<h2>CHAPTER IX.</h2>
<h3>"TAKE IT AWAY!"</h3>
<div class="figleft"> <ANTIMG src="images/m.png" width-obs="28" height-obs="55" alt="M" title="M" /></div>
<div class='unindent'><br/><big>ODE</big> rang the bell at Mr. Hastings', and
waited in some anxiety as to whether he
should get a glimpse of Miss Dora. He
had some momentous questions to ask her.
Fortune, or, in other words, Providence, favored
him. While he waited for orders, Dora
danced down the hall with a message.</div>
<p>"Tode, papa says you are to come in the
dining-room and wait; he wants to send a note
by you."</p>
<p>"All right," said Tode, following her into the
brightly lighted room, and plunging at once
into his subject.</p>
<p>"Look here, what did you mean the other
night about hearts, and things?"</p>
<p>"About what?"</p>
<p>"Why, don't you know? Down there to the
meeting."</p>
<p>"Oh! Why I meant <i>that;</i> just what I said.
That's the way they always talk at a prayer-<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[90]</SPAN></span>meeting
about Jesus, and loving him, and all
that."</p>
<p>"Was that a prayer-meeting where we was
t'other night?"</p>
<p>"Why yes, of course. Tode, have you got
the letters and figures all made?"</p>
<p>"Do you go every time?"</p>
<p>"What, to prayer-meeting? What a funny
idea. No, of course not. It stormed, you know,
and we had to go in somewhere. Wasn't it an
awful night?"</p>
<p>"Who is Jesus, anyhow?"</p>
<p>"Why, he is God. Tode, how queer you act.
Why don't you ask Mr. Birge, or somebody, if
you want to know such things. Mamma says
he is awful."</p>
<p>"Awful!"</p>
<p>"Yes, awful good, you know. He's the minister
down there at that chapel. Wasn't it a
funny looking church? Ours don't look a bit
like that. Tode, where do you go to church?"</p>
<p>"My!" said Tode, with his old merry chuckle.
"That's a queer one. <i>I</i> don't go to church nowhere;
never did."</p>
<p>"You ought to," answered Miss Dora, with a
sudden assumption of dignity. "It isn't nice
not to go to church and to Sunday-school. <i>I</i>
go. Pliny doesn't, because he has the headache
so much. Shall I show you my card?"<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[91]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>And she produced from her pocket a dainty
bit of pasteboard, and held it up.</p>
<p>"There, that's our verse. The whole school
learn it for next Sunday. Then we shall have a
speech about it."</p>
<p>A sudden shiver ran through Tode's frame as
he read the words printed on that card:</p>
<p>"The eyes of the Lord are in every place,
beholding the evil and the good."</p>
<p>He knew very little about that All-seeing
Eye, but it came upon him like a great shock,
the picture of the eye of God reaching everywhere,
beholding the <i>evil</i>. He felt afraid, and
alone, and desolate. He did not know what
was the matter with him, he had felt so strangely
troubled and unhappy since that evening of
the meeting. Almost the tears came into his
eyes as he stood there beside Dora, looking
down at that terrible verse.</p>
<p>"Take it away," he said, suddenly, turning
from the bit of pasteboard. "I don't want his
eyes looking at me."</p>
<p>"You can't help it," Dora answered, with
great emphasis. "There are more just such
verses, 'Thou God seest me;' and oh, plenty
of them. And he certainly <i>does</i> see you all
the time, whether you want him to or not."</p>
<p>"Well stop!" said Tode, with a sudden gruffness
that Dora had never seen in him before.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[92]</SPAN></span>
"I don't want to hear another bit about it, nor
your verse, nor anything—not a word. I wish
you had let me alone. I don't believe it, anyhow,
nor I won't, nor I ain't a going to—so."</p>
<p>At that moment Mr. Hastings' note came,
and miserable Tode went on his way. <i>How</i>
miserable he was; the glimmering lamps along
the gloomy streets seemed to him eyes of fire
burning into his thoughts; the very walls of his
darkened room, when he had reached that retreat,
seemed to glow on every side with great
terrible, all-seeing eyes. Over and over again
was that fearful sentence repeated: "The eyes
of the Lord are in every place, beholding the
evil." Just then he stopped. He had suddenly
grown so vile in his own eyes that it seemed to
him that there was nothing good left to behold;
he tumbled and tossed on his narrow bed; he
covered himself, eyes, head, all, in the bed-clothes;
but it was of no use, that piercing
Eye saw into the darkness and through all the
covering—and oh, Tode was afraid!</p>
<p>He was a brave, fearless boy; no darkness
had ever before held any terrors for him. I am
not sure that he would not have whistled contemptuously
over a whole legion of supposed
ghosts. He was entirely familiar with, and
quite indifferent to, that most frightful of all
human sights, a reeling, swearing drunkard;<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[93]</SPAN></span>
but this was quite another matter, this great
solemn eye of God, which he felt to-night for
the first time, looking steadily down upon him,
never forgetting him for a moment, never by
any chance turning away and giving him time
to go to sleep. Tode didn't know why he felt
this terrible new feeling; he didn't know that
the loving, pitying Savior had his tender eyes
bent on him, and was calling him, that God had
used that powerful thrust from the Spirit to
wound his sinful heart; he knew nothing about
it, save that he was afraid, and desolate and very
miserable. Suddenly he sprung up, a little of
his ordinary determination coming back to him.</p>
<p>"What's the use," he muttered, "of a fellow
lying shivering here; if I can't sleep, I might
as well give it up first as last I'll go down to
the parlor, and whistle 'Yankee Doodle,' or
something else until train time."</p>
<p>But his hand trembled so in his attempt to
strike a light, that he failed again and again.
Finally he was dressed, and went out into the
hall. Mr. Roberts opened his own door at that
moment, and seeing the boy gave him what he
thought would be a happy message:</p>
<p>"Tode, you can sleep over to-night. Jim is
on hand, and you may be ready for the five
o'clock train."</p>
<p>No excuse now for going down stairs, and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[94]</SPAN></span>
the wretched boy crept back to his room; <i>utterly</i>
wretched he felt, and he had no human
friend to help him, no human heart to comfort
him. He wrapped a quilt about him and sat
down on the edge of his bed to calculate how
long his bit of candle would probably burn, and
what he <i>should</i> do when he was left once more
in that awful darkness. On his table lay a half-burnt
lamp lighter. He mechanically untwisted
it, and twisted it up again, busy still with that
fearful sentence: "The eyes of the Lord are in
<i>every</i> place." The lighter was made of a bit of
printed paper, and Tode could read. The letters
caught his eye, and he bent forward to decipher
them; and of all precious words that
can be found in our language, came these home
to that troubled youth: "Look unto me and
be ye saved, all—" Just there the paper was
burned. No matter, be ye <i>saved</i>, that was what
he wanted. He felt in his inmost soul that he
needed to be saved, from himself, and from
some dreadful evil that <ins title="Transcriber's Note: original reads 'seeemed'">seemed</ins> near at hand.
Now how to do it? The smoke-edged bit of
paper said, "Look unto me." Who was that
blessed <i>Me</i>, and where was he, and how could
Tode look to him?</p>
<p>Quick as lightning the boy's memory went
back to that evening in the chapel, and the wonderful
story of one Jesus, and the gray-haired<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[95]</SPAN></span>
man in the corner, who stood up and shut his
eyes, and spoke to Jesus just as if he had been
in the room. Perhaps, oh, <i>perhaps</i>, the All-seeing
Eye belonged to him? No, that could not
be, for that card said, "The eyes of the Lord,"
and Tode knew that meant God, but you see he
knew nothing about that blessed Trinity, the
three in One. Then he remembered his question
to Dora: "Who is Jesus, anyhow?" and
her answer: "Why, he is God." What if it
should in some strange way all mean God?
Couldn't he try? Suppose he should stand up
in the corner like that old man, and shut his
eyes and speak to Jesus? What harm could it
do? A great resolution came over him to try
it at once. He went over to the corner at the
foot of his bed with the first touch of reverence
in his face that perhaps it had ever felt. He
closed his eyes and said aloud: "O Jesus, save
me." Over and over again were the words repeated,
solemnly and slowly, and in wonderful
earnestness: "O Jesus, save me." Gradually
something of the terror died out of his tones,
and there came instead a yearning, longing
sound to his voice, while again and yet again
came the simple words: "O Jesus, save me."</p>
<p>After a little Tode came quietly out of his
corner, deliberately blew out his light and went
to bed, not at all unmindful of the All-seeing<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[96]</SPAN></span>
Eye; but someway it had ceased to burn. He
felt very grave and solemn, but not exactly
afraid, and a new strange feeling of some loving
presence in his room possessed his heart, and
the thought of that name Jesus brought tears
into his eyes, he didn't know why. He didn't
know that there was such a thing as being a
Christian; he didn't know that he had anything
to do with Christ; he didn't know that he was
in the least different from the Tode who lay
there but an hour before only. Yes, that solemn
Eye did not make him afraid now; and
with an earnest repeatal of his one prayer, which
he did not know <i>was</i> prayer, "O Jesus, save
me," Tode went to sleep.</p>
<p>But I think that the recording angel up in
heaven opened his book that night and wrote a
new name on its pages, and that the ever-listening
Savior said, "<i>I</i> have called him by his name;
he is mine."</p>
<p>In the gray glimmering dawn of the early
morning Tode stood out on the steps, and
waited for the rush of travelers from the train.
They came rushing in, cold and cross, many of
them unreasonable, too, as cold and hungry
travelers so often are; but on each and all the
boy waited, flying hither and thither, doing his
utmost to help make them comfortable; being
apparently not one whit different from the bust<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[97]</SPAN></span>ling
important boy who flew about there every
morning intent upon the same duties, and yet
he had that very morning fallen heir to a glorious
inheritance. True, he did not know it yet,
but no matter for that, his title was sure.</p>
<p>The days went round, and Sunday morning
came. Now Sunday was a very busy day at
the hotel. Aside from the dreadful Sunday
trains that came tearing into town desecrating
the day, the whole country seemed to disgorge
itself, and pleasure-seekers came in cliques of
twos and fours for a ride and a warm dinner on
this gala day. Tode had wont to be busy and
blithe on these days, but on this eventful Sabbath
morning it was different. Gradually he
was becoming aware that some strange new
feelings possessed his heart. He had continued
the repeatal of the one prayer, "O Jesus, save
me;" going always to the corner at the foot of
his bed, and closing his eyes to repeat it. And
now he was conscious of the fact that he had
little thrills of delight all over him when he
said these words, and a new, strange, sweet
sense of protection and friendship stole over
him from some unknown source. Now a longing
possessed him to know something more
about Jesus. He had heard of him at only one
place, that chapel. Naturally his thoughts
turned toward it. He knew it would be open<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[98]</SPAN></span>
on that day, and "Who knows," said ignorant
Tode to himself, "but they might happen to say
something about him to-day." In short, Tode,
knowing nothing about "Remember the Sabbath
day, to keep it holy," never having so much as
heard that there <i>was</i> a fourth commandment,
wanted to go to church. And wanting this
very much, knew at the same time that it was
an extremely doubtful case, utterly unlikely
that he should be allowed to go.</p>
<p>He brushed his hair before his bit of glass,
and buttoned on his clean collar, all the time in
deep thought. A sudden resolution came to
him, that old man had said Jesus would give us
everything we wanted or needed or something
like that.</p>
<p>"I'll try it," said Tode, aloud and positively.
"'Tain't no harm if it don't do no good, and
'tain't nobody's business, anyhow."</p>
<p>And with these strangely original thoughts
on the subject of prayer, he went into his corner,
but once there the reverent look with
which he nowadays pronounced that sacred
name spread over his face as he said, "O Jesus,
I want to go to that church, and I s'pose I
can't." This was everything Tode was conscious
of wanting just at present, so this was all
he said, only repeating it again and again.</p>
<p>Then when he went down stairs he marched<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[99]</SPAN></span>
directly to headquarters, and made known his
desires.</p>
<p>"Mr. Roberts, I want this forenoon to myself.
Can I have it?"</p>
<p>"You do," answered Mr. Roberts, eyeing him
thoughtfully. "Well, as such requests are rare
from you, and as Jim's brother is here to help, I
think I may say yes."</p>
<p>"A queer, bright, capable boy," Mr. Roberts
thought, looking after Tode as he dashed off
down town. "Going to make just the man for
our business. I must begin to promote him
soon."</p>
<p>As for Tode he was in high glee.</p>
<p>"What brought that Jim's brother over to help
to-day?" he asked himself. "I'd like to know
<i>that</i> now. I believe I do, as sure as I'm alive,
that <i>he</i> heard every word, and has been and
fixed it all out. I most know he has, 'cause
things didn't ever happen around like this for
me before."</p>
<p>The pronoun "he" did not refer to Jim's
brother, and was spoken with that touch of awe
and reverence which had so lately come to Tode.
And I think that the words were recorded up in
heaven, as having a meaning not unlike the acknowledgment
of those less ignorant disciples,
"Lord, I believe."</p>
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<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[100]</SPAN></span></p>
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