<h3 align="center">CHAPTER XXVI</h3><br/><br/>
<p>It would be useless to chronicle the events of the
three years that followed—events and experiences
by which the family grew from an abject condition of
want to a state of comparative self-reliance, based, of
course, on the obvious prosperity of Jennie and the
generosity (through her) of her distant husband. Lester
was seen now and then, a significant figure, visiting
Cleveland, and sometimes coming out to the house where
he occupied with Jennie the two best rooms of the
second floor. There were hurried trips on her part—in
answer to telegraph massages—to Chicago, to St. Louis,
to New York. One of his favorite pastimes was to engage
quarters at the great resorts—Hot Springs, Mt.
Clemens, Saratoga—and for a period of a week or two
at a stretch enjoy the luxury of living with Jennie as
his wife. There were other times when he would pass
through Cleveland only for the privilege of seeing her for
a day. All the time he was aware that he was throwing
on her the real burden of a rather difficult situation, but
he did not see how he could remedy it at this time. He
was not sure as yet that he really wanted to. They were
getting along fairly well.</p>
<p>The attitude of the Gerhardt family toward this condition
of affairs was peculiar. At first, in spite of the
irregularity of it, it seemed natural enough. Jennie
said she was married. No one had seen her marriage
certificate, but she said so, and she seemed to carry herself
with the air of one who holds that relationship. Still, she
never went to Cincinnati, where his family lived, and none
of his relatives ever came near her. Then, too, his
attitude, in spite of the money which had first blinded
them, was peculiar. He really did not carry himself
like a married man. He was so indifferent. There were
weeks in which she appeared to receive only perfunctory
notes. There were times when she would only go away
for a few days to meet him. Then there were the long
periods in which she absented herself—the only worthwhile
testimony toward a real relationship, and that, in a
way, unnatural.</p>
<p>Bass, who had grown to be a young man of twenty-five,
with some business judgment and a desire to get out
in the world, was suspicious. He had come to have a
pretty keen knowledge of life, and intuitively he felt that
things were not right. George, nineteen, who had gained
a slight foothold in a wall-paper factory and was looking
forward to a career in that field, was also restless. He
felt that something was wrong. Martha, seventeen, was
still in school, as were William and Veronica. Each was
offered an opportunity to study indefinitely; but there
was unrest with life. They knew about Jennie's child.
The neighbors were obviously drawing conclusions for
themselves. They had few friends. Gerhardt himself
finally concluded that there was something wrong, but
he had let himself into this situation, and was not in
much of a position now to raise an argument. He
wanted to ask her at times—proposed to make her do
better if he could—but the worst had already been done.
It depended on the man now, he knew that.</p>
<p>Things were gradually nearing a state where a general
upheaval would have taken place had not life stepped in
with one of its fortuitous solutions. Mrs. Gerhardt's
health failed. Although stout and formerly of a fairly
active disposition, she had of late years become decidedly
sedentary in her habits and grown weak, which, coupled
with a mind naturally given to worry, and weighed upon
as it had been by a number of serious and disturbing ills,
seemed now to culminate in a slow but very certain case
of systemic poisoning. She became decidedly sluggish
in her motions, wearied more quickly at the few tasks
left for her to do, and finally complained to Jennie that
it was very hard for her to climb stairs. "I'm not
feeling well," she said. "I think I'm going to be
sick."</p>
<p>Jennie now took alarm and proposed to take her to
some near-by watering-place, but Mrs. Gerhardt wouldn't
go. "I don't think it would do any good," she said.
She sat about or went driving with her daughter, but the
fading autumn scenery depressed her. "I don't like
to get sick in the fall," she said. "The leaves coming
down make me think I am never going to get
well."</p>
<p>"Oh, ma, how you talk!" said Jennie; but she felt
frightened, nevertheless.</p>
<p>How much the average home depends upon the mother
was seen when it was feared the end was near. Bass,
who had thought of getting married and getting out of
this atmosphere, abandoned the idea temporarily. Gerhardt,
shocked and greatly depressed, hung about like
one expectant of and greatly awed by the possibility of
disaster. Jennie, too inexperienced in death to feel that
she could possibly lose her mother, felt as if somehow
her living depended on her. Hoping in spite of all opposing
circumstances, she hung about, a white figure of
patience, waiting and serving.</p>
<p>The end came one morning after a month of illness and
several days of unconsciousness, during which silence
reigned in the house and all the family went about on tiptoe.
Mrs. Gerhardt passed away with her dying gaze
fastened on Jennie's face for the last few minutes of
consciousness that life vouchsafed her. Jennie stared
into her eyes with a yearning horror. "Oh, mamma!
mamma!" she cried. "Oh no, no!"</p>
<p>Gerhardt came running in from the yard, and, throwing
himself down by the bedside, wrung his bony hands in
anguish. "I should have gone first!" he cried. "I
should have gone first!"</p>
<p>The death of Mrs. Gerhardt hastened the final breaking
up of the family. Bass was bent on getting married at
once, having had a girl in town for some time. Martha,
whose views of life had broadened and hardened, was
anxious to get out also. She felt that a sort of stigma
attached to the home—to herself, in fact, so long as she
remained there. Martha looked to the public schools as
a source of income; she was going to be a teacher. Gerhardt
alone scarcely knew which way to turn. He was
again at work as a night watchman. Jennie found him
crying one day alone in the kitchen, and immediately
burst into tears herself. "Now, papa!" she pleaded,
"it isn't as bad as that. You will always have a home—you
know that—as long as I have anything. You can
come with me."</p>
<p>"No, no," he protested. He really did not want to
go with her. "It isn't that," he continued. "My
whole life comes to nothing."</p>
<p>It was some little time before Bass, George and Martha
finally left, but, one by one, they got out, leaving Jennie,
her father, Veronica, and William, and one other—Jennie's
child. Of course Lester knew nothing of Vesta's
parentage, and curiously enough he had never seen the
little girl. During the short periods in which he deigned
to visit the house—two or three days at most—Mrs.
