CHAPTER XXXI
There was peace and quiet for some time after this storm. Jennie went the
next day and brought Vesta away with her. The joy of the reunion between
mother and child made up for many other worries. "Now I can do by her as I
ought," she thought; and three or four times during the day she found
herself humming a little song.
Lester came only occasionally at first. He was trying to make himself believe
that he ought to do something toward reforming his life—toward bringing
about that eventual separation which he had suggested. He did not like the
idea of a child being in this apartment—particularly that particular child. He
fought his way through a period of calculated neglect, and then began to
return to the apartment more regularly. In spite of all its drawbacks, it was
a place of quiet, peace, and very notable personal comfort.
During the first days of Lester's return it was difficult for Jennie to adjust
matters so as to keep the playful, nervous, almost uncontrollable child from
annoying the staid, emphatic, commercial-minded man. Jennie gave Vesta a
severe talking to the first night Lester telephoned that he was coming, telling
her that he was a very bad-tempered man who didn't like children, and that
she mustn't go near him. "You mustn't talk," she said. "You mustn't ask
questions. Let mamma ask you what you want. And don't reach, ever."
Vesta agreed solemnly, but her childish mind hardly grasped the full
significance of the warning.
Lester came at seven. Jennie, who had taken great pains to array Vesta as
attractively as possible, had gone into her bedroom to give her own toilet a
last touch. Vesta was supposedly in the kitchen. As a matter of fact, she had
followed her mother to the door of the sitting-room, where now she could be
plainly seen. Lester hung up his hat and coat, then, turning, he caught his
first glimpse. The child looked very sweet—he admitted that at a glance. She
was arrayed in a blue-dotted, white flannel dress, with a soft roll collar and
cuffs, and the costume was completed by white stockings and shoes. Her
corn-colored ringlets hung gaily about her face. Blue eyes, rosy lips, rosy
cheeks completed the picture. Lester stared, almost inclined to say
something, but restrained himself. Vesta shyly retreated.
When Jennie came out he commented on the fact that Vesta had arrived.
"Rather sweet-looking child," he said. "Do you have much trouble in making
her mind?"
"Not much," she returned.
Jennie went on to the dining-room, and Lester overheard a scrap of their
conversation.
"Who are he?" asked Vesta.
"Sh! That's your Uncle Lester. Didn't I tell you you mustn't talk?"
"Are he your uncle?"
"No, dear. Don't talk now. Run into the kitchen."
"Are he only my uncle?"
"Yes. Now run along."
"All right."
In spite of himself Lester had to smile.
What might have followed if the child had been homely, misshapen, peevish,
or all three, can scarcely be conjectured. Had Jennie been less tactful, even
in the beginning, he might have obtained a disagreeable impression. As it
was, the natural beauty of the child, combined with the mother's gentle
diplomacy in keeping her in the background, served to give him that fleeting
glimpse of innocence and youth which is always pleasant. The thought
struck him that Jennie had been the mother of a child all these years; she
had been separated from it for months at a time; she had never even hinted
at its existence, and yet her affection for Vesta was obviously great. "It's
queer," he said. "She's a peculiar woman."
One morning Lester was sitting in the parlor reading his paper when he
thought he heard something stir. He turned, and was surprised to see a
large blue eye fixed upon him through the crack of a neighboring door—the
effect was most disconcerting. It was not like the ordinary eye, which, under
such embarrassing circumstances, would have been immediately
withdrawn; it kept its position with deliberate boldness. He turned his paper
solemnly and looked again. There was the eye. He turned it again. Still was
the eye present. He crossed his legs and looked again. Now the eye was
gone.
This little episode, unimportant in itself, was yet informed with the saving
grace of comedy, a thing to which Lester was especially responsive. Although
not in the least inclined to relax his attitude of aloofness, he found his mind,
in the minutest degree, tickled by the mysterious appearance; the corners of
his mouth were animated by a desire to turn up. He did not give way to the
feeling, and stuck by his paper, but the incident remained very clearly in his
mind. The young wayfarer had made her first really important impression
upon him.
Not long after this Lester was sitting one morning at breakfast, calmly eating
his chop and conning his newspaper, when he was aroused by another
visitation—this time not quite so simple. Jennie had given Vesta her
breakfast, and set her to amuse herself alone until Lester should leave the
house. Jennie was seated at the table, pouring out the coffee, when Vesta
suddenly appeared, very business-like in manner, and marched through the
room. Lester looked up, and Jennie colored and arose.
"What is it, Vesta?" she inquired, following her.
By this time, however, Vesta had reached the kitchen, secured a little
broom, and returned, a droll determination lighting her face.
"I want my little broom," she exclaimed and marched sedately past, at which
manifestation of spirit Lester again twitched internally, this time allowing
the slightest suggestion of a smile to play across his mouth.
The final effect of this intercourse was gradually to break down the feeling of
distaste Lester had for the child, and to establish in its place a sort of
tolerant recognition of her possibilities as a human being.
The developments of the next six months were of a kind to further relax the
strain of opposition which still existed in Lester's mind. Although not at all
resigned to the somewhat tainted atmosphere in which he was living, he yet
found himself so comfortable that he could not persuade himself to give it
up. It was too much like a bed of down. Jennie was too worshipful. The
condition of unquestioned liberty, so far as all his old social relationships
were concerned, coupled with the privilege of quiet, simplicity, and affection
in the home was too inviting. He lingered on, and began to feel that perhaps
it would be just as well to let matters rest as they were.
During this period his friendly relations with the little Vesta insensibly
strengthened. He discovered that there was a real flavor of humor about
Vesta's doings, and so came to watch for its development. She was forever
doing something interesting, and although Jennie watched over her with a
care that was in itself a revelation to him, nevertheless Vesta managed to
elude every effort to suppress her and came straight home with her remarks.
Once, for example, she was sawing away at a small piece of meat upon her
large plate with her big knife, when Lester remarked to Jennie that it might
be advisable to get her a little breakfast set.
"She can hardly handle these knives."
"Yes," said Vesta instantly. "I need a little knife. My hand is just so very
little."
She held it up. Jennie, who never could tell what was to follow, reached over
and put it down, while Lester with difficulty restrained a desire to laugh.
Another morning, not long after, she was watching Jennie put the lumps of
sugar in Lester's cup, when she broke in with, "I want two lumps in mine,
mamma."
"No, dearest," replied Jennie, "you don't need any in yours. You have milk to
drink."
"Uncle Lester has two," she protested.
"Yes," returned Jennie; "but you're only a little girl. Besides you mustn't say
anything like that at the table. It isn't nice."
"Uncle Lester eats too much sugar," was her immediate rejoinder, at which
that fine gourmet smiled broadly.
"I don't know about that," he put in, for the first time deigning to answer her
directly. "That sounds like the fox and grapes to me." Vesta smiled back at
him, and now that the ice was broken she chattered on unrestrainedly. One
thing led to another, and at last Lester felt as though, in a way, the little girl
belonged to him; he was willing even that she should share in such
opportunities as his position and wealth might make possible—provided, of
course, that he stayed with Jennie, and that they worked out some
arrangement which would not put him hopelessly out of touch with the
world which was back of him, and which he had to keep constantly in mind.
Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |