Out of the Primitive - BestLightNovel.com
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"Roped? What's that?" demanded Dolores.
"Ask Jeems," laughed Blake.
"Er--seems to me I've heard the expression in relation to the term 'steer,'" observed Lord James.
"Oh, something to do with a s.h.i.+p," said the girl.
"Yes, with what the sailormen would call a trim craft. Eh, Jeems?"
chuckled Blake.
"You're laughing at me!" accused the girl. "To make up for it, you'll have to come and hold my prayer-book for me. Just think!--a real hero to hold my prayer-book!"
"Excuse _me!_" objected Blake. "I don't know the places."
"Never mind. We can study the styles quite as well. Vievie, let's hurry on. Mamma has gone up to rout out Uncle Herbert. They'll be late--as usual."
"Well, then, I'll clear the track," said Blake. "Take good care of Jeems for me. Good-bye, Miss Jenny."
"Don't leave, Tom," replied Genevieve. "If you do not wish to go to the Cathedral--"
"We'll all stay home," cut in Dolores.
"What's this about staying home?" came the voice of Mrs. Gantry from the hall.
"Quick, Mr. Blake!" exclaimed Dolores in a stage whisper. "Hide behind me. I'm taller than Vievie."
Her mother came in upon them in time to catch Blake's broadest grin.
"Stay at home, indeed! Such a delightful day as--Ah!"
"It is Mr. Blake, Aunt Amice," said Genevieve in a tone that compelled the stiffening matron to bow.
"Well, good-bye," repeated Blake.
"Please wait," said Genevieve. "If you do not wish to go to church, you must stay to--Here's papa."
"Not late this time, am I?" demanded Mr. Leslie, bustling into the room. "All ready, my dear? No, you've not got on your hat. h.e.l.lo!" He stopped short, staring at Blake. "Didn't know you were to be with us."
"I'm not," said Blake.
"You're not? H'm,--why not? Not afraid of church, are you? Better join us."
Blake stared in open astonishment. "Thanks, I--Not this time, I guess,"
he replied.
Mr. Leslie seemed about to press the point, but paused and glanced at his watch.
"Please do not wait for me," said Genevieve. "I have decided not to go."
If Blake expected an outburst over this, he had another surprise in store for him. Mrs. Gantry turned away, tight-lipped and high of chin, either too full for utterance or else aware that it was an instant when silence was the better part of diplomacy.
Mr. Leslie followed her, after a half-irritable, half-cordial word to Blake. "Very well, very well. Some other time, then."
As Lord James took his leave of Genevieve with apparent nonchalance, Blake noted an exultant sparkle in the black eyes of Dolores. Yet the look was flatly contradicted by her words as she flounced about toward the door: "You needn't say good-bye, Mr. Scarbridge. You may as well stay right here, since she's not going."
"You see how she rags me," complained Lord James, hastening out after her.
Blake watched them go, his eyes keen with eager observation. He was still staring at the doorway when Genevieve offered banteringly, "A penny for your thoughts, Mr. Blake."
"You'll have to bid higher. Make it a coronet--I mean, half a crown."
"Only half a crown? Why not a crown--the oak crown of the conqueror?
You know the Bible verse: 'He that overcometh himself is greater than he that taketh a city.'"
"Can't say as to that; but I've taken in the town, after having failed to overcome," said Blake with bitter humor.
"Tom! You must not speak of your defeats. They are past and of the Past. You must not even think of them. Have you ever been baptized?"
"Baptized? Let's see... Yes, I remember the question was brought up when I came back from my first hoboing and my sisters got me going to the Episcopal Mission. They even persuaded me to join what's called a confirmation cla.s.s. That's when it had to be proved I'd been baptized."
"Oh, Tom! then you've been confirmed--you're an Episcopalian!"
"I was confirmed. That's not saying I'm an Episcopalian now."
"Have you joined another denomination?"
"No. It was just that my religious streak pinched out, and some years after that I read Darwin and Spencer and Haeckel."
"But that's no reason. If only you had read Drummond first, you'd have seen that true science and true religion are not opposed but are complementary to each other."
"Drummond?" queried Blake. "Never heard of him, that I remember.
Anyway, I guess I'm not one of the religious kind. It was only to please my sisters I started in that time."
"But you'll go to church with me now, Tom?"
Blake hesitated. "Thought you told them you'd decided not to go?"
"Not to the Cathedral. There's the little chapel down the street, in which I was confirmed. It's nearer. We could walk. The bishop officiates at the communion this morning, but he is ill; so Mr.
Vincent, the vicar, will preach. He's a young clergyman and is said to be as popular with the men of his congregation as with the women. His text to-day for morning service is--No, I'll not tell it to you, but I'm sure you'll find the sermon helpful."
"If you're so anxious to have me go, Jenny, I'll go. But it's to be with you, not because I'm interested in that kind of religion. I don't believe in going to a church every week and whining about being full of sin and iniquity and all that. The people that do it are either hypocrites and don't believe what they are saying, or else it's true, and they ought to go to jail."
Genevieve smiled regretfully. "You and I live in such different worlds.
Will you not try to at least look into mine?"
"Well, I'll not sleep during the sermon," promised Blake.
She shook her head at his levity, and left him, to fetch her hat and furs.
When they went out, Blake had no need to stop in the hall. He had brought no overcoat. The first breath of the clear frosty air outside caused her to draw her furs about her graceful throat. She glanced at Blake, and asked with almost maternal concern. "Where's your topcoat?