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<h2> CHAPTER XVI. DAVID BAKER’S OPINION </h2>
<p>The next week David Baker came to Lindsay. He arrived in the afternoon
when Eric was in school. When the latter came home he found that David
had, in the space of an hour, captured Mrs. Williamson’s heart, wormed
himself into the good graces of Timothy, and become hail-fellow-well-met
with old Robert. But he looked curiously at Eric when the two young men
found themselves alone in the upstairs room.</p>
<p>“Now, Eric, I want to know what all this is about. What scrape have you
got into? You write me a letter, entreating me in the name of friendship
to come to you at once. Accordingly I come post haste. You seem to be in
excellent health yourself. Explain why you have inveigled me hither.”</p>
<p>“I want you to do me a service which only you can do, David,” said Eric
quietly. “I didn’t care to go into the details by letter. I have met in
Lindsay a young girl whom I have learned to love. I have asked her to
marry me, but, although she cares for me, she refuses to do so because she
is dumb. I wish you to examine her and find out the cause of her defect,
and if it can be cured. She can hear perfectly and all her other faculties
are entirely normal. In order that you may better understand the case I
must tell you the main facts of her history.”</p>
<p>This Eric proceeded to do. David Baker listened with grave attention, his
eyes fastened on his friend’s face. He did not betray the surprise and
dismay he felt at learning that Eric had fallen in love with a dumb girl
of doubtful antecedents; and the strange case enlisted his professional
interest. When he had heard the whole story he thrust his hands into his
pockets and strode up and down the room several times in silence. Finally
he halted before Eric.</p>
<p>“So you have done what I foreboded all along you would do—left your
common sense behind you when you went courting.”</p>
<p>“If I did,” said Eric quietly, “I took with me something better and nobler
than common sense.”</p>
<p>David shrugged his shoulders.</p>
<p>“You’ll have hard work to convince me of that, Eric.”</p>
<p>“No, it will not be difficult at all. I have one argument that will
convince you speedily—and that is Kilmeny Gordon herself. But we
will not discuss the matter of my wisdom or lack of it just now. What I
want to know is this—what do you think of the case as I have stated
it to you?”</p>
<p>David frowned thoughtfully.</p>
<p>“I hardly know what to think. It is very curious and unusual, but it is
not totally unprecedented. There have been cases on record where pre-natal
influences have produced a like result. I cannot just now remember whether
any were ever cured. Well, I’ll see if anything can be done for this girl.
I cannot express any further opinion until I have examined her.”</p>
<p>The next morning Eric took David up to the Gordon homestead. As they
approached the old orchard a strain of music came floating through the
resinous morning arcades of the spruce wood—a wild, sorrowful,
appealing cry, full of indescribable pathos, yet marvelously sweet.</p>
<p>“What is that?” exclaimed David, starting.</p>
<p>“That is Kilmeny playing on her violin,” answered Eric. “She has great
talent in that respect and improvises wonderful melodies.”</p>
<p>When they reached the orchard Kilmeny rose from the old bench to meet
them, her lovely luminous eyes distended, her face flushed with the
excitement of mingled hope and fear.</p>
<p>“Oh, ye gods!” muttered David helplessly.</p>
<p>He could not hide his amazement and Eric smiled to see it. The latter had
not failed to perceive that his friend had until now considered him as
little better than a lunatic.</p>
<p>“Kilmeny, this is my friend, Dr. Baker,” he said.</p>
<p>Kilmeny held out her hand with a smile. Her beauty, as she stood there in
the fresh morning sunshine beside a clump of her sister lilies, was
something to take away a man’s breath. David, who was by no means lacking
in confidence and generally had a ready tongue where women were concerned,
found himself as mute and awkward as a school boy, as he bowed over her
hand.</p>
<p>But Kilmeny was charmingly at ease. There was not a trace of embarrassment
in her manner, though there was a pretty shyness. Eric smiled as he
recalled HIS first meeting with her. He suddenly realized how far Kilmeny
had come since then and how much she had developed.</p>
<p>With a little gesture of invitation Kilmeny led the way through the
orchard to the wild cherry lane, and the two men followed.</p>
<p>“Eric, she is simply unutterable!” said David in an undertone. “Last
night, to tell you the truth, I had a rather poor opinion of your sanity.
But now I am consumed with a fierce envy. She is the loveliest creature I
ever saw.”</p>
<p>Eric introduced David to the Gordons and then hurried away to his school.
On his way down the Gordon lane he met Neil and was half startled by the
glare of hatred in the Italian boy’s eyes. Pity succeeded the momentary
alarm. Neil’s face had grown thin and haggard; his eyes were sunken and
feverishly bright; he looked years older than on the day when Eric had
first seen him in the brook hollow.</p>
<p>Prompted by sudden compassionate impulse Eric stopped and held out his
hand.</p>
<p>“Neil, can’t we be friends?” he said. “I am sorry if I have been the cause
of inflicting pain on you.”</p>
<p>“Friends! Never!” said Neil passionately. “You have taken Kilmeny from me.
I shall hate you always. And I’ll be even with you yet.”</p>
<p>He strode fiercely up the lane, and Eric, with a shrug of his shoulders,
went on his way, dismissing the meeting from his mind.</p>
<p>The day seemed interminably long to him. David had not returned when he
went home to dinner; but when he went to his room in the evening he found
his friend there, staring out of the window.</p>
<p>“Well,” he said, impatiently, as David wheeled around but still kept
silence, “What have you to say to me? Don’t keep me in suspense any
longer, David. I have endured all I can. To-day has seemed like a thousand
years. Have you discovered what is the matter with Kilmeny?”</p>
<p>“There is nothing the matter with her,” answered David slowly, flinging
himself into a chair by the window.</p>
<p>“What do you mean?”</p>
<p>“Just exactly what I say. Her vocal organs are all perfect. As far as they
are concerned, there is absolutely no reason why she should not speak.”</p>
<p>“Then why can’t she speak? Do you think—do you think—”</p>
<p>“I think that I cannot express my conclusion in any better words than
Janet Gordon used when she said that Kilmeny cannot speak because her
mother wouldn’t. That is all there is to it. The trouble is psychological,
not physical. Medical skill is helpless before it. There are greater men
than I in my profession; but it is my honest belief, Eric, that if you
were to consult them they would tell you just what I have told you,
neither more nor less.”</p>
<p>“Then there is no hope,” said Eric in a tone of despair. “You can do
nothing for her?”</p>
<p>David took from the back of his chair a crochet antimacassar with a lion
rampant in the center and spread it over his knee.</p>
<p>“I can do nothing for her,” he said, scowling at that work of art. “I do
not believe any living man can do anything for her. But I do not say—exactly—that
there is no hope.”</p>
<p>“Come, David, I am in no mood for guessing riddles. Speak plainly, man,
and don’t torment me.”</p>
<p>David frowned dubiously and poked his finger through the hole which
represented the eye of the king of beasts.</p>
<p>“I don’t know that I can make it plain to you. It isn’t very plain to
myself. And it is only a vague theory of mine, of course. I cannot
substantiate it by any facts. In short, Eric, I think it is possible that
Kilmeny may speak sometime—if she ever wants it badly enough.”</p>
<p>“Wants to! Why, man, she wants to as badly as it is possible for any one
to want anything. She loves me with all her heart and she won’t marry me
because she can’t speak. Don’t you suppose that a girl under such
circumstances would ‘want’ to speak as much as any one could?”</p>
<p>“Yes, but I do not mean that sort of wanting, no matter how strong the
wish may be. What I do mean is—a sudden, vehement, passionate inrush
of desire, physical, psychical, mental, all in one, mighty enough to rend
asunder the invisible fetters that hold her speech in bondage. If any
occasion should arise to evoke such a desire I believe that Kilmeny would
speak—and having once spoken would thenceforth be normal in that
respect—ay, if she spoke but the one word.”</p>
<p>“All this sounds like great nonsense to me,” said Eric restlessly. “I
suppose you have an idea what you are talking about, but I haven’t. And,
in any case, it practically means that there is no hope for her—or
me. Even if your theory is correct it is not likely such an occasion as
you speak of will ever arise. And Kilmeny will never marry me.”</p>
<p>“Don’t give up so easily, old fellow. There HAVE been cases on record
where women have changed their minds.”</p>
<p>“Not women like Kilmeny,” said Eric miserably. “I tell you she has all her
mother’s unfaltering will and tenacity of purpose, although she is free
from any taint of pride or selfishness. I thank you for your sympathy and
interest, David. You have done all you could—but, heavens, what it
would have meant to me if you could have helped her!”</p>
