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<h2> CHAPTER XXVII </h2>
<p>That night brought the first frost of the season worth counting. In the
morning, when Theron came downstairs, his casual glance through the window
caught a desolate picture of blackened dahlia stalks and shrivelled
blooms. The gayety and color of the garden were gone, and in their place
was shabby and dishevelled ruin. He flung the sash up and leaned out. The
nipping autumn air was good to breathe. He looked about him, surveying the
havoc the frost had wrought among the flowers, and smiled.</p>
<p>At breakfast he smiled again—a mirthless and calculated smile. "I
see that Brother Gorringe's flowers have come to grief over night," he
remarked.</p>
<p>Alice looked at him before she spoke, and saw on his face a confirmation
of the hostile hint in his voice. She nodded in a constrained way, and
said nothing.</p>
<p>"Or rather, I should say," Theron went on, with deliberate words, "the
late Brother Gorringe's flowers."</p>
<p>"How do you mean—LATE" asked his wife, swiftly.</p>
<p>"Oh, calm yourself!" replied the husband. "He is not dead. He has only
intimated to me his desire to sever his connection. I may add that he did
so in a highly offensive manner."</p>
<p>"I am very sorry," said Alice, in a low tone, and with her eyes on her
plate.</p>
<p>"I took it for granted you would be grieved at his backsliding," remarked
Theron, making his phrases as pointed as he could. "He was such a
promising probationer, and you took such a keen interest in his spiritual
awakening. But the frost has nipped his zeal—along with the hundred
or more dollars' worth of flowers by which he testified his faith. I find
something interesting in their having been blasted simultaneously."</p>
<p>Alice dropped all pretence of interest in her breakfast. With a flushed
face and lips tightly compressed, she made a movement as if to rise from
her chair. Then, changing her mind, she sat bolt upright and faced her
husband.</p>
<p>"I think we had better have this out right now," she said, in a voice
which Theron hardly recognized. "You have been hinting round the subject
long enough—too long. There are some things nobody is obliged to put
up with, and this is one of them. You will oblige me by saying out in so
many words what it is you are driving at."</p>
<p>The outburst astounded Theron. He laid down his knife and fork, and gazed
at his wife in frank surprise. She had so accustomed him, of late, to a
demeanor almost abject in its depressed docility that he had quite
forgotten the Alice of the old days, when she had spirit and courage
enough for two, and a notable tongue of her own. The flash in her eyes and
the lines of resolution about her mouth and chin for a moment daunted him.
Then he observed by a flutter of the frill at her wrist that she was
trembling.</p>
<p>"I am sure I have nothing to 'say out in so many words,' as you put it,"
he replied, forcing his voice into cool, impassive tones. "I merely
commented upon a coincidence, that was all. If, for any reason under the
sun, the subject chances to be unpleasant to you, I have no earthly desire
to pursue it."</p>
<p>"But I insist upon having it pursued!" returned Alice. "I've had just all
I can stand of your insinuations and innuendoes, and it's high time we had
some plain talk. Ever since the revival, you have been dropping sly,
underhand hints about Mr. Gorringe and—and me. Now I ask you what
you mean by it."</p>
<p>Yes, there was a shake in her voice, and he could see how her bosom heaved
in a tremor of nervousness. It was easy for him to be very calm.</p>
<p>"It is you who introduce these astonishing suggestions, not I," he replied
coldly. "It is you who couple your name with his—somewhat to my
surprise, I admit—but let me suggest that we drop the subject. You
are excited just now, and you might say things that you would prefer to
leave unsaid. It would surely be better for all concerned to say no more
about it."</p>
<p>Alice, staring across the table at him with knitted brows, emitted a sharp
little snort of indignation. "Well, I never! Theron, I wouldn't have
thought it of you!"</p>
<p>"There are so many things you wouldn't have thought, on such a variety of
subjects," he observed, with a show of resuming his breakfast. "But why
continue? We are only angering each other."</p>
<p>"Never mind that," she replied, with more control over her speech. "I
guess things have come to a pass where a little anger won't do any harm. I
have a right to insist on knowing what you mean by your insinuations."</p>
<p>Theron sighed. "Why will you keep harping on the thing?" he asked wearily.
"I have displayed no curiosity. I don't ask for any explanations. I think
I mentioned that the man had behaved insultingly to me—but that
doesn't matter. I don't bring it up as a grievance. I am very well able to
take care of myself I have no wish to recur to the incident in any way. So
far as I am concerned, the topic is dismissed."</p>
<p>"Listen to me!" broke in Alice, with eager gravity. She hesitated, as he
looked up with a nod of attention, and reflected as well as she was able
among her thoughts for a minute or two. "This is what I want to say to
you. Ever since we came to this hateful Octavius, you and I have been
drifting apart—or no, that doesn't express it—simply rushing
away from each other. It only began last spring, and now the space between
us is so wide that we are worse than complete strangers. For strangers at
least don't hate each other, and I've had a good many occasions lately to
see that you positively do hate me—"</p>
<p>"What grotesque absurdity" interposed Theron, impatiently.</p>
<p>"No, it isn't absurdity; it's gospel truth," retorted Alice. "And—don't
interrupt me—there have been times, too, when I have had to ask
myself if I wasn't getting almost to hate you in return. I tell you this
frankly."</p>
<p>"Yes, you are undoubtedly frank," commented the husband, toying with his
teaspoon. "A hypercritical person might consider, almost too frank."</p>
<p>Alice scanned his face closely while he spoke, and held her breath as if
in expectant suspense. Her countenance clouded once more. "You don't
realize, Theron," she said gravely; "your voice when you speak to me, your
look, your manner, they have all changed. You are like another man—some
man who never loved me, and doesn't even know me, much less like me. I
want to know what the end of it is to be. Up to the time of your sickness
last summer, until after the Soulsbys went away, I didn't let myself get
downright discouraged. It seemed too monstrous for belief that you should
go away out of my life like that. It didn't seem possible that God could
allow such a thing. It came to me that I had been lax in my Christian
life, especially in my position as a minister's wife, and that this was my
punishment. I went to the altar, to intercede with Him, and to try to
loose my burden at His feet. But nothing has come of it. I got no help
from you."</p>
<p>"Really, Alice," broke in Theron, "I explained over and over again to you
how preoccupied I was—with the book—and affairs generally."</p>
<p>"I got no assistance from Heaven either," she went on, declining the
diversion he offered. "I don't want to talk impiously, but if there is a
God, he has forgotten me, his poor heart-broken hand-maiden."</p>
<p>"You are talking impiously, Alice," observed her husband. "And you are
doing me cruel injustice, into the bargain."</p>
<p>"I only wish I were!" she replied; "I only wish to God I were!"</p>
<p>"Well, then, accept my complete assurance that you ARE—that your
whole conception of me, and of what you are pleased to describe as my
change toward you, is an entire and utter mistake. Of course, the married
state is no more exempt from the universal law of growth, development,
alteration, than any other human institution. On its spiritual side, of
course, viewed either as a sacrament, or as—"</p>
<p>"Don't let us go into that," interposed Alice, abruptly. "In fact, there
is no good in talking any more at all. It is as if we didn't speak the
same language. You don't understand what I say; it makes no impression
upon your mind."</p>
<p>"Quite to the contrary," he assured her; "I have been deeply interested
and concerned in all you have said. I think you are laboring under a great
delusion, and I have tried my best to convince you of it; but I have never
heard you speak more intelligibly or, I might say, effectively."</p>
<p>A little gleam of softness stole over Alice's face. "If you only gave me a
little more credit for intelligence," she said, "you would find that I am
not such a blockhead as you think I am."</p>
<p>"Come, come!" he said, with a smiling show of impatience. "You really
mustn't impute things to me wholesale, like that."</p>
<p>She was glad to answer the smile in kind. "No; but truly," she pleaded,
"you don't realize it, but you have grown into a way of treating me as if
I had absolutely no mind at all."</p>
<p>"You have a very admirable mind," he responded, and took up his teaspoon
again. She reached for his cup, and poured out hot coffee for him. An
almost cheerful spirit had suddenly descended upon the breakfast table.</p>
<p>"And now let me say the thing I have been aching to say for months," she
began in less burdened voice.</p>
<p>He lifted his brows. "Haven't things been discussed pretty fully already?"
he asked.</p>
<p>The doubtful, harassed expression clouded upon her face at his words, and
she paused. "No," she said resolutely, after an instant's reflection; "it
is my duty to discuss this, too. It is a misunderstanding all round. You
remember that I told you Mr. Gorringe had given me some plants, which he
got from some garden or other?"</p>
<p>"If you really wish to go on with the subject—yes I have a
recollection of that particular falsehood of his."</p>
<p>"He did it with the kindest and friendliest motives in the world!"
protested Alice. "He saw how down-in-the-mouth and moping I was here,
among these strangers—and I really was getting quite peaked and
run-down—and he said I stayed indoors too much and it would do me
all sorts of good to work in the garden, and he would send me some plants.
The next I knew, here they were, with a book about mixing soils and
planting, and so on. When I saw him next, and thanked him, I suppose I
showed some apprehension about his having laid out money on them, and he,
just to ease my mind, invented the story about his getting them for
nothing. When I found out the truth—I got it out of that boy, Harvey
Semple—he admitted it quite frankly—said he was wrong to
deceive me."</p>
<p>"This was in the fine first fervor of his term of probation, I suppose,"
put in Theron. He made no effort to dissemble the sneer in his voice.</p>
<p>"Well," answered Alice, with a touch of acerbity, "I have told you now,
and it is off my mind. There never would have been the slightest
concealment about it, if you hadn't begun by keeping me at arm's length,
and making it next door to impossible to speak to you at all, and if—"</p>
<p>"And if he hadn't lied." Theron, as he finished her sentence for her, rose
from the table. Dallying for a brief moment by his chair, there seemed the
magnetic premonition in the air of some further and kindlier word. Then he
turned and walked sedately into the next room, and closed the door behind
him. The talk was finished; and Alice, left alone, passed the knuckle of
her thumb over one swimming eye and then the other, and bit her lips and
swallowed down the sob that rose in her throat.</p>
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