<h2><SPAN name="II"></SPAN>II</h2>
<br/>
<p>What! Silver tree? She hadn't realized how the time had been
flying. But there was the sawmill. She could hear the whir and
buzz! And there was the old livery-stable, and the place where farm
implements were sold, and the little harness shop jammed in
between;--and there, to convince her no mistake had been made, was
the lozenge of grass with "Silvertree" on it in white stones. Then,
in a second, the station appeared with the busses backed up against
it, and beyond them the familiar surrey with a woman in it with
yearning eyes.</p>
<p>Kate, the specialized student of psychology, the graduate with
honors, who had learned to note contrasts and weigh values, forgot
everything (even her umbrella) and leaped from the train while it
was still in motion. Forgotten the honors and degrees; the majors
were mere minor affairs; and there remained only the things which
were from the beginning.</p>
<p>She and her mother sat very close together as they drove through
the familiar village streets. When they did speak, it was
incoherently. There was an odor of brier roses in the air and the
sun was setting in a "bed of daffodil sky." Kate felt waves of
beauty and tenderness breaking over her and wanted to cry. Her
mother wanted to and did. Neither trusted herself to speak, but
when they were in the house Mrs. Barrington pulled the pins out of
Kate's hat and then Kate took the faded, gentle woman in her strong
arms and crushed her to her.</p>
<p>"Your father was afraid he wouldn't be home in time to meet
you," said Mrs. Barrington when they were in the parlor, where the
Dresden vases stood on the marble mantel and the rose-jar decorated
the three-sided table in the corner. "It was just his luck to be
called into the country. If it had been a really sick person who
wanted him, I wouldn't have minded, but it was only Venie
Sampson."</p>
<p>"Still having fits?" asked Kate cheerfully, as one glad to
recognize even the chronic ailments of a familiar community.</p>
<p>"Well, she thinks she has them," said Mrs. Barrington in an
easy, gossiping tone; "but my opinion is that she wouldn't be
troubled with them if only there were some other way in which she
could call attention to herself. You see, Venie was a very pretty
girl."</p>
<p>"Has that made her an invalid, mummy?"</p>
<p>"Well, it's had something to do with it. When she was young she
received no end of attention, but some way she went through the
woods and didn't even pick up a crooked stick. But she got so used
to being the center of interest that when she found herself growing
old and plain, she couldn't think of any way to keep attention
fixed on her except by having these collapses. You know you mustn't
call the attacks 'fits.' Venie's far too refined for that."</p>
<p>Kate smiled broadly at her mother's distinctive brand of humor.
She loved it all--Miss Sampson's fits, her mother's jokes; even the
fact that when they went out to supper she sat where she used in
the old days when she had worn a bib beneath her chin.</p>
<p>"Oh, the plates, the cups, the everything!" cried Kate,
ridiculously lifting a piece of the "best china" to her lips and
kissing it.</p>
<p>"Absurdity!" reproved her mother, but she adored the girl's
extravagances just the same.</p>
<p>"Everything's glorious," Kate insisted. "Cream cheese and
parsley! Did you make it, mummy? Currant rolls--oh, the wonders!
Martha Underwood, don't dare to die without showing me how to make
those currant rolls. Veal loaf--now, what do you think of that?
Why, at Foster we went hungry sometimes--not for lack of quantity,
of course, but because of the quality. I used to be dreadfully
ashamed of the fact that there we were, dozens of us women in that
fine hall, and not one of us with enough domestic initiative to
secure a really good table. I tried to head an insurrection and to
have now one girl and now another supervise the table, but the
girls said they hadn't come to college to keep house."</p>
<p>"Yes, yes," chimed in her mother excitedly; "that's where the
whole trouble with college for women comes in. They not only don't
go to college to keep house, but most of them mean not to keep it
when they come out. We allowed you to go merely because you
overbore us. You used to be a terrible little tyrant,
Katie,--almost as bad as--"</p>
<p>She brought herself up suddenly.</p>
<p>"As bad as whom, mummy?"</p>
<p>There was a step on the front porch and Mrs. Barrington was
spared the need for answering.</p>
<p>"There's your father," she said, signaling Kate to meet him.</p>
<hr style="width: 25%;">
<p>Dr. Barrington was tall, spare, and grizzled. The torpor of the
little town had taken the light from his eyes and reduced the tempo
of his movements, but, in spite of all, he had preserved certain
vivid features of his personality. He had the long, educated hands
of the surgeon and the tyrannical aspect of the physician who has
struggled all his life with disobedience and perversity. He
returned Kate's ardent little storm of kisses with some
embarrassment, but he was unfeignedly pleased at her appearance,
and as the three of them sat about the table in their old
juxtaposition, his face relaxed. However, Kate had seen her mother
look up wistfully as her husband passed her, as if she longed for
some affectionate recognition of the occasion, but the man missed
his opportunity and let it sink into the limbo of unimproved
moments.</p>
<p>"Well, father, we have our girl home again," Mrs. Barrington
said with pardonable sentiment.</p>
<p>"Well, we've been expecting her, haven't we?" Dr. Barrington
replied, not ill-naturedly but with a marked determination to make
the episode matter-of-fact.</p>
<p>"Indeed we have," smiled Mrs. Barrington. "But of course it
couldn't mean to you, Frederick, what it does to me. A
mother's--"</p>
<p>Dr. Barrington raised his hand.</p>
<p>"Never mind about a mother's love," he said decisively. "If you
had seen it fail as often as I have, you'd think the less said on
the subject the better. Women are mammal, I admit; maternal they
are not, save in a proportion of cases. Did you have a pleasant
journey down, Kate?"</p>
<p>He had the effect of shutting his wife out of the conversation;
of definitely snubbing and discountenancing her. Kate knew it had
always been like that, though when she had been young and more
passionately determined to believe her home the best and dearest in
the world, as children will, she had overlooked the fact--had
pretended that what was a habit was only a mood, and that if
"father was cross" to-day, he would be pleasant to-morrow. Now he
began questioning Kate about college, her instructors and her
friends. There was conversation enough, but the man's wife sat
silent, and she knew that Kate knew that he expected her to do
so.</p>
<p>Custard was brought on and Mrs. Barrington diffidently served
it. Her husband gave one glance at it.</p>
<p>"Curdled!" he said succinctly, pushing his plate from him. "It's
a pity it couldn't have been right Kate's first night home."</p>
<p>Kate thought there had been so much that was not right her first
night home, that a spoiled confection was hardly worth comment.</p>
<p>"I'm dreadfully sorry," Mrs. Barrington said. "I suppose I
should have made it myself, but I went down to the train--"</p>
<p>"That didn't take all the afternoon, did it?" the doctor
asked.</p>
<p>"I was doing things around the house--"</p>
<p>"Putting flowers in my room, I know, mummy," broke in Kate, "and
polishing up the silver toilet bottles, the beauties. You're one of
those women who pet a home, and it shows, I can tell you. You don't
see many homes like this, do you, dad,--so ladylike and
brier-rosy?"</p>
<p>She leaned smilingly across the table as she addressed her
father, offering him not the ingratiating and seductive smile which
he was accustomed to see women--his wife among the rest--employ
when they wished to placate him. Kate's was the bright smile of a
comradely fellow creature who asked him to play a straight game. It
made him take fresh stock of his girl. He noted her high oval brow
around which the dark hair clustered engagingly; her flexible,
rather large mouth, with lips well but not seductively arched, and
her clear skin with its uniform tinting. Such beauty as she had,
and it was far from negligible, would endure. She was quite five
feet ten inches, he estimated, with a good chest development and
capable shoulders. Her gestures were free and suggestive of
strength, and her long body had the grace of flexibility and
perfect unconsciousness. All of this was good; but what of the
spirit that looked out of her eyes? It was a glance to which the
man was not accustomed--feminine yet unafraid, beautiful but not
related to sex. The physician was not able to analyze it, though
where women were concerned he was a merciless analyst. Gratified,
yet unaccountably disturbed, he turned to his wife.</p>
<p>"Martha has forgotten to light up the parlor," he said testily.
"Can't you impress on her that she's to have the room ready for us
when we've finished inhere?"</p>
<p>"She's so excited over Kate's coming home," said Mrs. Barrington
with a placatory smile. "Perhaps you'll light up to-night,
Frederick."</p>
<p>"No, I won't. I began work at five this morning and I've been
going all day. It's up to you and Martha to run the house."</p>
<p>"The truth is," said Mrs. Barrington, "neither Martha nor I can
reach the gasolier."</p>
<p>Dr. Barrington had the effect of pouncing on this statement.</p>
<p>"That's what's the matter, then," he said. "You forgot to get
the tapers. I heard Martha telling you last night that they were
out."</p>
<p>A flush spread over Mrs. Barrington's delicate face as she cast
about her for the usual subterfuge and failed to find it. In that
moment Kate realized that it had been a long programme of
subterfuges with her mother--subterfuges designed to protect her
from the onslaughts of the irritable man who dominated her.</p>
<p>"I'll light the gas, mummy," she said gently. "Let that be one
of my fixed duties from now on."</p>
<p>"You'll spoil your mother, Kate," said the doctor with a
whimsical intonation.</p>
<p>His jesting about what had so marred the hour of reunion brought
a surge of anger to Kate's brain.</p>
<p>"That's precisely what I came home to do, sir," she said
significantly. "What other reason could I have for coming back to
Silvertree? The town certainly isn't enticing. You've been
doctoring here for forty years, but you havn't been able to cure
the local sleeping-sickness yet."</p>
<p>It stung and she had meant it to. To insult Silvertree was to
hurt the doctor in his most tender vanity. It was one of his most
fervid beliefs that he had selected a growing town, conspicuous for
its enterprise. In his young manhood he had meant to do fine
things. He was public-spirited, charitable, a death-fighter of
courage and persistence. Though not a religious man, he had one
holy passion, that of the physician. He respected himself and loved
his wife, but he had from boyhood confused the ideas of masculinity
and tyranny. He believed that women needed discipline, and he had
little by little destroyed the integrity of the woman he would have
most wished to venerate. That she could, in spite of her manifest
cowardice and moral circumventions, still pray nightly and read the
book that had been the light to countless faltering feet, furnished
him with food for acrid sarcasm. He saw in this only the essential
furtiveness, inconsistency, and superstition of the female.</p>
<p>The evening dragged. The neighbors who would have liked to visit
them refrained from doing so because they thought the reunited
family would prefer to be alone that first evening. Kate did her
best to preserve some tattered fragments of the amenities. She told
college stories, talked of Lena Vroom and of beautiful Honora
Fulham,--hinted even at Ray McCrea,--and by dint of much ingenuity
wore the evening away.</p>
<p>"In the morning," she said to her father as she bade him
good-night, "we'll both be rested." She had meant it for an
apology, not for herself any more than for him, but he assumed no
share in it.</p>
<p>Up in her room her mother saw her bedded, and in kissing her
whispered,--</p>
<p>"Don't oppose your father, Kate. You'll only make me unhappy.
Anything for peace, that's what I say."</p>
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