<h2><SPAN name="V"></SPAN>V</h2>
<br/>
<p>A fortnight later she was established as an officer of the
Children's Protective Association, an organization with a
self-explanatory name, instituted by women, and chiefly supported
by them. She was given an inexhaustible task, police powers,
headquarters at Hull House, and a vocation demanding enough to
satisfy even her desire for spiritual adventure.</p>
<p>It was her business to adjust the lives of children--which meant
that she adjusted their parents' lives also. She arranged the
disarranged; played the providential part, exercising the powers of
intervention which in past times belonged to the priest, but which,
in the days of commercial feudalism, devolve upon the social
workers.</p>
<p>Her work carried her into the lowest strata of society, and her
compassion, her efficiency, and her courage were daily called upon.
Perhaps she might have found herself lacking in the required
measure of these qualities, being so young and inexperienced, had
it not been that she was in a position to concentrate completely
upon her task. She knew how to listen and to learn; she knew how to
read and apply. She went into her new work with a humble spirit,
and this humility offset whatever was aggressive and militant in
her. The death of her mother and the aloofness of her father had
turned all her ardors back upon herself. They found vent now in her
new work, and she was not long in perceiving that she needed those
whom she was called upon to serve quite as much as they needed
her.</p>
<p>Mrs. Barsaloux and Marna Carton, who had been shopping, met Kate
one day crossing the city with a baby in her arms and two miserable
little children clinging to her skirts. Hunger and neglect had
given these poor small derelicts that indescribable appearance of
depletion and shame which, once seen, is never to be confused with
anything else.</p>
<p>"My goodness!" cried Mrs. Barsaloux, glowering at Kate through
her veil; "what sort of work is this you are doing, Miss
Barrington? Aren't you afraid of becoming infected with some
dreadful disease? Wherever do you find the fortitude to be seen in
the company of such wretched little creatures? I would like to help
them myself, but I'd never be willing to carry such filthy little
bags of misery around with me."</p>
<p>Kate smiled cheerfully.</p>
<p>"We've just put their mother in the Bridewell," she said, "and
their father is in the police station awaiting trial. The poor
dears are going to be clean for once in their lives and have a good
supper in the bargain. Maybe they'll be taken into good homes
eventually. They're lovely children, really. You haven't looked at
them closely enough, Mrs. Barsaloux."</p>
<p>"I'm just as close to them as I want to be, thank you," said the
lady, drawing back involuntarily. But she reached for her purse and
gave Kate a bill.</p>
<p>"Would this help toward getting them something?" she asked.</p>
<p>Marna laughed delightedly.</p>
<p>"I'm sure they're treasures," she said. "Mayn't I help Miss
Barrington take them to wherever they're going, <i>tante</i>? I
shan't catch a thing, and I love to know what becomes of homeless
children."</p>
<p>Kate saw a look of acute distress on Mrs. Barsaloux's face.</p>
<p>"This isn't your game just now, Miss Cartan," Kate said in her
downright manner. "It's mine. I'm moving my pawns here and there,
trying to find the best places for them. It's quite
exhilarating."</p>
<p>Her arms were aching and she moved the heavy baby from one
shoulder to the other.</p>
<p>"A game, is it?" asked the Irish girl. "And who wins?"</p>
<p>"The children, I hope. I'm on the side of the children first and
last."</p>
<p>"Oh, so am I. I think it's just magnificent of you to help
them."</p>
<p>Kate disclaimed the magnificence.</p>
<p>"You mustn't forget that I'm doing it for money," she said.
"It's my job. I hope I'll do it well enough to win the reputation
of being honest, but you mustn't think there's anything saintly
about me, because there isn't. Good-bye. Hold on tight,
children!"</p>
<p>She nodded cheerfully and moved on, fresh, strong, determined,
along the crowded thoroughfare, the people making way for her
smilingly. She saw nothing of the attention paid her. She was
wondering if her arms would hold out or if, in some unguarded
moment, the baby would slip from them. Perhaps the baby was
fearful, too, for it reached up its little clawlike hands and
clasped her tight about the neck. Kate liked the feeling of those
little hands, and was sorry when they relaxed and the weary little
one fell asleep.</p>
<p>Each day brought new problems. If she could have decided these
by mere rule of common sense, her new vocation might not have
puzzled her as much as it did. But it was uncommon, superfine,
intuitive sense that was required. She discovered, for example,
that not only was sin a virtue in disguise, but that a virtue might
be degraded into a sin.</p>
<p>She put this case to Honora and David one evening as the three
of them sat in Honora's drawing-room.</p>
<p>"It's the case of Peggy Dunn," she explained. "Peggy likes life.
She has brighter eyes than she knows what to do with and more
smiles than she has a chance to distribute. She has finished her
course at the parochial school and she's clerking in a downtown
store. That is slow going for Peggy, so she evens things up by
attending the Saturday night dances. When she's whirling around the
hall on the tips of her toes, she really feels like herself. She
gets home about two in the morning on these occasions and finds her
mother waiting up for her and kneeling before a little statue of
the Virgin that stands in the corner of the sitting-room. As soon
as the mother sees Peggy, she pounces on her and weeps on her
shoulder, and after Peggy's in bed and dead with the tire in her
legs, her mother gets down beside the bed and prays some more.
'What would you do, please,' says Peggy to me, 'if you had a mother
that kept crying and praying every time you had a bit of fun?
Wouldn't you run away from home and get where they took things
aisier?'"</p>
<p>David threw back his head and roared in sympathetic commendation
of Peggy's point of view.</p>
<p>"Poor little mother," sighed Honora. "I suppose she'll send her
girl straight on the road to perdition and never know what did
it."</p>
<p>"Not if I can help it," said Kate. "I don't believe in letting
her go to perdition at all. I went around to see the mother and I
put the responsibility on her. 'Every time you make Peggy laugh,' I
said, 'you can count it for glory. Every time you make her
swear,--for she does swear,--you can know you've blundered. Why
don't you give her some parties if you don't want her to be going
out to them?'"</p>
<p>"How did she take that?" asked Honora.</p>
<p>"It bothered her a good deal at first, but when I went down to
meet Peggy the other day as she came out of the store, she told me
her mother had had the little bisque Virgin moved into her own
bedroom and that she had put a talking-machine in the place where
it had stood. I told Peggy the talking-machine was just a new kind
of prayer, meant to make her happy, and that it wouldn't do for her
to let her mother's prayers go unanswered. 'Any one with eyes like
yours,' I said to her, 'is bound to have beaux in plenty, but
you've only one mother and you'd better hang on to her.'"</p>
<p>"Then what did she say?" demanded the interested Honora.</p>
<p>"She's an impudent little piece. She said, 'You've some eyes
yourself, Miss Barrington, but I suppose you know how to make them
behave."</p>
<p>"Better marry that girl as soon as you can, Miss Barrington,"
counseled David; "that is, if any hymeneal authority is vested in
you."</p>
<p>"That's what Peggy wanted to know," admitted Kate. "She said to
me the other day: 'Ain't you Cupid, Miss Barrington? I heard about
a match you made up, and it was all right--the real thing, sure
enough.' 'Have you a job for me--supposing I was Cupid?' I asked.
That set her off in a gale. So I suppose there's something up
Peggy's very short sleeves."</p>
<p>The Fulhams liked to hear her stories, particularly as she kept
the amusing or the merely pathetic ones for them, refraining from
telling them of the unspeakable, obscene tragedies which daily came
to her notice. It might have been supposed that scenes such as
these would so have revolted her that she could not endure to deal
with them; but this was far from being the case. The greater the
need for her help, the more determined was she to meet the demand.
She had plenty of superiors whom she could consult, and she
suffered less from disgust or timidity than any one could have
supposed possible.</p>
<p>The truth was, she was grateful for whatever absorbed her and
kept her from dwelling upon that dehumanized house at Silvertree.
Her busy days enabled her to fight her sorrow very well, but in the
night, like a wailing child, her longing for her mother awoke, and
she nursed it, treasuring it as those freshly bereaved often do.
The memory of that little frustrated soul made her tender of all
women, and too prone, perhaps, to lay to some man the blame of
their shortcomings. She had no realization that she had set herself
in this subtle and subconscious way against men. But whether she
admitted it or not, the fact remained that she stood with her
sisters, whatever their estate, leagued secretly against the other
sex.</p>
<p>By way of emphasizing her devotion to her work, she ceased
answering Ray McCrea's letters. She studiously avoided the
attentions of the men she met at the Settlement House and at Mrs.
Dennison's Caravansary. Sometimes, without her realizing it, her
thoughts took on an almost morbid hue, so that, looking at Honora
with her chaste, kind, uplifted face, she resented her close
association with her husband. It seemed offensive that he, with his
curious, half-restrained excesses of temperament, should have
domination over her friend who stood so obviously for abnegation.
David manifestly was averse to bounds and limits. All that was wild
and desirous of adventure, in Kate informed her of like qualities
in this man. But she held--and meant always to hold--the restless
falcons of her spirit in leash. Would David Fulham do as much? She
could not be quite sure, and instinctively she avoided anything
approaching intimacy with him.</p>
<p>He was her friend's husband. "Friend's husband" was a sort of
limbo into which men were dropped by scrupulous ladies; so Kate
decided, with a frown at herself for having even thought that David
could wish to emerge from that nondescript place of spiritual
residence. Anyway, she did not completely like him, though she
thought him extraordinary and stimulating, and when Honora told her
something of the great discovery which the two of them appeared to
be upon the verge of making concerning the germination of life
without parental interposition, she had little doubt that David was
wizard enough to carry it through. He would have the daring, and
Honora the industry, and--she reflected--if renown came, that would
be David's beyond all peradventure.</p>
<p>No question about it, Kate's thoughts were satiric these days.
She was still bleeding from the wound which her father had
inflicted, and she did not suspect that it was wounded affection
rather than hurt self-respect which was tormenting her. She only
knew that she shrank from men, and that at times she liked to
imagine what sort of a world it would be if there were no men in it
at all.</p>
<p>Meantime she met men every day, and whether she was willing to
admit it or not, the facts were that they helped her on her way
with brotherly good will, and as they saw her going about her
singular and heavy tasks, they gave her their silent good wishes,
and hoped that the world of pain and shame would not too soon
destroy what was gallant and trustful in her.</p>
<hr style="width: 25%;">
<p>But here has been much anticipation. To go back to the
beginning, at the end of her first week in the city she had a
friend. It was Marna Cartan. They had fallen into the way of
talking together a few minutes before or after dinner, and Kate
would hasten her modest dinner toilet in order to have these few
marginal moments with this palpitating young creature who moved to
unheard rhythms, and whose laughter was the sweetest thing she had
yet heard in a city of infinite dissonances.</p>
<p>"You don't know how to account for me very well, do you?"
taunted Marna daringly, when they had indulged their inclination
for each other's society for a few days. "You wonder about me
because I'm so streaked. I suppose you see vestiges of the farm
girl peeping through the operatic student. Wouldn't you like me to
explain myself?"</p>
<p>She had an iridescent personality, made up of sudden shynesses,
of bright flashes of bravado, of tenderness and hauteur, and she
contrived to be fascinating in all of them. She held Kate as the
Ancient Mariner held the wedding-guest.</p>
<p>"Of course I'd love to know all about you," answered Kate.
"Inquisitiveness is the most marked of my characteristics. But I
don't want you to tell me any more than I deserve to hear."</p>
<p>"You deserve everything," cried Marna, seizing Kate's firm hand
in her own soft one, "because you understand friendship. Why, I
always said it could be as swift and surprising as love, and just
as mysterious. You take it that way, too, so you deserve a great
deal. Well, to begin with, I'm Irish."</p>
<p>Kate's laugh could be heard as far as the kitchen, where Mrs.
Dennison was wishing the people would come so that she could dish
up the soup. Marna laughed, too.</p>
<p>"You guessed it?" she cried. She didn't seem to think it so
obvious as Kate's laugh indicated.</p>
<p>"You don't leave a thing to the imagination in that direction,"
Kate cried. "Irish? As Irish as the shamrock! Go on."</p>
<p>"Dear me, I want to begin so far back! You see, I don't merely
belong to modern Ireland. I'm--well, I'm traditional. At least,
Great-Grandfather Cartan, who came over to Wisconsin with a company
of immigrants, could tell you things about our ancestors that would
make you feel as if we came up out of the Irish hills. And
great-grandfather, he actually looked legendary himself. Why, do
you know, he came over with these people to be their
story-teller!"</p>
<p>"Their story-teller?"</p>
<p>"Yes, just that--their minstrel, you understand. And that's what
my people were, 'way back, minstrels. All the way over on the ship,
when the people were weeping for homesickness, or sitting dreaming
about the new land, or falling sick, or getting wild and vicious,
it was great-granddaddy's place to bring them to themselves with
his stories. Then when they all went on to Wisconsin and took up
their land, they selected a small beautiful piece for
great-grandfather, and built him a log house, and helped him with
his crops. He, for his part, went over the countryside and was
welcomed everywhere, and carried all the friendly news and gossip
he could gather, and sat about the fire nights, telling tales of
the old times, and keeping the ancient stories and the ancient
tongue alive for them."</p>
<p>"You mean he used the Gaelic?"</p>
<p>"What else would he be using, and himself the descendant of
minstrels? But after a time he learned the English, too, and he
used that in his latter years because the understanding of the
Gaelic began to die out."</p>
<p>"How wonderful he must have been!"</p>
<p>"Wonderful? For eighty years he held sway over the hearts of
them, and was known as the best story-teller of them all. This was
the more interesting, you see, because every year they gathered at
a certain place to have a story-telling contest; and
great-grandfather was voted the master of them until--"</p>
<p>Marna hesitated, and a flush spread over her face.</p>
<p>"Until--" urged Kate.</p>
<p>"Until a young man came along. Finnegan, his name was. He was no
more than a commercial traveler who heard of the gathering and came
up there, and he capped stories with great-grandfather, and it went
on till all the people were thick about them like bees around a
flower-pot. Four days it lasted, and away into the night; and in
the end they took the prize from great-grandfather and gave it to
Gerlie Finnegan. And that broke great-granddad's heart."</p>
<p>"He died?"</p>
<p>"Yes, he died. A hundred and ten he was, and for eighty years
had been the king of them. When he was gone, it left me without
anybody at all, you see. So that was how I happened to go down to
Baraboo to earn my living."</p>
<p>"What were you doing?"</p>
<p>Marna looked at the tip of her slipper for a moment,
reflectively. Then she glanced up at Kate, throwing a supplicating
glance from the blue eyes which looked as if they were snared
behind their long dark lashes.</p>
<p>"I wouldn't be telling everybody that asked me," she said. "But
I was singing at the moving-picture show, and Mrs. Barsaloux came
in there and heard me. Then she asked me to live with her and go to
Europe, and I did, and she paid for the best music lessons for me
everywhere, and now--"</p>
<p>She hesitated, drawing in a long breath; then she arose and
stood before Kate, breathing deep, and looking like a shining
butterfly free of its chrysalis and ready to spread its emblazoned
wings.</p>
<p>"Yes, bright one!" cried Kate, glowing with admiration. "What
now?"</p>
<p>"Why, now, you know, I'm to go in opera. The manager of the
Chicago Opera Company has been Mrs. Barsaloux's friend these many
years, and she has had him try out my voice. And he likes it. He
says he doesn't care if I haven't had the usual amount of training,
because I'm really born to sing, you see. Perhaps that's my
inheritance from the old minstrels--for they chanted their ballads
and epics, didn't they? Anyway, I really can sing. And I'm to make
my debut this winter in 'Madame Butterfly.' Just think of that! Oh,
I love Puccini! I can understand a musician like that--a man who
makes music move like thoughts, flurrying this way and blowing
that. It's to be very soon--my debut. And then I can make up to
Mrs. Barsaloux for all she's done for me. Oh, there come all the
people! You mustn't let Mrs. Fulham know how I've chattered. I
wouldn't dare talk about myself like that before her. This is just
for you--I <i>knew</i> you wanted to know about me. I want to know
all about you, too."</p>
<p>"Oh," said Kate, "you mustn't expect me to tell my story. I'm
different from you. I'm not born for anything in particular--I've
no talents to point out my destiny. I keep being surprised and
frustrated. It looks to me as if I were bound to make mistakes.
There's something wrong with me. Sometimes I think that I'm not
womanly enough--that there's too much of the man in my disposition,
and that the two parts of me are always going to struggle and
clash."</p>
<p>Chairs were being drawn up to the table.</p>
<p>"Come!" called Dr. von Shierbrand. "Can't you young ladies take
time enough off to eat?"</p>
<p>He looked ready for conversation, and Kate went smilingly to sit
beside him. She knew he expected women to be amusing, and she found
it agreeable to divert him. She understood the classroom fag from
which he was suffering; and, moreover, after all those austere
meals with her father, it really was an excitement and a pleasure
to talk with an amiable and complimentary man.</p>
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