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<h2> CHAPTER XXVI </h2>
<p>Theron spent half an hour in aimless strolling about the streets. From
earliest boyhood his mind had always worked most clearly when he walked
alone. Every mental process which had left a mark upon his memory and his
career—the daydreams of future academic greatness and fame which had
fashioned themselves in his brain as a farm lad; the meditations,
raptures, and high resolves of his student period at the seminary; the
more notable sermons and powerful discourse by which he had revealed the
genius that was in him to astonished and delighted assemblages—all
were associated in his retrospective thoughts with solitary rambles.</p>
<p>He had a very direct and vivid consciousness now that it was good to be on
his legs, and alone. He had never in his life been more sensible of the
charm of his own companionship. The encounter with Gorringe seemed to have
cleared all the clouds out of his brain, and restored lightness to his
heart. After such an object lesson, the impossibility of his continuing to
sacrifice himself to a notion of duty to these low-minded and
coarse-natured villagers was beyond all argument. There could no longer be
any doubt about his moral right to turn his back upon them, to wash his
hands of the miserable combination of hypocrisy and hysterics which they
called their spiritual life.</p>
<p>And the question of Gorringe and Alice, that too stood precisely where he
wanted it. Even in his own thoughts, he preferred to pursue it no further.
Between them somewhere an offence of concealment, it might be of
conspiracy, had been committed against him. It was no business of his to
say more, or to think more. He rested his case simply on the fact, which
could not be denied, and which he was not in the least interested to have
explained, one way or the other. The recollection of Gorringe's obvious
disturbance of mind was especially pleasant to him. He himself had been
magnanimous almost to the point of weakness. He had gone out of his way to
call the man "brother," and to give him an opportunity of behaving like a
gentleman; but his kindly forbearance had been wasted. Gorringe was not
the man to understand generous feelings, much less rise to their level. He
had merely shown that he would be vicious if he knew how. It was more
important and satisfactory to recall that he had also shown a complete
comprehension of the injured husband's grievance. The fact that he had
recognized it was enough—was, in fact, everything.</p>
<p>In the background of his thoughts Theron had carried along a notion of
going and dining with Father Forbes when the time for the evening meal
should arrive. The idea in itself attracted him, as a fitting capstone to
his resolve not to go home to supper. It gave just the right kind of
character to his domestic revolt. But when at last he stood on the
doorstep of the pastorate, waiting for an answer to the tinkle of the
electric bell he had heard ring inside, his mind contained only the single
thought that now he should hear something about Celia. Perhaps he might
even find her there; but he put that suggestion aside as slightly
unpleasant.</p>
<p>The hag-faced housekeeper led him, as before, into the dining-room. It was
still daylight, and he saw on the glance that the priest was alone at the
table, with a book beside him to read from as he ate.</p>
<p>Father Forbes rose and came forward, greeting his visitor with profuse
urbanity and smiles. If there was a perfunctory note in the invitation to
sit down and share the meal, Theron did not catch it. He frankly displayed
his pleasure as he laid aside his hat, and took the chair opposite his
host.</p>
<p>"It is really only a few months since I was here, in this room, before,"
he remarked, as the priest closed his book and tossed it to one side, and
the housekeeper came in to lay another place. "Yet it might have been
years, many long years, so tremendous is the difference that the lapse of
time has wrought in me."</p>
<p>"I am afraid we have nothing to tempt you very much, Mr. Ware," remarked
Father Forbes, with a gesture of his plump white hand which embraced the
dishes in the centre of the table. "May I send you a bit of this boiled
mutton? I have very homely tastes when I am by myself."</p>
<p>"I was saying," Theron observed, after some moments had passed in silence,
"that I date such a tremendous revolution in my thoughts, my beliefs, my
whole mind and character, from my first meeting with you, my first coming
here. I don't know how to describe to you the enormous change that has
come over me; and I owe it all to you."</p>
<p>"I can only hope, then, that it is entirely of a satisfactory nature,"
said the priest, politely smiling.</p>
<p>"Oh, it is so splendidly satisfactory!" said Theron, with fervor. "I look
back at myself now with wonder and pity. It seems incredible that, such a
little while ago, I should have been such an ignorant and unimaginative
clod of earth, content with such petty ambitions and actually proud of my
limitations."</p>
<p>"And you have larger ambitions now?" asked the other. "Pray let me help
you to some potatoes. I am afraid that ambitions only get in our way and
trip us up. We clergymen are like street-car horses. The more steadily we
jog along between the rails, the better it is for us."</p>
<p>"Oh, I don't intend to remain in the ministry," declared Theron. The
statement seemed to him a little bald, now that he had made it; and as his
companion lifted his brows in surprise, he added stumblingly: "That is, as
I feel now, it seems to me impossible that I should remain much longer.
With you, of course, it is different. You have a thousand things to
interest and pleasantly occupy you in your work and its ceremonies, so
that mere belief or non-belief in the dogma hardly matters. But in our
church dogma is everything. If you take that away, or cease to have its
support, the rest is intolerable, hideous."</p>
<p>Father Forbes cut another slice of mutton for himself. "It is a pretty
serious business to make such a change at your time of life. I take it for
granted you will think it all over very carefully before you commit
yourself." He said this with an almost indifferent air, which rather
chilled his listener's enthusiasm.</p>
<p>"Oh, yes,", Theron made answer; "I shall do nothing rash. But I have a
good many plans for the future."</p>
<p>Father Forbes did not ask what these were, and a brief further period of
silence fell upon the table.</p>
<p>"I hope everything went off smoothly at the picnic," Theron ventured, at
last. "I have not seen any of you since then."</p>
<p>The priest shook his head and sighed. "No," he said. "It is a bad
business. I have had a great deal of unhappiness out of it this past
fortnight. That young man who was rude to you—of course it was mere
drunken, irresponsible nonsense on his part—has got himself into a
serious scrape, I'm afraid. It is being kept quite within the family, and
we hope to manage so that it will remain there, but it has terribly upset
his father and his sister. But that, after all, is not so hard to bear as
the other affliction that has come upon the Maddens. You remember Michael,
the other brother? He seems to have taken cold that evening, or perhaps
over-exerted himself. He has been seized with quick consumption. He will
hardly last till snow flies."</p>
<p>"Oh, I am GRIEVED to hear that!" Theron spoke with tremulous earnestness.
It seemed to him as if Michael were in some way related to him.</p>
<p>"It is very hard upon them all," the priest went on. "Michael is as sweet
and holy a character as it is possible for any one to think of. He is the
apple of his father's eye. They were inseparable, those two. Do you know
the father, Mr. Madden?"</p>
<p>Theron shook his head. "I think I have seen him," he said. "A small man,
with gray whiskers."</p>
<p>"A peasant," said Father Forbes, "but with a heart of gold. Poor man! he
has had little enough out of his riches. Ah, the West Coast people, what
tragedies I have seen among them over here! They have rudimentary lung
organizations, like a frog's, to fit the mild, wet soft air they live in.
The sharp air here kills them off like flies in a frost. Whole families
go. I should think there are a dozen of old Jeremiah's children in the
cemetery. If Michael could have passed his twenty-eighth year, there would
have been hope for him, at least till his thirty-fifth. These pulmonary
things seem to go by sevens, you know."</p>
<p>"I didn't know," said Theron. "It is very strange—and very sad." His
startled mind was busy, all at once, with conjectures as to Celia's age.</p>
<p>"The sister—Miss Madden—seems extremely strong," he remarked
tentatively.</p>
<p>"Celia may escape the general doom," said the priest. His guest noted that
he clenched his shapely white hand on the table as he spoke, and that his
gentle, carefully modulated voice had a gritty hardness in its tone. "THAT
would be too dreadful to think of," he added.</p>
<p>Theron shuddered in silence, and strove to shut his mind against the
thought.</p>
<p>"She has taken Michael's illness so deeply to heart," the priest
proceeded, "and devoted herself to him so untiringly that I get a little
nervous about her. I have been urging her to go away and get a change of
air and scene, if only for a few days. She does not sleep well, and that
is always a bad thing."</p>
<p>"I think I remember her telling me once that sometimes she had sleepless
spells," said Theron. "She said that then she banged on her piano at all
hours, or dragged the cushions about from room to room, like a wild woman.
A very interesting young lady, don't you find her so?"</p>
<p>Father Forbes let a wan smile play on his lips. "What, our Celia?" he
said. "Interesting! Why, Mr. Ware, there is no one like her in the world.
She is as unique as—what shall I say?—as the Irish are among
races. Her father and mother were both born in mud-cabins, and she—she
might be the daughter of a hundred kings, except that they seem mostly
rather under-witted than otherwise. She always impresses me as a sort of
atavistic idealization of the old Kelt at his finest and best. There in
Ireland you got a strange mixture of elementary early peoples, walled off
from the outer world by the four seas, and free to work out their own
racial amalgam on their own lines. They brought with them at the outset a
great inheritance of Eastern mysticism. Others lost it, but the Irish, all
alone on their island, kept it alive and brooded on it, and rooted their
whole spiritual side in it. Their religion is full of it; their blood is
full of it; our Celia is fuller of it than anybody else. The Ireland of
two thousand years ago is incarnated in her. They are the merriest people
and the saddest, the most turbulent and the most docile, the most talented
and the most unproductive, the most practical and the most visionary, the
most devout and the most pagan. These impossible contradictions war
ceaselessly in their blood. When I look at Celia, I seem to see in my
mind's eye the fair young-ancestral mother of them all."</p>
<p>Theron gazed at the speaker with open admiration. "I love to hear you
talk," he said simply.</p>
<p>An unbidden memory flitted upward in his mind. Those were the very words
that Alice had so often on her lips in their old courtship days. How
curious it was! He looked at the priest, and had a quaint sensation of
feeling as a romantic woman must feel in the presence of a specially
impressive masculine personality. It was indeed strange that this
soft-voiced, portly creature in a gown, with his white, fat hands and his
feline suavity of manner, should produce such a commanding and unique
effect of virility. No doubt this was a part of the great sex mystery
which historically surrounded the figure of the celibate priest as with an
atmosphere. Women had always been prostrating themselves before it.
Theron, watching his companion's full, pallid face in the lamp-light,
tried to fancy himself in the priest's place, looking down upon these
worshipping female forms. He wondered what the celibate's attitude really
was. The enigma fascinated him.</p>
<p>Father Forbes, after his rhetorical outburst, and been eating. He pushed
aside his cheese-plate. "I grow enthusiastic on the subject of my race
sometimes," he remarked, with the suggestion of an apology. "But I make up
for it other times—most of the time—by scolding them. If it
were not such a noble thing to be an Irishman, it would be ridiculous."</p>
<p>"Ah," said Theron, deprecatingly, "who would not be enthusiastic in
talking of Miss Madden? What you said about her was perfect. As you spoke,
I was thinking how proud and thankful we ought to be for the privilege of
knowing her—we who do know her well—although of course your
friendship with her is vastly more intimate than mine—than mine
could ever hope to be."</p>
<p>The priest offered no comment, and Theron went on: "I hardly know how to
describe the remarkable impression she makes upon me. I can't imagine to
myself any other young woman so brilliant or broad in her views, or so
courageous. Of course, her being so rich makes it easier for her to do
just what she wants to do, but her bravery is astonishing all the same. We
had a long and very sympathetic talk in the woods, that day of the picnic,
after we left you. I don't know whether she spoke to you about it?"</p>
<p>Father Forbes made a movement of the head and eyes which seemed to
negative the suggestion.</p>
<p>"Her talk," continued Theron, "gave me quite new ideas of the range and
capacity of the female mind. I wonder that everybody in Octavius isn't
full of praise and admiration for her talents and exceptional character.
In such a small town as this, you would think she would be the centre of
attention—the pride of the place."</p>
<p>"I think she has as much praise as is good for her," remarked the priest,
quietly.</p>
<p>"And here's a thing that puzzles me," pursued Mr. Ware. "I was immensely
surprised to find that Dr. Ledsmar doesn't even think she is smart—or
at least he professes the utmost intellectual contempt for her, and says
he dislikes her into the bargain. But of course she dislikes him, too, so
that's only natural. But I can't understand his denying her great
ability."</p>
<p>The priest smiled in a dubious way. "Don't borrow unnecessary alarm about
that, Mr. Ware," he said, with studied smoothness of modulated tones.
"These two good friends of mine have much enjoyment out of the idea that
they are fighting for the mastery over my poor unstable character. It has
grown to be a habit with them, and a hobby as well, and they pursue it
with tireless zest. There are not many intellectual diversions open to us
here, and they make the most of this one. It amuses them, and it is not
without its charms for me, in my capacity as an interested observer. It is
a part of the game that they should pretend to themselves that they detest
each other. In reality I fancy that they like each other very much. At any
rate, there is nothing to be disturbed about."</p>
<p>His mellifluous tones had somehow the effect of suggesting to Theron that
he was an outsider and would better mind his own business. Ah, if this
purring pussy-cat of a priest only knew how little of an outsider he
really was! The thought gave him an easy self-control.</p>
<p>"Of course," he said, "our warm mutual friendship makes the observation of
these little individual vagaries merely a part of a delightful whole. I
should not dream of discussing Miss Madden's confidences to me, or the
doctor's either, outside our own little group."</p>
<p>Father Forbes reached behind him and took from a chair his black
three-cornered cap with the tassel. "Unfortunately I have a sick call
waiting me," he said, gathering up his gown and slowly rising.</p>
<p>"Yes, I saw the man sitting in the hall," remarked Theron, getting to his
feet.</p>
<p>"I would ask you to go upstairs and wait," the priest went on, "but my
return, unhappily, is quite uncertain. Another evening I may be more
fortunate. I am leaving town tomorrow for some days, but when I get back—"</p>
<p>The polite sentence did not complete itself. Father Forbes had come out
into the hall, giving a cool nod to the working-man, who rose from the
bench as they passed, and shook hands with his guest on the doorstep.</p>
<p>When the door had closed upon Mr. Ware, the priest turned to the man. "You
have come about those frames," he said. "If you will come upstairs, I will
show you the prints, and you can give me a notion of what can be done with
them. I rather fancy the idea of a triptych in carved old English, if you
can manage it."</p>
<p>After the workman had gone away, Father Forbes put on slippers and an old
loose soutane, lighted a cigar, and, pushing an easy-chair over to the
reading lamp, sat down with a book. Then something occurred to him, and he
touched the house-bell at his elbow.</p>
<p>"Maggie," he said gently, when the housekeeper appeared at the door, "I
will have the coffee and FINE CHAMPAGNE up here, if it is no trouble. And—oh,
Maggie—I was compelled this evening to turn the blameless visit of
the framemaker into a venial sin, and that involves a needless wear and
tear of conscience. I think that—hereafter—you understand?—I
am not invariably at home when the Rev. Mr. Ware does me the honor to
call."</p>
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