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The Mother, a novel by Norman Duncan |
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_ The Rev. John Fithian lived alone with a man-servant in a wide-windowed, sombre, red old house, elbowed by tenements, near the Church of the Lifted Cross--once a fashionable quarter: now mean, dejected, incongruously thronged, and fast losing the last appearances of respectability. Sombre without--half-lit, silent, vast within: the whole intolerant of frivolity, inharmony, garishness, ugliness, but yet quite free of gloom and ghostly suggestion. The boy tiptoed over the thick carpets, spoke in whispers, eyed the shadowy corners--sensitive to impressions, forever alert: nevertheless possessing a fine feeling of security and hopefulness; still wistful, often weeping in the night, but not melancholy. Responsive to environment, by nature harmonious with his new surroundings, he presently moved through the lofty old rooms with a manner reflecting their own--the same gravity, serenity, old-fashioned grace: expressing even their stateliness in a quaint and childish way. Thus was the soil of his heart prepared for the seed of a great change.
"It is time, now," the curate sighed, "that I told you the story." "What story?" "The story of the Man who died for us." The boy turned--in wonderment. "I did not know," he said, quickly, "that a man had died for us. What was his name? Why did he do it? My mother never told me that story." "I think she does not know it." "Then I'll tell her when I learn." "Perhaps," said the curate, "she will like to hear it--from you." Very gently, then, in his deep, mellifluous voice--while the rain beat upon the windows, crying out the sorrows of the poor--the curate unfolded the poignant story: the terms simple, the recital clear, vivid, complete.... And to the heart of this child the appeal was immediate and irresistible. "And they who sin," the curate concluded, "crucify Him again." "I love that Jesus!" the boy sobbed. "I love Him--almost as much as mother." "Almost?" The boy misunderstood. He felt reproved. He flushed--ashamed that the new love had menaced the old. "No," he answered; "but I love Him very much." "Not as much?" "Oh, I could not!" The boy was never afterwards the same. All that was inharmonious in life--the pain and poverty and unloveliness--became as sin: a continuous crucifixion, hateful, wringing the heart....
"Mother," the boy whispered, gripping her hand, "he is looking at us." She laughed. "Let him look!" said she. "It don't matter." The man staggered to the bench--heavily sat down: limp and shameless, his head hanging. "Let us go away!" the boy pleaded. "Why, darling?" his mother asked, puzzled. "What's the matter with you, anyhow?" She looked at him--realizing some subtle change in him, bewildered by it: searching eagerly for the nature and cause. "You didn't used to be like that," she said. "I don't like him. He's wicked. He frightens me." The man slipped suddenly from the bench--sprawling upon the walk. The woman laughed. "Don't laugh!" the boy exclaimed--a cry of reproach, not free of indignation. "Oh, mother," he complained, putting her hand to his cheek, "how could you!" She did not answer. The derelict picked himself up, whining in a maudlin way. "How could you!" the boy repeated. "Oh," said she, lightly, "he's all right. He won't hurt us." "He's wicked!" "He's drunk. It don't matter. What's come over you, dear?" "I'm afraid," said the boy. "He's sinful." "He's only drunk, poor man!" High over the houses beyond, the steeple of the Church of the Lifted Cross pierced the blue-black sky. It was tipped with a blazing cross--a great cross, flaming in the night: a symbol of sacrifice, a hope, a protest, raised above the feverish world. To this the boy looked. It transported him far from the woman whose hand he clutched. "They who sin," he muttered, his eyes still turned to the lifted cross, "crucify the dear Lord again!" His mother was both mystified and appalled. She followed his glance--but saw only the familiar landmark: an illuminated cross, topping a steeple. "For God's sake, Richard!" she demanded, "what you talking about?" He did not hear. "You ain't sick, are you?" she continued. He shook his head. "What's the matter with you?" she implored. "Oh, tell your mother!" He loosened his hand from her clasp, withdrew it: but instantly caught her hand again, and kissed it passionately. So much concerned was she for his physical health that the momentary shrinking escaped her. "You're sick," she said. "I know you are. You're singing too much in the church." "No." "Then you're eating too much lemon pie," she declared, anxiously. "You're too fond of that. It upsets your stomach. Oh, Richard! Shame, dear! I told you not to." "You told me not to eat much," he said. "So I don't eat any--to make sure." She was aware of the significance of this sacrifice--and kissed him quickly in fond approval. Then she turned up his coat-sleeve. "The fool!" she cried. "You got cold. That's what's the matter with you. Here it is November! And he ain't put your flannels on. That there curate," she concluded, in disgust, "don't know nothing about raising a boy." "I'm quite well, mother." "Then what's the matter with you?" "I'm sad!" he whispered. She caught him to her breast--blindly misconceiving the meaning of this: in her ignorance concluding that he longed for her, and was sick because of that.... And while she held him close, the clock of the Church of the Lifted Cross chimed seven. In haste she put him down, kissed him, set him on his homeward way; and she watched him until he was lost in the dusk and distance of the park. Then, concerned, bewildered, she made haste to that quarter of the city--that swarming, flaring, blatant place--where lay her occupation for the night. Near Christmas, in a burst of snowy weather, the boy sang his first solo at the Church of the Lifted Cross: this at evening. His mother, conspicuously gowned, somewhat overcome by the fashion of the place, which she had striven to imitate--momentarily chagrined by her inexplicable failure to be in harmony--seated herself obscurely, where she had but an infrequent glimpse of his white robe, wistful face, dark, curling hair. She had never loved him more proudly--never before realized that his value extended beyond the region of her arms: never before known that the babe, the child, the growing boy, mothered by her, nursed at her breast, her possession, was a gift to the world, sweet and inspiring. "Angels, ever bright and fair!" She felt the thrill of his tender voice; perceived the impression: the buzz, the subsiding confusion, the spell-bound stillness. "Take, oh, take me to your care!" It was in her heart to strike her breasts--to cry out that this was her son, born of her; her bosom his place.... When the departing throng had thinned in the aisle, she stepped from the pew, and stood waiting. There passed, then, a lady in rich attire--sweet-faced, of exquisite manner. A bluff, ruddy young man attended her. "Did you like the music?" he asked--a conventional question: everywhere repeated. "Perfectly lovely!" she replied. "A wonderful voice! And such a pretty child!" "I wonder," said he, "who the boy can be?" Acting upon ingenuous impulse, the boy's mother overtook the man, timidly touched his elbow, looked into his eyes, her own bright with proud love. "He is my son," she said. The lady turned in amazement. In a brief, appraising glance, she comprehended the whole woman; the outre gown, the pencilled eyebrows, the rouged cheeks, the bleached hair. She took the man's arm. "Come!" she said. The man yielded. He bowed--smiled in an embarrassed way, flushing to his sandy hair: turned his back. "How strange!" the lady whispered. The woman was left alone in the aisle--not chagrined by the rebuff, being used to this attitude, sensitive no longer: but now knowing, for the first time, that the world into which her child had gone would not accept her.... The church was empty. The organ had ceased. One by one the twinkling lights were going out. The boy came bounding down the aisle. With a glad little cry he leaped into her waiting arms.... _ |