<p>With a groan Eric flung himself on a chair and buried his face in his
hands. It was a moment which held for him all the bitterness of death. He
had thought that he was prepared for disappointment; he had not known how
strong his hope had really been until that hope was utterly taken from
him.</p>
<p>David, with a sigh, returned the crochet antimacassar carefully to its
place on the chair back.</p>
<p>“Eric, last night, to be honest, I thought that, if I found I could not
help this girl, it would be the best thing that could happen, as far as
you were concerned. But since I have seen her—well, I would give my
right hand if I could do anything for her. She is the wife for you, if we
could make her speak; yes, and by the memory of your mother”—David
brought his fist down on the window sill with a force that shook the
casement,—“she is the wife for you, speech or no speech, if we could
only convince her of it.”</p>
<p>“She cannot be convinced of that. No, David, I have lost her. Did you tell
her what you have told me?”</p>
<p>“I told her I could not help her. I did not say anything to her of my
theory—that would have done no good.”</p>
<p>“How did she take it?”</p>
<p>“Very bravely and quietly—‘like a winsome lady’. But the look in her
eyes—Eric, I felt as if I had murdered something. She bade me
good-bye with a pitiful smile and went upstairs. I did not see her again,
although I stayed to dinner as her uncle’s request. Those old Gordons are
a queer pair. I liked them, though. They are strong and staunch—good
friends, bitter enemies. They were sorry that I could not help Kilmeny,
but I saw plainly that old Thomas Gordon thought that I had been meddling
with predestination in attempting it.”</p>
<p>Eric smiled mechanically.</p>
<p>“I must go up and see Kilmeny. You’ll excuse me, won’t you, David? My
books are there—help yourself.”</p>
<p>But when Eric reached the Gordon house he saw only old Janet, who told him
that Kilmeny was in her room and refused to see him.</p>
<p>“She thought you would come up, and she left this with me to give you,
Master.”</p>
<p>Janet handed him a little note. It was very brief and blotted with tears.</p>
<p>“Do not come any more, Eric,” it ran. “I must not see you, because it
would only make it harder for us both. You must go away and forget me. You
will be thankful for this some day. I shall always love and pray for you.”</p>
<p>“KILMENY.”<br/></p>
<p>“I MUST see her,” said Eric desperately. “Aunt Janet, be my friend. Tell
her she must see me for a little while at least.”</p>
<p>Janet shook her head but went upstairs. She soon returned.</p>
<p>“She says she cannot come down. You know she means it, Master, and it is
of no use to coax her. And I must say I think she is right. Since she will
not marry you it is better for her not to see you.”</p>
<p>Eric was compelled to go home with no better comfort than this. In the
morning, as it was Sunday, he drove David Baker to the station. He had not
slept and he looked so miserable and reckless that David felt anxious
about him. David would have stayed in Lindsay for a few days, but a
certain critical case in Queenslea demanded his speedy return. He shook
hands with Eric on the station platform.</p>
<p>“Eric, give up that school and come home at once. You can do no good in
Lindsay now, and you’ll only eat your heart out here.”</p>
<p>“I must see Kilmeny once more before I leave,” was all Eric’s answer.</p>
<p>That afternoon he went again to the Gordon homestead. But the result was
the same; Kilmeny refused to see him, and Thomas Gordon said gravely,</p>
<p>“Master, you know I like you and I am sorry Kilmeny thinks as she does,
though maybe she is right. I would be glad to see you often for your own
sake and I’ll miss you much; but as things are I tell you plainly you’d
better not come here any more. It will do no good, and the sooner you and
she get over thinking about each other the better for you both. Go now,
lad, and God bless you.”</p>
<p>“Do you know what it is you are asking of me?” said Eric hoarsely.</p>
<p>“I know I am asking a hard thing for your own good, Master. It is not as
if Kilmeny would ever change her mind. We have had some experience with a
woman’s will ere this. Tush, Janet, woman, don’t be weeping. You women are
foolish creatures. Do you think tears can wash such things away? No, they
cannot blot out sin, or the consequences of sin. It’s awful how one sin
can spread out and broaden, till it eats into innocent lives, sometimes
long after the sinner has gone to his own accounting. Master, if you take
my advice, you’ll give up the Lindsay school and go back to your own world
as soon as may be.”</p>
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