The Vehement Flame Part 43
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They came, and Maurice and Eleanor dined with them, as Mrs. Houghton had insisted that they should; but only Mrs. Houghton accepted Eleanor's repaying hospitality.
"Mother has virtue enough for the family," Edith said; "I'm going to stay here with father."
"It will be a jewel in your crown," Henry Houghton told his Mary.
"Why not collect jewels for your crown?" she inquired. "Henry, Maurice looks troubled. What do you suppose is the matter?"
"He does look seedy," he agreed; "poke about and find out what's wrong.
You can do it better if your inelegant offspring isn't around, and if I'm not there, either. He won't open his lips to me! I think it's money.
He's carrying a pretty heavy load. But he never peeps.... I wish he wouldn't economize on cigars, though; he offered me one yesterday, and politeness compelled me to smoke it!"
"'Peeps'!" said Edith; "how elegant!"
So that was how it happened that Mary Houghton went alone to dine with Maurice and Eleanor. But she couldn't discover, in Maurice's talk or Eleanor's silences, any hint of financial anxiety. "So," she said to herself, "it isn't money that worries him." When he walked back with her to the hotel after dinner, he was thinking, "She'd know what to do about Jacky." But of course he couldn't ask her what to do! He could never ask anybody--except, perhaps, Mr. Houghton; and what would he, an old man, know about bringing up a little boy? He was listening, not very closely, to Mrs. Houghton's talk of the Custom House; but when she said, "John Bennett met us on the dock," he was suddenly attentive.
"Has Edith--?" he began.
She laughed ruefully. "No. Young people are not what they were in my day. Edith is not a bit sentimental."
Maurice was silent. When they reached the hotel, they went upstairs into a vast, bleak parlor, and steered their way among enormous plush armchairs to a sofa. A few electric bulbs, glaring among the gla.s.s prisms of a remote chandelier, made a dim light--but not too dim for Mary Houghton to see that Maurice's face was drawn and worried; involuntarily she said:
"You dear boy, I wish you didn't look so careworn!"
"I'm bothered about something," he said.
"Your uncle Henry told me to 'poke around,' and see if you were troubled about money?" she said, smiling.
"Oh, not especially. I'm always more or less strapped. But money isn't worth bothering about, really."
"If you 'consider the stars,' you will find very few things are worth bothering about! Except, of course, wrongdoing."
And, to his own astonishment, he found himself saying, "I'm afraid that's where I come in!" As he spoke, he remembered that night of the eclipse--oh, those moon-washed depths, those stupendous serenities of Law and Beauty which, together, are Truth! How pa.s.sionately he had desired Truth. And now Mrs. Houghton was saying "Consider the stars."
"If I could only tell her!" he thought.
"If the wrongdoing is behind you," said Mary Houghton, "let it go."
"It won't let me go," he said, with nervous lightness. "Though it's behind me, all right!"
Which made her say, gently, "Maurice, perhaps I know what troubles you?"
His start made her add, quickly: "Your uncle Henry has never betrayed your confidence; but ... I guessed, long ago, that something had gone wrong. I don't know how wrong--"
"Oh, Mrs. Houghton," he said, despairingly, "awfully wrong!
Awfully--awfully wrong!" He put his elbow on his knee, and rested his chin on his clenched fist; she was silent. Then he said: "You've always been an angel to me. I am glad you guessed. Because--I don't know what to do."
"About the woman?"
"No. The boy."
"Oh!" she said; "a _child_!"
Her dismay was like a blow. "But you said you had 'guessed'?"
"I guessed that there was a woman; but I didn't know--" She put her arm over his shoulders and kissed him. "My poor Maurice!" The tears stood in her eyes.
"I told you it was 'awful,'" he said, simply; "yes, it is my little boy; I'm worried to death about him. Lily--that's her name--is perfectly all right; she means well, and adores him, and all that; but--" Then he told her what Jacky's mother had been and what she was now; and the ill.u.s.trations he gave of Lily's ignorance of ethical standards made Mary Houghton cringe. "She's ruining the little fellow," he said; "he's not mean nor a coward--I'll say that for him! But he lies whenever he feels like it, and honesty only means not getting 'pinched.' She's awfully ambitious for him; but her idea of success is what she calls 'Society,'
Oh, it's such a relief to speak to you, Mrs. Houghton! I haven't a soul I can talk to."
"Maurice, can't you get him?" Her voice was shocked.
He almost laughed. "Wild horses wouldn't drag him from Lily!"
She was silent before the complexity of the situation--the furtive paternity, with its bewildered sense of responsibility, in conflict with the pa.s.sion of the dam!
"I have to be so infernally secret," Maurice said. "If it wasn't for that, I could train him a little, because he's fond of me," he explained--and for a moment his face relaxed into one of his old charming smiles. "He really is an awfully fine little beggar. I swear I believe he's musical! And he's confoundedly clever. Why, he said--" Mrs.
Houghton could have wept with the pitifulness of it! For Maurice went on, like any proud young father, with a story of how his little boy had said this or done that. "But he's fresh, sometimes, and he's the kind that, if he got fresh, ought to be licked. She can't make him mind; but"--here the poor, shamed pride shone again in his blue eyes--"he minds _me_!"
Mary Houghton was silent; she tried to consider the stars, but her dismay at a child endangered, came between her and the eternal tranquillities. "The boy must be saved," she thought, "at any cost! It isn't a question of Maurice's happiness; it's a question of his _obligation_."
"This thing of having a secret hanging round your neck is h.e.l.l!" Maurice told her. "Every minute I think--'Suppose Eleanor should find out?'"
Mrs. Houghton put her hand on his knee. "The only way to escape from the fear of being found out, Maurice, _is to be found out_. Get rid of the millstone. Tell Eleanor."
"You don't know Eleanor," he said, dryly.
"Yes, I do. She loves you so much that she would forgive you. And with forgiveness would come helpfulness with the little boy. The child is the important one--not you, nor Eleanor, nor the woman. Oh, Maurice, a child is the most precious thing in the world! You _must_ save him!"
"Don't you suppose I want to? But, good G.o.d! I'm helpless."
"If you tell Eleanor, you won't be 'helpless.'"
"You don't understand. She's jealous of--of everybody."
"Telling her will prove to her she needn't be jealous of--this person.
And the chance to do something for you would mean so much to her. She will forgive you--Eleanor can always do a big thing! Remember the mountain? Maurice! Let her do another great thing for you. Let her help you save your child, by making it possible for you to be open and aboveboard, and see him all you want to--all you _ought_ to. Oh, Maurice dear, it would have been better, of course, if you had told Eleanor at first. You wouldn't have had to carry this awful load for all these years. But tell her now! Give her the chance to be generous. Let her help you to do your duty to the little boy. Maurice, his character, and his happiness, are your job! Just as much your job as if he had been Eleanor's child, instead of the child of this woman. Perhaps more so, for that reason. Don't you see that? _Tell_ Eleanor, so that you can save him!"
The appeal was like a bugle note. Maurice--discouraged, thwarted, hopeless--heard it, and his heart quickened. This inverted idea of recompense--of making up to Eleanor for having secretly robbed her, by telling her she had been robbed!--stirred some hope in him. He did not love his wife; he was profoundly tired of her; but suppose, now, he did throw himself upon her generosity and give her a chance to prove that love which was a daily fatigue to him? Mere _Truth_ would, as Mrs.
Houghton said, go far toward saving Jacky. He was silent for a long time. Then Mary Houghton said:
"I ought to tell you, Maurice, that Henry--who is the very best man in the world, as well as the wisest!--doesn't agree with me about this matter of confession. He doesn't understand women! He thinks you ought not to tell Eleanor."
"I know. He said so. That first night, when I told him the whole hideous business, he said so. And I thought he was right. I'm afraid I still think so."
"He was wrong. Maurice, save the child! Tell Eleanor."
"That is what Edith said."
"_Edith!_" Mary Houghton was stupefied.
The Vehement Flame Part 43
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The Vehement Flame Part 43 summary
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