<h2>CHAPTER XXV</h2>
<h3>THE CHINOOK</h3></div>
<p>Emblazoned on the front page of the Omaha paper upon which Mr. Pantin
relied to keep him abreast of the times was the announcement that both
mutton and wool had touched highwater mark in the history of the
sheep-raising industry.</p>
<p>Mr. Pantin moved into the bow window where the light was better and read
the article carefully. The Australian embargo, dust-storms in the
steppes of Russia, rumors of war, all had contributed to send prices
soaring. When he had concluded, he took the stub of a pencil from his
waistcoat pocket and made a computation in neat figures upon the margin.
As he eyed the total his mouth puckered in a whistle which changed
gradually to a grin of satisfaction.</p>
<p>“You can’t keep a squirrel down in a timbered country,” Mr. Pantin
chuckled aloud, ambiguously.</p>
<p>A pleased smile still rested upon his face when Mrs. Pantin entered.</p>
<p>“Priscilla, will you do me a favor?”</p>
<p>“Abram,” reproachfully, “have I ever failed you? What is it?”</p>
<p>“The next time you have something going on here I want you to invite
Kate Prentice.”</p>
<p>Mrs. Pantin recoiled.</p>
<p>“What!”</p>
<p>“Don’t squawk like that!” said Mr. Pantin, irritably.<SPAN class="pagenum" name='page_299' id='page_299' title='299'></SPAN> “You do it often,
and it’s an annoying mannerism.”</p>
<p>“Do you quite realize what you are asking?” his wife demanded.</p>
<p>“Perfectly,” replied Mr. Pantin, calmly. “I’ve passed the stage when I
talk to make conversation.”</p>
<p>“But think how she’s been criticised!”</p>
<p>Mr. Pantin got up impatiently.</p>
<p>“Oh, you virtuous dames—”</p>
<p>Mrs. Pantin’s thin lips went shut like a rat-trap.</p>
<p>“Abram, are you twitting me?”</p>
<p>Mr. Pantin ignored the accusation, and observed astutely:</p>
<p>“I presume you’ve done your share of talking, and that’s why—”</p>
<p>“She is impossible, and what you ask is impossible,” Mrs. Pantin
declared firmly.</p>
<p>“It’s not often that I ask a favor of you, Prissy.” His tone was
conciliatory.</p>
<p>Mrs. Pantin met him half way and her voice was softer as she answered:</p>
<p>“I appreciate that, Abram, but there are a few of us who must keep up
the bars against such persons. Society—”</p>
<p>“Rats!” ejaculated Mr. Pantin coarsely.</p>
<p>The hand which she had laid tenderly upon his shoulder was withdrawn as
if it harbored a hornet.</p>
<p>“I don’t understand this at all—not at all,” she said, icily.
“However,” very distinctly, “it is not necessary that I should, for I
shall not do it.” She folded her arms as she confronted him.</p>
<p>Mr. Pantin was silent so long that she thought the battle was over, and
purred at him:</p>
<p>“You can realize how I feel about it, can’t you, darling?”<SPAN class="pagenum" name='page_300' id='page_300' title='300'></SPAN></p>
<p>“No, by George, I can’t! And I’m not going to either.” He slapped the
table with Henry Van Dyke in ooze leather for emphasis. “I want Kate
Prentice invited here the next time she’s in town. If you don’t do as I
ask, Priscilla, you shan’t go a step—not a step—to Keokuk this
winter.”</p>
<p>“Is that an ultimatum?” Mrs. Pantin demanded.</p>
<p>Mr. Pantin gave a quick furtive look over either shoulder, then declared
with emphatic gusto:</p>
<p>“I mean every damn word of it!”</p>
<p>Mrs. Pantin stood speechless, thinking rapidly. There was nothing for it
evidently but to play her trump card, which never yet had failed her.
She wasted no breath in further argument, but threw herself full-length
on the davenport and had hysterics.</p>
<p>Only a few times in their married life had Mr. Pantin risen on his hind
legs, speaking figuratively, and defied her. In the beginning, before he
was well housebroken, he was careless in the matter of cleaning his
soles on the scraper, and had been obstinate on the question of changing
his shirt on Wednesdays, holding that once a week was enough for a
person not engaged in manual labor. Mrs. Pantin had won out on each
issue, but it had not been an easy victory. Mr. Pantin had been docile
so long now that she had expected no further trouble with him, therefore
this outbreak was so unlooked for that her fit was almost genuine.</p>
<p>Having hurled his thunderbolt, Mr. Pantin stood above his wife regarding
her imperturbably as she lay with her face buried in a sofa pillow.
Unmoved, he even felt a certain interest in the rise and fall of her
shoulder blades as she sobbed. Actually, she seemed to breathe with
them—“like the gills of a fish,” he thought heartlessly—and wondered
how long she could keep it up.<SPAN class="pagenum" name='page_301' id='page_301' title='301'></SPAN></p>
<p>“It’s no use having this tantrum, Prissy,” he said inexorably.</p>
<p>Tantrum! The final insult. Mrs. Pantin squealed with rage and gnawed the
corner of the leather pillow.</p>
<p>“You might as well come out of it,” he admonished further. “You’ll only
make your eyes red and give yourself a headache.”</p>
<p>“You’re a brute, Abram Pantin, and I wish I’d never seen you!”</p>
<p>Mr. Pantin suppressed the reply that the wish was mutual. Instead, he
picked up the leather button which flew on the floor when Mrs. Pantin
doubled her fist and smote the davenport.</p>
<p>“I doubt very much if she’d come, even if you ask her,” said Pantin. It
was a stroke of genius.</p>
<p>“Not come!” The eye which Mrs. Pantin exposed regarded Mr. Pantin
scornfully. “Not come? Why, she’d be tickled to pieces.”</p>
<p>But of that Mr. Pantin continued to have his own opinion.</p>
<p>Mrs. Pantin sat up and winked rapidly in her indignation.</p>
<p>“She’s made if I take her up, and the woman isn’t so stupid as not to
know it, is she?”</p>
<p>“She may not see it from that angle,” dryly. “At any rate, you’ll be
pleasing me greatly by asking her.”</p>
<p>Mrs. Pantin looked at her husband fixedly:</p>
<p>“Why this deep interest, Abram?”</p>
<p>Flattered by the implied accusation, Mr. Pantin, however, resisted the
temptation to make Mrs. Pantin jealous, and answered truthfully:</p>
<p>“I admire her greatly. She deserves recognition and will get it. If you
are a wise woman you’ll swallow your prejudices and be the first to
admit it.”<SPAN class="pagenum" name='page_302' id='page_302' title='302'></SPAN></p>
<p>Mrs. Pantin raised both eyebrows—her own and the one she put on
mornings—incredulously.</p>
<p>“She’s the kind that would win out anywhere,” he added, with conviction.</p>
<p>Mrs. Pantin stared at him absently, while the tears on her lashes dried
to smudges. She murmured finally:</p>
<p>“I could have pineapple with mayonnaise dressing.”</p>
<p>To conceal a smile, Mr. Pantin stooped for his paper.</p>
<p>“Or would you have lettuce with roquefort cheese dressing, Abram?”</p>
<p>“You know much more about such things than I do—your luncheons are
always perfect, Prissy. Who do you think of inviting to meet her?”</p>
<p>Mrs. Pantin considered. Then her eyes sparkled with malice, “I’ll begin
with Mrs. Toomey.”</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>In the office of the <i>Grit</i>, Hiram Butefish was reading the proof of his
editorial that pointed out the many advantages Prouty enjoyed over its
rival in the next county.</p>
<p>There was no more perfect spot on the footstool for the rearing of
children, Mr. Butefish declared editorially. Fresh air, pure water, and
a moral atmosphere—wherein it differed, he hinted, from its neighbor.
There Vice rampant and innocent Youth met on every corner, while the
curse of the Demon Rum was destroying its manhood.</p>
<p>Mr. Butefish laid down the proof-sheet, sighed deeply, and quite
unconsciously moistened his lips.</p>
<p>He was for Reform, certainly, but the thought would intrude that when
Vice moved on to greener fields it took with it much of the zest of
living. In the days when a man could get drunk as he liked and as often
as he liked without fear of criticism, sure of being laid away tenderly
by tolerant friends, instead of, as now,—being snaked, scuffling, to
the calaboose by the constable<SPAN class="pagenum" name='page_303' id='page_303' title='303'></SPAN>—</p>
<p>The arrival of the mail with its exchanges interrupted thoughts flowing
in a dangerous channel.</p>
<p>The soaring price of wool, featured in the headlines, caught his
attention instantly, since, naturally, anything that pertained to the
sheep industry was of interest to the community. Mr. Butefish used his
scissors freely and opined that the next issue of the <i>Grit</i> would be a
corker. Then an idea came to him. Why not make it a sheep number
exclusively? Give all the wool-growers in the vicinity a write-up.
Great! He’d do it. Mr. Butefish enumerated them on his fingers. When he
came to Kate Prentice, he hesitated. Would Prouty stand for it—the
eulogy he contemplated? In a small paper one had to consider local
prejudices—besides, she was not a subscriber.</p>
<p>While Mr. Butefish debated, a spirit of rebellion rose within him. Ever
since he had established the paper he had been a worm, and what had it
got him? It had got him in debt to the point of bankruptcy—that’s what
it had got him—and he was good and sick of it! He was tired of
grovelling—nauseated with catering to a public that paid in rutabagas
and elk meat that was “spoilin’ on ’em.” He hadn’t started in
right—that was half the trouble. If he had dug into their pasts and
blackmailed ’em, they’d be eating out of his hand, instead of pounding
on the desk in front of him if he transposed their initials. He would
have been a power in the country in place of having to drag his hat brim
to ’em, lest they take out their advertisement of a setting of eggs or a
Plymouth Rock rooster.</p>
<p>He’d show ’em, by gorry! He’d show ’em! Mr. Butefish jabbed his pen into
the potato he used as a penwiper, instead of the ink, in his fury. He
wrote with the rapidity of inspiration, and words came which he had not<SPAN class="pagenum" name='page_304' id='page_304' title='304'></SPAN>
known were in his vocabulary as he extolled Kate and her achievements.
Emotion welled within him until his collar choked him, so he removed it,
while the pen spread with the force he put into the actual writing. And
when he had finished, he walked the floor reading the editorial, his
voice vibrating, tingling with his own eloquence. The article snorted
defiance. Mr. Butefish tacitly waved the bright flag of personal freedom
in the face of Public Opinion. He bellowed his liberty, as it were, over
Kate’s shoulder. He strode, he swaggered—he had not known such a
glorious feeling of independence since he left off plumbing. And he
could go back to it if he had to! Mr. Butefish stopped in the middle of
the floor and showed his teeth at an invisible audience of advertisers
and subscribers.</p>
<p>The article came out exactly as written. Reflection did not temper Mr.
Butefish’s attitude with caution. The bruised worm not only had turned,
but rolled clean over.</p>
<p>The following week, Kate rode into Prouty in ignorance of the flattering
tribute which the editor had paid her. Coming at a leisurely gait down
Main Street she looked as usual in pitiless scrutiny at the signs which
told of the collapse of the town’s prosperity. She saw without
compassion the graying hair, the tired eyes of anxiety, the lines of
brooding and despondency deepening in faces she remembered as carefree
and hopeful, the look of resignation that comes to the weaklings who
have lost their grip, the emptiness of burned-out passion, the weary
languor of repeated failure—she saw it all through the eyes of her
relentless hatred.</p>
<p>But to-day there was a something different which, in her extreme
sensitiveness, she was quick to see and feel. There was a new expression
in the eyes of the passersby<SPAN class="pagenum" name='page_305' id='page_305' title='305'></SPAN> with whom she exchanged glances. Eyes
which for years had stared at her with impudence, indifference, or
ostentatious blankness now held a sort of friendly inquiry, something
conciliatory, which told her they would have spoken had they not been
met by the immobile mask of imperturbability that she wore in Prouty.</p>
<p>“Why the chinook?” Kate asked herself ironically.</p>
<p>The warm wave met her everywhere and she continued to wonder, though it
did not melt the ice about her heart that was of many years'
accumulation.</p>
<p>Kate had sold her wool, finally, through a commission house, and at an
advance over the price at which she had held it when Bowers had advised
her to accept the buyer’s offer. She expected the draft in the three
weeks’ accumulation of mail for which she had come to Prouty. When the
mail was handed out to her, she looked in astonishment at the amount of
it. At first glance, there appeared to be only a little less than a
bushel. The postmaster, who had forgotten Bowers’s instructions, grinned
knowingly as he passed out photographs and sweet-scented, pink-tinted
envelopes addressed to the sheepherder in feminine writing.</p>
<p>“So he had done it!” Kate mused as she crowded them all into the leather
mail sack which bulged to the point of refusing to buckle. The letter
she expected was among the rest, and, as she looked at the draft it
contained, a smile that had meant not only gratification but exultation
lurked at the corners of her mouth. She led her horse to the bank and
tied it. Mr. Wentz came nimbly forward to the receiving teller’s window
as she entered, and flashed his eloquent eyes at her.</p>
<p>“You’re quite a stranger!” he greeted her tritely, and added, “But we’ve
been reading about you.”</p>
<p>Kate looked her surprise.<SPAN class="pagenum" name='page_306' id='page_306' title='306'></SPAN></p>
<p>“In the <i>Grit</i>—haven’t you seen it? A great boost! Butefish really
writes vurry, vurry well when he puts his mind to it.”</p>
<p>This explained the warmer temperature, she thought sardonically, but
said merely:</p>
<p>“I haven’t seen the paper.” Then changing the subject: “I’ve decided to
increase the size of my account with you, Mr. Wentz. I’ll leave this
draft on open deposit, though it may be considerable time before I need
it.” She passed it to him carelessly.</p>
<p>Since leaving the laundry, where he had been as temperamental as he
liked, and taken it out on the wringer, Mr. Wentz had endeavored to
train himself to conceal his feelings, and imagined he had succeeded.
But now the wild impulse he felt to crawl through the aperture and
embrace Kate told him otherwise.</p>
<p>Kate watched the play of emotions over his face in deep satisfaction.
There was no need of words to express his gratitude—which was mostly
relief.</p>
<p>“I appreciate this, Miss Prentice, I do indeed. I am glad that you do
not hold it against us because upon a time we were not able to
accommodate you.”</p>
<p>“A bank must abide by its rules, I presume,” she replied noncommittally.</p>
<p>“Exactly! A bank must protect its customers at all hazards.”</p>
<p>“And the directors.”</p>
<p>Mr. Wentz colored. Did she mean anything in particular? He wondered. He
continued to speculate after her departure. It was a random shot, he
decided. If it had been otherwise she scarcely would be giving him her
business now, especially to the extent of this deposit—which he was
needing—well, nobody but Mr. Wentz knew exactly how much.<SPAN class="pagenum" name='page_307' id='page_307' title='307'></SPAN></p>
<p>There was a quizzical smile upon Kate’s face as she passed down the
steps of the bank and turned up the street on another errand. She was
walking with her eyes bent upon the sidewalk, thinking hard, when her
way was blocked by Mrs. Abram Pantin extending a high supine hand with
the charming cordiality which distinguished her best social manner. Mrs.
Pantin slipped her manner on and off, as the occasion warranted, as she
did her kitchen apron.</p>
<p>The suddenness of the meeting surprised Kate into a look of
astonishment.</p>
<p>“This is Miss Prentice, isn’t it?”</p>
<p>“That’s the general impression,” Kate answered.</p>
<p>Mrs. Pantin registered vivacity by winking rapidly and twittering in a
pert birdlike fashion:</p>
<p>“I’ve so much wanted to know you!”</p>
<p>The reply that there always had been ample opportunity seemed
superfluous, so Kate said nothing.</p>
<p>“I’ve been reading about you, you know, and I want to tell you how proud
we all are of you and of what you have accomplished. This is Woman’s
Day, isn’t it?”</p>
<p>Since she seemed not to expect an answer, Kate made none and Mrs. Pantin
continued:</p>
<p>“I’ve been wanting to see you that I might ask you to come to me—say
next Thursday?”</p>
<p>Mrs. Pantin’s manner was tinged with patronage.</p>
<p>Kate’s silence deceived her. She imagined that Kate was awed and
tongue-tied in her presence. The woman was, as Prissy had assured Abram,
“tickled to pieces.”</p>
<p>In the meanwhile, interested observers of the meeting were saying to
each other cynically:</p>
<p>“Nothing succeeds like success, does it?”</p>
<p>This time, apparently, Mrs. Pantin expected an answer, so Kate asked
bluntly:<SPAN class="pagenum" name='page_308' id='page_308' title='308'></SPAN></p>
<p>“What for?”</p>
<p>“Luncheon. At one—we are very old-fashioned. I want you to meet some of
our best ladies—Mrs. Sudds—Mrs. Neifkins—Mrs. Toomey—and others.”</p>
<p>As she enumerated the guests on her fingers the tip of Mrs. Pantin’s
pink tongue darted in and out with the rapierlike movement of an
ant-eater.</p>
<p>Kate’s face hardened and she replied curtly:</p>
<p>“I already have had that doubtful pleasure upon an occasion, which you
should remember.”</p>
<p>Mrs. Pantin flushed. Disconcerted for a moment, she collected herself,
and instead of protesting ignorance of her meaning, as she was tempted,
she said candidly:</p>
<p>“We must let bygones be bygones, Miss Prentice, and be friends. We are
older now, and wiser, aren’t we?”</p>
<p>Kate clasped her hands behind her, a mannerism with which offending
herders were familiar, and regarded Mrs. Pantin steadily.</p>
<p>“Older but not wiser, apparently, else you would have known better than
to suggest the possibility of friendship between us. You are a poor
judge of human nature, and conceited past my understanding, to imagine
that it is a matter which is entirely optional with you.” With the slow
one-sided smile of irony which her face sometimes wore, she bowed
slightly. Then, “You will excuse me?” and passed on.</p>
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