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Here Podge ran out of the room and the conversation in the front parlor was renewed. The voice of Calvin Van de Lear said:
"Agnes, looking at your affairs in the light of religious duty, as you seem to prefer, I must tell you that your actions have not always been perfect."
Nothing was said in reply to this.
"I am to be your pastor at some not distant day," spoke the same voice, "and may take some of that privilege now. As a daughter of the church you should give the encouragement of your beauty and favor only to serious, and approved, and moral young men. Not such scapegraces as Andrew Zane!"
"Sir!" exclaimed Agnes, rising. "How dare you speak of the poor absent one?"
"Sit down," exclaimed Calvin Van de Lear, not a bit discomposed. "I have some disciplinary power now, and shall have more. A lady in full communion with our church--a single woman without a living guardian--requires to hear the truth, even from an erring brother. You have no right to go outside the range at least of respectable men, to place your affections and bestow your beauty and religion on a particularly bad man--a criminal indeed--one already fled from this community, and under circ.u.mstances of the greatest suspicion. I mean Andrew Zane!"
"Hus.h.!.+" exclaimed Agnes; "perhaps he is dead."
A short and awkward quiet succeeded, broken by young Van de Lear's interruption at last:
"Aggy, I don't know but it is the best thing. Is it so?"
"For shame, sir!"
"He wouldn't have come to any good. I know him well. We went to school together here in Kensington. Under a light and agreeable exterior he concealed an obstinacy almost devilish. All the tricks and daredevil feats we heard of, he was at the head of them. After he grew up his eyes fell on you. For a time he was soberer. Then, perceiving that you were also his father's choice, he conspired against his father, repeatedly absconded, and gave that father great trouble to find and return him to his home, and still stepped between Mr. Zane and his wishes. Was that the part of a grateful and obedient son?"
Not a word was returned by Agnes Wilt.
"How ill-advised," continued Calvin Van de Lear, "was your weakness during that behavior! Do you know what the tattle of all Kensington is?
That you favored both the father and the son! That you declined the son only because his father might disinherit him, and put off the father because the son would have the longer enjoyment of his property! I have defended you everywhere on these charges. They say even more, _Miss_ Agnes--if you prefer it--that the murder of the father was not committed by Andrew Zane without an instigator, perhaps an accessory."
The voice of Agnes was heard in hasty and anxious imploration:
"For pity's sake, say no more. Be silent. Am I not bowed and wretched enough?"
She came hastily to the fissure of the door and looked in, because Duff Salter just then sneezed tremendously:
"Jericho-o-o-o! Jer-ry-cho-o-o!"
Podge Byerly reappeared with a pack of cards and shuffled them before Duff Salter's face.
They sat down and played a game of euchre for a cent a point, the tablets at hand between them to write whatever was mindful. Duff Salter was the best player.
"I believe," wrote Podge, "that all Western men are gamblers. Are you?"
He wrote, to her astonishment,
"I was."
"Wasn't it a sin?"
"Not there."
"I thought gambling was a sin everywhere?"
"It is everywhere done," wrote Duff Salter. "You are a gambler."
"That's a fib."
"You risk your heart, capturing another's."
"My heart is gone," added Podge, blus.h.i.+ng.
"What's his name?" wrote Duff Salter.
"That's telling."
Again the voices of the two people in the front parlor broke on Podge's ear:
"You must leave me, Mr. Van de Lear. You do not know the pain and wrong you are doing me."
"Agnes, I came to say I loved you. Your beauty has almost maddened me for years. Your resistance would give me anger if I had not hope left. I know you loved me once."
"Sir, it is impossible; it is cruel."
"Cruel to love you?" repeated the divinity student. "Come now, that's absurd! No woman is annoyed by an offer. I swear I love you reverently.
I can put you at the head of this society--the wife of a clergyman. Busy tongues shall be stilled at your coming and going, and the shadow of this late tragedy will no more plague your reputation, protected in the bosom of the church and nestled in mine."
Sounds of a slight struggle were heard, as if the amorous young priest were trying to embrace Agnes.
Podge arose, listening.
The face of Duff Salter was stolid, and unconscious of anything but the game of cards.
"I tell you, sir!" exclaimed Agnes, "that your attentions are offensive.
Will you force me to insult you?"
"Oh! that's all put on, my subtle beauty. You are not alarmed by these delicate endearments. Give me a kiss!"
"Calvin Van de Lear, you are a hypocrite. The gentleman you have slandered to win my favor is as dear to me as you are repulsive. Nay, sir, I'll teach you good behavior!"
She threw open the folding-doors just as Duff Salter had come to a terrific sneeze.
"Jericho! Jericho! Jer-rick-co-o-o-oh!"
Looking in with bold suavity, Calvin Van de Lear made a bow and took up his hat.
"Good-night," he said, "most reputable ladies, two of a kind!"
"I think," wrote Duff Salter frigidly, as the young man slammed the door behind him, "that we'll make a pitcher of port sangaree and have a little gla.s.s before we go to bed. We will all three take a hand at cards. What shall we play?"
"Euchre--cut-throat!" exclaimed Podge Byerly, rather explosively.