<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0019" id="link2H_4_0019"></SPAN></p>
<h2> XVI </h2>
<h3> THE SHOWER </h3>
<p>She continued to be thoughtful until after lunch, when, upon the sun's
disappearance behind a fat cloud, Jane and the heavens exchanged
dispositions for the time—the heavens darkened and Jane brightened.
She was in the front hall, when the sunshine departed rather abruptly, and
she jumped for joy, pointing to the open door. "Look! Looky there!" she
called to her brother. Richly ornamented, he was descending the front
stairs, his embellishments including freshly pressed white trousers, a new
straw hat, unusual shoes, and a blasphemous tie. "I'm goin' to get to sail
my boat," Jane shouted. "It's goin' to rain."</p>
<p>"It is not," said William, irritated. "It's not going to anything like
rain. I s'pose you think it ought to rain just to let you sail that chunk
of wood!"</p>
<p>"It's goin' to rain—it's goin' to rain!" (Jane made a little
singsong chant of it.) "It's goin' to rain—it gives Willie a pain—it's
goin' to rain—it gives Willie a pain—it's goin' to—"</p>
<p>He interrupted her sternly. "Look here! You're old enough to know better.
I s'pose you think there isn't anything as important in the world as your
gettin' the chance to sail that little boat! I s'pose you think business
and everything else has got to stop and get ruined, maybe, just to please
you!" As he spoke he walked to an umbrella-stand in the hall and
deliberately took therefrom a bamboo walking-stick of his father's.
Indeed, his denunciation of Jane's selfishness about the weather was made
partly to reassure himself and settle his nerves, strained by the unusual
procedure he contemplated, and partly to divert Jane's attention. In the
latter effort he was unsuccessful; her eyes became strange and unbearable.</p>
<p>She uttered a shriek:</p>
<p>"Willie's goin' to carry a CANE!"</p>
<p>"You hush up!" he said, fiercely, and hurried out through the front door.
She followed him to the edge of the porch; she stood there while he made
his way to the gate, and she continued to stand there as he went down the
street, trying to swing the cane in an accustomed and unembarrassed
manner.</p>
<p>Jane made this difficult.</p>
<p>"Willie's got a CANE!" she screamed. "He's got papa's CANE!" Then,
resuming her little chant, she began to sing: "It's goin' to rain—Willie's
got papa's cane—it's goin' to rain—Willie's got papa's cane!"
She put all of her voice into a final effort. "MISS PRATT'LL GET WET IF
YOU DON'T TAKE AN UMBERELLER-R-R!"</p>
<p>The attention of several chance pedestrians had been attracted, and the
burning William, breaking into an agonized half-trot, disappeared round
the corner. Then Jane retired within the house, feeling that she had done
her duty. It would be his own fault if he got wet.</p>
<p>Rain was coming. Rain was in the feel of the air—and in Jane's hope.</p>
<p>She was not disappointed. Mr. Genesis, so secure of fair weather in the
morning, was proved by the afternoon to be a bad prophet. The fat cloud
was succeeded by others, fatter; a corpulent army assailed the vault of
heaven, heavy outriders before a giant of evil complexion and devastating
temper.</p>
<p>An hour after William had left the house, the dust in the streets and all
loose paper and rubbish outdoors rose suddenly to a considerable height
and started for somewhere else. The trees had colic; everything became as
dark as winter twilight; streaks of wildfire ran miles in a second, and
somebody seemed to be ripping up sheets of copper and tin the size of
farms. The rain came with a swish, then with a rattle, and then with a
roar, while people listened at their garret doorways and marveled.
Window-panes turned to running water;—it poured.</p>
<p>Then it relented, dribbled, shook down a few last drops; and passed on to
the countryside. Windows went up; eaves and full gutters plashed and
gurgled; clearer light fell; then, in a moment, sunshine rushed upon
shining green trees and green grass; doors opened—and out came the
children!</p>
<p>Shouting, they ran to the flooded gutters. Here were rivers, lakes, and
oceans for navigation; easy pilotage, for the steersman had but to wade
beside his craft and guide it with a twig. Jane's timely boat was one of
the first to reach the water.</p>
<p>Her mother had been kind, and Jane, with shoes and stockings left behind
her on the porch, was a happy sailor as she waded knee-deep along the
brimming curbstones. At the corner below the house of the Baxters, the
street was flooded clear across, and Jane's boat, following the current,
proceeded gallantly onward here, sailed down the next block, and was
thoughtlessly entering a sewer when she snatched it out of the water.
Looking about her, she perceived a gutter which seemed even lovelier than
the one she had followed. It was deeper and broader and perhaps a little
browner, wherefore she launched her ship upon its dimpled bosom and
explored it as far as the next sewer-hole or portage. Thus the voyage
continued for several blocks with only one accident—which might have
happened to anybody. It was an accident in the nature of a fall, caused by
the sliding of Jane's left foot on some slippery mud. This treacherous
substance, covered with water, could not have been anticipated;
consequently Jane's emotions were those of indignation rather than of
culpability. Upon rising, she debated whether or not she should return to
her dwelling, inclining to the opinion that the authorities there would
have taken the affirmative; but as she was wet not much above the waist,
and the guilt lay all upon the mud, she decided that such an interruption
of her journey would be a gross injustice to herself. Navigation was
reopened.</p>
<p>Presently the boat wandered into a miniature whirlpool, grooved in a
spiral and pleasant to see. Slowly the water went round and round, and so
did the boat without any assistance from Jane. Watching this movement
thoughtfully, she brought forth from her drenched pocket some sodden
whitish disks, recognizable as having been crackers, and began to eat
them. Thus absorbed, she failed at first to notice the approach of two
young people along the sidewalk.</p>
<p>They were the entranced William and Miss Pratt; and their appearance
offered a suggestive contrast in relative humidity. In charming and
tender-colored fabrics, fluffy and cool and summery, she was specklessly
dry; not a drop had touched even the little pink parasol over her
shoulder, not one had fallen upon the tiny white doglet drowsing upon her
arm. But William was wet—he was still more than merely damp, though
they had evidently walked some distance since the rain had ceased to fall.
His new hat was a mucilaginous ruin; his dank coat sagged; his shapeless
trousers flopped heavily, and his shoes gave forth marshy sounds as he
walked.</p>
<p>No brilliant analyst was needed to diagnose this case. Surely any observer
must have said: "Here is a dry young lady, and at her side walks a wet
young gentleman who carries an umbrella in one hand and a walking-stick in
the other. Obviously the young lady and gentleman were out for a stroll
for which the stick was sufficient, and they were caught by the rain.
Before any fell, however, he found her a place of shelter—such as a
corner drug-store and then himself gallantly went forth into the storm for
an umbrella. He went to the young lady's house, or to the house where she
may be visiting, for, if he had gone to his own he would have left his
stick. It may be, too, that at his own, his mother would have detained
him, since he is still at the age when it is just possible sometimes for
mothers to get their sons into the house when it rains. He returned with
the umbrella to the corner drug-store at probably about the time when the
rain ceased to fall, because his extreme moistness makes necessary the
deduction that he was out in all the rain that rained. But he does not
seem to care."</p>
<p>The fact was that William did not even know that he was wet. With his head
sidewise and his entranced eyes continuously upon the pretty face so near,
his state was almost somnambulistic. Not conscious of his soggy garments
or of the deluged streets, he floated upon a rosy cloud, incense about
him, far-away music enchanting his ears.</p>
<p>If Jane had not recognized the modeling of his features she might not have
known them to be William's, for they had altered their grouping to produce
an expression with which she was totally unfamiliar. To be explicit, she
was unfamiliar with this expression in that place—that is to say,
upon William, though she had seen something like it upon other people,
once or twice, in church.</p>
<p>William's thoughts might have seemed to her as queer as his expression,
could she have known them. They were not very definite, however, taking
the form of sweet, vague pictures of the future. These pictures were of
married life; that is, married life as William conceived it for himself
and Miss Pratt—something strikingly different from that he had
observed as led by his mother and father, or their friends and relatives.
In his rapt mind he beheld Miss Pratt walking beside him "through life,"
with her little parasol and her little dog—her exquisite face always
lifted playfully toward his own (with admiration underneath the
playfulness), and he heard her voice of silver always rippling "baby-talk"
throughout all the years to come. He saw her applauding his triumphs—though
these remained indefinite in his mind, and he was unable to foreshadow the
business or profession which was to provide the amazing mansion (mainly
conservatory) which he pictured as their home. Surrounded by flowers, and
maintaining a private orchestra, he saw Miss Pratt and himself growing old
together, attaining to such ages as thirty and even thirty-five, still in
perfect harmony, and always either dancing in the evenings or strolling
hand in hand in the moonlight. Sometimes they would visit the nursery,
where curly-headed, rosy cherubs played upon a white-bear rug in the
firelight. These were all boys and ready-made, the youngest being three
years old and without a past.</p>
<p>They would be beautiful children, happy with their luxurious toys on the
bear rug, and they would NEVER be seen in any part of the house except the
nursery. Their deportment would be flawless, and—</p>
<p>"WILL-EE!"</p>
<p>The aviator struck a hole in the air; his heart misgave him. Then he came
to earth—a sickening drop, and instantaneous.</p>
<p>"WILL-EE!"</p>
<p>There was Jane, a figurine in a plastic state and altogether disgraceful;—she
came up out of the waters and stood before them with feet of clay, indeed;
pedestaled upon the curbstone.</p>
<p>"Who IS that CURIOUS child?" said Miss Pratt, stopping.</p>
<p>William shuddered.</p>
<p>"Was she calling YOU?" Miss Pratt asked, incredulously.</p>
<p>"Willie, I told you you better take an umbereller," said Jane, "instead of
papa's cane." And she added, triumphantly, "Now you see!"</p>
<p>Moving forward, she seemed to have in mind a dreadful purpose; there was
something about her that made William think she intended casually to
accompany him and Miss Pratt.</p>
<p>"You go home!" he commanded, hoarsely.</p>
<p>Miss Pratt uttered a little scream of surprise and recognition. "It's your
little sister!" she exclaimed, and then, reverting to her favorite
playfulness of enunciation, "'Oor ickle sissa!" she added, gaily, as a
translation. Jane misunderstood it; she thought Miss Pratt meant "OUR
little sister."</p>
<p>"Go home!" said William.</p>
<p>"No'ty, no'ty!" said Miss Pratt, shaking her head. "Me 'fraid oo's a
no'ty, no'ty ickle dirl! All datie!"</p>
<p>Jane advanced. "I wish you'd let me carry Flopit for you," she said.</p>
<p>Giving forth another gentle scream, Miss Pratt hopped prettily backward
from Jane's extended hands. "Oo-oo!" she cried, chidingly. "Mustn't touch!
P'eshus Flopit all soap-water-wash clean. Ickle dirly all muddy-nassy!
Ickle dirly must doe home, det all soap-water-wash clean like NICE ickle
sissa. Evabody will love 'oor ickle sissa den," she concluded, turning to
William. "Tell 'oor ickle sissa MUS' doe home det soap-water-wash!"</p>
<p>Jane stared at Miss Pratt with fixed solemnity during the delivery of
these admonitions, and it was to be seen that they made an impression upon
her. Her mouth slowly opened, but she spake not. An extraordinary idea had
just begun to make itself at home in her mind. It was an idea which had
been hovering in the neighborhood of that domain ever since William's
comments upon the conversation of Mr. Genesis, in the morning.</p>
<p>"Go home!" repeated William, and then, as Jane stood motionless and
inarticulate, transfixed by her idea, he said, almost brokenly, to his
dainty companion, "I DON'T know what you'll think of my mother! To let
this child—"</p>
<p>Miss Pratt laughed comfortingly as they started on again. "Isn't mamma's
fault, foolish boy Baxter. Ickle dirlies will det datie!"</p>
<p>The profoundly mortified William glanced back over his shoulder, bestowing
upon Jane a look in which bitterness was mingled with apprehension. But
she remained where she was, and did not follow. That was a little to be
thankful for, and he found some additional consolation in believing that
Miss Pratt had not caught the frightful words, "papa's cane," at the
beginning of the interview. He was encouraged to this belief by her
presently taking from his hand the decoration in question and examining it
with tokens of pleasure. "'Oor pitty walk'-'tick," she called it, with a
tact he failed to suspect. And so he began to float upward again; glamors
enveloped him and the earth fell away.</p>
<p>He was alone in space with Miss Pratt once more.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />