<h2>XVIII</h2>
<p>When Ruth Macdonald got back from camp
she found herself utterly dissatisfied with her old
life. The girls in her social set were full of war
plans. They had one and all enlisted in every
activity that was going. Each one appeared in some
pretty and appropriate uniform, and took the new
régime with as much eagerness and enthusiasm as
ever she had put into dancing and dressing.</p>
<p>Not that they had given up either of those employments.
Oh, dear no! When they were not
busy getting up little dances for the poor dear soldier
boys from the nearby camps, they were learning
new solo steps wherewith to entertain those
soldier boys when their turn came to go to camp and
keep up the continuous performance that seemed to
be necessary to the cheering of a good soldier. And
as for dressing, no one need ever suggest again a
uniform for women as the solution of the high cost
of dressing. The number of dainty devices of gold
braid and red stars and silver tassels that those same
staid uniforms developed made plain forever that
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_277' name='page_277'></SPAN>277</span>
the woman who chooses can make even a uniform
distinctive and striking and altogether costly. In
short they went into the war with the same superficial
flightiness formerly employed in the social
realms. They went dashing here and there in their
high-power cars on solemn errands, with all the
nonchalance of their ignorance and youth, till one,
knowing some of them well, trembled for the errand
if it were important. And many of them were
really useful, which only goes to prove that a tremendous
amount of unsuspected power is wasted
every year and that unskilled labor often accomplishes
almost as much as skilled. Some of them
secured positions in the Navy Yard, or in other
public offices, where they were thrown delightfully
into intimacies with officers, and were able to step
over the conventionalities of their own social positions
into wildly exciting Bohemian adventures
under the popular guise of patriotism, without a
rebuke from their elders. There was not a dull
hour in the little town. The young men of their
social set might all be gone to war, but there were
others, and the whirl of life went on gaily for the
thoughtless butterflies, who danced and knitted and
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_278' name='page_278'></SPAN>278</span>
drove motor cars, and made bandages and just rejoiced
to walk the streets knitting on the Sabbath
day, a gay cretonne knitting bag on arm, and knitting
needles plying industriously as if the world
would go naked if they did not work every minute.
Just a horde of rebellious young creatures, who at
heart enjoyed the unwonted privilege of breaking
the Sabbath and shocking a few fanatics, far more
than they really cared to knit. But nobody had
time to pry into the quality of such patriotism.
There were too many other people doing the same
thing, and so it passed everywhere for the real thing,
and the world whirled on and tried to be gay to
cover its deep heartache and stricken horror over
the sacrifice of its sons.</p>
<p>But Ruth, although she bravely tried for several
weeks, could not throw herself into such things.
She felt that they were only superficial. There
might be a moiety of good in all these things, but
they were not the real big things of life; not the
ways in which the vital help could be given, and she
longed with her whole soul to get in on it somewhere.</p>
<p>The first Sabbath after her return from camp
she happened into a bit of work which while it was
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_279' name='page_279'></SPAN>279</span>
in no way connected with war work, still helped to
interest her deeply and keep her thinking along the
lines that had been started while she was with
John Cameron.</p>
<p>A quiet, shy, plain little woman, an old member
of the church and noted for good work, came hurrying
down the aisle after the morning service and implored
a young girl in the pew just in front of Ruth
to help her that afternoon in an Italian Sunday
school she was conducting in a small settlement
about a mile and a half from Bryne Haven:</p>
<p>“It’s only to play the hymns, Miss Emily,” she
said. “Carrie Wayne has to go to a funeral. She
always plays for me. I wouldn’t ask you if I could
play the least mite myself, but I can’t. And the
singing won’t go at all without someone to play
the piano.”</p>
<p>“Oh, I’m sorry, Mrs. Beck, but I really can’t!”
pleaded Miss Emily quickly. “I promised to help
out in the canteen work this afternoon. You know
the troop trains are coming through, and Mrs. Martin
wanted me to take her place all the afternoon.”</p>
<p>Mrs. Beck’s face expressed dismay. She gave a
hasty glance around the rapidly emptying church.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_280' name='page_280'></SPAN>280</span></p>
<p>“Oh, dear, I don’t know what I’ll do!” she said.</p>
<p>“Oh, let them do without singing for once,” suggested
the carefree Emily. “Everybody ought to
learn to do without something in war time. We
conserve sugar and flour, let the Italians conserve
singing!” and with a laugh at her own brightness
she hurried away.</p>
<p>Ruth reached forward and touched the troubled
little missionary on the arm:</p>
<p>“Would I do?” she asked. “I never played
hymns much, but I could try.”</p>
<p>“Oh! Would you?” A flood of relief went
over the woman’s face, and Ruth was instantly glad
she had offered. She took Mrs. Beck down to the
settlement in her little runabout, and the afternoon’s
experience opened a new world to her. It was the
first time she had ever come in contact with the
really poor and lowly of the earth, and she proved
herself a true child of God in that she did not shrink
from them because many of them were dirty and
poorly clad. Before the first afternoon was over
she had one baby in her arms and three others hanging
about her chair with adoring glances. They
could not talk in her language, but they stared into
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_281' name='page_281'></SPAN>281</span>
her beautiful face with their great dark eyes, and
spoke queer unintelligible words to one another
about her. The whole little company were delighted
with the new “pretty lady” who had come among
them. They openly examined her simple lovely
frock and hat and touched with shy furtive fingers
the blue ribbon that floated over the bench from her
girdle. Mrs. Beck was in the seventh heaven and
begged her to come again, and Ruth, equally
charmed, promised to go every Sunday. For it
appeared that the wayward pianist was very irregular
and had to be constantly coaxed.</p>
<p>Ruth entered into the work with zest. She took
the children’s class which formerly had been with
the older ones, and gathering them about her told
them Bible stories till their young eyes bulged with
wonder and their little hearts almost burst with love
of her. Love God? Of course they would. Try
to please Jesus? Certainly, if “Mrs. Ruth,” as
they called her, said they should. They adored her.</p>
<p>She fell into the habit of going down during the
week and slipping into their homes with a big basket
of bright flowers from her home garden which she
distributed to young and old. Even the men, when
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_282' name='page_282'></SPAN>282</span>
they happened to be home from work, wanted the
flowers, and touched them with eager reverence.
Somehow the little community of people so different
from herself filled her thoughts more and more.
She began to be troubled that some of the men
drank and beat their wives and little children in
consequence. She set herself to devise ways to keep
them from it. She scraped acquaintance with one
or two of the older boys in her own church and
enlisted them to help her, and bought a moving picture
machine which she took to the settlement. She
spent hours attending moving picture shows that
she might find the right films for their use. Fortunately
she had money enough for all her schemes,
and no one to hinder her good work, although Aunt
Rhoda did object strenuously at first on the ground
that she might “catch something.” But Ruth only
smiled and said: “That’s just what I’m out for,
Auntie, dear! I want to catch them all, and try to
make them live better lives. Other people are going
to France. I haven’t got a chance to go yet, but
while I stay here I must do something. I can’t be
an idler.”</p>
<p>Aunt Rhoda looked at her quizzically. She
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_283' name='page_283'></SPAN>283</span>
wondered if Ruth was worried about one of her men
friends—and which one?</p>
<p>“If you’d only take up some nice work for the
Government, dear, such as the other girls are
doing!” she sighed, “work that would bring you
into contact with nice people! You always have to
do something queer. I’m sure I don’t know where
you got your low tendencies!”</p>
<p>But Ruth would be off before more could be
said. This was an old topic of Aunt Rhoda’s and
had been most fully discussed during the young
years of Ruth’s life, so that she did not care to enter
into it further.</p>
<p>But Ruth was not fully satisfied with just helping
her Italians. The very week she came back from
camp she had gone to their old family physician who
held a high and responsible position in the medical
world, and made her plea:</p>
<p>“Daddy-Doctor,” she said, using her old childish
name for him, “you’ve got to find a way for me
to go over there and help the war. I know I don’t
know much about nursing, but I’m sure I could
learn. I’ve taken care of Grandpa and Auntie a
great many times and watched the trained nurses,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_284' name='page_284'></SPAN>284</span>
and I’m sure if Lalla Farrington and Bernice
Brooks could get into the Red Cross and go over in
such a short time I’m as bright as they.”</p>
<p>“Brighter!” said the old doctor eyeing her approvingly.
“But what will your people say?”</p>
<p>“They’ll have to let me, Daddy-Doctor. Besides,
everybody else is doing it, and you know that
has great weight with Aunt Rhoda.”</p>
<p>“It’s a hard life, child! You never saw much
of pain and suffering and horror.”</p>
<p>“Well, it’s time, then.”</p>
<p>“But those men over there you would have to
care for will not be like your grandfather and aunt.
They will be dirty and bloody, and covered with
filth and vermin.”</p>
<p>“Well, what of that!”</p>
<p>“Could you stand it?”</p>
<p>“So you think I’m a butterfly, too, do you,
Daddy-Doctor? Well, I want to prove to you that
I’m not. I’ve been doing my best to get used to
dirt and distress. I washed a little sick Italian baby
yesterday and helped it’s mother scrub her floor and
make the house clean.”</p>
<p>“The dickens you did!” beamed the doctor
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_285' name='page_285'></SPAN>285</span>
proudly. “I always knew you had a lot of grit. I
guess you’ve got the right stuff in you. But say,
if I help you you’ve got to tell me the real reason
why you want to go, or else—nothing doing! Understand?
I know you aren’t like the rest, just wanting
to get into the excitement and meet a lot of
officers and have a good time so you can say afterward
you were there. You aren’t that kind of a
girl. What’s the real reason you want to go? Have
you got somebody over there you’re interested in?”</p>
<p>He looked at her keenly, with loving, anxious
eyes as her father’s friend who had known her from
birth might look.</p>
<p>Ruth’s face grew rosy, and her eyes dropped,
but lifted again undaunted:</p>
<p>“And if I have, Daddy-Doctor, is there anything
wrong about that?”</p>
<p>The doctor frowned:</p>
<p>“It isn’t that fat chump of a Wainwright, is it?
Because if it is I shan’t lift my finger to help you go.”</p>
<p>But Ruth’s laugh rang out clear and free.</p>
<p>“Never! dear friend, never! Set your mind at
rest about him,” she finished, sobering down. “And
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_286' name='page_286'></SPAN>286</span>
if I care for someone, Daddy-Doctor, can’t you
trust me I’d pick out someone who was all right?”</p>
<p>“I suppose so!” grumbled the doctor only half
satisfied, “but girls are so dreadfully blind.”</p>
<p>“I think you’d like him,” she hazarded, her
cheeks growing pinker, “that is, you would if there
<i>is</i> anybody,” she corrected herself laughing. “But
you see, it’s a secret yet and maybe always will be.
I’m not sure that he knows, and I’m not quite sure
I know myself——”</p>
<p>“Oh, I see!” said the doctor watching her sweet
face with a tender jealousy in his eyes. “Well, I
suppose I’ll help you to go, but I’ll shoot him, remember,
if he doesn’t turn out to be all right. It
would take a mighty superior person to be good
enough for you, little girl.”</p>
<p>“That’s just what he is,” said Ruth sweetly,
and then rising and stooping over him she dropped
a kiss on the wavy silver lock of hair that hung over
the doctor’s forehead.</p>
<p>“Thank you, Daddy-Doctor! I knew you
would,” she said happily. “And please don’t be too
long about it. I’m in a great hurry.”</p>
<p>The doctor promised, of course. No one could
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_287' name='page_287'></SPAN>287</span>
resist Ruth when she was like that, and in due time
certain forces were set in operation to the end that
she might have her desire.</p>
<p>Meanwhile, as she waited, Ruth filled her days
with thoughts of others, not forgetting Cameron’s
mother for whom she was always preparing some
little surprise, a dainty gift, some fruit or flowers,
a book that she thought might comfort and while
away her loneliness, a restful ride at the early evening,
all the little things that a thoughtful daughter
might do for a mother. And Cameron’s mother
wrote him long letters about it all which would have
delighted his heart during those dreary days if they
could only have reached him then.</p>
<p>Ruth’s letters to Cameron were full of the
things she was doing, full of her sweet wise thoughts
that seemed to be growing wiser every day. She
had taken pictures of her Italian friends and introduced
him to them one by one. She had filled every
page with little word pictures of her daily life. It
seemed a pity that he could not have had them just
when he needed them most. It would have filled
her with dismay if she could have known the long
wandering journey that was before those letters before
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_288' name='page_288'></SPAN>288</span>
they would finally reach him; she might have
been discouraged from writing them.</p>
<p>Little Mrs. Beck was suddenly sent for one
Sunday morning to attend her sister who was very
ill, and she hastily called Ruth over the telephone
and begged her to take her place at the Sunday
school. Ruth promised to secure some one to teach
the lesson, but found to her dismay that no one was
willing to go at such short notice. And so, with
trembling heart she knelt for a hasty petition that
God would guide her and show her how to lead these
simple people in the worship of the day.</p>
<p>As she stood before them trying to make plain
in the broken, mixed Italian and English, the story
of the blind man, which was the lesson for the day,
there came over her a sense of her great responsibility.
She knew that these people trusted her and
that what she told them they would believe, and her
heart lifted itself in a sharp cry for help, for light,
to give to them. She felt an appalling lack of
knowledge and experience herself. Where had she
been all these young years of her life, and what had
she been doing that she had not learned the way of
life so that she might put it before them?
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_289' name='page_289'></SPAN>289</span></p>
<p>Before her sat a woman bowed with years, her
face seamed with sorrow and hard work, and grimed
with lack of care, a woman whose husband frequently
beat her for attending Sunday school.
There were four men on the back seat, hard workers,
listening with eager eyes, assenting vigorously when
she spoke of the sorrow on the earth. They, too,
had seen trouble. They sat there patient, sad-eyed,
wistful; what could she show them out of the Book
of God to bring a light of joy to their faces? There
were little children whose future looked so full of
hard knocks and toil that it seemed a wonder they
were willing to grow up knowing what was before
them. The money that had smoothed her way thus
far through life was not for them. The comfortable
home and food and raiment and light and luxury
that had made her life so full of ease were almost
unknown to them. Had she anything better to
offer them than mere earthly comforts which probably
could never be theirs, no matter how hard they
might strive? But, after all, money and ease could
in no way soothe the pain of the heart, and she had
come close enough already to these people to know
they had each one his own heart’s pain and sorrow
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_290' name='page_290'></SPAN>290</span>
to bear. There was one man who had lost five little
children by death. That death had come in consequence
of dirt and ignorance made it no easier to
bear. The dirt and ignorance had not all been his
fault. People who were wiser and had not cared
to help were to blame. What was the remedy for
the world’s sorrow, the world’s need?</p>
<p>Ruth knew in a general way that Jesus Christ
was the Saviour of the world, that His name should
be the remedy for evil; but how to put it to them in
simple form, ah! that was it. It was Cameron’s
search for God, and it seemed that all the world was
on the same search. But now to-day she had suddenly
come on some of the footprints of the Man of
Sorrow as He toiled over the mountains of earth
searching for lost humanity, and her own heart
echoed His love and sorrow for the world. She cried
out in her helplessness for something to give to these
wistful people.</p>
<p>Somehow the prayer must have been answered,
for the little congregation hung upon her words,
and one old man with deep creases in his forehead
and kindly wrinkles around his eyes spoke out in
meeting and said:
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_291' name='page_291'></SPAN>291</span></p>
<p>“I like God. I like Him good. I like Him all
e time wi’ mee! All e time. Ev’e where! Him live
in my house!”</p>
<p>The tears sprang to her eyes with answering
sympathy. Here in her little mission she had found
a brother soul, seeking after God. She had another
swift vision then of what the kinship of the whole
world meant, and how Christ could love everybody.</p>
<p>After Sunday school was out little Sanda came
stealing up to her:</p>
<p>“Mine brudder die,” she said sorrowfully.</p>
<p>“What? Tony? The pretty fat baby? Oh,
I’m so sorry!” said Ruth putting her arm tenderly
around the little girl. “Where is your mother? I
must go and see her.”</p>
<p>Down the winding unkept road they walked, the
delicately reared girl and the little Italian drudge,
to the hovel where the family were housed, a
tumbled-down affair of ancient stone, tawdrily
washed over in some season past with scaling pink
whitewash. The noisy abode of the family pig was
in front of the house in the midst of a trim little
garden of cabbage, lettuce, garlic, and tomatoes.
But the dirty swarming little house usually so full
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_292' name='page_292'></SPAN>292</span>
of noise and good cheer was tidy to-day, and no
guests hovered on the brief front stoop sipping
from a friendly bottle, or playing the accordion.
There was not an accordion heard in the community,
for there had been a funeral that morning and every
one was trying to be quiet out of respect for the
bereaved parents.</p>
<p>And there in the open doorway, in his shirt
sleeves, crouched low upon the step, sat the head of
the house, his swarthy face bowed upon his knees, a
picture of utter despair, and just beyond the
mother’s head was bowed upon her folded arms on
the window seat, and thus they mourned in public
silence before their little world.</p>
<p>Ruth’s heart went out to the two poor ignorant
creatures in their grief as she remembered the little
dark child with the brown curls and glorious eyes
who had resembled one of Raphael’s cherubs, and
thought how empty the mother’s arms would be
without him.</p>
<p>“Oh, Sanda, tell your mother how sorry I am!”
she said to the little girl, for the mother could not
speak or understand English. “Tell her not to
mourn so terribly, dear. Tell her that the dear baby
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_293' name='page_293'></SPAN>293</span>
is safe and happy with Jesus! Tell her she will go
to Him some day.”</p>
<p>And as the little girl interpreted her words, suddenly
Ruth knew that what she was speaking was
truth, truth she might have heard before but never
recognized or realized till now.</p>
<p>The mother lifted her sorrowful face all tear
swollen and tried a pitiful smile, nodded to say she
understood, then dropped sobbing again upon the
window sill. The father lifted a sad face, not too
sober, but blear-eyed and pitiful, too, in his hopelessness,
and nodded as if he accepted the fact she had
told but it gave him no comfort, and then went back
to his own despair.</p>
<p>Ruth turned away with aching heart, praying:
“Oh, God, they need you! Come and comfort them.
I don’t know how!” But somehow, on her homeward
way she seemed to have met and been greeted
by her Saviour.</p>
<p>It was so she received her baptism for the work
that she was to do.</p>
<p>The next day permission came for her to go to
France, and she entered upon her brief training.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_294' name='page_294'></SPAN>294</span></p>
<p>“Don’t you dread to have her go?” asked a
neighbor of Aunt Rhoda.</p>
<p>“Oh, yes,” sighed the good lady comfortably,
“but then she is going in good company, and it isn’t
as if all the best people weren’t doing it. Of course,
it will be great experience for her, and I wouldn’t
want to keep her out of it. She’ll meet a great many
nice people over there that she might not have met
if she had stayed at home. Everybody, they tell
me, is at work over there. She’ll be likely to meet
the nobility. It isn’t as if we didn’t have friends
there, too, who will be sure to invite her over week
ends. If she gets tired she can go to them, you
know. And really, I was glad to have something
come up to take her away from that miserable little
country slum she has been so crazy about. I was
dreadfully afraid she would catch something there
or else they would rob us and murder us and kidnap
her some day.”</p>
<p>And that was the way things presented themselves
to Aunt Rhoda!</p>
<hr class='major' />
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_295' name='page_295'></SPAN>295</span>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />