Part 13 (1/2)

Bite it was. No mad dog's bite ever caused more sin and sorrow than that bite did me. We cry, 'mad dog,' and kill the poor brute; the worse than brute we 'license' to live.”

Thus he would sit and talk by the hour. ”If I can only keep out of the way of the tempters,” said he, ”I never shall drink again.”

He was now acc.u.mulating money; he always came home to sleep, ”for,” says he, ”I feel, as sure as I enter this door, that I am safe.”

It was determined, as soon as Maggie came again, that they would go to keeping house. ”If that blessed child was only with me,” said the father, as the tears rolled down his furrowed cheeks, ”I should feel as though I had a s.h.i.+eld--through which none of these traffickers in human souls could reach me. My wife is like an aged counsellor, there is wisdom in her every word, but she cannot go out through the streets, leaning upon my arm, still full of manly strength, like Maggie, while I lean upon her still greater strength--the strength and might of a strong mind.”

”Here is a letter from our dear child,” said Mrs. Reagan to her husband, one evening as he came in from work. ”Sit down and read it aloud, for some how, my old eyes get dim every time I try; I cannot imagine what is the matter with them.”

I can. They were full of tears. Strange, that we shed bitter and sweet water from the same fountain.

Reagan put on his spectacles, took the letter, looked at the first words, took them off, wiped the gla.s.ses, looked again, repeated the operation, laid both letter and spectacles upon the table, got up and walked the room back and forth, then he tried to speak--to utter the first words of that letter; if he could get over that he could go on, but he could not, they stuck in his throat. At length he got them up--”Dear father and mother, I am coming home to kiss you both.” Simple words! Common every-day words. But they were strong words, for they had overcome the strength of a strong man, and he fell upon his wife's neck and wept like a child.

”Such words to me--me who have kicked, and cuffed, and froze, and starved, and abused that child for years. Oh, G.o.d, preserve my life to make her ample amends for my wrongs and her love! Oh, G.o.d, preserve her life to make us both happy, and drop a tear at our grave!”

Prayer calms the spirit. Realization and acknowledgment of sin soothes the soul.

Reagan could now read the letter without difficulty. His spectacles did not need wiping again. It was dated,

”Near KATONA, Westchester County, New York.

”DEAR FATHER AND MOTHER:

”I am coming home to kiss you both. I don't know but I shall kiss Tom, for he has written me all about it--I know it all--I know how you was brought in, and how you took the pledge, and how you have kept it, and how industrious you have been, and how you have saved your money, and how you want to go to housekeeping again, and all about it--I know it all. Tom writes me every week. He is a good boy. Well, in two months I am coming down. You need not look for me before, and then, if you want me, I will come and live with you.”

”If we want her! Did you ever hear the like? But, then, what is she to do? She is a big girl now, and must not be idle. I wish she had a trade.

Every child ought to have a trade.”

”Well, well, wife, let us have the balance of the letter.”

”Yes, yes, go on; you need not mind what I say. Go on.”

”Let me see; where was I? 'Come and live with you,' that's it.”

”And now I must tell you such a piece of news--good news. Oh, it was a good thing I came up here. I have got a trade--a trade that will support us all when you get so you cannot work.”

”Heaven bless the girl, what is it?”

”Do wait, wife, and you shall hear.”

”It is a nice, genteel trade, too. Now we will take a house, and father will work at his trade, and mother will do the house-work, and I will work at my trade, and we shall live so happy.”

”So we shall. But, dear me, why don't she tell what it is?”

”So she will if you let me alone. A girl must have her own way to tell it; probably she will do that in a postscript.”

”Well, read on. I am so impatient.”

”Perhaps you would like to know what my trade is?”

”Why to be sure we should. Why don't she tell?”