<h2>CHAPTER XX.</h2>
<h3>HOW IT WAS DONE.</h3>
<P>FLOSSY came quite down the broad aisle
to the seat which the girls had, by tacit <ins title="Transcriber's Note: original reads 'unstanding'">understanding</ins>,
chosen for their own, her face just <ins title="Transcriber's Note: original reads 'radient'">radiant</ins>
with a sort of surprised satisfaction, and
the gentleman who followed her with an assured
and measured step was none other than Judge
Erskine himself. He may have been surprised
at his own appearance in that place for prayer,
but no surprise of his could compare with the
amazement of his daughter Ruth. For once in
her life her well-bred composure forsook her, and
her look could be called nothing less than an absolute
stare.</P>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_323" id="Page_323"></SPAN></span>Of the four, Flossy only had succeeded. The
way of it was this:</p>
<p>Having become a realist, in the most emphatic
sense of that word, to have promised to bring
some one with her to meeting if she possibly
could, meant to her just that, and nothing less
than that. Of course, such an understanding
of a promise made it impossible to stop with the
asking of one person, or two, or three, provided
her invitations met with only refusals.</p>
<p>She had started out as confident of success as
Eurie; she felt nearly certain of Col. Baker;
not because he was any more likely of his own
will to choose the prayer-meeting than he had
been all his life thus far, but because he was
growing every day more anxious to give pleasure
to Flossy.</p>
<p>Having some dim sense of this in her heart,
Flossy reasoned that it would be right to put this
power of hers to the good use of winning him to
the meeting, for who could tell what words from
God's Spirit might reach him while there? So
she asked him to go.</p>
<p>To her surprise, and to Col. Baker's real annoyance,
he was obliged to refuse her. He was<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_324" id="Page_324"></SPAN></span>
more than willing to go, even to a prayer-meeting,
if thereby he could take one step forward
toward the place in her life that he desired to
fill. Therefore his regrets were profuse and
sincere.</p>
<p>It was club night, and, most unluckily, they
were to meet with him, and he was to provide
the entertainment. Under almost any other circumstances
he could have been excused. Had
he even had the remotest idea that Flossy would
have liked his company that evening, he could
have made arrangements for a change of evening
for the club; that is, had he known of it
earlier. But, as it was, she would see how impossible
it would be for him to get away. Quick-witted
Flossy took him at his word.</p>
<p>"Would he remember, then," she asked, with
her most winning smile, "that of all places where
she could possibly like to see him regularly, the
Wednesday evening prayer-meeting at the First
Church was the place."</p>
<p>What a bitter pill an evening prayer-meeting
would be to Col. Baker! But he did not tell
her so. He was even growing to think that he
could do that, for a while at least.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_325" id="Page_325"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>From him Flossy turned to her brother; but
it was club night to him, too, and while he had
not the excuse that the entertainer of the club
certainly had, it served very well as an excuse,
though he was frank enough to add, "As for
that, I don't believe I should go if I hadn't an
engagement; I won't be hypocrite enough to go
to the prayer-meeting." Such strange ideas have
some otherwise sensible people on this subject of
hypocrisy!</p>
<p>It required a good deal of courage for Flossy
to ask her mother, but she accomplished it, and
received in reply an astonished stare, a half-embarrassed
laugh, and the expression:</p>
<p>"What an absurd little fanatic you are getting
to be, Flossy! I am sure one wouldn't have
looked for it in a child like you! Me? Oh,
dear, no! I can't go; I never walk so far you
know; at least very rarely, and Kitty will have
the carriage in use for Mrs. Waterman's reception.
Why don't you go there, child? It really
isn't treating Mrs. Waterman well; she is such
an old friend."</p>
<p>These were a few of the many efforts which
Flossy made. They met with like results, until<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_326" id="Page_326"></SPAN></span>
at last the evening in question found her somewhat
belated and alone, ringing at Judge Erskine's
mansion. That important personage being
in the hall, in the act of going out to the post-office,
he opened the door and met her hurried,
almost breathless, question:</p>
<p>"Judge Erskine, is Ruth gone? Oh, excuse
me. Good-evening. I am in such haste that I
forgot courtesy. Do you think Ruth is gone?"</p>
<p>Yes, Judge Erskine knew that his daughter
was out, for she stepped into the library to leave
a message a few moments ago, and she was then
dressed for the street, and had passed out a moment
afterward.</p>
<p>Then did he know whether Katie Flinn, the
chamber-maid, was in? "Of course you won't
know," she added, blushing and smiling at the
absurdity of her question. "I mean could you
find out for me whether she is in, and can I speak
to her just a minute?"</p>
<p>He was fortunately wiser to-night than she
gave him credit for being, Judge Erskine said,
with a courtly bow and smile.</p>
<p>It so happened that just after his daughter departed,
Katie had sought him, asking permission<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_327" id="Page_327"></SPAN></span>
to be out that evening until nine o'clock, a permission
that she had forgotten to secure of his
daughter; therefore, as a most unusual circumstance
which must have occurred for Flossy's
special benefit, he was posted even as to Katie's
whereabouts. He was unprepared for the sudden
flushing of Flossy's cheeks, and quiver of
her almost baby chin.</p>
<p>"Oh, I am <i>so</i> sorry!" she said, and there were
actual tears in her blue eyes.</p>
<p>Judge Erskine saw them, and felt as if he were
in some way a monster. He hastened to be
sympathetic. If she was alone and timid it
would afford him nothing but pleasure to see her
safely to any part of the city she chose to mention.
He was going out simply for a stroll, with no
business whatever.</p>
<p>"Oh, it isn't that," Flossy said, hastily. "I
am such a little way from the chapel, and it is so
early I shall not be afraid; but I am so disappointed.
You see, Judge Erskine, we girls were
each to bring one with us to the meeting to-night,
and I have tried so hard, I have asked almost
a dozen people, and none of them could go.
At last I happened to think of your Katie Flinn:<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_328" id="Page_328"></SPAN></span>
I knew she was in our Sunday-school, and I
thought perhaps if I asked her she would go
with me, if Ruth had not done it before me. She
was my last chance, and I am more disappointed
than I can tell you."</p>
<p>Shall I try to describe to you what a strange
sensation Judge Erskine felt in the region of his
heart as he stood there in the hall with that
pretty blushing girl, who seemed to him only a
child, and found that her quivering chin and
swimming eyes meant simply that she had failed
in securing even his chambermaid to attend the
prayer-meeting? He never remembered to have
had such an astonishing feeling, nor such a queer
choking sensation in his throat.</p>
<p>His own daughter was dignified and stately;
the very picture of her father, every one said;
he had no idea that she could shed a tear any
more than he could himself; but this timid,
flushing, trembling little girl seemed made of
some other material than just the clay that he
supposed himself to be composed of.</p>
<p>He stood regarding her with a sort of pleased
wonder. In common with many other stately
gentlemen, he very much admired real, unaffected,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_329" id="Page_329"></SPAN></span>
artless childhood. It seemed to him that
a grieved child stood before him. How could he
comfort her? If a doll, now, with curling hair
and blue eyes could do it, how promptly should
it be bought and given to this flesh-and-blood
doll before him.</p>
<p>But no, nothing short of some one to accompany
her to prayer-meeting would appease
this little troubled bit of humanity. In the
magnanimity of his haughty heart the learned
judge took a sudden and almost overpowering
resolution.</p>
<p>Could <i>he</i> go? he asked her. To be sure,
he was not Katie Flinn, but he would do his best
to take the place of that personage if she would
kindly let him go to the said meeting with
her.</p>
<p>It was worth a dozen sittings even in prayer-meeting,
Judge Erskine thought, to see the sudden
clearing of that tearful face; the sudden
radiant outlook from those wet eyes.</p>
<p><i>Would</i> he go? Would he <i>really</i> go? Could
anything be more <i>splendid!</i></p>
<p>And, verily, Judge Erskine thought, as he beheld
her shining face, that there hardly could.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_330" id="Page_330"></SPAN></span>
He felt precisely as you do when you have been
unselfish toward a pretty child, who, someway,
has won a warm spot in your heart.</p>
<p>He went to the First Church prayer-meeting
for the first time with no higher motive than
that—never mind, he went. Flossy Shipley
certainly was not responsible for the motive of
his going; neither did it in any degree affect the
honest, earnest, persistent effort she had made
that day. Her account of it was simple enough,
when the girls met afterward to talk over their
efforts.</p>
<p>"Why, you know," she said, "I actually
<i>promised</i> to bring some one with me if I possibly
could; so there was nothing for it but to try in
every possible way up to the very last minute of
the time I had. But, after all, I brought the
one whom I had not the least idea of asking; he
asked himself."</p>
<p>"Well," Marion said, after a period of amazed
silence, "I have made two discoveries. One is,
that people may possibly have tried before this
to enlarge the prayer-meeting; possibly we may
not, after all, be the originators of that brilliant
idea; they may have tried, and failed even as we<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_331" id="Page_331"></SPAN></span>
did; for I have learned that it is not so easy a
matter as it at first appears; it needs a power
behind the wills of people to get them to do even
so simple a thing as that. The other important
thought is, there are two ways of keeping a
promise; one is to make an attempt and fail,
saying to our contented consciences, 'There!
I've done my duty, and it is no use you see;'
and the other is to persist in attempt after attempt,
until the very pertinacity of our faith accomplishes
the work for us. What if we follow
the example of our little Flossy after this, and
let a promise mean something?"</p>
<p>"My example!" Flossy said, with wide open
eyes. "Why, I only <i>asked</i> people, just as I said
I would; but they wouldn't come."</p>
<p>There was one young lady who walked home
from that eventful prayer-meeting with a very
unsatisfied conscience. Ruth Erskine could not
get away from the feeling that she was a shirker;
all the more so, because the person who had sat
very near her was her father! not brought there
by any invitation from her; it was not that she
had tried and failed; that form of it would have
been an infinite relief; she simply had not tried,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_332" id="Page_332"></SPAN></span>
and she made herself honestly confess to herself
that the trouble was, she could not be satisfied
with one who was within the reach of her asking.</p>
<p>Yet conscience, working all alone, is a very
uncomfortable and disagreeable companion, and
often accomplishes for the time being nothing
beyond making his victim disagreeable. This
was Ruth to the fullest extent of her power; she
realized it, and in a measure felt ashamed of herself,
and struggled a little for a better state of
mind.</p>
<p>It seemed ill payment for the courtesy which
had made Harold Wayne forsake the club before
supper for the purpose of walking home with her
from church. He was unusually kind, too, and
patient. Part of her trouble, be it known, was
her determination in her heart not to be driven
by that dreadful conscience into saying a single
personal word to Harold Wayne. Not that
she put it in that way; bless you, no! Satan
rarely blunders enough to speak out plainly; he
has a dozen smooth-sounding phrases that mean
the same thing.</p>
<p>"People need to be approached very carefully
on very special occasions, which are not apt to<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_333" id="Page_333"></SPAN></span>
occur; they need to be approached by just such
persons, and in just such well-chosen words,"
etc. etc.</p>
<p>Though why it should require such infinite
tact and care and skill to say to a friend, "I wish
you were going to heaven with me," when the person
would say without the slightest hesitation,
"I wish you were going to Europe with me,"
and be accounted an idiot if he made talk about
tact and skill and caution, I am sure I don't
know.</p>
<p>Yet all these things Ruth said to herself. The
reason the thought ruffled her was because her
honest conscience knew they were false, and
that she had a right to say, "Harold, I <i>wish</i> you
were a Christian;" and had no right at all with
the results.</p>
<p>She simply could not bring herself to say it;
she did not really know why, herself; probably
Satan did.</p>
<p><SPAN name="tn3" id="tn3"></SPAN>Mr. Wayne was unusually quiet and grave; he
seemed to be doing what he could to lead Ruth
into serious talk; he asked about the meeting,
whether there were many out, and whether she
enjoyed it.</p>
<p>"I sort of like Dr. Dennis," he said. "He is<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_334" id="Page_334"></SPAN></span>
tremendously in earnest; but why shouldn't a
man be in earnest if he believes what he is talking
about. Do you suppose he does, Ruth?"</p>
<p>"Of course," Ruth said, shortly, almost crossly;
"you know he does. Why do you ask such a
foolish question?"</p>
<p>"Oh, I don't know; half the time it seems to
me as if the religious people were trying to humbug
the world; because, you see, they don't act
as if they were in dead earnest—very few of
them do, at least."</p>
<p>"That is a very easy thing to say, and people
seem to be fond of saying it," Ruth said: and
then she simply would not talk on that subject
or any other; she was miserably unhappy; an
awakened conscience, toyed with, is a very fruitful
source of misery. She was glad when the
walk was concluded.</p>
<p>"Shall I come in?" Mr. Wayne asked, lingering
on the step, half smiling, half wistful.
"What do you advise, shall I go back to the club
or call on you?"</p>
<p>Now, Ruth hated that club; she was much
afraid of its influence over her friend; she had
determined, as soon as she could plan a line of
operation, to set systematically at work to withdraw<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_335" id="Page_335"></SPAN></span>
him from its influence; but she was not
ready for it yet. And, among other things that
she was not ready for, was a call from Mr.
Wayne; it seemed to her that in her present
miserable, unsettled state it would be simply impossible
to carry on a conversation with him.
True to her usually frank nature, she answered,
promptly:</p>
<p>"I have certainly no desire for you to go to
the club, either on this evening or any other;
but, to be frank, I would rather be alone this
evening; I want to think over some matters of
importance, and to decide them. You will not
think strangely of me for saying that, will you?"</p>
<p>"Oh, no," he said, and he smiled kindly on
her; yet he was very much disappointed; he
showed it in his face.</p>
<p>Many a time afterward, as Ruth sat thinking
over this conversation, recalling every little detail
of it, recalling the look on his face, and the
peculiar sadness in his eyes, she thought within
herself, "If I had said, 'Harold, I want you to
come in; I want to talk with you; I want you
to decide now to live for Christ,' I wonder what
he <i>would</i> have answered."</p>
<p>But she did not say it. Instead, she turned<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_336" id="Page_336"></SPAN></span>
from him and went into the house; and—he
went directly to his club: an unaccountable
gloom hung over him; he must have companionship;
if not with his chosen and promised wife,
then with the club. That was just what Ruth
was to him; and it was one of the questions that
tormented her.</p>
<p>There were reasons why thought about it had
forced itself upon her during the last few days.
She was pledged to him long before she found
this new experience. The question was, Could
she fulfil those pledges? Had they a thought in
common now? Could she live with him the sort
of life that she had promised to live, and that she
solemnly meant to live? If she <i>could</i>, was it
right to do so? You see she had enough to torment
her; only she set about thinking of it in
so strange a manner; not at all as she would
have thought about it if the pledges she had
given him had meant to her all that they mean
to some, all that they ought to mean to any one
who makes them. This phase of it also troubled
her.</p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_337" id="Page_337"></SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />