<h2><SPAN name="II" id="II"></SPAN>II</h2>
<p><span class="smcap">When</span> Justine Brent emerged from the Hope
Hospital the October dusk had fallen and the
wide suburban street was almost dark, except when
the illuminated bulk of an electric car flashed by under
the maples.</p>
<p>She crossed the tracks and approached the narrower<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_8" id="Page_8"></SPAN></span>
thoroughfare where Amherst awaited her. He hung
back a moment, and she was amused to see that he
failed to identify the uniformed nurse with the girl in
her trim dark dress, soberly complete in all its accessories,
who advanced to him, smiling under her little veil.</p>
<p>"Thank you," he said as he turned and walked beside
her. "Is this your way?"</p>
<p>"I am staying in Oak Street. But it's just as short
to go by Maplewood Avenue."</p>
<p>"Yes; and quieter."</p>
<p>For a few yards they walked on in silence, their long
steps falling naturally into time, though Amherst was
somewhat taller than his companion.</p>
<p>At length he said: "I suppose you know nothing
about the relation between Hope Hospital and the
Westmore Mills."</p>
<p>"Only that the hospital was endowed by one of the
Westmore family."</p>
<p>"Yes; an old Miss Hope, a great-aunt of Westmore's.
But there is more than that between them—all
kinds of subterranean passages." He paused, and
began again: "For instance, Dr. Disbrow married the
sister of our manager's wife."</p>
<p>"Your chief at the mills?"</p>
<p>"Yes," he said with a slight grimace. "So you see,
if Truscomb—the manager—thinks one of the mill-hands
is only slightly injured, it's natural that his<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_9" id="Page_9"></SPAN></span>
brother-in-law, Dr. Disbrow, should take an optimistic
view of the case."</p>
<p>"Natural? I don't know——"</p>
<p>"Don't you think it's natural that a man should be
influenced by his wife?"</p>
<p>"Not where his professional honour is concerned."</p>
<p>Amherst smiled. "That sounds very young—if
you'll excuse my saying so. Well, I won't go on to
insinuate that, Truscomb being high in favour with
the Westmores, and the Westmores having a lien on
the hospital, Disbrow's position there is also bound up
with his taking—more or less—the same view as Truscomb's."</p>
<p>Miss Brent had paused abruptly on the deserted
pavement.</p>
<p>"No, don't go on—if you want me to think well of
you," she flashed out.</p>
<p>Amherst met the thrust composedly, perceiving, as
she turned to face him, that what she resented was not
so much his insinuation against his superiors as his
allusion to the youthfulness of her sentiments. She
was, in fact, as he now noticed, still young enough to
dislike being excused for her youth. In her severe
uniform of blue linen, her dusky skin darkened by the
nurse's cap, and by the pale background of the hospital
walls, she had seemed older, more competent and
experienced; but he now saw how fresh was the pale<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_10" id="Page_10"></SPAN></span>
curve of her cheek, and how smooth the brow clasped
in close waves of hair.</p>
<p>"I began at the wrong end," he acknowledged.
"But let me put Dillon's case before you dismiss me."</p>
<p>She softened. "It is only because of my interest in
that poor fellow that I am here——"</p>
<p>"Because you think he needs help—and that you
can help him?"</p>
<p>But she held back once more. "Please tell me about
him first," she said, walking on.</p>
<p>Amherst met the request with another question.
"I wonder how much you know about factory life?"</p>
<p>"Oh, next to nothing. Just what I've managed to
pick up in these two days at the hospital."</p>
<p>He glanced at her small determined profile under its
dark roll of hair, and said, half to himself: "That
might be a good deal."</p>
<p>She took no notice of this, and he went on: "Well,
I won't try to put the general situation before you,
though Dillon's accident is really the result of it. He
works in the carding room, and on the day of the accident
his 'card' stopped suddenly, and he put his hand
behind him to get a tool he needed out of his trouser-pocket.
He reached back a little too far, and the card
behind him caught his hand in its million of diamond-pointed
wires. Truscomb and the overseer of the room
maintain that the accident was due to his own care<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_11" id="Page_11"></SPAN></span>lessness;
but the hands say that it was caused by the
fact of the cards being too near together, and that just
such an accident was bound to happen sooner or later."</p>
<p>Miss Brent drew an eager breath. "And what do
<i>you</i> say?"</p>
<p>"That they're right: the carding-room is shamefully
overcrowded. Dillon hasn't been in it long—he
worked his way up at the mills from being a bobbin-boy—and
he hadn't yet learned how cautious a man
must be in there. The cards are so close to each other
that even the old hands run narrow risks, and it takes
the cleverest operative some time to learn that he must
calculate every movement to a fraction of an inch."</p>
<p>"But why do they crowd the rooms in that way?"</p>
<p>"To get the maximum of profit out of the minimum
of floor-space. It costs more to increase the floor-space
than to maim an operative now and then."</p>
<p>"I see. Go on," she murmured.</p>
<p>"That's the first point; here is the second. Dr.
Disbrow told Truscomb this morning that Dillon's
hand would certainly be saved, and that he might get
back to work in a couple of months if the company
would present him with an artificial finger or two."</p>
<p>Miss Brent faced him with a flush of indignation.
"Mr. Amherst—who gave you this version of Dr. Disbrow's
report?"</p>
<p>"The manager himself."<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_12" id="Page_12"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Verbally?"</p>
<p>"No—he showed me Disbrow's letter."</p>
<p>For a moment or two they walked on silently through
the quiet street; then she said, in a voice still stirred
with feeling: "As I told you this afternoon, Dr. Disbrow
has said nothing in my hearing."</p>
<p>"And Mrs. Ogan?"</p>
<p>"Oh, Mrs. Ogan—" Her voice broke in a ripple of
irony. "Mrs. Ogan 'feels it to be such a beautiful
dispensation, my dear, that, owing to a death that very
morning in the surgical ward, we happened to have a
bed ready for the poor man within three hours of the
accident.'" She had exchanged her deep throat-tones
for a high reedy note which perfectly simulated the
matron's lady-like inflections.</p>
<p>Amherst, at the change, turned on her with a boyish
burst of laughter: she joined in it, and for a moment
they were blent in that closest of unions, the discovery
of a common fund of humour.</p>
<p>She was the first to grow grave. "That three hours'
delay didn't help matters—how is it there is no emergency
hospital at the mills?"</p>
<p>Amherst laughed again, but in a different key.
"That's part of the larger question, which we haven't
time for now." He waited a moment, and then added:
"You've not yet given me your own impression of
Dillon's case."<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_13" id="Page_13"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>"You shall have it, if you saw that letter. Dillon
will certainly lose his hand—and probably the whole
arm." She spoke with a thrilling of her slight frame
that transformed the dispassionate professional into a
girl shaken with indignant pity.</p>
<p>Amherst stood still before her. "Good God! Never
anything but useless lumber?"</p>
<p>"Never——"</p>
<p>"And he won't die?"</p>
<p>"Alas!"</p>
<p>"He has a consumptive wife and three children.
She ruined her health swallowing cotton-dust at the
factory," Amherst continued.</p>
<p>"So she told me yesterday."</p>
<p>He turned in surprise. "You've had a talk with her?"</p>
<p>"I went out to Westmore last night. I was haunted
by her face when she came to the hospital. She looks
forty, but she told me she was only twenty-six." Miss
Brent paused to steady her voice. "It's the curse of
my trade that it's always tempting me to interfere in
cases where I can do no possible good. The fact is,
I'm not fit to be a nurse—I shall live and die a wretched
sentimentalist!" she ended, with an angry dash at the
tears on her veil.</p>
<p>Her companion walked on in silence till she had
regained her composure. Then he said: "What did you
think of Westmore?"<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_14" id="Page_14"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>"I think it's one of the worst places I ever saw—and
I am not unused to slums. It looks so dead. The
slums of big cities are much more cheerful."</p>
<p>He made no answer, and after a moment she asked:
"Does the cotton-dust always affect the lungs?"</p>
<p>"It's likely to, where there is the least phthisical tendency.
But of course the harm could be immensely
reduced by taking up the old rough floors which hold
the dust, and by thorough cleanliness and ventilation."</p>
<p>"What does the company do in such cases? Where
an operative breaks down at twenty-five?"</p>
<p>"The company says there was a phthisical tendency."</p>
<p>"And will they give nothing in return for the two
lives they have taken?"</p>
<p>"They will probably pay for Dillon's care at the
hospital, and they have taken the wife back as a
scrubber."</p>
<p>"To clean those uncleanable floors? She's not fit
for it!"</p>
<p>"She must work, fit for it or not; and there is less
strain in scrubbing than in bending over the looms or
cards. The pay is lower, of course, but she's very
grateful for being taken back at all, now that <ins title="Transcriber's Note: original reads 'he's'">she's</ins> no
longer a first-class worker."</p>
<p>Miss Brent's face glowed with a fine wrath. "She
can't possibly stand more than two or three months of
it without breaking down!"<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_15" id="Page_15"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Well, you see they've told her that in less than that
time her husband will be at work again."</p>
<p>"And what will the company do for them when the
wife is a hopeless invalid, and the husband a cripple?"</p>
<p>Amherst again uttered the dry laugh with which he
had met her suggestion of an emergency hospital. "I
know what I should do if I could get anywhere near
Dillon—give him an overdose of morphine, and let the
widow collect his life-insurance, and make a fresh start."</p>
<p>She looked at him curiously. "Should you, I wonder?"</p>
<p>"If I saw the suffering as you see it, and knew the
circumstances as I know them, I believe I should feel
justified—" He broke off. "In your work, don't you
ever feel tempted to set a poor devil free?"</p>
<p>She mused. "One might...but perhaps the professional
instinct to save would always come first."</p>
<p>"To save—what? When all the good of life is
gone?"</p>
<p>"I daresay," she sighed, "poor Dillon would do it
himself if he could—when he realizes that all the good
<i>is</i> gone."</p>
<p>"Yes, but he can't do it himself; and it's the irony
of such cases that his employers, after ruining his life,
will do all they can to patch up the ruins."</p>
<p>"But that at least ought to count in their favour."</p>
<p>"Perhaps; if—" He paused, as though reluctant<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_16" id="Page_16"></SPAN></span>
to lay himself open once more to the charge of uncharitableness;
and suddenly she exclaimed, looking
about her: "I didn't notice we had walked so far down
Maplewood Avenue!"</p>
<p>They had turned a few minutes previously into the
wide thoroughfare crowning the high ground which is
covered by the residential quarter of Hanaford. Here
the spacious houses, withdrawn behind shrubberies and
lawns, revealed in their silhouettes every form of architectural
experiment, from the symmetrical pre-Revolutionary
structure, with its classic portico and clipped
box-borders, to the latest outbreak in boulders and
Moorish tiles.</p>
<p>Amherst followed his companion's glance with surprise.
"We <i>have</i> gone a block or two out of our way.
I always forget where I am when I'm talking about
anything that interests me."</p>
<p>Miss Brent looked at her watch. "My friends don't
dine till seven, and I can get home in time by taking a
Grove Street car," she said.</p>
<p>"If you don't mind walking a little farther you can
take a Liberty Street car instead. They run oftener,
and you will get home just as soon."</p>
<p>She made a gesture of assent, and as they walked on
he continued: "I haven't yet explained why I am so
anxious to get an unbiassed opinion of Dillon's case."</p>
<p>She looked at him in surprise. "What you've told<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_17" id="Page_17"></SPAN></span>
me about Dr. Disbrow and your manager is surely
enough."</p>
<p>"Well, hardly, considering that I am Truscomb's
subordinate. I shouldn't have committed a breach of
professional etiquette, or asked you to do so, if I hadn't
a hope of bettering things; but I have, and that is why
I've held on at Westmore for the last few months, instead
of getting out of it altogether."</p>
<p>"I'm glad of that," she said quickly.</p>
<p>"The owner of the mills—young Richard Westmore—died
last winter," he went on, "and my hope—it's
no more—is that the new broom may sweep a little
cleaner."</p>
<p>"Who is the new broom?"</p>
<p>"Westmore left everything to his widow, and she is
coming here to-morrow to look into the management of
the mills."</p>
<p>"Coming? She doesn't live here, then?"</p>
<p>"At Hanaford? Heaven forbid! It's an anomaly
nowadays for the employer to live near the employed.
The Westmores have always lived in New York—and
I believe they have a big place on Long Island."</p>
<p>"Well, at any rate she <i>is</i> coming, and that ought to
be a good sign. Did she never show any interest in
the mills during her husband's life?"</p>
<p>"Not as far as I know. I've been at Westmore
three years, and she's not been seen there in my time.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_18" id="Page_18"></SPAN></span>
She is very young, and Westmore himself didn't care.
It was a case of inherited money. He drew the dividends,
and Truscomb did the rest."</p>
<p>Miss Brent reflected. "I don't know much about
the constitution of companies—but I suppose Mrs.
Westmore doesn't unite all the offices in her own person.
Is there no one to stand between Truscomb and
the operatives?"</p>
<p>"Oh, the company, on paper, shows the usual official
hierarchy. Richard Westmore, of course, was president,
and since his death the former treasurer—Halford
Gaines—has replaced him, and his son, Westmore
Gaines, has been appointed treasurer. You can see
by the names that it's all in the family. Halford Gaines
married a Miss Westmore, and represents the clan at
Hanaford—leads society, and keeps up the social credit
of the name. As treasurer, Mr. Halford Gaines kept
strictly to his special business, and always refused to
interfere between Truscomb and the operatives. As
president he will probably follow the same policy, the
more so as it fits in with his inherited respect for the
<i>status quo</i>, and his blissful ignorance of economics."</p>
<p>"And the new treasurer—young Gaines? Is there no
hope of his breaking away from the family tradition?"</p>
<p>"Westy Gaines has a better head than his father;
but he hates Hanaford and the mills, and his chief object
in life is to be taken for a New Yorker. So far he<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_19" id="Page_19"></SPAN></span>
hasn't been here much, except for the quarterly meetings,
and his routine work is done by another cousin—you
perceive that Westmore is a nest of nepotism."</p>
<p>Miss Brent's work among the poor had developed
her interest in social problems, and she followed these
details attentively.</p>
<p>"Well, the outlook is not encouraging, but perhaps
Mrs. Westmore's coming will make a change. I suppose
she has more power than any one."</p>
<p>"She might have, if she chose to exert it, for her
husband was really the whole company. The official
cousins hold only a few shares apiece."</p>
<p>"Perhaps, then, her visit will open her eyes. Who
knows but poor Dillon's case may help others—prove a
beautiful dispensation, as Mrs. Ogan would say?"</p>
<p>"It does come terribly pat as an illustration of some
of the abuses I want to have remedied. The difficulty
will be to get the lady's ear. That's her house we're
coming to, by the way."</p>
<p>An electric street-lamp irradiated the leafless trees
and stone gate-posts of the building before them.
Though gardens extended behind it, the house stood
so near the pavement that only two short flights of steps
intervened between the gate-posts and the portico.
Light shone from every window of the pompous rusticated
façade—in the turreted "Tuscan villa" style of
the 'fifties—and as Miss Brent and Amherst approached,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_20" id="Page_20"></SPAN></span>
their advance was checked by a group of persons who
were just descending from two carriages at the door.</p>
<p>The lamp-light showed every detail of dress and
countenance in the party, which consisted of two men,
one slightly lame, with a long white moustache and a
distinguished nose, the other short, lean and professional,
and of two ladies and their laden attendants.</p>
<p>"Why, that must be her party arriving!" Miss Brent
exclaimed; and as she spoke the younger of the two
ladies, turning back to her maid, exposed to the glare
of the electric light a fair pale face shadowed by the
projection of her widow's veil.</p>
<p>"Is that Mrs. Westmore?" Miss Brent whispered;
and as Amherst muttered: "I suppose so; I've never
seen her——" she continued excitedly: "She looks so
like—do you know what her name was before she
married?"</p>
<p>He drew his brows together in a hopeless effort of remembrance.
"I don't know—I must have heard—but
I never can recall people's names."</p>
<p>"That's bad, for a leader of men!" she said mockingly,
and he answered, as though touched on a sore
point: "I mean people who don't count. I never
forget an operative's name or face."</p>
<p>"One can never tell who may be going to count,"
she rejoined sententiously.</p>
<p>He dwelt on this in silence while they walked on<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_21" id="Page_21"></SPAN></span>
catching as they passed a glimpse of the red-carpeted
Westmore hall on which the glass doors were just
being closed. At length he roused himself to ask:
"Does Mrs. Westmore look like some one you know?"</p>
<p>"I fancied so—a girl who was at the Sacred Heart
in Paris with me. But isn't this my corner?" she exclaimed,
as they turned into another street, down which
a laden car was descending.</p>
<p>Its approach left them time for no more than a
hurried hand-clasp, and when Miss Brent had been
absorbed into the packed interior her companion, as
his habit was, stood for a while where she had left him,
gazing at some indefinite point in space; then, waking
to a sudden consciousness of his surroundings, he
walked off toward the centre of the town.</p>
<p>At the junction of two business streets he met an
empty car marked "Westmore," and springing into it,
seated himself in a corner and drew out a pocket Shakespeare.
He read on, indifferent to his surroundings,
till the car left the asphalt streets and illuminated shop-fronts
for a grey intermediate region of mud and
macadam. Then he pocketed his volume and sat
looking out into the gloom.</p>
<p>The houses grew less frequent, with darker gaps of
night between; and the rare street-lamps shone on
cracked pavements, crooked telegraph-poles, hoardings
tapestried with patent-medicine posters, and all the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_22" id="Page_22"></SPAN></span>
mean desolation of an American industrial suburb.
Farther on there came a weed-grown field or two, then
a row of operatives' houses, the showy gables of the
"Eldorado" road-house—the only building in Westmore
on which fresh paint was freely lavished—then
the company "store," the machine shops and other out-buildings,
the vast forbidding bulk of the factories looming
above the river-bend, and the sudden neatness of the
manager's turf and privet hedges. The scene was so
familiar to Amherst that he had lost the habit of comparison,
and his absorption in the moral and material
needs of the workers sometimes made him forget the
outward setting of their lives. But to-night he recalled
the nurse's comment—"it looks so dead"—and the
phrase roused him to a fresh perception of the scene.
With sudden disgust he saw the sordidness of it all—the
poor monotonous houses, the trampled grass-banks,
the lean dogs prowling in refuse-heaps, the reflection of
a crooked gas-lamp in a stagnant loop of the river; and
he asked himself how it was possible to put any sense
of moral beauty into lives bounded forever by the low
horizon of the factory. There is a fortuitous ugliness
that has life and hope in it: the ugliness of overcrowded
city streets, of the rush and drive of packed activities;
but this out-spread meanness of the suburban working
colony, uncircumscribed by any pressure of surrounding
life, and sunk into blank acceptance of its isolation, its<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_23" id="Page_23"></SPAN></span>
banishment from beauty and variety and surprise,
seemed to Amherst the very negation of hope and life.</p>
<p>"She's right," he mused—"it's dead—stone dead:
there isn't a drop of wholesome blood left in it."</p>
<p>The Moosuc River valley, in the hollow of which,
for that river's sake, the Westmore mills had been
planted, lingered in the memory of pre-industrial Hanaford
as the pleasantest suburb of the town. Here, beyond
a region of orchards and farm-houses, several
"leading citizens" had placed, above the river-bank,
their prim wood-cut "residences," with porticoes and
terraced lawns; and from the chief of these, Hopewood,
brought into the Westmore family by the Miss Hope
who had married an earlier Westmore, the grim mill-village
had been carved. The pillared "residences"
had, after this, inevitably fallen to base uses; but the
old house at Hopewood, in its wooded grounds, remained,
neglected but intact, beyond the first bend of
the river, deserted as a dwelling but "held" in anticipation
of rising values, when the inevitable growth of
Westmore should increase the demand for small building
lots. Whenever Amherst's eyes were refreshed by
the hanging foliage above the roofs of Westmore, he
longed to convert the abandoned country-seat into a
park and playground for the mill-hands; but he knew
that the company counted on the gradual sale of Hopewood
as a source of profit. No—the mill-town would<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_24" id="Page_24"></SPAN></span>
not grow beautiful as it grew larger—rather, in obedience
to the grim law of industrial prosperity, it would soon
lose its one lingering grace and spread out in unmitigated
ugliness, devouring green fields and shaded
slopes like some insect-plague consuming the land.
The conditions were familiar enough to Amherst; and
their apparent inevitableness mocked the hopes he had
based on Mrs. Westmore's arrival.</p>
<p>"Where every stone is piled on another, through the
whole stupid structure of selfishness and egotism, how
can one be pulled out without making the whole thing
topple? And whatever they're blind to, they always
see that," he mused, reaching up for the strap of the car.</p>
<p>He walked a few yards beyond the manager's house,
and turned down a side street lined with scattered cottages.
Approaching one of these by a gravelled path
he pushed open the door, and entered a sitting-room
where a green-shaded lamp shone pleasantly on bookshelves
and a crowded writing-table.</p>
<p>A brisk little woman in black, laying down the evening
paper as she rose, lifted her hands to his tall
shoulders.</p>
<p>"Well, mother," he said, stooping to her kiss.</p>
<p>"You're late, John," she smiled back at him, not reproachfully,
but with affection.</p>
<p>She was a wonderfully compact and active creature,
with face so young and hair so white that she looked as<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_25" id="Page_25"></SPAN></span>
unreal as a stage mother till a close view revealed the
fine lines that experience had drawn about her mouth
and eyes. The eyes themselves, brightly black and
glancing, had none of the veiled depths of her son's
gaze. Their look was outward, on a world which had
dealt her hard blows and few favours, but in which her
interest was still fresh, amused and unabated.</p>
<p>Amherst glanced at his watch. "Never mind—Duplain
will be later still. I had to go into Hanaford,
and he is replacing me at the office."</p>
<p>"So much the better, dear: we can have a minute to
ourselves. Sit down and tell me what kept you."</p>
<p>She picked up her knitting as she spoke, having the
kind of hands that find repose in ceaseless small activities.
Her son could not remember a time when he
had not seen those small hands in motion—shaping
garments, darning rents, repairing furniture, exploring
the inner economy of clocks. "I make a sort of rag-carpet
of the odd minutes," she had once explained
to a friend who wondered at her turning to her needlework
in the moment's interval between other tasks.</p>
<p>Amherst threw himself wearily into a chair. "I was
trying to find out something about Dillon's case," he
said.</p>
<p>His mother turned a quick glance toward the door,
rose to close it, and reseated herself.</p>
<p>"Well?"<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_26" id="Page_26"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>"I managed to have a talk with his nurse when she
went off duty this evening."</p>
<p>"The nurse? I wonder you could get her to speak."</p>
<p>"Luckily she's not the regular incumbent, but a
volunteer who happened to be here on a visit. As it
was, I had some difficulty in making her talk—till I
told her of Disbrow's letter."</p>
<p>Mrs. Amherst lifted her bright glance from the
needles. "He's very bad, then?"</p>
<p>"Hopelessly maimed!"</p>
<p>She shivered and cast down her eyes. "Do you
suppose she really knows?"</p>
<p>"She struck me as quite competent to judge."</p>
<p>"A volunteer, you say, here on a visit? What is her
name?"</p>
<p>He raised his head with a vague look. "I never
thought of asking her."</p>
<p>Mrs. Amherst laughed. "How like you! Did she
say with whom she was staying?"</p>
<p>"I think she said in Oak Street—but she didn't mention
any name."</p>
<p>Mrs. Amherst wrinkled her brows thoughtfully. "I
wonder if she's not the thin dark girl I saw the other
day with Mrs. Harry Dressel. Was she tall and rather
handsome?"</p>
<p>"I don't know," murmured Amherst indifferently.
As a rule he was humorously resigned to his mother's<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_27" id="Page_27"></SPAN></span>
habit of deserting the general for the particular, and
following some irrelevant thread of association in utter
disregard of the main issue. But to-night, preoccupied
with his subject, and incapable of conceiving how anyone
else could be unaffected by it, he resented her indifference
as a sign of incurable frivolity.</p>
<p>"How she can live close to such suffering and forget
it!" was his thought; then, with a movement of self-reproach,
he remembered that the work flying through
her fingers was to take shape as a garment for one of
the infant Dillons. "She takes her pity out in action,
like that quiet nurse, who was as cool as a drum-major
till she took off her uniform—and then!" His face
softened at the recollection of the girl's outbreak.
Much as he admired, in theory, the woman who kept
a calm exterior in emergencies, he had all a man's
desire to know that the springs of feeling lay close to
the unruffled surface.</p>
<p>Mrs. Amherst had risen and crossed over to his chair.
She leaned on it a moment, pushing the tossed brown
hair from his forehead.</p>
<p>"John, have you considered what you mean to do next?"</p>
<p>He threw back his head to meet her gaze.</p>
<p>"About this Dillon case," she continued. "How
are all these investigations going to help you?"</p>
<p>Their eyes rested on each other for a moment; then he
said coldly: "You are afraid I am going to lose my place."<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_28" id="Page_28"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>She flushed like a girl and murmured: "It's not the
kind of place I ever wanted to see you in!"</p>
<p>"I know it," he returned in a gentler tone, clasping
one of the hands on his chair-back. "I ought to have
followed a profession, like my grandfather; but my
father's blood was too strong in me. I should never
have been content as anything but a working-man."</p>
<p>"How can you call your father a working-man? He
had a genius for mechanics, and if he had lived he would
have been as great in his way as any statesman or lawyer."</p>
<p>Amherst smiled. "Greater, to my thinking; but
he gave me his hard-working hands without the genius
to create with them. I wish I had inherited more from
him, or less; but I must make the best of what I am,
rather than try to be somebody else." He laid her
hand caressingly against his cheek. "It's hard on you,
mother—but you must bear with me."</p>
<p>"I have never complained, John; but now you've
chosen your work, it's natural that I should want you
to stick to it."</p>
<p>He rose with an impatient gesture. "Never fear; I
could easily get another job——"</p>
<p>"What? If Truscomb black-listed you? Do you forget
that Scotch overseer who was here when we came?"</p>
<p>"And whom Truscomb hounded out of the trade?
I remember him," said Amherst grimly; "but I have
an idea I am going to do the hounding this time."<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_29" id="Page_29"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>His mother sighed, but her reply was cut short by
the noisy opening of the outer door. Amherst seemed
to hear the sound with relief. "There's Duplain," he
said, going into the passage; but on the threshold he
encountered, not the young Alsatian overseer who
boarded with them, but a small boy who said breathlessly:
"Mr. Truscomb wants you to come down
bimeby."</p>
<p>"This evening? To the office?"</p>
<p>"No—he's sick a-bed."</p>
<p>The blood rushed to Amherst's face, and he had to
press his lips close to check an exclamation. "Say
I'll come as soon as I've had supper," he said.</p>
<p>The boy vanished, and Amherst turned back to the
sitting-room. "Truscomb's ill—he has sent for me;
and I saw Mrs. Westmore arriving tonight! Have
supper, mother—we won't wait for Duplain." His
face still glowed with excitement, and his eyes were
dark with the concentration of his inward vision.</p>
<p>"Oh, John, John!" Mrs. Amherst sighed, crossing
the passage to the kitchen.</p>
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