Part 1 (1/2)

The Awakening of Helena Richie.

by Margaret Deland.

CHAPTER I

Dr. Lavendar and Goliath had toiled up the hill to call on old Mr.

Benjamin Wright; when they jogged back in the late afternoon it was with the peculiar complacency which follows the doing of a disagreeable duty. Goliath had not liked climbing the hill, for a heavy rain in the morning had turned the clay to stiff mud, and Dr.

Lavendar had not liked calling on Benjamin Wright.

”But, Daniel,” said Dr. Lavendar, addressing a small old dog who took up a great deal more room on the seat of the buggy than he was ent.i.tled to, ”Daniel, my boy, you don't consult your likings in pastoral calls.” Then he looked out of the mud-spattered window of the buggy, at a house by the roadside--”The Stuffed Animal House,” Old Chester children called it, because its previous owner had been a taxidermist of some little local renown. ”That's another visit I ought to make,” he reflected, ”but it can wait until next week. G'long, Goliath!”

Goliath went along, and Mrs. Frederick Richie, who lived in the Stuffed Animal House, looking listlessly from an upper window, saw the hood of the buggy jogging by and smiled suddenly. ”Thank Heaven!” she said.

Benjamin Wright had not thanked Heaven when Dr. Lavendar drove away.

He had been as disagreeable as usual to his visitor, but being a very lonely old man he enjoyed having a visitor to whom to be disagreeable.

He lived on his hilltop a mile out of Old Chester, with his ”n.i.g.g.e.r”

Simmons, his canary-birds, and his temper. More than thirty years before he had quarrelled with his only son Samuel, and the two men had not spoken to each other since. Old Chester never knew what this quarrel had been about; Dr. Lavendar, speculating upon it as he and Goliath went squas.h.i.+ng through the mud that April afternoon, wondered which was to blame. ”Pot and kettle, probably,” he decided. ”Samuel's goodness is very irritating sometimes, and Benjamin's badness is-- well, it's not as distressing as it should be. But what a forlorn old critter he is! And this Mrs. Richie is lonely too--a widow, with no children, poor woman! I must call next week. Goliath wouldn't like to turn round now and climb the hill again. Danny, I fear Goliath is very selfish.”

Goliath's selfishness carried them home and landed Dr. Lavendar at his own fireside, rather tired and full of good intentions in regard to calls. He confided these intentions to Dr. William King who looked in after supper to inquire about his cold.

”Cold? I haven't any cold! You can't get a job here. Sit down and give me some advice. Hand me a match first; this ragam.u.f.fin Danny has gone to sleep with his head on my foot, and I can't budge.”

The doctor produced the match; ”I'll advise you not to go out in such weather. Promise me you won't go out to-morrow.”

”To-morrow? Right after breakfast, sir! To make calls on the people I've neglected. w.i.l.l.y, how can I find a home for an orphan child? A parson up in the mountains has asked me to see if I can place a little seven-year-old boy. The child's sister who took care of him has just died. Do you know anybody who might take him?”

”Well,” said w.i.l.l.y King, ”there's Mrs. Richie.”

Dr. Lavendar looked at him over his spectacles. ”Mrs. Frederick Richie?--though I understand she calls herself Mrs. Helena Richie. I don't like a young female to use her own name, William, even if she is a widow! Still, she may be a nice woman I suppose. Do you think a little boy would have a good home with her?”

”Well,” the doctor demurred, ”of course, we know very little about her. She has only been here six months. But I should think she was just the person to take him. She is mighty good-looking, isn't she?”

”Yes,” Dr. Lavendar said, ”she is. And other things being equal I prefer a good-looking woman. But I don't know that her looks are a guarantee that she can train up a child in the way he should go. Can't you think of anybody else?”

”I don't see why you don't like Mrs. Richie?” ”I never said I didn't like her,” protested Dr. Lavendar; ”but she's a widow.”

”Unless she murdered the late Richie, that's not against her.”

”Widows don't always stay widows, w.i.l.l.y.”

”I don't believe she's the marrying kind,” William said. ”I have a sort of feeling that the deceased Richie was not the kind of husband who receives the compliment of a successor--”

”Hold on; you're mixing things up! It's the bad husband and the good wife that get compliments of that kind.”

William laughed as he was expected to, but he stuck to his opinion that Mrs. Richie had had enough of husbands. ”And anyway, she's devoted to her brother--though he doesn't come to see her very often.”

”There's another point,” objected Dr. Lavendar; ”what kind of a man is this Mr. Pryor? Danny growled at him once, which prejudiced me against him.”