Gerhardt took good care that Vesta was kept in the
background. There was a play-room on the top floor,
and also a bedroom there, and concealment was easy.
Lester rarely left his rooms, he even had his meals served
to him in what might have been called the living-room
of the suite. He was not at all inquisitive or anxious to
meet any one of the other members of the family. He
was perfectly willing to shake hands with them or to
exchange a few perfunctory words, but perfunctory
words only. It was generally understood that the child
must not appear, and so it did not.</p>
<p>There is an inexplicable sympathy between old age
and childhood, an affinity which is as lovely as it is
pathetic. During that first year in Lorrie Street, when
no one was looking, Gerhardt often carried Vesta about
on his shoulders and pinched her soft, red cheeks.
When she got old enough to walk he it was who, with a
towel fastened securely under her arms, led her patiently
around the room until she was able to take a few steps
of her own accord. When she actually reached the
point where she could walk he was the one who coaxed
her to the effort, shyly, grimly, but always lovingly.
By some strange leading of fate this stigma on his
family's honor, this blotch on conventional morality,
had twined its helpless baby fingers about the tendons
of his heart. He loved this little outcast ardently,
hopefully. She was the one bright ray in a narrow,
gloomy life, and Gerhardt early took upon himself the
responsibility of her education in religious matters.
Was it not he who had insisted that the infant should
be baptized?</p>
<p>"Say 'Our Father,'" he used to demand of the lisping
infant when he had her alone with him.</p>
<p>"Ow Fowvaw," was her vowel-like interpretation of
his words.</p>
<p>"'Who art in heaven.'"</p>
<p>"'Ooh ah in aven,'" repeated the child.</p>
<p>"Why do you teach her so early?" pleaded Mrs. Gerhardt,
overhearing the little one's struggles with stubborn
consonants and vowels.</p>
<p>"Because I want she should learn the Christian
faith," returned Gerhardt determinedly. "She ought
to know her prayers. If she don't begin now she never
will know them."</p>
<p>Mrs. Gerhardt smiled. Many of her husband's religious
idiosyncrasies were amusing to her. At the same
time she liked to see this sympathetic interest he was
taking in the child's upbringing. If he were only not
so hard, so narrow at times. He made himself a torment
to himself and to every one else.</p>
<p>On the earliest bright morning of returning spring
he was wont to take her for her first little journeys in the
world. "Come, now," he would say, "we will go for a
little walk."</p>
<p>"Walk," chirped Vesta.</p>
<p>"Yes, walk," echoed Gerhardt.</p>
<p>Mrs. Gerhardt would fasten on one of her little hoods,
for in these days Jennie kept Vesta's wardrobe beautifully
replete. Taking her by the hand, Gerhardt
would issue forth, satisfied to drag first one foot and
then the other in order to accommodate his gait to her
toddling steps.</p>
<p>One beautiful May day, when Vesta was four years
old, they started on one of their walks. Everywhere
nature was budding and bourgeoning; the birds twittering
their arrival from the south; the insects making the
best of their brief span of life. Sparrows chirped in the
road; robins strutted upon the grass; bluebirds built in
the eaves of the cottages. Gerhardt took a keen delight
in pointing out the wonders of nature to Vesta, and she
was quick to respond. Every new sight and sound interested
her.</p>
<p>"Ooh!—ooh!" exclaimed Vesta, catching sight of a
low, flashing touch of red as a robin lighted upon a twig
nearby. Her hand was up, and her eyes were wide open.</p>
<p>"Yes," said Gerhardt, as happy as if he himself had but
newly discovered this marvelous creature. "Robin.
Bird. Robin. Say robin."</p>
<p>"Wobin," said Vesta.</p>
<p>"Yes, robin," he answered. "It is going to look for a
worm now. We will see if we cannot find its nest. I
think I saw a nest in one of these trees."</p>
<p>He plodded peacefully on, seeking to rediscover an
old abandoned nest that he had observed on a former
walk. "Here it is," he said at last, coming to a small
and leafless tree, in which a winter-beaten remnant of a
home was still clinging. "Here, come now, see," and
he lifted the baby up at arm's length.</p>
<p>"See," said Gerhardt, indicating the wisp of dead
grasses with his free hand, "nest. That is a bird's nest.
See!"</p>
<p>"Ooh!" repeated Vesta, imitating his pointing finger
with one of her own. "Ness—ooh!"</p>
<p>"Yes," said Gerhardt, putting her down again. "That
was a wren's nest. They have all gone now. They will
not come any more."</p>
<p>Still further they plodded, he unfolding the simple
facts of life, she wondering with the wide wonder of a
child. When they had gone a block or two he turned
slowly about as if the end of the world had been reached.</p>
<p>"We must be going back!" he said.</p>
<p>And so she had come to her fifth year, growing in
sweetness, intelligence, and vivacity. Gerhardt was
fascinated by the questions she asked, the puzzles she
pronounced. "Such a girl!" he would exclaim to his
wife. "What is it she doesn't want to know? 'Where
is God? What does He do? Where does He keep His
feet?" she asks me. "I gotta laugh sometimes." From
rising in the morning, to dress her to laying her down at
night after she had said her prayers, she came to be the
chief solace and comfort of his days. Without Vesta,
Gerhardt would have found his life hard indeed to bear.</p>
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