<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0025" id="link2HCH0025"></SPAN></p>
<h2> CHAPTER XXV </h2>
<p>The memory of the kiss abode with Theron. Like Aaron's rod, it swallowed
up one by one all competing thoughts and recollections, and made his brain
its slave.</p>
<p>Even as he strode back through the woods to the camp-meeting, it was the
kiss that kept his feet in motion, and guided their automatic course. All
along the watches of the restless night, it was the kiss that bore him
sweet company, and wandered with him from one broken dream of bliss to
another. Next day, it was the kiss that made of life for him a sort of
sunlit wonderland. He preached his sermon in the morning, and took his
appointed part in the other services of afternoon and evening, apparently
to everybody's satisfaction: to him it was all a vision.</p>
<p>When the beautiful full moon rose, this Sunday evening, and glorified the
clearing and the forest with its mellow harvest radiance, he could have
groaned with the burden of his joy. He went out alone into the light, and
bared his head to it, and stood motionless for a long time. In all his
life, he had never been impelled as powerfully toward earnest and soulful
thanksgiving. The impulse to kneel, there in the pure, tender moonlight,
and lift up offerings of praise to God, kept uppermost in his mind. Some
formless resignation restrained him from the act itself, but the spirit of
it hallowed his mood. He gazed up at the broad luminous face of the
satellite. "You are our God," he murmured. "Hers and mine! You are the
most beautiful of heavenly creatures, as she is of the angels on earth. I
am speechless with reverence for you both."</p>
<p>It was not until the camp-meeting broke up, four days later, and Theron
with the rest returned to town, that the material aspects of what had
happened, and might be expected to happen, forced themselves upon his
mind. The kiss was a child of the forest. So long as Theron remained in
the camp, the image of the kiss, which was enshrined in his heart and
ministered to by all his thoughts, continued enveloped in a haze of sylvan
mystery, like a dryad. Suggestions of its beauty and holiness came to him
in the odors of the woodland, at the sight of wild flowers and
water-lilies. When he walked alone in unfamiliar parts of the forest, he
carried about with him the half-conscious idea of somewhere coming upon a
strange, hidden pool which mortal eye had not seen before—a deep,
sequestered mere of spring-fed waters, walled in by rich, tangled growths
of verdure, and bearing upon its virgin bosom only the shadows of the
primeval wilderness, and the light of the eternal skies. His fancy dwelt
upon some such nook as the enchanted home of the fairy that possessed his
soul. The place, though he never found it, became real to him. As he
pictured it, there rose sometimes from among the lily-pads, stirring the
translucent depths and fluttering over the water's surface drops like
gems, the wonderful form of a woman, with pale leaves wreathed in her
luxuriant red hair, and a skin which gave forth light.</p>
<p>With the homecoming to Octavius, his dreams began to take more account of
realities. In a day or two he was wide awake, and thinking hard. The kiss
was as much as ever the ceaseless companion of his hours, but it no longer
insisted upon shrouding itself in vines and woodland creepers, or
outlining itself in phosphorescent vagueness against mystic backgrounds of
nymph-haunted glades. It advanced out into the noonday, and assumed
tangible dimensions and substance. He saw that it was related to the facts
of his daily life, and had, in turn, altered his own relations to all
these facts.</p>
<p>What ought he to do? What COULD he do? Apparently, nothing but wait. He
waited for a week—then for another week. The conclusion that the
initiative had been left to him began to take shape in his mind. From this
it seemed but a step to the passionate resolve to act at once.</p>
<p>Turning the situation over and over in his anxious thoughts, two things
stood out in special prominence. One was that Celia loved him. The other
was that the boy in Gorringe's law office, and possibly Gorringe, and
heaven only knew how many others besides, had reasons for suspecting this
to be true.</p>
<p>And what about Celia? Side by side with the moving rapture of thinking
about her as a woman, there rose the substantial satisfaction of
contemplating her as Miss Madden. She had kissed him, and she was very
rich. The things gradually linked themselves before his eyes. He tried a
thousand varying guesses at what she proposed to do, and each time reined
up his imagination by the reminder that she was confessedly a creature of
whims, who proposed to do nothing, but was capable of all things.</p>
<p>And as to the boy. If he had blabbed what he saw, it was incredible that
somebody should not take the subject up, and impart a scandalous twist to
it, and send it rolling like a snowball to gather up exaggeration and foul
innuendo till it was big enough to overwhelm him. What would happen to him
if a formal charge were preferred against him? He looked it up in the
Discipline. Of course, if his accusers magnified their mean suspicions and
calumnious imaginings to the point of formulating a charge, it would be
one of immorality. They could prove nothing; there was nothing to prove.
At the worst, it was an indiscretion, which would involve his being
admonished by his Presiding Elder. Or if these narrow bigots confused
slanders with proofs, and showed that they intended to convict him, then
it would be open to him to withdraw from the ministry, in advance of his
condemnation. His relation to the church would be the same as if he had
been expelled, but to the outer world it would be different. And supposing
he did withdraw from the ministry?</p>
<p>Yes; this was the important point. What if he did abandon this mistaken
profession of his? On its mental side the relief would be prodigious,
unthinkable. But on the practical side, the bread-and-butter side? For
some days Theron paused with a shudder when he reached this question. The
thought of the plunge into unknown material responsibilities gave him a
sinking heart. He tried to imagine himself lecturing, canvassing for books
or insurance policies, writing for newspapers—and remained
frightened. But suddenly one day it occurred to him that these qualms and
forebodings were sheer folly. Was not Celia rich? Would she not with
lightning swiftness draw forth that check-book, like the flashing sword of
a champion from its scabbard, and run to his relief? Why, of course. It
was absurd not to have thought of that before.</p>
<p>He recalled her momentary anger with him, that afternoon in the woods,
when he had cried out that discovery would mean ruin to him. He saw
clearly enough now that she had been grieved at his want of faith in her
protection. In his flurry of fright, he had lost sight of the fact that,
if exposure and trouble came to him, she would naturally feel that she had
been the cause of his martyrdom. It was plain enough now. If he got into
hot water, it would be solely on account of his having been seen with her.
He had walked into the woods with her—"the further the better" had
been her own words—out of pure kindliness, and the desire to lead
her away from the scene of her brother's and her own humiliation. But why
amplify arguments? Her own warm heart would tell her, on the instant, how
he had been sacrificed for her sake, and would bring her, eager and
devoted, to his succor.</p>
<p>That was all right, then. Slowly, from this point, suggestions expanded
themselves. The future could be, if he willed it, one long serene triumph
of love, and lofty intellectual companionship, and existence softened and
enriched at every point by all that wealth could command, and the most
exquisite tastes suggest. Should he will it! Ah! the question answered
itself. But he could not enter upon this beckoning heaven of a future
until he had freed himself. When Celia said to him, "Come!" he must not be
in the position to reply, "I should like to, but unfortunately I am tied
by the leg." He should have to leave Octavius, leave the ministry, leave
everything. He could not begin too soon to face these contingencies.</p>
<p>Very likely Celia had not thought it out as far as this. With her, it was
a mere vague "sometime I may." But the harder masculine sense, Theron
felt, existed for the very purpose of correcting and giving point to these
loose feminine notions of time and space. It was for him to clear away the
obstacles, and map the plans out with definite decision.</p>
<p>One warm afternoon, as he lolled in his easy-chair under the open window
of his study, musing upon the ever-shifting phases of this vast,
complicated, urgent problem, some chance words from the sidewalk in front
came to his ears, and, coming, remained to clarify his thoughts.</p>
<p>Two ladies whose voices were strange to him had stopped—as so many
people almost daily stopped—to admire the garden of the parsonage.
One of them expressed her pleasure in general terms. Said the other—</p>
<p>"My husband declares those dahlias alone couldn't be matched for thirty
dollars, and that some of those gladiolus must have cost three or four
dollars apiece. I know we've spent simply oceans of money on our garden,
and it doesn't begin to compare with this."</p>
<p>"It seems like a sinful waste to me," said her companion.</p>
<p>"No-o," the other hesitated. "No, I don't think quite that—if you
can afford it just as well as not. But it does seem to me that I'd rather
live in a little better house, and not spend it ALL on flowers. Just LOOK
at that cactus!"</p>
<p>The voices died away. Theron sat up, with a look of arrested thought upon
his face, then sprang to his feet and moved hurriedly through the parlor
to an open front window. Peering out with caution he saw that the two
women receding from view were fashionably dressed and evidently came from
homes of means. He stared after them in a blank way until they turned a
corner.</p>
<p>He went into the hall then, put on his frock-coat and hat, and stepped out
into the garden. He was conscious of having rather avoided it heretofore—not
altogether without reasons of his own, lying unexamined somewhere in the
recesses of his mind. Now he walked slowly about, and examined the flowers
with great attentiveness. The season was advancing, and he saw that many
plants had gone out of bloom. But what a magnificent plenitude of blossoms
still remained!</p>
<p>Thirty dollars' worth of dahlias—that was what the stranger had
said. Theron hardly brought himself to credit the statement; but all the
same it was apparent to even his uninformed eye that these huge,
imbricated, flowering masses, with their extraordinary half-colors, must
be unusual. He remembered that the boy in Gorringe's office had spoken of
just one lot of plants costing thirty-one dollars and sixty cents, and
there had been two other lots as well. The figures remained surprisingly
distinct in his memory. It was no good deceiving himself any longer: of
course these were the plants that Gorringe had spent his money upon, here
all about him.</p>
<p>As he surveyed them with a sour regard, a cool breeze stirred across the
garden. The tall, over-laden flower-spikes of gladioli bent and nodded at
him; the hollyhocks and flaming alvias, the clustered blossoms on the
standard roses, the delicately painted lilies on their stilt-like stems,
fluttered in the wind, and seemed all bowing satirically to him. "Yes,
Levi Gorringe paid for us!" He almost heard their mocking declaration.</p>
<p>Out in the back-yard, where a longer day of sunshine dwelt, there were
many other flowers, and notably a bed of geraniums which literally made
the eye ache. Standing at this rear corner of the house, he caught the
droning sound of Alice's voice, humming a hymn to herself as she went
about her kitchen work. He saw her through the open window. She was
sweeping, and had a sort of cap on her head which did not add to the
graces of her appearance. He looked at her with a hard glance, recalling
as a fresh grievance the ten days of intolerable boredom he had spent
cooped up in a ridiculous little tent with her, at the camp-meeting. She
must have realized at the time how odious the enforced companionship was
to him. Yes, beyond doubt she did. It came back to him now that they had
spoken but rarely to each other. She had not even praised his sermon upon
the Sabbath-question, which every one else had been in raptures over. For
that matter she no longer praised anything he did, and took obvious pains
to preserve toward him a distant demeanor. So much the better, he felt
himself thinking. If she chose to behave in that offish and unwifely
fashion, she could blame no one but herself for its results.</p>
<p>She had seen him, and came now to the window, watering-pot and broom in
hand. She put her head out, to breathe a breath of dustless air, and began
as if she would smile on him. Then her face chilled and stiffened, as she
caught his look.</p>
<p>"Shall you be home for supper?" she asked, in her iciest tone.</p>
<p>He had not thought of going out before. The question, and the manner of
it, gave immediate urgency to the idea of going somewhere. "I may or I may
not," he replied. "It is quite impossible for me to say." He turned on his
heel with this, and walked briskly out of the yard and down the street.</p>
<p>It was the most natural thing that presently he should be strolling past
the Madden house, and letting a covert glance stray over its front and the
grounds about it, as he loitered along. Every day since his return from
the woods he had given the fates this chance of bringing Celia to meet
him, without avail. He had hung about in the vicinity of the Catholic
church on several evenings as well, but to no purpose. The organ inside
was dumb, and he could detect no signs of Celia's presence on the curtains
of the pastorate next door. This day, too, there was no one visible at the
home of the Maddens, and he walked on, a little sadly. It was weary work
waiting for the signal that never came.</p>
<p>But there were compensations. His mind reverted doggedly to the flowers in
his garden, and to Alice's behavior toward him. They insisted upon
connecting themselves in his thoughts. Why should Levi Gorringe, a
money-lender, and therefore the last man in the world to incur reckless
expenditure, go and buy perhaps a hundred dollars, worth of flowers for
his wife's garden? It was time—high time—to face this
question. And his experiencing religion afterward, just when Alice did,
and marching down to the rail to kneel beside her—that was a thing
to be thought of, too.</p>
<p>Meditation, it is true, hardly threw fresh light upon the matter. It was
incredible, of course, that there should be anything wrong. To even shape
a thought of Alice in connection with gallantry would be wholly
impossible. Nor could it be said that Gorringe, in his new capacity as a
professing church-member, had disclosed any sign of ulterior motives, or
of insincerity. Yet there the facts were. While Theron pondered them,
their mystery, if they involved a mystery, baffled him altogether. But
when he had finished, he found himself all the same convinced that neither
Alice nor Gorringe would be free to blame him for anything he might do. He
had grounds for complaint against them. If he did not himself know just
what these grounds were, it was certain enough that THEY knew. Very well,
then, let them take the responsibility for what happened.</p>
<p>It was indeed awkward that at the moment, as Theron chanced to emerge
temporarily from his brown-study, his eyes fell full upon the spare,
well-knit form of Levi Gorringe himself, standing only a few feet away, in
the staircase entrance to his law office. His lean face, browned by the
summer's exposure, had a more Arabian aspect than ever. His hands were in
his pockets, and he held an unlighted cigar between his teeth. He looked
the Rev. Mr. Ware over calmly, and nodded recognition.</p>
<p>Theron had halted instinctively. On the instant he would have given a
great deal not to have stopped at all. It was stupid of him to have
paused, but it would not do now to go on without words of some sort. He
moved over to the door-way, and made a half-hearted pretence of looking at
the photographs in one of the show-cases at its side. As Mr. Gorringe did
not take his hands from his pockets, there was no occasion for any formal
greeting.</p>
<p>"I had no idea that they took such good pictures in Octavius," Theron
remarked after a minute's silence, still bending in examination of the
photographs.</p>
<p>"They ought to; they charge New York prices," observed the lawyer,
sententiously.</p>
<p>Theron found in the words confirmation of his feeling that Gorringe was
not naturally a lavish or extravagant man. Rather was he a careful and
calculating man, who spent money only for a purpose. Though the minister
continued gazing at the stiff presentments of local beauties and swains,
his eyes seemed to see salmon-hued hollyhocks and spotted lilies instead.
Suddenly a resolve came to him. He stood erect, and faced his trustee.</p>
<p>"Speaking of the price of things," he said, with an effort of arrogance in
his measured tone, "I have never had an opportunity before of mentioning
the subject of the flowers you have so kindly furnished for my—for
MY garden."</p>
<p>"Why mention it now?" queried Gorringe, with nonchalance. He turned his
cigar about with a movement of his lips, and worked it into the corner of
his mouth. He did not find it necessary to look at Theron at all.</p>
<p>"Because—" began Mr. Ware, and then hesitated—"because—well,
it raises a question of my being under obligation, which I—"</p>
<p>"Oh, no, sir," said the lawyer; "put that out of your mind. You are no
more under obligation to me than I am to you. Oh, no, make yourself easy
about that. Neither of us owes the other anything."</p>
<p>"Not even good-will—I take that to be your meaning," retorted
Theron, with some heat.</p>
<p>"The words are yours, sir," responded Gorringe, coolly. "I do not object
to them."</p>
<p>"As you like," put in the other. "If it be so, why, then all the more
reason why I should, under the circumstances—"</p>
<p>"Under what circumstances?" interposed the lawyer. "Let us be clear about
this thing as we go along. To what circumstances do you refer?"</p>
<p>He had turned his eyes now, and looked Theron in the face. A slight
protrusion of his lower jaw had given the cigar an upward tilt under the
black mustache.</p>
<p>"The circumstances are that you have brought or sent to my garden a great
many very expensive flower-plants and bushes and so on."</p>
<p>"And you object? I had not supposed that clergymen in general—and
you in particular—were so sensitive. Have donation parties, then,
gone out of date?"</p>
<p>"I understand your sneer well enough," retorted Theron, "but that can
pass. The main point is, that you did me the honor to send these plants—or
to smuggle them in—but never once deigned to hint to me that you had
done so. No one told me. Except by mere accident, I should not have known
to this day where they came from."</p>
<p>Mr. Gorringe twisted the cigar at another angle, with lines of grim
amusement about the corner of his mouth. "I should have thought," he said
with dry deliberation, "that possibly this fact might have raised in your
mind the conceivable hypothesis that the plants might not be intended for
you at all."</p>
<p>"That is precisely it, sir," said Theron. There were people passing, and
he was forced to keep his voice down. It would have been a relief, he
felt, to shout. "That is it—they were not intended for me."</p>
<p>"Well, then, what are you talking about?" The lawyer's speech had become
abrupt almost to incivility.</p>
<p>"I think my remarks have been perfectly clear," said the minister, with
dignity. It was a new experience to be addressed in that fashion. It
occurred to him to add, "Please remember that I am not in the witness-box,
to be bullied or insulted by a professional."</p>
<p>Gorringe studied Theron's face attentively with a cold, searching
scrutiny. "You may thank your stars you're not!" he said, with
significance.</p>
<p>What on earth could he mean? The words and the menacing tone greatly
impressed Theron. Indeed, upon reflection, he found that they frightened
him. The disposition to adopt a high tone with the lawyer was melting
away.</p>
<p>"I do not see," he began, and then deliberately allowed his voice to take
on an injured and plaintive inflection—"I do not see why you should
adopt this tone toward me—Brother Gorringe."</p>
<p>The lawyer scowled, and bit sharply into the cigar, but said nothing.</p>
<p>"If I have unconsciously offended you in any way," Theron went on, "I beg
you to tell me how. I liked you from the beginning of my pastorate here,
and the thought that latterly we seemed to be drifting apart has given me
much pain. But now it is still more distressing to find you actually
disposed to quarrel with me. Surely, Brother Gorringe, between a pastor
and a probationer who—"</p>
<p>"No," Gorringe broke in; "quarrel isn't the word for it. There isn't any
quarrel, Mr. Ware." He stepped down from the door-stone to the sidewalk as
he spoke, and stood face to face with Theron. Working-men with
dinner-pails, and factory girls, were passing close to them, and he
lowered his voice to a sharp, incisive half-whisper as he added, "It
wouldn't be worth any grown man's while to quarrel with so poor a creature
as you are."</p>
<p>Theron stood confounded, with an empty stare of bewilderment on his face.
It rose in his mind that the right thing to feel was rage, righteous
indignation, fury; but for the life of him, he could not muster any manly
anger. The character of the insult stupefied him.</p>
<p>"I do not know that I have anything to say to you in reply," he remarked,
after what seemed to him a silence of minutes. His lips framed the words
automatically, but they expressed well enough the blank vacancy of his
mind. The suggestion that anybody deemed him a "poor creature" grew more
astounding, incomprehensible, as it swelled in his brain.</p>
<p>"No, I suppose not," snapped Gorringe. "You're not the sort to stand up to
men; your form is to go round the corner and take it out of somebody
weaker than yourself—a defenceless woman, for instance."</p>
<p>"Oh—ho!" said Theron. The exclamation had uttered itself. The sound
of it seemed to clarify his muddled thoughts; and as they ranged
themselves in order, he began to understand. "Oh—ho!" he said again,
and nodded his head in token of comprehension.</p>
<p>The lawyer, chewing his cigar with increased activity, glared at him.
"What do you mean?" he demanded peremptorily.</p>
<p>"Mean?" said the minister. "Oh, nothing that I feel called upon to explain
to you."</p>
<p>It was passing strange, but his self-possession had all at once returned
to him. As it became more apparent that the lawyer was losing his temper,
Theron found the courage to turn up the corners of his lips in show of a
bitter little smile of confidence. He looked into the other's dusky face,
and flaunted this smile at it in contemptuous defiance. "It is not a
subject that I can discuss with propriety—at this stage," he added.</p>
<p>"Damn you! Are you talking about those flowers?"</p>
<p>"Oh, I am not talking about anything in particular," returned Theron, "not
even the curious choice of language which my latest probationer seems to
prefer."</p>
<p>"Go and strike my name off the list!" said Gorringe, with rising passion.
"I was a fool to ever have it there. To think of being a probationer of
yours—my God!"</p>
<p>"That will be a pity—from one point of view," remarked Theron, still
with the ironical smile on his lips. "You seemed to enter upon the new
life with such deliberation and fixity of purpose, too! I can imagine the
regrets your withdrawal will cause, in certain quarters. I only hope that
it will not discourage those who accompanied you to the altar, and shared
your enthusiasm at the time." He had spoken throughout with studied
slowness and an insolent nicety of utterance.</p>
<p>"You had better go away!" broke forth Gorringe. "If you don't, I shall
forget myself."</p>
<p>"For the first time?" asked Theron. Then, warned by the flash in the
lawyer's eye, he turned on his heel and sauntered, with a painstaking
assumption of a mind quite at ease, up the street.</p>
<p>Gorringe's own face twitched and his veins tingled as he looked after him.
He spat the shapeless cigar out of his mouth into the gutter, and, drawing
forth another from his pocket, clenched it between his teeth, his gaze
following the tall form of the Methodist minister till it was merged in
the crowd.</p>
<p>"Well, I'm damned!" he said aloud to himself.</p>
<p>The photographer had come down to take in his showcases for the night. He
looked up from his task at the exclamation, and grinned inquiringly.</p>
<p>"I've just been talking to a man," said the lawyer, "who's so much meaner
than any other man I ever heard of that it takes my breath away. He's got
a wife that's as pure and good as gold, and he knows it, and she worships
the ground he walks on, and he knows that too. And yet the scoundrel is
around trying to sniff out some shadow of a pretext for misusing her worse
than he's already done. Yes, sir; he'd be actually tickled to death if he
could nose up some hint of a scandal about her—something that he
could pretend to believe, and work for his own advantage to levy
blackmail, or get rid of her, or whatever suited his book. I didn't think
there was such an out-and-out cur on this whole footstool. I almost wish,
by God, I'd thrown him into the canal!"</p>
<p>"Yes, you lawyers must run against some pretty snide specimens," remarked
the photographer, lifting one of the cases from its sockets.</p>
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