “Scared most to death, was she?” he asked, with
a shamefaced blush.</p>
<p>“I know something is the matter, and I think it would be
better for you to tell me, father,” replied Ellen, soberly.</p>
<p>“There's nothing to tell, child,” said Andrew.
“Don't you worry your little head about it.” Between his
anxiety lest the girl should be troubled, and his intense humiliation
that she should have discovered him in such an abandon of grief which
was almost like a disclosure of the nakedness of his spirit, he was
completely unnerved. Ellen felt him tremble, and heard his voice
quiver when he spoke. She felt towards her father something she had
never felt before—an impulse of protection. She felt the older
and stronger of the two. Her grasp on his hand tightened, she seemed
in a measure to be leading him along.</p>
<p>When they reached the yard between the houses Andrew cast an
apprehensive glance at the windows. “Has she gone?” he
asked.</p>
<p>“Who, the dressmaker?”</p>
<p>“Yes.”</p>
<p>“She hadn't when I came out. I saw you come past the house,
and I thought you walked as if you didn't feel well, so I thought I
would run out and see.”</p>
<p>“I was all right,” replied Andrew. “Have you got
to try on anything more to-night?”</p>
<p>“No.”</p>
<p>“Well, then, let's run into grandma's a minute.”</p>
<p>“All right,” said Ellen.</p>
<p>Mrs. Zelotes was sitting at her front window in the dusk, looking
out on the street, as was her favorite custom. The old woman seldom
lit a lamp in the summer evening, but sat there staring out at the
lighted street and the people passing and repassing, with her mind as
absolutely passive as regarded herself as if she were travelling and
observing only that which passed without. At those times she became
in a fashion sensible of the motion of the world, and lost her sense
of individuality in the midst of it. When her son and granddaughter
entered she looked away from the window with the expression of one
returning from afar, and seemed dazed for a moment.</p>
<p>“Hullo, mother!” said Andrew.</p>
<p>The room was dusky, and they moved across between the chairs and
tables like two shadows.</p>
<p>“Oh, is it you, Andrew?” said his mother. “Who
is that with you—Ellen?”</p>
<p>“Yes,” said Ellen. “How do you do,
grandma?”</p>
<p>Mrs. Zelotes became suddenly fully awake to the situation; she
collected her scattered faculties; her keen old eyes gleamed in a
shaft of electric-light from the street without, which fell full upon
her face.</p>
<p>“Set down,” said she. “Has the dressmaker
gone?”</p>
<p>“No, she hadn't when I came out,” replied Ellen,
“but she's most through for to-night.”</p>
<p>“How do your things look?”</p>
<p>“Real pretty, I guess.”</p>
<p>“Sometimes I think you'd better have had Miss Patch. I hope
she 'ain't got your sleeves too tight at the elbows.”</p>
<p>“They seem to fit very nicely, grandma.”</p>
<p>“Sleeves are very particular things; a sleeve wrong can
spoil a whole dress.”</p>
<p>Suddenly the old woman turned on Ellen with a look of extremest
facetiousness and intelligence, and the girl winced, for she knew
what was coming. “I see you goin' past with a young man last
night, didn't I?” said she.</p>
<p>Ellen flushed. “Yes,” she said, almost indignantly,
for she had a feeling as if the veil of some inner sacredness of her
nature were continually being torn aside. “I went over to Miss
Lennox, to carry some sweet-peas, and Mr. Robert Lloyd was there, and
he came home with me.”</p>
<p>“Oh!” replied her grandmother.</p>
<p>Ellen's patience left her at the sound of that “Oh,”
which seemed to rasp her very soul. “You have none of you any
right to talk and act as you do,” said she. “You make me
ashamed of you, you and mother; father has more sense. Just because a
young man makes me a call to return something, and then walks home
with me, because he happened to be at the house where I call in the
evening! I think it's a shame. You make me feel as if I couldn't look
him in the face.”</p>
<p>“Never mind, grandma didn't mean any harm,” Andrew
said, soothingly.</p>
<p>“You needn't try to excuse me, Andrew Brewster,” cried
his mother, angrily. “I guess it's a pretty to-do, if I can't
say a word in joke to my own granddaughter. If it had been a poor,
good-for-nothing young feller workin' in a shoe-factory, I s'pose
she'd been tickled to death to be joked about him, but now when it
begins to look as if somebody that was worth while had come
along—”</p>
<p>“Grandma, if you say another word about it, I will never
speak to Robert Lloyd again as long as I live,” declared
Ellen.</p>
<p>“Never mind, child,” whispered Andrew.</p>
<p>“I do mind, and I mean what I say,” Ellen cried.
“I won't have it. Robert Lloyd is nothing to me, and I am
nothing to him. He is no better than Granville Joy. There is nothing
between us, and you make me too ashamed to think of him.”</p>
<p>Then the old woman cried out, in a tone of triumph, “Well,
there he is, turnin' in at your gate now.”</p>
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