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<h2> CHAPTER VIII. — “WHAT WOULD YOU DO, DEAR?” </h2>
<p>She joined in his laugh albeit, there was a tender look in her eyes. After
a moment, she said, gently:—</p>
<p>“It is not scheming, Evan; I am only trying to set about the work for
which I have been chosen. I'll tell you how it all came to me. I was
reading—my morning reading, you know—after you had gone;
taking little dips here and there in the fashion that you think is so
unsystematic, and I came upon this verse: 'He is a chosen vessel unto me,'
you know, about Paul? Well, it came to me with a sudden sense of awe and
beauty, the being chosen of God to do a great work. I stopped reading to
think it out; what a grand moment it must have been to Paul when he
realized it. And I began to feel almost sorry that we lived in such
different times, with no such opportunities! I stopped right in the midst
of my folly to remember that I was as certainly chosen of God as ever Paul
was; for assuredly I did not come to him of myself, nor begin to love him
of myself, and therefore he must indeed have chosen me; and I wondered
whether probably each Christian had not a work to do as definite as Paul's—a
work that would be given to no other, unless indeed the chosen one failed.
I did not want to fail, and I asked God not to let me. Then, of course, I
set to wondering what my work, or my part of some other person's work,
could be. It was the morning after you had told me that about Ester Ried.
You cannot think how that impressed me. I could not get away from the
wonderment as to how her work was prospering, and whether there were
chosen ones enough, or if there might possibly be a little place for me. I
couldn't settle anything, and finally I decided to look at Paul's work a
little while. Of course, it was not reasonable to suppose that the duties
of the great apostle had anything in common with my bits of effort; still,
I said, the directions given him may help me a little. And Evan, what do
you think was the first thing I found? Why, this: 'The God of our fathers
hath chosen thee, that thou <i>shouldst know his will</i>.' Surely, so
far, the things for which both he and I were chosen were parallel. I
looked further: 'And see that Just One.' That was the very next. Was not
I, too, chosen for that? 'Thine eyes shall see the King in his beauty.' I
said over the beautiful promise to assure myself that it was true, and
went on: 'And shouldst hear the voice of his mouth.' Was it not strange,
Evan? Certainly I shall hear my King speak, often and often, when I get
home. Only think of it; so far Paul was not ahead of me. I hurried to find
another reference to Paul's work, and I found this; let me read it to
you.” Her bit of dainty sewing was suddenly pushed one side, and up from
the depths of the rose-lined work-basket came a small, plainly-bound
Bible, much marked; a rapid turning of the leaves, and the eager disciple
read: “I have appeared unto thee for this purpose, to make thee a minister
and a witness, both of these things which thou hast seen, and of those
things in the which I will appear unto thee. Now, Evan, you know the
veriest child can be a witness if he knows anything about the facts; and I
do certainly know some wonderful things about Jesus to which I could
witness; and besides, isn't it reasonable to suppose that he will appear
to me every day with things for me to witness to? And then I read this;
Paul sent to the Gentiles, you know, but for what: 'To open their eyes,
and to turn them from darkness to light, and from the power of Satan unto
God, that they may receive forgiveness of sins and inheritance among them
which are sanctified, by faith that is in me.' Evan, was there ever a more
wonderful work to do in the world than that? And yet I cannot tell you how
it made me feel to discover, or at least to realize, that a great deal of
it was my work! Of course, I naturally began to ask myself, what Gentile
was there for me to reach? Whose eyes must I try to open? Do you know,
that very afternoon I met Mr. Ried, and heard of those boys? They
interested me from the first, and what he told me about his sister
increased the interest. Then when I saw them!—Evan, if ever boys
were in the power of Satan they are; and to think that they may have an
inheritance among them which are sanctified! This morning when I saw where
some some of them lived, and imagined how they lived, I fell stunned for a
moment. It seemed to me impossible. What means could possibly be found of
sufficient power to fit them for such an inheritance? And then directly
came the closing words of the commission: 'Through faith that is in me.'
Evan, God will save them; and I think he will let me help.”</p>
<p>“Amen!” said Mr. Roberts, and his voice was husky. When his wife was in
one of her exalted moods he always admired her with a sort of reverence.
He had been for years an earnest worker. He carried business plans and
business principles into the work; he studied cause and effect, and
calculated and expected certain results to follow certain causes, like a
mathematical problem; not that he by any means forgot the power of faith,
or in any sense attempted to do his work alone. He was a Christian who
spent much time on his knees; but little Flossy brought so much of the
childlike, unquestioning spirit into her work, that sometimes he stood in
awe, not knowing whether he could follow her. It was not so much a
mathematical problem to be worked out, as it was the faith that can remove
mountains.</p>
<p>“As a little child relies<br/>
On a strength beyond his own:<br/>
Knows he is neither strong nor wise,<br/>
Fears to stir a step alone—”<br/></p>
<p>Mr. Roberts often found himself quoting these lines when his wife gave him
glimpses of her heart; and at such times he had no hesitancy in deciding
that the steps she took were not alone, but the Lord was with her.</p>
<p>The postman's ring broke in on their quiet.</p>
<p>“I hope there are letters from home to-night,” Mrs. Roberts said, “real
long ones. It is a week since we have heard.”</p>
<p>“And I ought to hope that they would require a first reading in private,”
her husband answered, as he seized his neglected pen. “It is the only way
in which these business letters will get answered. I find the temptation
to talk to you irresistible.”</p>
<p>One letter! but that was of comfortable dimensions and weight.</p>
<p>“It is from Marion,” Mrs. Roberts said, delight in her voice, after the
first glance at the familiar writing. She was presently lost in its many
pages, and the business of letter-writing went on uninterruptedly for some
time.</p>
<p>Mrs. Marion Dennis had not forgotten her fondness for her pretty little
Flossy: nor forgotten that,—softly-innocent little creature though
she was, she possessed a wisdom far above those who are credited with
having keen insight; even a wisdom so subtle, and withal so tender, that
its source could only be Infinite Wisdom. So she, in company with many
others, was learning to turn to the friend so much younger than herself,
as one in whom she could safely confide.</p>
<p>“Dear little Flossy,” so the letter ran, “I suppose, though you should
live to be a white-haired old lady, sitting with placid face and fluted
cap and spectacles, in your high-backed arm-chair, in the most treasured
corner mayhap of some granddaughter's choicest room, I, writing to you,
would still commence 'Dear little Flossy.' That I have to cover it from
prying eyes by the dignified and respectable 'Mrs. Evan Roberts,' is
almost a matter of amusement to me. I fancy I can see you making a journey
through some of the Chautauqua avenues, picking your way daintily towards
Palestine, bending lovingly over the small white stones that mark the
village of Bethany,—a pink on your cheek, born, as I thought, of the
excitement of being among those tiny photographs of the wonderful past,
but born in part, I now believe, of the fact that Mr. Evan Roberts joined
us in our walk. Oh, little mousie, how quiet you were!</p>
<p>“Well, many things have since transpired. We are old married women, you,
and Ruth, and Eurie and I. I suppose the contrast in our lives,—the
outward portion of them, I mean,—is still as strongly marked,
perhaps more so, than it was when we were in Chautauqua together. We were
girls then; we are matrons now, and with the taking on of that title, Ruth
and I took special and great responsibilities. To-night it rains. Mr.
Dennis has been called to the upper part of the city,—away out to
Springdale, in fact,—to see a sick and dying man, and I am alone and
almost lonely. If I could summon any one of the three to my aid and
comfort I would. I am almost as lonely as I was on some of those evenings
in the old boarding-house. Still there are differences; the smoky old
stove is not; a summer warmth floats through the house, born of steam; no
ill-smelling kerosene lamp offends your aesthetic friend to-night, but the
softest of shaded drop-lights sheds a halo around me. Isn't that almost
poetic? Moreover, oh blessed thought! I have no examination papers to
prepare, no reports to make up; nothing to do but visit with you. Also, I
will admit just to you, that this is another and most blessed difference
between this and my lonely past. At almost any moment now I may hope for
Dr. Dennis' ring, and when he comes all sense of loneliness will instantly
depart. Ah! Flossy, dear Flossy, this is such a difference as even you
cannot appreciate! You had your mother and father, and all your dear home
friends, and I had no one; and besides,—here I hesitate, lest you
may be too obtuse to understand the reasoning,—you have only added
Mr. Roberts to your circle of treasures. He is grand and good, I know, and
I like him without even a mental reservation; but, my dear, I have added
Dr. Dennis! Can human language say more?</p>
<p>“Nonsense aside, sweet little woman, God has been very good to you and me.
Yet, Flossy, do you remember how, during those last months in which we
were together, I fell into the habit of telling you a great deal about the
thorns, and admitted to you once that they pricked less when they had felt
your smoothing touch? I want to tell you something. Our Gracie—I am
so sorry for her, yet I don't know what to do. She is living a most
unhappy life, and of course she shadows our lives also. I told you, dear,
about Prof. Ellis. He is still trying to convince poor Gracie, that I,
being her step-mother, must be her natural enemy; reminding her that
before I came into the family her father was entirely willing to receive
his calls, and allowed her to accept his attentions. Don't you see, it
isn't strange at all that the poor little girl should believe him, and
turn from me? She has many judicious helpers in her father's congregation.
There are those who sigh over her almost in my hearing. 'Poor Gracie' they
say, 'how changed she is! She used to be so bright and happy. There is
something unnatural in these second-mother relations; all high-spirited
children rebel.' Imagine such talk helping Gracie! Meantime, what do you
suppose can be Prof. Ellis' motive? I cannot think that he cares for her;
I almost do not believe that there is enough purity left in him even to
admire a pure-hearted young girl; certainly not one with such high ideals
and earnest ambitions as Gracie had. 'Why does she admire him?' I fancy I
hear you asking. My dear, she doesn't; she thinks she does, and at
seventeen such thoughts sometimes work irreparable mischief; but left
alone, one of these days she would make the discovery that she was
flattered by his attentions, because he is nearly fifteen years older than
she, and is brilliant in conversation, and quoted as the finest musician
in the city. I wish I knew more things about him; what I do know shows me
plainly enough the sort of man he is; but with these guileless young
things it seems as though one had to unmask wickedness very thoroughly
before they will believe that it is anything but gossip or
misrepresentation. He has gone away for a six weeks' vacation; I don't
know where, nor does Dr. Dennis. Gracie knows, but does not enlighten me.
