The Inside of the Cup
CHAPTER XIX
MR. GOODRICH BECOMES A PARTISAN
I
In these days of his preparation, she haunted him continually. In her he saw
typified all those who possessed the divine discontent, the yearning
unsatisfied,—the fatalists and the dreamers. And yet she seemed to have risen
through instinct to share the fire of his vision of religion revealed to the
countless ranks of strugglers as the hidden motive-power of the world, the
impetus of scientist, statesman, artist, and philanthropist! They had stood
together on the heights of the larger view, whence the whole of the battle-line
lay disclosed.
At other and more poignant moments he saw her as waving him bravely on while
he steamed out through towering seas to safety. The impression was that of
smiling at her destiny. Had she fixed upon it? and did she linger now only that
she might inspire him in his charge? She was capable, he knew, of taking calmly
the irrevocable step, of accepting the decree as she read it. The thought
tortured, the desire to save her from herself obsessed him; with true
clairvoyance she had divined him aright when she had said that he wished her to
have faith in him for her own sake. Could he save her in spite of herself? and
how? He could not see her, except by chance. Was she waiting until he should
have crossed the bar before she should pay some inexorable penalty of which he
knew nothing?
Thus he speculated, suffered, was at once cast down and lifted up by the
thought of her. To him, at least, she was one of those rare and dauntless women,
the red stars of history, by whom the Dantes and Leonardos are fired to express
the inexpressible, and common clay is fused and made mad: one of those women
who, the more they reveal, become the more inscrutable. Divinely inarticulate,
he called her; arousing the passion of the man, yet stirring the sublimer
efforts of the god.
What her feelings toward him, whether she loved him as a woman loves a man he
could not say, no man being a judge in the supreme instance. She beheld him
emancipated, perhaps, from what she might have called the fetters of an
orthodoxy for which she felt an instinctive antagonism; but whether, though
proclaiming himself free, the fact of his continuation in the ministry would not
of itself set up in her a reaction, he was unable to predict. Her antipathy to
forms, he saw, was inherent. Her interest—her fascinated absorption, it might be
called—in his struggle was spiritual, indeed, but it also had mixed in it the
individualistic zeal of the nonconformist. She resented the trammels of society;
though she suffered from her efforts to transcend them. The course he had
determined upon appeared to her as a rebellion not only against a cut-and-dried
state of mind, but also against vested privilege. Yet she had in her, as she
confessed, the craving for what privilege brings in the way of harmonious
surroundings. He loved her for her contradictions.
Thus he was utterly unable to see what the future held for him in the way of
continued communion with her, to evolve any satisfactory theory as to why she
remained in the city. She had told him that the gardens were an excuse. She had
come, by her own intimation, to reflect, to decide some momentous question.
Marriage? He found this too agitating to dwell upon, summoning, as it did,
conjectures of the men she might have known; and it was perhaps natural, in view
of her attitude, that he could only think of such a decision on her part as
surrender.
That he had caught and held her attention, although by no conscious effort of
his own, was clear to him. But had he not merely arrested her? Would she not
presently disappear, leaving only in his life the scarlet thread which she had
woven into it for all time? Would he not fail to change, permanently, the
texture of hers?
Such were his hopes and fears concerning her, and they were mingled
inextricably with other hopes and fears which had to do with the great venture
of his life. He dwelt in a realm of paradoxes, discovered that exaltation was
not incompatible with anxiety and dread. He had no thought of wavering; he had
achieved to an extent he would not have believed possible the sense of
consecration which brings with it indifference to personal fortunes, and the
revelation of the inner world, and yet he shrank from the wounds he was about to
receive—and give. Outwardly controlled, he lived in the state of intense
excitement of the leader waiting for the time to charge.
II
The moment was at hand. September had waned, the nights were cooling, his
parishioners were returning from the East. One of these was Eleanor Goodrich,
whom he met on a corner, tanned and revived from her long summer in
Massachusetts. She had inherited the kindly shrewdness of glance characteristic
of gentlefolk, the glance that seeks to penetrate externals in its concern for
the well-being of those whom it scrutinizes. And he was subtly aware, though she
greeted him cordially, that she felt a change in him without being able to
account for it.
"I hear you have been here all summer," she said reproachfully. "Mother and
father and all of us were much disappointed that you did not come to us on the
Cape."
"I should have come, if it had been possible," he replied. "It seems to have
done you a world of good."
"Oh, I!" She seemed slightly embarrassed, puzzled, and did not look at him.
"I am burned as disgracefully as Evelyn. Phil came on for a month.
"He tells me he hasn't seen you, but that isn't surprising, for he hasn't
been to church since June—and he's a vestryman now, too."
She was in mourning for her father-in-law, who had died in the spring. Phil
Goodrich had taken his place. Eleanor found the conversation, somehow, drifting
out of her control. It was not at all what she would have desired to say. Her
colour heightened.
"I have not been conducting the services, but I resume them next Sunday,"
said the rector. "I ought to tell you," he went on, regarding her, "in view of
the conversation we have had, that I have changed my mind concerning a great
many things we have talked about—although I have not spoken of this as yet to
any of the members of the congregation."
She was speechless, and could only stare at him blankly.
"I mean," he continued, with a calmness that astonished her afterwards, "that
I have changed my whole conception as to the functions and future of the Church,
that I have come to your position, that we must make up our minds for ourselves,
and not have them made up for us. And that we must examine into the truth of all
statements, and be governed accordingly."
Her attitude was one of mingled admiration, concern, and awe. And he saw that
she had grasped something of the complications which his course was likely to
bring about.
"But you are not going to leave us!" she managed to exclaim.
"Not if it is possible to remain," he said, smiling.
"I am so glad." She was still overpowered by the disclosure. "It is good of
you to tell me. Do you mind my telling Phil?"
"Not at all," he assured her.
"Will you forgive me," she asked, after a slight pause during which she had
somewhat regained her composure, "if I say that I always thought, or rather
hoped you would change? that your former beliefs seemed so—unlike you?"
He continued to smile at her as she stepped forward to take the car.
"I'll have to forgive you," he answered, "because you were right—"
She was still in such a state of excitement when she arrived down town that
she went direct to her husband's law office.
"I like this!" he exclaimed, as, unannounced, she opened the door of his
sanctuary. "You might have caught me with one of those good-looking clients of
mine."
"Oh, Phil!" she cried, "I've got such a piece of news, I couldn't resist
coming to tell you. I met Mr. Hodder—and he's changed."
"Changed!" Phil repeated, looking up at her flushed face beside him. Instead
of a law-book, he flung down a time table in which he had been investigating the
trains to a quail shooting club in the southern part of the state: The
transition to Mr. Hodder was, therefore, somewhat abrupt. "Why, Nell, to look at
you, I thought it could be nothing else than my somewhat belated appointment to
the United States Supreme Court. How has Hodder changed? I always thought him
pretty decent."
"Don't laugh at me," she begged, "it's really serious—and no one knows it
yet. He said I might tell you. Do you remember that talk we had at father's,
when he first came, and we likened him to a modern Savonarola?"
"And George Bridges took the floor, and shocked mother and Lucy and
Laureston," supplied Phil.
"I don't believe mother really was as much shocked as she appeared to be,"
said Eleanor. "At any rate, the thing that had struck us—you and me—was that Mr.
Hodder looked as though he could say something helpful, if he only would. And
then I went to see him afterwards, in the parish house—you remember?—after we
had been reading modern criticism together, and he told me that the faith which
had come down from the fathers was like an egg? It couldn't be chipped. I was
awfully disappointed—and yet I couldn't help liking him, he was so honest. And
the theological books he gave me to read—which were so mediaeval and absurd!
Well, he has come around to our point of view. He told me so himself."
"But what is our point of view, Nell?" her husband asked, with a smile.
"Isn't it a good deal like Professor Bridges', only we're not quite so learned?
We're just ordinary heathens, as far as I can make out. If Hodder has our point
of view, he ought to go into the law or a trust company."
"Oh, Phil!" she protested, "and you're on the vestry! I do believe in
Something, and so do you."
"Something," he observed, "is hardly a concrete and complete theology."
"Why do you make me laugh," she reproached him, "when the matter is so
serious? What I'm trying to tell you is that I'm sure Mr. Hodder has worked it
out. He's too sincere to remain in the Church and not have something
constructive and satisfying. I've always said that he seemed to have a truth
shut up inside of him which he could not communicate. Well, now he looks as
though he were about to communicate it, as though he had discovered it. I
suppose you think me silly, but you'll grant, whatever Mr. Hodder may be, he
isn't silly. And women can feel these things. You know I'm not given to
sentimentality, but I was never so impressed by the growth in any personality as
I was this morning by his. He seems to have become himself, as I always imagined
him. And, Phil, he was so fine! He's absolutely incapable of posing, as you'll
admit, and he stood right up and acknowledged that he'd been wrong in our
argument. He hasn't had the services all summer, and when he resumes them next
Sunday I gathered that he intends to make his new position clear."
Mr. Goodrich thrust his hands in his pockets and gave a low whistle.
"I guess I won't go shooting Saturday, after all," he declared. "I wouldn't
miss Hodder's sermon for all the quail in Harrington County."
"It's high time you did go to church," remarked Eleanor, contemplating, not
without pride, her husband's close-cropped, pugnacious head.
"Your judgments are pretty sound, Nell. I'll do you that credit. And I've
always owned up that Hodder would be a fighter if he ever got started. It's
written all over him. What's more, I've a notion that some of our friends are
already a little suspicious of him."
"You mean Mr. Parr?" she asked, anxiously.
"No, Wallis Plimpton."
"Oh!" she exclaimed, with disdain in her voice.
"Mr. Parr only got back yesterday, and Wallis told me that Hodder had refused
to go on a yachting trip with him. Not only foolishness, but high treason." Phil
smiled. "Plimpton's the weather-vane, the barometer of that crowd—he feels a
disturbance long before it turns up—he's as sensitive as the stock market."
"He is the stock market," said Eleanor.
"It's been my opinion," Phil went on reflectively, "that they've all had just
a trace of uneasiness about Hodder all along, an idea that Nelson Langmaid
slipped up for the first time in his life when he got him to come. Oh, the
feeling's been dormant, but it existed. And they've been just a little afraid
that they couldn't handle him if the time ever came. He's not their type. When I
saw Plimpton at the Country Club the other day he wondered, in that genial,
off-hand manner of his, whether Hodder would continue to be satisfied with St.
John's. Plimpton said he might be offered a missionary diocese. Oh we'll have a
fine old row."
"I believe," said Eleanor, "that that's the only thing that interests you."
"Well, it does please me," he admitted, "when I think of Gordon Atterbury and
Everett Constable and a few others,—Eldon Parr,—who believe that religion ought
to be kept archaic and innocuous, served in a form that won't bother anybody. By
the way, Nell, do you remember the verse the Professor quoted about the
Pharisees, and cleansing the outside of the cup and platter?"
"Yes," she answered, "why?"
"Well—Hodder didn't give you any intimation as to what he intended to do
about that sort of thing, did he?"
"What sort of thing?"
"About the inside of Eldon Parr's cup,—so to speak. And the inside of Wallis
Plimpton's cup, and Everett Constable's cup, and Ferguson's cup, and Langmaid's.
Did it ever strike you that, in St. John's, we have the sublime spectacle of
Eldon Parr, the Pharisee in chief, conducting the Church of Christ, who, uttered
that denunciation? That's what George Bridges meant. There's something rather
ironical in such a situation, to say the least."
"I see," said Eleanor, thoughtfully.
"And what's more, it's typical," continued Phil, energetically, "the big
Baptist church on the Boulevard is run by old Sedges, as canny a rascal as you
could find in the state. The inside of has cup has never been touched, though he
was once immersed in the Mississippi, they say, and swallowed a lot of water."
"Oh, Phil!"
"Hodder's been pretty intimate with Eldon Parr—that always puzzled me," Phil
went on. "And yet I'm like you, I never doubted Hodder's honesty. I've always
been curious to know what would happen when he found out the kind of thing Eldon
Parr is doing every day in his life, making people stand and deliver in the
interest of what he would call National Prosperity. Why, that fellow, Funk, they
sent to the penitentiary the other day for breaking into the Addicks' house
isn't a circumstance to Eldon Parr. He's robbed his tens of thousands, and goes
on robbing them right along. By the way, Mr. Parr took most of Addicks' money
before Funk got his silver."
"Phil, you have such a ridiculous way of putting things! But I suppose it's
true."
"True! I should say it was! There was Mr. Bentley—that was mild. And there
never was a hold-up of a western express that could compare to the Consolidated
Tractions. Some of these big fellows have the same kind of brain as the
professional thieves. Well, they are professional thieves—what's the use of
mincing matters! They never try the same game twice. Mr. Parr's getting ready to
make another big haul right now. I know, because Plimpton said as much, although
he didn't confide in me what this particular piece of rascality is. He knows
better." Phil Goodrich looked grim.
"But the law?" exclaimed his wife.
"There never was a law that Nelson Langmaid couldn't drive a horse and
carriage through."
"And Mr. Langmaid's one of the nicest men I know!"
"What I wonder," mused Phil, "is whether this is a mere doctrinal revolt on
Hodder's part, or whether he has found out a few things. There are so many
parsons in these days who don't seem to see any inconsistency in robbing several
thousand people to build settlement houses and carved marble altars, and who
wouldn't accept a Christmas box from a highwayman. But I'll do Hodder the
justice to say he doesn't strike me as that kind. And I have an idea that Eldon
Parr and Wallis Plimpton and the rest know he isn't, know that he'd be a Tartar
if he ever get started, and that's what makes them uneasy."
"Then it isn't his change of religious opinions they would care about?" said
Eleanor.
"Oh, I don't say that Eldon Parr won't try to throw him out if he questions
the faith as delivered by the Saints."
"Phil, what a way of putting it!"
"Any indication of independence, any approach to truth would be regarded as
dangerous," Phil continued. "And of course Gordon Atterbury and others we could
mention, who think they believe in the unchipped egg theory, will be outraged.
But it's deeper than that. Eldon Parr will give orders that Hodder's to go."
"Give orders?"
"Certainly. That vestry, so far as Mr. Parr is concerned, is a mere dummy
board of directors. He's made Langmaid, and Plimpton, and even Everett
Constable, who's the son of an honourable gentleman, and ought to know better.
And he can ruin them by snapping his fingers. He can even make the financial
world too hot for Ferguson. I'll say this for Gordon Atterbury, that Mr. Parr
can't control him, but he's got a majority without him, and Gordon won't vote
for a heretic. Who are left, except father-in-law Waring and myself?"
"He can't control either of you!" said Eleanor, proudly.
"When it comes to that, Nell—we'll move into Canada and buy a farm."
"But can he hurt you, Phil—either of you?" she asked, after a moment.
"I'd like to see him try it," Phil Goodrich declared
And his wife thought, as she looked at him, that she would like to see Mr.
Parr try it, too.
III
Phil Goodrich had once said that Mr. Plimpton's translation of the national
motto E pluribus unum, was "get together," and it was true that not the least of
Mr. Plimpton's many gifts was that of peace making. Such was his genius that he
scented trouble before it became manifest to the world, and he stoutly declared
that no difference of opinion ever existed between reasonable men that might not
be patched up before the breach became too wide—provided that a third reasonable
man contributed his services. The qualifying word "reasonable" is to be noted.
When Mr. Bedloe Hubbell had undertaken, in the name of Reform, to make a witch's
cauldron of the city's politics, which Mr. Beatty had hitherto conducted so
smoothly from the back room of his saloon, Mr. Plimpton had unselfishly offered
his services. Bedloe Hubbell, although he had been a playmate of Mr. Plimpton's
wife's, had not proved "reasonable," and had rejected with a scorn only to be
deemed fanatical the suggestion that Mr. Hubbell's interests and Mr. Beatty's
interests need not clash, since Mr. Hubbell might go to Congress! And Mr.
Plimpton was the more hurt since the happy suggestion was his own, and he had
had no little difficulty in getting Mr. Beatty to agree to it.
Yet Mr. Plimpton's career in the ennobling role of peacemaker had, on the
whole, been crowned with such success as to warrant his belief in the principle.
Mr. Parr, for instance,—in whose service, as in that of any other friend, Mr.
Plimpton was always ready to act—had had misunderstandings with eminent
financiers, and sometimes with United States Senators. Mr. Plimpton had made
many trips to the Capitol at Washington, sometimes in company with Mr. Langmaid,
sometimes not, and on one memorable occasion had come away smiling from an
interview with the occupant of the White House himself.
Lest Mr. Plimpton's powers of premonition seem supernatural, it may be well
to reveal the comparative simplicity of his methods. Genius, analyzed, is often
disappointing, Mr. Plimpton's was selective and synthetic. To illustrate in a
particular case, he had met Mr. Parr in New York and had learned that the
Reverend Mr. Hodder had not only declined to accompany the banker on a yachting
trip, but had elected to remain in the city all summer, in his rooms in the
parish house, while conducting no services. Mr. Parr had thought this peculiar.
On his return home Mr. Plimpton had one day dropped in to see a Mr. Gaines, the
real estate agent for some of his property. And Mr. Plimpton being
hale-fellow-well-met, Mr. Gaines had warned him jestingly that he would better
not let his parson know that he owned a half interest in a certain hotel in
Dalton Street, which was leased at a profitable rate.
If Mr. Plimpton felt any uneasiness, he did not betray it. And he managed to
elicit from the agent, in an entirely casual and jovial manner, the fact that
Mr. Hodder, a month or so before, had settled the rent of a woman for a Dalton
Street flat, and had been curious to discover the name of the owner. Mr. Gaines,
whose business it was to recognize everybody, was sure of Mr. Hodder, although
he had not worn clerical clothes.
Mr. Plimpton became very thoughtful when he had left the office. He visited
Nelson Langmaid in the Parr Building. And the result of the conference was to
cause Mr. Langmaid to recall, with a twinge of uneasiness, a certain autumn
morning in a room beside Bremerton Lake when he had been faintly yet distinctly
conscious of the admonitory whisperings of that sixth sense which had saved him
on other occasions.
"Dash it!" he said to himself, after Mr. Plimpton had departed, and he stood
in the window and gazed across at the flag on the roof of 'Ferguson's.' "It
would serve me right for meddling in this parson business. Why did I take him
away from Jerry Whitely, anyhow?"
It added to Nelson Langmaid's discomfort that he had a genuine affection,
even an admiration for the parson in question. He might have known by looking at
the man that he would wake up some day,—such was the burden of his lament. And
there came to him, ironically out of the past, the very words of Mr. Parr's
speech to the vestry after Dr. Gilman's death, that succinct list of
qualifications for a new rector which he himself, Nelson Langmaid, had
humorously and even more succinctly epitomized. Their "responsibility to the
parish, to the city, and to God" had been to find a rector "neither too old nor
too young, who would preach the faith as we received it, who was not
sensational, and who did not mistake Socialism for Christianity." At the
"Socialism" a certain sickly feeling possessed the lawyer, and he wiped beads of
perspiration from his dome-like forehead.
He didn't pretend to be versed in theology—so he had declared—and at the
memory of these words of his the epithet "ass," self applied, passed his lips.
"You want a parson who will stick to his last, not too high or too low or too
broad or too narrow, who has intellect without too much initiative... and will
not get the church uncomfortably full of strangers and run you out of your
pews." Thus he had capped the financier. Well, if they had caught a tartar, it
served him, Nelson Langmaid, right. He recalled his talk with Gerald Whitely,
and how his brother-in-law had lost his temper when they had got on the subject
of personality....
Perhaps Wallis Plimpton could do something. Langmaid's hopes of this were not
high. It may have been that he had suspicions of what Mr. Plimpton would have
called Hodder's "reasonableness." One thing was clear—that Mr. Plimpton was
frightened. In the sanctuaries, the private confessionals of high finance (and
Nelson Langmaid's office may be called so), the more primitive emotions are
sometimes exhibited.
"I don't see what business it is of a clergyman, or of any one else, whether
I own property in Dalton Street," Mr. Plimpton had said, as he sat on the edge
of the lawyer's polished mahogany desk. "What does he expect us to do,—allow our
real estate to remain unproductive merely for sentimental reasons? That's like a
parson, most of 'em haven't got any more common sense than that. What right has
he got to go nosing around Dalton Street? Why doesn't he stick to his church?"
"I thought you fellows were to build him a settlement house there," Langmaid
observed.
"On the condition that he wouldn't turn socialist."
"You'd better have stipulated it in the bond," said the lawyer, who could not
refrain, even at this solemn moment, from the temptation of playing upon Mr.
Plimpton's apprehensions. "I'm afraid he'll make it his business, Wallis, to
find out whether you own anything in Dalton Street. I'll bet he's got a list of
Dalton Street property in his pocket right now."
Mr. Plimpton groaned.
"Thank God I don't own any of it!" said Langmaid.
"What the deuce does he intend to do?" the other demanded.
"Read it out in church," Langmaid suggested. "It wouldn't sound pretty,
Wallis, to be advertised in the post on Monday morning as owning that kind of a
hotel."
"Oh, he's a gentleman," said Mr. Plimpton, "he wouldn't do anything as low as
that!"
"But if he's become a socialist?" objected Langmaid.
"He wouldn't do it," his friend reiterated, none too confidently. "I
shouldn't be surprised if he made me resign from the vestry and forced me to
sell my interest. It nets me five thousand a year."
"What is the place?" Langmaid asked sympathetically, "Harrod's?"
Mr. Plimpton nodded.
"Not that I am a patron," the lawyer explained somewhat hastily. "But I've
seen the building, going home."
"It looks to me as if it would burn down some day, Wallis."
"I wish it would," said Mr. Plimpton.
"If it's any comfort to you—to us," Langmaid went on, after a moment, "Eldon
Parr owns the whole block above Thirteenth, on the south side—bought it three
years ago. He thinks the business section will grow that way."
"I know," said Mr. Plimpton, and they looked at each other.
The name predominant in both minds had been mentioned.
"I wonder if Hodder really knows what he's up against." Mr. Plimpton
sometimes took refuge in slang.
"Well, after all, we're not sure yet that he's 'up against anything,'"
replied Langmaid, who thought the time had come for comfort. "It may all be a
false alarm. There's no reason, after all, why a Christian clergyman shouldn't
rescue women in Dalton Street, and remain in the city to study the conditions of
the neighbourhood where his settlement house is to be. And just, because you or
I would not be able to resist an invitation to go yachting with Eldon Parr, a
man might be imagined who had that amount of moral courage."
"That's just it. Hodder seems to me, now I come to think of it, just the kind
of John Brown type who wouldn't hesitate to get into a row with Eldon Parr if he
thought it was right, and pull down any amount of disagreeable stuff about our
ears."
"You're mixing your heroes, Wallis," said Langmaid.
"I can't help it. You'd catch it, too, Nelson. What in the name of sense
possessed you to get such a man?"
This being a question the lawyer was unable to answer, the conversation came
to another pause. And it was then that Mr. Plimpton's natural optimism
reasserted itself.
"It isn't done,—the thing we're afraid of, that's all," he proclaimed, after
a turn or two about the room. "Hodder's a gentleman, as I said, and if he feels
as we suspect he does he'll resign like a gentleman and a Christian. I'll have a
talk with him—oh, you can trust me! I've got an idea. Gordon Atterbury told me
the other day there is a vacancy in a missionary diocese out west, and that
Hodder's name had been mentioned, among others, to the bishops for the place.
He'd make a rattling missionary bishop, you know, holding services in saloons
and knocking men's heads together for profanity, and he boxes like a
professional. Now, a word from Eldon Parr might turn the trick. Every parson
wants to be a bishop."
Langmaid shook his head.
"You're getting out of your depths, my friend. The Church isn't Wall Street.
And missionary bishops aren't chosen to make convenient vacancies."
"I don't mean anything crude," Mr. Plimpton protested. "But a word from the
chief layman of a diocese like this, a man who never misses a General
Convention, and does everything handsomely, might count,—particularly if they're
already thinking of Hodder. The bishops would never suspect we wanted to get rid
of him."
"Well," said Langmaid, "I advise you to go easy, all along the line."
"Oh, I'll go easy enough," Mr. Plimpton assented, smiling. "Do you remember
how I pulled off old Senator Matthews when everybody swore he was dead set on
voting for an investigation in the matter of those coal lands Mr. Parr got hold
of in his state?"
"Matthews isn't Hodder, by a long shat," said Langmaid. "If you ask me my
opinion, I'll tell you frankly that if Hodder has made up his mind to stay in
St. John's a ton of dynamite and all the Eldon Parrs in the nation can't get him
out."
"Can't the vestry make him resign?" asked Mr. Plimpton, uncomfortably.
"You'd better, go home and study your canons, my friend. Nothing short of
conviction for heresy can do it, if he doesn't want to go."
"You wouldn't exactly call him a heretic," Mr. Plimpton said ruefully.
"Would you know a heretic if you saw one?" demanded Langmaid.
"No, but my wife would, and Gordon Atterbury and Constable would, and Eldon
Parr. But don't let's get nervous."
"Well, that's sensible at any rate," said Langmaid....
So Mr. Plimpton had gone off optimistic, and felt even more so the next
morning after he had had his breakfast in the pleasant dining room of the Gore
Mansion, of which he was now master. As he looked out through the open window at
the sunshine in the foliage of Waverley Place, the prospect of his being removed
from that position of dignity and influence on the vestry of St. John's, which
he had achieved, with others, after so much walking around the walls, seemed
remote. And he reflected with satisfaction upon the fact that his wife, who was
his prime minister, would be home from the East that day. Two heads were better
than one, especially if one of the two were Charlotte Gore's. And Mr. Plimpton
had often reflected upon the loss to the world, and the gain to himself, that
she was a woman.
It would not be gallant to suggest that his swans were geese.
IV
The successful navigation of lower Tower Street, at noonday, required
presence of mind on the part of the pedestrian. There were currents and
counter-currents, eddies and backwaters, and at the corner of Vine a veritable
maelstrom through which two lines of electric cars pushed their way, east and
weft, north and south, with incessant clanging of bells; followed by automobiles
with resounding horns, trucks and delivery wagons with wheels reverberating on
the granite. A giant Irish policeman, who seemed in continual danger of a
violent death, and wholly indifferent to it, stood between the car tracks and
halted the rush from time to time, driving the people like sheep from one side
to the other. Through the doors of Ferguson's poured two conflicting streams of
humanity, and wistful groups of young women, on the way from hasty lunches,
blocked the pavements and stared at the finery behind the plate-glass windows.
The rector, slowly making his way westward, permitted himself to be thrust
hither and thither, halted and shoved on again as he studied the faces of the
throng. And presently he found himself pocketed before one of the exhibits of
feminine interest, momentarily helpless, listening to the admiring and envious
chorus of a bevy of diminutive shop-girls on the merits of a Paris gown. It was
at this moment that he perceived, pushing towards him with an air of rescue, the
figure of his vestryman, Mr. Wallis Plimpton.
"Well, well, well!" he cried, as he seized Hodder by the arm and pulled him
towards the curb. "What are you doing herein the marts of trade? Come right
along with me to the Eyrie, and we'll have something, to eat."
The Eyrie was a famous lunch club, of limited membership, at the top of the
Parr Building, where financial affairs of the first importance were discussed
and settled.
Hodder explained that he had lunched at half-past twelve.
"Well, step into my office a minute. It does me good, to see you again, upon
my word, and I can't let you get by without a little pow-wow."
Mr. Plimpton's trust company, in Vine Street, resembled a Greek temple.
Massive but graceful granite columns adorned its front, while within it was
partitioned off with polished marble and ornamental grills. In the rear, guarded
by the desks and flanked by the compartments of various subordinates, was the
president's private sanctum, and into this holy of holies Mr. Plimpton led the
way with the simple, unassuming genial air of the high priest of modern finance
who understands men. The room was eloquent almost to affectation of the system
and order of great business, inasmuch as it betrayed not the least sign of a
workshop. On the dark oak desk were two leather-bound books and a polished
telephone. The walls were panelled, there was a stone fireplace with andirons
set, a deep carpet spread over the tessellated floor, and three leather-padded
armchairs, one of which Mr. Plimpton hospitably drew forward for the rector. He
then produced a box of cigars.
"You don't smoke, Mr. Hodder. I always forget. That's the way you manage to
keep yourself in such good shape." He drew out a gold match box and seated
himself with an air of gusto opposite his guest. "And you haven't had a
vacation, they tell me."
"On the contrary," said the rector, "McCrae has taken the services all
summer."
"But you've been in the city!" Mr. Plimpton exclaimed, puffing at his cigar.
"Yes, I've been in the city."
"Well, well, I'll bet you haven't been idle. Just between us, as friends, Mr.
Hodder, I've often wondered if you didn't work too hard—there's such a thing as
being too conscientious, you know. And I've an idea that the rest of the vestry
think so. Mr. Parr, for instance. We know when we've got a good thing, and we
don't want to wear you out. Oh, we can appreciate your point of view, and admire
it. But a little relaxation—eh? It's too bad that you couldn't have seen your
way to take that cruise—Mr. Parr was all cut up about it. I guess you're the
only man among all of us fairly close to him, who really knows him well," said
Mr. Plimpton, admiringly. "He thinks a great deal of you, Mr. Hodder. By the
way, have you seen him since he got back?"
"No," Hodder answered.
"The trip did him good. I thought he was a little seedy in the spring—didn't
you? Wonderful man! And when I think how he's slandered and abused it makes me
hot. And he never says anything, never complains, lives up there all alone, and
takes his medicine. That's real patriotism, according to my view. He could
retire to-morrow—but he keeps on—why? Because he feels the weight of a
tremendous responsibility on his shoulders, because he knows if it weren't for
him and men like him upon whom the prosperity of this nation depends, we'd have
famine and anarchy on our hands in no time. And look what he's done for the
city, without ostentation, mind you! He never blows his own horn-never makes a
speech. And for the Church! But I needn't tell you. When this settlement house
and chapel are finished, they'll be coming out here from New York to get points.
By the way, I meant to have written you. Have our revised plans come yet? We
ought to break ground in November, oughtn't we?"
"I intend to lay my views on that matter before the vestry at the next
meeting, the rector said.
"Well," declared Mr. Plimpton, after a scarcely perceptible pause, "I've no
doubt they'll be worth listening to. If I were to make a guess," he continued,
with a contemplative smile, blowing a thin stream of smoke towards the distant
ceiling, "I should bet that you have spent your summer looking over the ground.
I don't say that you have missed your vocation, Mr. Hodder, but I don't mind
telling you that for a clergyman, for a man absorbed in spiritual matters, a man
who can preach the sermons you preach, you've got more common-sense and business
thoroughness than any one I have ever run across in your profession."
"Looking over the ground?" Hodder repeated, ignoring the compliment.
"Sure," said Mr. Plimpton, smiling more benignly than ever. "You mustn't be
modest about it. Dalton Street. And when that settlement house is built, I'll
guarantee it will be run on a business basis. No nonsense."
"What do you mean by nonsense?" Hodder asked. He did not make the question
abrupt, and there was even the hint of a smile in his eyes, which Mr. Plimpton
found the more disquieting.
"Why, that's only a form of speech. I mean you'll be practical, efficient,
that you'll get hold of the people of that neighbourhood and make 'em see that
the world isn't such a bad place after all, make 'em realize that we in St.
John's want to help 'em out. That you won't make them more foolishly
discontented than they are, and go preaching socialism to them."
"I have no intention of preaching socialism," said Hodder. But he laid a
slight emphasis on the word which sent a cold shiver down Mr. Plimpton's spine,
and made him wonder whether there might not be something worse than socialism.
"I knew you wouldn't," he declared, with all the heartiness he could throw
into his voice. "I repeat, you're a practical, sensible man. I'll yield to none
in my belief in the Church as a moral, uplifting, necessary spiritual force in
our civilization, in my recognition of her high ideals, but we business men, Mr.
Hodder,—as—I am sure you must agree,—have got to live, I am sorry to say, on a
lower plane. We've got to deal with the world as we find it, and do our little
best to help things along. We can't take the Gospel literally, or we should all
be ruined in a day, and swamp everybody else. You understand me?
"I understand you," said the rector.
Mr. Plimpton's cigar had gone out. In spite of himself, he had slipped from
the easy-going, casual tone into one that was becoming persuasive, apologetic,
strenuous. Although the day was not particularly warm, he began to perspire a
little; and he repeated the words over to himself, "I understand you." What the
deuce did the rector know? He had somehow the air of knowing everything—more
than Mr. Plimpton did. And Mr. Plimpton was beginning to have the unusual and
most disagreeable feeling of having been weighed in the balance and found
wanting. He glanced at his guest, who sat quite still, the head bent a trifle,
the disturbing gray eyes fixed contemplatively an him—accusingly. And yet the
accusation did not seem personal with the clergyman, whose eyes were nearly the
medium, the channels of a greater, an impersonal Ice. It was true that the man
had changed. He was wholly baffling to Mr. Plimpton, whose sense of alarm
increased momentarily into an almost panicky feeling as he remembered what
Langmaid had said. Was this inscrutable rector of St. John's gazing, knowingly,
at the half owner of Harrods Hotel in Dalton Street, who couldn't take the
Gospel literally? There was evidently no way to find out at once, and suspense
would be unbearable, in vain he told himself that these thoughts were nonsense,
the discomfort persisted, and he had visions of that career in which he had
become one of the first citizens and the respected husband of Charlotte Gore
clashing down about his ears. Why? Because a clergyman should choose to be
quixotic, fanatical? He did not took quixotic, fanatical, Mr. Plimpton had to
admit,—but a good deal saner than he, Mr. Plimpton, must have appeared at that
moment. His throat was dry, and he didn't dare to make the attempt to relight
his cigar.
"There's nothing like getting together—keeping in touch with people, Mr.
Hodder," he managed to say. "I've been out of town a good deal this
summer—putting on a little flesh, I'm sorry to admit. But I've been meaning to
drop into the parish house and talk over those revised plans with you. I will
drop in—in a day or two. I'm interested in the work, intensely interested, and
so is Mrs. Plimpton. She'll help you. I'm sorry you can't lunch with me."
He had the air, now, of the man who finds himself disagreeably and
unexpectedly closeted with a lunatic; and his language, although he sought to
control it, became even a trifle less coherent.
"You must make allowances for us business men, Mr. Hodder. I mean, of course,
we're sometimes a little lax in our duties—in the summer, that is. Don't shoot
the pianist, he's doing his—ahem! You know the story.
"By the way, I hear great things of you; I'm told it's on the cards that
you're to be made a bishop."
"Oh," answered the rector, "there are better men mentioned than I!"
"I want you to know this," said his vestryman, as he seized Hodder's hand,
"much as we value you here, bitterly as we should hate to lose you, none of us,
I am sure, would stand in the way of such a deserved advancement."
"Thank you, Mr. Plimpton," said the rector.
Mr. Plimpton watched the vigorous form striding through the great chamber
until it disappeared. Then he seized his hat and made his way as rapidly as
possible through the crowds to the Parr Building. At the entrance of the
open-air roof garden of the Eyrie he ran into Nelson Langmaid.
"You're the very man I'm after," said Mr. Plimpton, breathlessly. "I stopped
in your office, and they said you'd gone up."
"What's the matter, Wallis?" inquired the lawyer, tranquilly. "You look as if
you'd lost a couple of bonds."
"I've just seen Hodder, and he is going to do it."
"Do what?"
"Sit down here, at this table in the corner, and I'll tell you."
For a practical man, it must be admitted that Mr. Plimpton had very little of
the concrete to relate. And it appeared on cross-examination by Mr. Langmaid,
who ate his cold meat and salad with an exasperating and undiminished
appetite—that the only definite thing the rector had said was that he didn't
intend to preach socialism. This was reassuring.
"Reassuring!" exclaimed Mr. Plimpton, whose customary noonday hunger was
lacking, "I wish you could have heard him say it!"
"The wicked," remarked the lawyer, "flee when no man pursueth. Don't shoot
the pianist!" Langmaid set down his beer, and threw back his head and laughed.
"If I were the Reverend Mr. Hodder, after such an exhibition as you gave, I
should immediately have suspected the pianist of something, and I should have
gone off by myself and racked my brains and tried to discover what it was. He's
a clever man, and if he hasn't got a list of Dalton Street property now he'll
have one by to-morrow, and the story of some of your transactions with Tom
Beatty and the City Council."
"I believe you'd joke in the electric chair," said Mr. a Plimpton,
resentfully. "I'll tell you this,—and my experience backs me up,—if you can't
get next to a man by a little plain talk, he isn't safe. I haven't got the
market sense for nothing, and I'll give you this tip, Nelson,—it's time to stand
from under. Didn't I warn you fellows that Bedloe Hubbell meant business long
before he started in? and this parson can give Hubbell cards and spades. Hodder
can't see this thing as it is. He's been thinking, this summer. And a man of
that kind is downright dangerous when he begins to think. He's found out things,
and he's put two and two together, and he's the uncompromising type. He has a
notion that the Gospel can be taken literally, and I could feel all the time I
was talking to him he thought I was a crook."
"Perhaps he was right," observed the lawyer.
"That comes well from you," Mr. Plimpton retorted.
"Oh, I'm a crook, too," said Langmaid. "I discovered it some time ago. The
difference between you and me, Wallis, is that I am willing to acknowledge it,
and you're not. The whole business world, as we know it, is crooked, and if we
don't cut other people's throats, they'll cut ours."
"And if we let go, what would happen to the country?" his companion demanded.
Langmaid began to shake with silent laughter.
"Your solicitude about the country, Wallis, is touching. I was brought up to
believe that patriotism had an element of sacrifice in it, but I can't see ours.
And I can't imagine myself, somehow, as a Hercules bearing the burden of our
Constitution. From Mr. Hodder's point of view, perhaps,—and I'm not sure it
isn't the right one, the pianist is doing his damnedest, to the tune of—Dalton
Street. We might as well look this thing in the face, my friend. You and I
really don't believe in another world, or we shouldn't be taking so much trouble
to make this one as we'd like to have it."
"I never expected to hear you talk this way," said Mr. Plimpton.
"Well, it's somewhat of a surprise to me," the lawyer admitted.
"And I don't think you put it fairly," his friend contended. "I never can
tell when you are serious, but this is damned serious. In business we have to
deal with crooks, who hold us up right and left, and if we stood back you know
as well as I do that everything would go to pot. And if we let the reformers
have their way the country would be bedlam. We'd have anarchy and bloodshed,
revolution, and the people would be calling us, the strong men, back in no time.
You can't change human nature. And we have a sense of responsibility—we support
law and order and the Church, and found institutions, and give millions away in
charity."
The big lawyer listened to this somewhat fervent defence of his order with an
amused smile, nodding his head slightly from side to side.
"If you don't believe in it," demanded Mr. Plimpton, "why the deuce don't you
drop it?"
"It's because of my loyalty," said Langmaid. "I wouldn't desert my pals. I
couldn't bear, Wallis, to see you go to the guillotine without me."
Mr. Plimpton became unpleasantly silent.
"Well, you may think it's a joke," he resumed, after a moment, "but there
will be a guillotine if we don't look out. That confounded parson is getting
ready to spring something, and I'm going to give Mr. Parr a tip. He'll know how
to handle him. He doesn't talk much, but I've got an idea, from one or two
things he let drop, that he's a little suspicious of a change in Hodder. But he
ought to be waived."
"You're in no condition to talk to Mr. Parr, or to anyone else, except your
wife, Walks," Langmaid said. "You'd better go home, and let me see Mr. Parr. I'm
responsible for Mr. Hodder, anyway."
"All right," Mr. Plimpton agreed, as though he had gained some shred of
comfort from this thought. "I guess you're in worse than any of us."