<h2>CHAPTER VI</h2>
<p>These were the reasons that had brought Justin Peabody to Edgewood
on the Saturday afternoon before Christmas, and had taken him to the
new tavern on Tory Hill, near the Meeting-House.</p>
<p>Nobody recognized him at the station or noticed him at the tavern,
and after his supper he put on his overcoat and started out for a walk,
aimlessly hoping that he might meet a friend, or failing that, intending
to call on some of his old neighbours, with the view of hearing the
village news and securing some information which might help him to decide
when he had better lay himself and his misfortunes at Nancy Wentworth’s
feet. They were pretty feet! He remembered that fact well
enough under the magical influence of familiar sights and sounds and
odours. He was restless, miserable, anxious, homesick—not
for Detroit, but for some heretofore unimagined good; yet, like Bunyan’s
shepherd boy in the Valley of Humiliation, he carried “the herb
called Hearts-ease in his bosom,” for he was at last loving consciously.</p>
<p>How white the old church looked, and how green the blinds!
It must have been painted very lately: that meant that the parish was
fairly prosperous. There were new shutters in the belfry tower,
too; he remembered the former open space and the rusty bell, and he
liked the change. Did the chimney use to be in that corner?
No; but his father had always said it would have drawn better if it
had been put there in the beginning. New shingles within a year:
that was evident to a practised eye. He wondered if anything had
been done to the inside of the building, but he must wait until the
morrow to see, for, of course, the doors would be locked. No;
the one at the right side was ajar. He opened it softly and stepped
into the tiny square entry that he recalled so well—the one through
which the Sunday-school children ran out to the steps from their catechism,
apparently enjoying the sunshine after a spell of orthodoxy; the little
entry where the village girls congregated while waiting for the last
bell to ring—they made a soft blur of pink and blue and buff,
a little flutter of curls and braids and fans and sunshades, in his
mind’s eye, as he closed the outer door behind him and gently
opened the inner one. The church was flooded with moonlight and
snowlight, and there was one lamp burning at the back of the pulpit;
a candle, too, on the pulpit steps. There was the tip-tap-tip
of a tack-hammer going on in a distant corner. Was somebody hanging
Christmas garlands? The new red carpet attracted his notice, and
as he grew accustomed to the dim light, it carried his eye along the
aisle he had trod so many years of Sundays, to the old familiar pew.
The sound of the hammer ceased and a woman rose from her knees.
A stranger was doing for the family honour what he ought himself to
have done. The woman turned to shake her skirt, and it was Nancy
Wentworth. He might have known it. Women were always faithful;
they always remembered old landmarks, old days, old friends, old duties.
His father and mother and Esther were all gone; who but dear Nancy would
have made the old Peabody pew right and tidy for the Christmas festival?
Bless her kind womanly heart!</p>
<p>She looked just the same to him as when he last saw her. Mercifully
he seemed to have held in remembrance all these years not so much her
youthful bloom as her general qualities of mind and heart: her cheeriness,
her spirit, her unflagging zeal, her bright womanliness. Her grey
dress was turned up in front over a crimson moreen petticoat.
She had on a cosy jacket, a fur turban of some sort with a redbreast
in it, and her cheeks were flushed from exertion. “Sweet
records, and promises as sweet,” had always met in Nancy’s
face, and either he had forgotten how pretty she was, or else she had
absolutely grown prettier during his absence.</p>
<p>Nancy would have chosen the supreme moment of meeting very differently,
but she might well have chosen worse. She unpinned her skirt and
brushed the threads off, smoothed the pew cushions carefully, and took
a last stitch in the ragged hassock. She then lifted the Bible
and the hymn-book from the rack, and putting down a bit of flannel on
the pulpit steps, took a flatiron from an oil-stove, and opening the
ancient books, pressed out the well-thumbed leaves one by one with infinite
care. After replacing the volumes in their accustomed place, she
first extinguished the flame of her stove, which she tucked out of sight,
and then blew out the lamp and the candle. The church was still
light enough for objects to be seen in a shadowy way, like the objects
in a dream, and Justin did not realize that he was a man in the flesh,
looking at a woman; spying, it might be, upon her privacy. He
was one part of a dream and she another, and he stood as if waiting,
and fearing, to be awakened.</p>
<p>Nancy, having done all, came out of the pew, and standing in the
aisle, looked back at the scene of her labours with pride and content.
And as she looked, some desire to stay a little longer in the dear old
place must have come over her, or some dread of going back to her lonely
cottage, for she sat down in Justin’s corner of the pew with folded
hands, her eyes fixed dreamily on the pulpit and her ears hearing: “Not
as though I wrote a new commandment unto thee, but that which we had
from the beginning.”</p>
<p>Justin’s grasp on the latch tightened as he prepared to close
the door and leave the place, but his instinct did not warn him quickly
enough, after all, for, obeying some uncontrollable impulse, Nancy suddenly
fell on her knees in the pew and buried her face in the cushions.</p>
<p>The dream broke, and in an instant Justin was a man—worse than
that, he was an eavesdropper, ashamed of his unsuspected presence.
He felt himself standing, with covered head and feet shod, in the holy
temple of a woman’s heart.</p>
<p>But his involuntary irreverence brought abundant grace with it.
The glimpse and the revelation wrought their miracles silently and irresistibly,
not by the slow processes of growth which Nature demands for her enterprises,
but with the sudden swiftness of the spirit. In an instant changes
had taken place in Justin’s soul which his so-called “experiencing
religion” twenty-five years back had been powerless to effect.
He had indeed been baptized then, but the recording angel could have
borne witness that this second baptism fructified the first, and became
the real herald of the new birth and the new creature.</p>
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