<h3 align="center">CHAPTER XXIX</h3><br/><br/>
<p>The reason why Jennie had been called was nothing
more than one of those infantile seizures the coming
and result of which no man can predict two hours beforehand.
Vesta had been seriously taken with membranous
croup only a few hours before, and the development
since had been so rapid that the poor old Swedish
mother was half frightened to death herself, and hastily
despatched a neighbor to say that Vesta was very ill
and Mrs. Kane was to come at once. This message, delivered
as it was in a very nervous manner by one whose
only object was to bring her, had induced the soul-racking
fear of death in Jennie and caused her to brave the
discovery of Lester in the manner described. Jennie
hurried on anxiously, her one thought being to reach
her child before the arm of death could interfere and
snatch it from her, her mind weighed upon by a legion
of fears. What if it should already be too late when
she got there; what if Vesta already should be no more.
Instinctively she quickened her pace and as the street
lamps came and receded in the gloom she forgot all the
sting of Lester's words, all fear that he might turn her
out and leave her alone in a great city with a little
child to care for, and remembered only the fact that her
Vesta was very ill, possibly dying, and that she was
the direct cause of the child's absence from her; that
perhaps but for the want of her care and attention
Vesta might be well to-night.</p>
<p>"If I can only get there," she kept saying to herself;
and then, with that frantic unreason which is the chief
characteristic of the instinct-driven mother: "I might
have known that God would punish me for my unnatural
conduct. I might have known—I might have
known."</p>
<p>When she reached the gate she fairly sped up the little
walk and into the house, where Vesta was lying pale,
quiet, and weak, but considerably better. Several Swedish
neighbors and a middle-aged physician were in attendance,
all of whom looked at her curiously as she
dropped beside the child's bed and spoke to her.</p>
<p>Jennie's mind had been made up. She had sinned, and
sinned grievously, against her daughter, but now she
would make amends so far as possible. Lester was very
dear to her, but she would no longer attempt to deceive
him in anything, even if he left her—she felt an agonized
stab, a pain at the thought—she must still do the one
right thing. Vesta must not be an outcast any longer.
Her mother must give her a home. Where Jennie was,
there must Vesta be.</p>
<p>Sitting by the bedside in this humble Swedish cottage,
Jennie realized the fruitlessness of her deception, the
trouble and pain it had created in her home, the months
of suffering it had given her with Lester, the agony it had
heaped upon her this night—and to what end? The
truth had been discovered anyhow. She sat there and
meditated, not knowing what next was to happen, while
Vesta quieted down, and then went soundly to sleep.</p>
<p>Lester, after recovering from the first heavy import of
this discovery, asked himself some perfectly natural
questions. "Who was the father of the child? How
old was it? How did it chance to be in Chicago, and
who was taking care of it?" He could ask, but he could
not answer; he knew absolutely nothing.</p>
<p>Curiously, now, as he thought, his first meeting with
Jennie at Mrs. Bracebridge's came back to him. What
was it about her then that had attracted him? What
made him think, after a few hours' observation, that he
could seduce her to do his will? What was it—moral
looseness, or weakness, or what? There must have been
art in the sorry affair, the practised art of the cheat, and,
in deceiving such a confiding nature as his, she had done
even more than practise deception—she had been ungrateful.</p>
<p>Now the quality of ingratitude was a very objectionable
thing to Lester—the last and most offensive trait
of a debased nature, and to be able to discover a trace of
it in Jennie was very disturbing. It is true that she had
not exhibited it in any other way before—quite to the
contrary—but nevertheless he saw strong evidences of it
now, and it made him very bitter in his feeling toward
her. How could she be guilty of any such conduct toward
him? Had he not picked her up out of nothing, so to
speak, and befriended her?</p>
<p>He moved from his chair in this silent room and began
to pace slowly to and fro, the weightiness of this subject
exercising to the full his power of decision. She was
guilty of a misdeed which he felt able to condemn. The
original concealment was evil; the continued deception
more. Lastly, there was the thought that her love after
all had been divided, part for him, part for the child, a
discovery which no man in his position could contemplate
with serenity. He moved irritably as he thought
of it, shoved his hands in his pockets and walked to and
fro across the floor.</p>
<p>That a man of Lester's temperament should consider
himself wronged by Jennie merely because she had concealed
a child whose existence was due to conduct no
more irregular than was involved later in the yielding
of herself to him was an example of those inexplicable
perversions of judgment to which the human mind, in its
capacity of keeper of the honor of others, seems permanently
committed. Lester, aside from his own personal
conduct (for men seldom judge with that in the
balance), had faith in the ideal that a woman should
reveal herself completely to the one man with whom she
is in love; and the fact that she had not done so was a
grief to him. He had asked her once tentatively about
her past. She begged him not to press her. That was
the time she should have spoken of any child. Now—he
shook his head.</p>
<p>His first impulse, after he had thought the thing over,
was to walk out and leave her. At the same time he was
curious to hear the end of this business. He did put on
his hat and coat, however, and went out, stopping at the
first convenient saloon to get a drink. He took a car
and went down to the club, strolling about the different
rooms and chatting with several people whom he encountered.
He was restless and irritated; and finally, after
three hours of meditation, he took a cab and returned to
his apartment.</p>
<p>The distraught Jennie, sitting by her sleeping child, was
at last made to realize, by its peaceful breathing that all
danger was over. There was nothing more that she
could do for Vesta, and now the claims of the home that
she had deserted began to reassert themselves, the promise
to Lester and the need of being loyal to her duties
unto the very end. Lester might possibly be waiting
for her. It was just probable that he wished to hear the
remainder of her story before breaking with her entirely.
Although anguished and frightened by the certainty, as
she deemed it, of his forsaking her, she nevertheless felt
that it was no more than she deserved—a just punishment
for all her misdoings.</p>
<p>When Jennie arrived at the flat it was after eleven, and
the hall light was already out. She first tried the door,
and then inserted her key. No one stirred, however, and,
opening the door, she entered in the expectation of seeing
Lester sternly confronting her. He was not there, however.
The burning gas had merely been an oversight on
his part. She glanced quickly about, but seeing only
the empty room, she came instantly to the other conclusion,
that he had forsaken her—and so stood there,
a meditative, helpless figure.</p>
<p>"Gone!" she thought.</p>
<p>At this moment his footsteps sounded on the stairs.
He came in with his derby hat pulled low over his broad
forehead, close to his sandy eyebrows, and with his overcoat
buttoned up closely about his neck. He took off the
coat without looking at Jennie and hung it on the rack.
Then he deliberately took off his hat and hung that up
also. When he was through he turned to where she was
watching him with wide eyes.</p>
<p>"I want to know about this thing now from beginning
to end," he began. "Whose child is that?"</p>
<p>Jennie wavered a moment, as one who might be going
to take a leap in the dark, then opened her lips mechanically
and confessed:</p>
<p>"It's Senator Brander's."</p>
<p>"Senator Brander!" echoed Lester, the familiar name
of the dead but still famous statesman ringing with
shocking and unexpected force in his ears. "How did
you come to know him?"</p>
<p>"We used to do his washing for him," she rejoined
simply—"my mother and I."</p>
<p>Lester paused, the baldness of the statements issuing
from her sobering even his rancorous mood. "Senator
Brander's child," he thought to himself. So that great
representative of the interests of the common people
was the undoer of her—a self-confessed washerwoman's
daughter. A fine tragedy of low life all this
was.</p>
<p>"How long ago was this?" he demanded, his face the
picture of a darkling mood.</p>
<p>"It's been nearly six years now," she returned.</p>
<p>He calculated the time that had elapsed since he had
known her, and then continued:</p>
<p>"How old is the child?"</p>
<p>"She's a little over five."</p>
<p>Lester moved a little. The need for serious thought
made his tone more peremptory but less bitter.</p>
<p>"Where have you been keeping her all this time?"</p>
<p>"She was at home until you went to Cincinnati last
spring. I went down and brought her then."</p>
<p>"Was she there the times I came to Cleveland?"</p>
<p>"Yes," said Jennie; "but I didn't let her come out
anywhere where you could see her."</p>
<p>"I thought you said you told your people that you
were married," he exclaimed, wondering how this relationship
of the child to the family could have been adjusted.</p>
<p>"I did," she replied, "but I didn't want to tell you
about her. They thought all the time I intended to."</p>
<p>"Well, why didn't you?"</p>
<p>"Because I was afraid."</p>
<p>"Afraid of what?"</p>
<p>"I didn't know what was going to become of me when
I went with you, Lester. I didn't want to do her any
harm if I could help it. I was ashamed, afterward; when
you said you didn't like children I was afraid."</p>
<p>"Afraid I'd leave you?"</p>
<p>"Yes."</p>
<p>He stopped, the simplicity of her answers removing
a part of the suspicion of artful duplicity which had
originally weighed upon him. After all, there was not so
much of that in it as mere wretchedness of circumstance
and cowardice of morals. What a family she must
have! What queer non-moral natures they must have
to have brooked any such a combination of affairs!</p>
<p>"Didn't you know that you'd be found out in the long
run?" he at last demanded. "Surely you might have
seen that you couldn't raise her that way. Why didn't
you tell me in the first place? I wouldn't have thought
anything of it then."</p>
<p>"I know," she said. "I wanted to protect her."</p>
<p>"Where is she now?" he asked.</p>
<p>Jennie explained.</p>
<p>She stood there, the contradictory aspect of these
questions and of his attitude puzzling even herself. She
did try to explain them after a time, but all Lester could
gain was that she had blundered along without any artifice
at all—a condition that was so manifest that, had he
been in any other position than that he was, he might
have pitied her. As it was, the revelation concerning
Brander was hanging over him, and he finally returned
to that.</p>
<p>"You say your mother used to do washing for him.
How did you come to get in with him?"</p>
<p>Jennie, who until now had borne his questions with
unmoving pain, winced at this. He was now encroaching
upon the period that was by far the most distressing
memory of her life. What he had just asked seemed to
be a demand upon her to make everything clear.</p>
<p>"I was so young, Lester," she pleaded. "I was only
eighteen. I didn't know. I used to go to the hotel
where he was stopping and get his laundry, and at the
end of the week I'd take it to him again."</p>
<p>She paused, and as he took a chair, looking as if he expected
to hear the whole story, she continued: "We
were so poor. He used to give me money to give to my
mother. I didn't know."</p>
<p>She paused again, totally unable to go on, and he,
seeing that it would be impossible for her to explain
without prompting, took up his questioning again—eliciting
by degrees the whole pitiful story. Brander
had intended to marry her. He had written to her, but
before he could come to her he died.</p>
<p>The confession was complete. It was followed by a
period of five minutes, in which Lester said nothing at all;
he put his arm on the mantel and stared at the wall,
while Jennie waited, not knowing what would follow—not
wishing to make a single plea. The clock ticked
audibly. Lester's face betrayed no sign of either thought
or feeling. He was now quite calm, quite sober, wondering
what he should do. Jennie was before him as the
criminal at the bar. He, the righteous, the moral, the
pure of heart, was in the judgment seat. Now to sentence
her—to make up his mind what course of action
he should pursue.</p>
<p>It was a disagreeable tangle, to be sure, something
that a man of his position and wealth really ought not
to have anything to do with. This child, the actuality of
it, put an almost unbearable face upon the whole matter—and
yet he was not quite prepared to speak. He
turned after a time, the silvery tinkle of the French clock
on the mantel striking three and causing him to become
aware of Jennie, pale, uncertain, still standing as she
had stood all this while.</p>
<p>"Better go to bed," he said at last, and fell again
to pondering this difficult problem.</p>
<p>But Jennie continued to stand there wide-eyed, expectant,
ready to hear at any moment his decision as to
her fate. She waited in vain, however. After a long
time of musing he turned and went to the clothes-rack
near the door.</p>
<p>"Better go to bed," he said, indifferently. "I'm going
out."</p>
<p>She turned instinctively, feeling that even in this
crisis there was some little service that she might render,
but he did not see her. He went out, vouchsafing no
further speech.</p>
<p>She looked after him, and as his footsteps sounded on
the stair she felt as if she were doomed and hearing her
own death-knell. What had she done? What would he
do now? She stood there a dissonance of despair, and
when the lower door clicked moved her hand out of
the agony of her suppressed hopelessness.</p>
<p>"Gone!" she thought. "Gone!"</p>
<p>In the light of a late dawn she was still sitting there
pondering, her state far too urgent for idle tears.</p>
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