Flossy, dear, could you give me a little wholesome advice, do you think? I
wonder, sometimes, whether I was not too complacent over my proposed
duties. Such schemed as I had! I was going to be the blessedest
step-mother that girl ever had. That would not be saying much, possibly.
Don't we all incline to think that the second mothers must be wrong, and
the sons and daughters poor abused darlings? But I loved Gracie, you know,
and she seemed to love me, and to be so happy over the thought of our near
relationship. There is very little happiness from any such source during
these days. Gracie has retired into dignity. She can be the most dignified
young woman on occasion that I ever beheld. She is not rude to me, on the
contrary she is ceremoniously polite; calls me Mrs. Dennis, and all that
sort of thing, when necessity compels her to call me anything; but she
speaks as little as possible; sits at table with us three times a day,
when she cannot secure an excuse for absence that her father will accept;
says 'Yes, sir,' and 'No, sir,' obediently to him, and 'No, ma'am, thank
you,' to me, and that is the extent of our conversation. Generally her
face is pale and her eyes red, and at the first possible moment she begs
to be excused, and retires to the privacy of her own room and locks her
door. Her father has stopped her music lessons; at least she preferred to
have them stopped rather than take lessons of any other person, so she
practices no more. She continues her German and French, and secures good
reports from the professors, but there is an air of weariness and
dreariness about everything she does that makes one alternate between a
feeling of deep pity for her, and a desire to box her ears or shut her up
in a corner until she can behave herself. As a rule, however, I am sorry
for her. I was young once myself. I was undisciplined, I had no mother,
and I had a thousand wild fancies, any one of which might have ruined me.
What do you think you would do, dear, if Mr. Roberts had a daughter, and
you were her mother? You are all in a flush, now, and have lain down this
sheet and said aloud: 'What an idea! Marion does say the most absurd
things!' Well, then, if you were Marion Dennis, and stood before God in
the place of mother to Grace Dennis, what do you imagine you would do?
I'll tell you my policy; I am uniformly cheerful in her presence—gay,
if I can make gayety out of anything; not toward her father, you
understand, because I can fancy that might irritate her. I really try to
be gay toward Gracie herself; but can you imagine an attempt to be cheery
with a tombstone? I study as much as I can, her tastes, in the ordering of
dinner and desserts, and arrange the flowers that I know she likes best,
and in short try to do all those little bits of nice things that I feel
certain you would do in my place; and just here I may as well own that I
learned these small prettinesses, studying you; never should have thought
them out for myself. Flossy, Dr. Dennis is one of the most patient and
long-suffering of men, but it is very hard for him to be patient with poor
Gracie; harder than it is for me; first, because I know by personal
experience just what a turbulent young creature a miss of seventeen or
eighteen can be, and secondly, because it is upon me her displeasure falls
most heavily, and that naturally he resents.</p>
<p>“Why am I writing all this to you? I don't, know, childie, really, save
that I remember what a curious way you have of telling Jesus all about
your friends and their trials, and I remember with great comfort that you
are my friend. Don't imagine me as miserable; I can never be that so long
as Christ is the present Helper that he is to me now; and you do not need
to be told that I daily thank him for giving me my husband. But I think
you will understand better than many would how earnestly I desire to fill
the place of mother, to my bright young motherless Gracie, with her
dangerous beauty and her dangerous talents and her capacity for being
miserable. Oh, I want to do more than my duty; I want to love her with all
my heart, and to have her love me. If it were not for that man, who always
hated me, and who, I believe in my heart, has sought her out and is
pressing his attentions upon her because he sees a possibility of stinging
me through her, I might hope to fill the place in her heart that I thought
I could.”</p>
<p>The letter closed abruptly at this point, and was finished a few days
afterwards in a different strain, giving plenty of home news, and being
full of the brightness which always sparkled in Marion's letters; but it
was the first two or three pages to which Mrs. Roberts turned back, and
which she thoughtfully re-read. Then she interrupted the busy pen:—</p>
<p>“Evan, are not the business letters nearly done? I want to read this to
you, and then I want to talk to you.”</p>
<p>“Delightful prospects, both of them,” he said with energy, as he added the
last hurried line, signed and delivered to his wife to enclose in its
envelope, then pushed aside writing materials and sat back to enjoy.</p>
<p>“It isn't all delightful,” his wife said, shaking her head. “I did hope
that poor Marion was going to have a few years of rest. Her life has been
such a hard one.”</p>
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