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<h2> CHAPTER XX </h2>
<p>It was apparent to the Rev. Theron Ware, from the very first moment of
waking next morning, that both he and the world had changed over night.
The metamorphosis, in the harsh toils of which he had been laboring
blindly so long, was accomplished. He stood forth, so to speak, in a new
skin, and looked about him, with perceptions of quite an altered kind,
upon what seemed in every way a fresh existence. He lacked even the
impulse to turn round and inspect the cocoon from which he had emerged.
Let the past bury the past. He had no vestige of interest in it.</p>
<p>The change was not premature. He found himself not in the least confused
by it, or frightened. Before he had finished shaving, he knew himself to
be easily and comfortably at home in his new state, and master of all its
requirements.</p>
<p>It seemed as if Alice, too, recognized that he had become another man,
when he went down and took his chair at the breakfast table. They had
exchanged no words since their parting in the depot-yard the previous
evening—an event now faded off into remote vagueness in Theron's
mind. He smiled brilliantly in answer to the furtive, half-sullen,
half-curious glance she stole at him, as she brought the dishes in.</p>
<p>"Ah! potatoes warmed up in cream!" he said, with hearty pleasure in his
tone. "What a mind-reader you are, to be sure!"</p>
<p>"I'm glad you're feeling so much better," she said briefly, taking her
seat.</p>
<p>"Better?" he returned. "I'm a new being!"</p>
<p>She ventured to look him over more freely, upon this assurance. He
perceived and catalogued, one by one, the emotions which the small brain
was expressing through those shallow blue eyes of hers. She was turning
over this, that, and the other hostile thought and childish grievance—most
of all she was dallying with the idea of asking him where he had been till
after midnight. He smiled affably in the face of this scattering fire of
peevish glances, and did not dream of resenting any phase of them all.</p>
<p>"I am going down to Thurston's this morning, and order that piano sent up
today," he announced presently, in a casual way.</p>
<p>"Why, Theron, can we afford it?" the wife asked, regarding him with
surprise.</p>
<p>"Oh, easily enough," he replied light-heartedly. "You know they've
increased my salary."</p>
<p>She shook her head. "No, I didn't. How should I? You don't realize it,"
she went on, dolefully, "but you're getting so you don't tell me the least
thing about your affairs nowadays."</p>
<p>Theron laughed aloud. "You ought to be grateful—such melancholy
affairs as mine have been till now," he declared—"that is, if it
weren't absurd to think such a thing." Then, more soberly, he explained:
"No, my girl, it is you who don't realize. I am carrying big projects in
my mind—big, ambitious thoughts and plans upon which great things
depend. They no doubt make me seem preoccupied and absent-minded; but it
is a wife's part to understand, and make allowances, and not intrude
trifles which may throw everything out of gear. Don't think I'm scolding,
my girl. I only speak to reassure you and—and help you to
comprehend. Of course I know that you wouldn't willingly embarrass my—my
career."</p>
<p>"Of course not," responded Alice, dubiously; "but—but—"</p>
<p>"But what? Theron felt compelled by civility to say, though on the instant
he reproached himself for the weakness of it.</p>
<p>"Well—I hardly know how to say it," she faltered, "but it was nicer
in the old days, before you bothered your head about big projects, and
your career, as you call it, and were just a good, earnest, simple young
servant of the Lord. Oh, Theron!" she broke forth suddenly, with tearful
zeal, "I get sometimes lately almost scared lest you should turn out to be
a—a BACKSLIDER!"</p>
<p>The husband sat upright, and hardened his countenance. But yesterday the
word would have had in it all sorts of inherited terrors for him. This
morning's dawn of a new existence revealed it as merely an empty and
stupid epithet.</p>
<p>"These are things not to be said," he admonished her, after a moment's
pause, and speaking with carefully measured austerity. "Least of all are
they to be said to a clergyman—by his wife."</p>
<p>It was on the tip of Alice's tongue to retort, "Better by his wife than by
outsiders!" but she bit her lips, and kept the gibe back. A rebuke of this
form and gravity was a novelty in their relations. The fear that it had
been merited troubled, even while it did not convince, her mind, and the
puzzled apprehension was to be read plainly enough on her face.</p>
<p>Theron, noting it, saw a good deal more behind. Really, it was amazing how
much wiser he had grown all at once. He had been married for years, and it
was only this morning that he suddenly discovered how a wife ought to be
handled. He continued to look sternly away into space for a little. Then
his brows relaxed slowly and under the visible influence of melting
considerations. He nodded his head, turned toward her abruptly, and broke
the silence with labored amiability.</p>
<p>"Come, come—the day began so pleasantly—it was so good to feel
well again—let us talk about the piano instead. That is," he added,
with an obvious overture to playfulness, "if the thought of having a piano
is not too distasteful to you."</p>
<p>Alice yielded almost effusively to his altered mood. They went together
into the sitting-room, to measure and decide between the two available
spaces which were at their disposal, and he insisted with resolute
magnanimity on her settling this question entirely by herself. When at
last he mentioned the fact that it was Friday, and he would look over some
sermon memoranda before he went out, Alice retired to the kitchen in
openly cheerful spirits.</p>
<p>Theron spread some old manuscript sermons before him on his desk, and took
down his scribbling-book as well. But there his application flagged, and
he surrendered himself instead, chin on hand, to staring out at the
rhododendron in the yard. He recalled how he had seen Soulsby patiently
studying this identical bush. The notion of Soulsby, not knowing at all
how to sing, yet diligently learning those sixths, brought a smile to his
mind; and then he seemed to hear Celia calling out over her shoulder,
"That's what Chopin does—he sings!" The spirit of that wonderful
music came back to him, enfolded him in its wings. It seemed to raise
itself up—a palpable barrier between him and all that he had known
and felt and done before. That was his new birth—that marvellous
night with the piano. The conceit pleased him—not the less because
there flashed along with it the thought that it was a poet that had been
born. Yes; the former country lout, the narrow zealot, the untutored slave
groping about in the dark after silly superstitions, cringing at the scowl
of mean Pierces and Winches, was dead. There was an end of him, and good
riddance. In his place there had been born a Poet—he spelled the
word out now unabashed—a child of light, a lover of beauty and sweet
sounds, a recognizable brother to Renan and Chopin—and Celia!</p>
<p>Out of the soothing, tenderly grateful revery, a practical suggestion
suddenly took shape. He acted upon it without a moment's delay, getting
out his letter-pad, and writing hurriedly—</p>
<p>"Dear Miss Madden,—Life will be more tolerable to me if before
nightfall I can know that there is a piano under my roof. Even if it
remains dumb, it will be some comfort to have it here and look at it, and
imagine how a great master might make it speak.</p>
<p>"Would it be too much to beg you to look in at Thurston's, say at eleven
this forenoon, and give me the inestimable benefit of your judgment in
selecting an instrument?</p>
<p>"Do not trouble to answer this, for I am leaving home now, but shall call
at Thurston's at eleven, and wait.</p>
<p>"Thanking you in anticipation,</p>
<p>"I am—"</p>
<p>Here Theron's fluency came to a sharp halt. There were adverbs enough and
to spare on the point of his pen, but the right one was not easy to come
at. "Gratefully," "faithfully," "sincerely," "truly"—each in turn
struck a false note. He felt himself not quite any of these things. At
last he decided to write just the simple word "yours," and then wavered
between satisfaction at his boldness, dread lest he had been over-bold,
and, worst of the lot, fear that she would not notice it one way or the
other—all the while he sealed and addressed the letter, put it
carefully in an inner pocket, and got his hat.</p>
<p>There was a moment's hesitation as to notifying the kitchen of his
departure. The interests of domestic discipline seemed to point the other
way. He walked softly through the hall, and let himself out by the front
door without a sound.</p>
<p>Down by the canal bridge he picked out an idle boy to his mind—a lad
whose aspect appeared to promise intelligence as a messenger, combined
with large impartiality in sectarian matters. He was to have ten cents on
his return; and he might report himself to his patron at the bookstore
yonder.</p>
<p>Theron was grateful to the old bookseller for remaining at his desk in the
rear. There was a tacit compliment in the suggestion that he was not a
mere customer, demanding instant attention. Besides, there was no keeping
"Thurston's" out of conversations in this place.</p>
<p>Loitering along the shelves, the young minister's eye suddenly found
itself arrested by a name on a cover. There were a dozen narrow volumes in
uniform binding, huddled together under a cardboard label of "Eminent
Women Series." Oddly enough, one of these bore the title "George Sand."
Theron saw there must be some mistake, as he took the book down, and
opened it. His glance hit by accident upon the name of Chopin. Then he
read attentively until almost the stroke of eleven.</p>
<p>"We have to make ourselves acquainted with all sorts of queer phases of
life," he explained in self-defence to the old bookseller, then counting
out the money for the book from his lean purse. He smiled as he added,
"There seems something almost wrong about taking advantage of the
clergyman's discount for a life of George Sand."</p>
<p>"I don't know," answered the other, pleasantly. "Guess she wasn't so much
different from the rest of 'em—except that she didn't mind
appearances. We know about her. We don't know about the others."</p>
<p>"I must hurry," said Theron, turning on his heel. The haste with which he
strode out of the store, crossed the street, and made his way toward
Thurston's, did not prevent his thinking much upon the astonishing things
he had encountered in this book. Their relation to Celia forced itself
more and more upon his mind. He could recall the twinkle in her eye, the
sub-mockery in her tone, as she commented with that half-contemptuous "Yes—George
something!" upon his blundering ignorance. His mortification at having
thus exposed his dull rusticity was swallowed up in conjectures as to just
what her tolerant familiarity with such things involved. He had never
before met a young unmarried woman who would have confessed to him any
such knowledge. But then, of course, he had never known a girl who
resembled Celia in any other way. He recognized vaguely that he must
provide himself with an entire new set of standards by which to measure
and comprehend her. But it was for the moment more interesting to wonder
what her standards were. Did she object to George Sand's behavior? Or did
she sympathize with that sort of thing? Did those statues, and the
loose-flowing diaphonous toga and unbound hair, the cigarettes, the fiery
liqueur, the deliberately sensuous music—was he to believe that they
signified—?</p>
<p>"Good-morning, Mr. Ware. You have managed by a miracle to hit on one of my
punctual days," said Celia.</p>
<p>She was standing on the doorstep, at the entrance to the musical
department of Thurston's. He had not noticed before the fact that the sun
was shining. The full glare of its strong light, enveloping her figure as
she stood, and drawing the dazzled eye for relief to the bower of softened
color, close beneath her parasol of creamy silk and lace, was what struck
him now first of all. It was as if Celia had brought the sun with her.</p>
<p>Theron shook hands with her, and found joy in the perception, that his own
hand trembled. He put boldly into words the thought that came to him.</p>
<p>"It was generous of you," he said, "to wait for me out here, where all
might delight in the sight of you, instead of squandering the privilege on
a handful of clerks inside."</p>
<p>Miss Madden beamed upon him, and nodded approval.</p>
<p>"Alcibiades never turned a prettier compliment," she remarked. They went
in together at this, and Theron made a note of the name.</p>
<p>During the ensuing half-hour, the young minister followed about even more
humbly than the clerks in Celia's commanding wake. There were a good many
pianos in the big show-room overhead, and Theron found himself almost awed
by their size and brilliancy of polish, and the thought of the tremendous
sum of money they represented altogether. Not so with the organist. She
ordered them rolled around this way or that, as if they had been so many
checkers on a draught-board. She threw back their covers with the scant
ceremony of a dispensary dentist opening paupers' mouths. She exploited
their several capacities with masterful hands, not deigning to seat
herself, but just slightly bending forward, and sweeping her fingers up
and down their keyboards—able, domineering fingers which pounded,
tinkled, meditated, assented, condemned, all in a flash, and amid what
affected the layman's ears as a hopelessly discordant hubbub.</p>
<p>Theron moved about in the group, nursing her parasol in his arms, and
watching her. The exaggerated deference which the clerks and salesmen
showed to her as the rich Miss Madden, seemed to him to be mixed with a
certain assertion of the claims of good-fellowship on the score of her
being a musician. There undoubtedly was a sense of freemasonry between
them. They alluded continually in technical terms to matters of which he
knew nothing, and were amused at remarks of hers which to him carried no
meaning whatever. It was evident that the young men liked her, and that
their liking pleased her. It thrilled him to think that she knew he liked
her, too, and to recall what abundant proofs she had given that here,
also, she had pleasure in the fact. He clung insistently to the memory of
these evidences. They helped him to resist a disagreeable tendency to feel
himself an intruder, an outsider, among these pianoforte experts.</p>
<p>When it was all over, Celia waved the others aside, and talked with
Theron. "I suppose you want me to tell you the truth," she said. "There's
nothing here really good. It is always much better to buy of the makers
direct."</p>
<p>"Do they sell on the instalment plan?" he asked. There was a wistful
effect in his voice which caught her attention.</p>
<p>She looked away—out through the window on the street below—for
a moment. Then her eyes returned to his, and regarded him with a
comforting, friendly, half-motherly glance, recalling for all the world
the way Sister Soulsby had looked at him at odd times.</p>
<p>"Oh, you want it at once—I see," she remarked softly. "Well, this
Adelberger is the best value for the money."</p>
<p>Mr. Ware followed her finger, and beheld with dismay that it pointed
toward the largest instrument in the room—a veritable leviathan
among pianos. The price of this had been mentioned as $600. He turned over
the fact that this was two-thirds his yearly salary, and found the courage
to shake his head.</p>
<p>"It would be too large—much too large—for the room," he
explained. "And, besides, it is more than I like to pay—or CAN pay,
for that matter." It was pitiful to be explaining such details, but there
was no help for it.</p>
<p>They picked out a smaller one, which Celia said was at least of fair
quality. "Now leave all the bargaining to me," she adjured him. "These
prices that they talk about in the piano trade are all in the air. There
are tremendous discounts, if one knows how to insist upon them. All you
have to do is to tell them to send it to your house—you wanted it
today, you said?"</p>
<p>"Yes—in memory of yesterday," he murmured.</p>
<p>She herself gave the directions, and Thurston's people, now all salesmen
again, bowed grateful acquiescence. Then she sailed regally across the
room and down the stairs, drawing Theron in her train. The hirelings made
salaams to him as well; it would have been impossible to interpose
anything so trivial and squalid as talk about terms and dates of payment.</p>
<p>"I am ever so much obliged to you," he said fervently, in the comparative
solitude of the lower floor. She had paused to look at something in the
book-department.</p>
<p>"Of course I was entirely at your service; don't mention it," she replied,
reaching forth her hand in an absent way for her parasol.</p>
<p>He held up instead the volume he had purchased. "Guess what that is! You
never would guess in this wide world!" His manner was surcharged with a
sense of the surreptitious.</p>
<p>"Well, then, there's no good trying, IS there?" commented Celia, her
glance roving again toward the shelves.</p>
<p>"It is a life of George Sand," whispered Theron. "I've been reading it
this morning—all the Chopin part—while I was waiting for you."</p>
<p>To his surprise, there was an apparently displeased contraction of her
brows as he made this revelation. For the instant, a dreadful fear of
having offended her seized upon and sickened him. But then her face
cleared, as by magic. She smiled, and let her eyes twinkle in laughter at
him, and lifted a forefinger in the most winning mockery of admonition.</p>
<p>"Naughty! naughty!" she murmured back, with a roguishly solemn wink.</p>
<p>He had no response ready for this, but mutely handed her the parasol. The
situation had suddenly grown too confused for words, or even sequent
thoughts. Uppermost across the hurly-burly of his mind there scudded the
singular reflection that he should never hear her play on that new piano
of his. Even as it flashed by out of sight, he recognized it for one of
the griefs of his life; and the darkness which followed seemed nothing but
a revolt against the idea of having a piano at all. He would countermand
the order. He would—but she was speaking again.</p>
<p>They had strolled toward the door, and her voice was as placidly
conventional as if the talk had never strayed from the subject of pianos.
Theron with an effort pulled himself together, and laid hold of her words.</p>
<p>"I suppose you will be going the other way," she was saying. "I shall have
to be at the church all day. We have just got a new Mass over from Vienna,
and I'm head over heels in work at it. I can have Father Forbes to myself
today, too. That bear of a doctor has got the rheumatism, and can't come
out of his cave, thank Heaven!"</p>
<p>And then she was receding from view, up the sunlit, busy sidewalk, and
Theron, standing on the doorstep, ruefully rubbed his chin. She had said
he was going the other way, and, after a little pause, he made her words
good, though each step he took seemed all in despite of his personal
inclinations. Some of the passers-by bowed to him, and one or two paused
as if to shake hands and exchange greetings. He nodded responses
mechanically, but did not stop. It was as if he feared to interrupt the
process of lifting his reluctant feet and propelling them forward, lest
they should wheel and scuttle off in the opposite direction.</p>
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