The Prodigal Girl - Grace Livingston Hill - E-Book

The Prodigal Girl E-Book

Grace Livingston Hill

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Beschreibung

Betty Thornton knew what she wanted, and it wasn’t her father’s boring lifestyle. So when Betty’s father insists on moving the family to a farm in Vermont, she turns to dashing Dudley Weston—and his promises of excitement and marriage—as the answer to her problems. Then, through a terrifying chain of events, Betty finds herself abandoned in a snowstorm! Now her only hope for survival is a stranger… but can she trust him?

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Grace Livingston Hill

THE PRODIGAL GIRL

Copyright

First published in 1929

Copyright © 2019 Classica Libris

Chapter 1

1920s, Briardale, Pennsylvania

As soon as the letter came that practically promised the contract for which he had been bending all his energies for the past six months, Chester Thornton sat back in his chair and let his mind relax.

For the first time in a year he took a deep breath without a tremble of anxiety at its finish. Now he could look things in the face and know that instead of a gradually increasing deficit there would be a good profit. This new connection would mean the backing of half a dozen of the best firms in the country; it would mean prestige and widening interests, unlimited credit and respect. It spelled success in large letters and filled him with an ecstasy such as he had not known since he was a care-free boy and went fishing.

He stared across at the file cabinets unseeingly and tried to think what it would mean to his home and family! Why, they could even buy a new house, a palatial place up on the Heights, and choose their own place in the world. In three or four years the firm would be one of the wealthiest in its line in the country; they might even open up a foreign office!

He drew himself sharply back from daydreams into the present. It would mean right now that he could do a lot of things that had needed to be done for a long time, little repairs to the house, not extensive of course, if they would be moving in a year or so, but enough to put things shipshape and livable again until they could look about them and choose just the home that they wanted. They might have to build. Why, of course they would build, that was the idea—build, and have just what they wanted! And in the meantime, whatever he had to do to their present home would only enhance its value for sale.

Then, too, Christmas was coming in a few weeks!

For the first time in his life he would be able to purchase real Christmas presents, gifts that were worth something and not just scrimped necessities. He really had never enjoyed giving Betty that wristwatch, platinum though it was, and set with some good little diamonds, because he had to lie awake so many nights planning just how he could make up for having spent that money on it. But Betty was the dearest daughter in the world; she deserved all that he could give her. Then his thoughts turned to Eleanor, and his soul swelled with joy; now he could buy that string of pearls he had wanted for so many years to give her and never dared. It wasn’t expensive as those things went, not the one he wanted, very simple and lovely, not a long string, for Eleanor liked quiet things.

A lover-like smile hovered over his lips for an instant at the thought of the gentle-faced woman who was his wife. Then his released ambitions leaped forward.

Well, Betty could have the car now that she had been coaxing for for over a year. Of course she was a little young for a car, only a trifle over seventeen, but all her friends had them, and it would relieve the situation for Eleanor wonderfully if she could have the family car free for herself and not have it continually off with Betty and her friends.

Of course Chris would be upset over Betty having a car, but Chris could wait another year or two. A boy wasn’t really fit to own a car till college age, though of course some of them did. But there were other things for Chris, and his time would come later. And there was Jane and the twins! Oh, it would be rare to buy Christ mas gifts this year with no grim ghost of want hovering behind to restrain his every impulse!

Thornton left the office at three o’clock that afternoon for the day. Things were in good shape, and he really could not hold himself down to work; he felt so happy. It seemed as if he must do something about it.

Acting on this desire, he went at once to the showrooms of the new Mermaid Eight. If he was going to get that car for Betty by Christmas it was high time he was looking into the matter. It ought to be ordered at once.

The Mermaid Eight proved to be far more fascinating than he had been told, and it was almost time for the five-thirty train to leave the station when he came puffing into the last car and dropped into a seat by the door.

He sank with a sense of satisfaction into a comfortable position, cast a quick, furtive glance around hoping there were none of his close acquaintances near to whom he must talk, and unfurled the newspaper, which he had bought from habit as he dashed past the newsstand. He did not want to talk to anyone just now. He wanted to enjoy this new sense of freedom from care and think over his afternoon’s experience.

Which one of those three Mermaid Eights would Betty rather have? The yellow one was out of the question of course, entirely too loud for a young girl. Perhaps it would be better to let her choose but no, that would spoil the joy of the surprise. This first real gift that was really worth anything he would choose just as he wanted it to be.

And he knew in his heart that the deep rich green like the heart of the woods would be his choice. Of course the blue was good, too, but blue was so common now. No, that green one with the sporty little gray top and the nickel trimmings was distinguished enough for any girl. Yes, he would get the green one. Perhaps he would not even tell Eleanor about it. He would just surprise them all.

His gaze wandered from the newspaper, which he was not reading, to the window with its lights flashing past. How beautiful it was out there with the river far below surrounded by lights clustering along its banks, little red lights like red berries on the barges tied up at the empty wharfs. Smoke billowing softly, cloudlike from the tall stacks of factories, more lights in clusters, stars above, stars below. Why, how beautiful it was! What a world to live in anyway, when even the riverbank down by a factory could appear beautiful at night. Someone ought to write a poem about it. The beauty of a city at night. Perhaps someone had. Perhaps others had noticed this beauty; he never had. It took an easy mind to just sit down and see beauty. He must remember this and get more time to look around him, see the beauty in the world before he got old!

It certainly was good to feel that great load of anxiety gone that he had carried now for ten years. Success in sight and writ large! His heart swelled gratefully.

It was then that the words struck him. They hurled around his protective newspaper and got him by the throat like so many demons taking him unawares to destroy him.

He had heard those two young voices; boyish, silly, vacuous, he had unconsciously labeled them when their conversation reached his averted consciousness. He had heard without knowing what they were saying, until suddenly his daughter’s name was mentioned followed by a loud, nasty laugh, the kind of a laugh a demon from the pit might give after a dastardly deed of depredation.

Instantly the father’s senses were alert, stung into horror, unable to believe his ears. If the two youths who were so frankly talking over their conquests could have seen his face, could have known who was sitting behind them listening to their depraved confidences, they would have slung themselves with little delay from his earshot. But in cheerful ignorance of his proximity, and with confident casualness, they proceeded, in no hushed voices, boastfully comparing experiences and girls!

“Little rats! Little dirty rats! Vile dirty devils!” A voice from Thornton’s soul away off in the distance seemed to be crying, “Throttle them! Choke them! Rub their faces in the dust of the earth! Strangle them! Pull out their tongues by the roots! Exterminate them!” The words seemed to be tumbling over and over in his brain, while his heart turned cold with horror and anger, and his brain seethed with helpless phrases. For a moment he knew how a murderer felt. He must kill them. Of course he must kill those vile creatures who had presumed to speak of his upright, precious daughter in such vilely intimate terms.

And yet when he tried to throw down the paper and rise, his hands trembled and had no power to release the sheet from his hold! And the power was gone from his feet! He could not move his eyes to see those two who were blaspheming his child in his hearing. An icy hand had his throat by a terrible grip, and something was binding his heart with fearful pressure so that it seemed as if the very veins in his temples would burst. Was he having a stroke? Was this paralysis that held him hand and foot from dragging those low-lived youths the length of the car and flinging them from the platform into a passing field?

Gradually his heart beat more steadily, and he could think a little. His eyes, which had been staring so blindly, began to see the larger letters on the sheet before him, although he did not comprehend their meaning. He was groping, reaching out, trying to steady himself. Perhaps he had been overdoing lately. Those blinding headaches to which he had been subject the last few months were a result of overwork and worry, and now that the pressure was relieved somewhat he was feeling a reaction. Surely he must have only fancied that he heard those awful words, the loathsome laughs that were like crawling serpents coming toward him, menacing the one he held so dear. What had they said anyway? He recalled the words, forced himself to bear again the shock of their meaning. Surely, surely they were lying! Boasting to one another! Trying to outdo one another, the dirty little vermin! Surely, they only chose his daughter’s name to accompany such boasts because she was so high, so pure, so far above any possibility of a breath touching her reputation that the boast was all the greater! Of course it could not be true—his daughter! Betty! Why, little Betty! They must be made to suffer for this! It was not true! He must do something about it, though! He must take them out when the train stopped, take them somewhere perhaps to the garage and put them through a grilling and then wallop them till they were sick. Would that be sufficient for such a hellish offense? He must control himself. He must remember his daughter’s fair name. He must not bring her into the public eye by attacking the criminals here in public. He must put a hold upon himself.

He was startled at the strength of the fury that had been unleashed within him— righteous fury!

Yet there he sat frozen in his seat, and those boastful voices were speaking further of his Betty, setting forth her personal charms with a frankness that was more than revolting, comparing her exquisite intimate loveliness to that of some other girl whom they called Judy! Why did he not reach forward now and grip that boy by the throat? Call the conductor and have him arrested! What was it that held him this way from making a single move?

Was it? Could it be that he was afraid lest Betty? No! But had Betty been indiscreet? Could she have allowed intimacies without realizing, meaning to? Innocently of course. Oh, no—impossible! His Betty! But yes, that must be what held him back!

He thought of her exquisite rose-leaf body as a baby lying softly in the white blanket when he and Eleanor had looked at her alone together for the first time, almost to worship her, so fresh and sweet she was from God, like a bud dropped down to earth from heaven. It had seemed a sanctuary just to stand and look at her. Her father’s heart had turned to God more closely at that moment than ever before, when he realized that God had trusted him with such a flower of perfect life to love and guide. It had made him feel that he must somehow purify his own life to be worthy of so great a trust. And through the years when she had been growing up he had always felt this more or less whenever he looked at her glowing beauty. He felt almost like worshipping her, giving her reverence for her exquisite purity and beauty.

And now, these swine dared to joke about her charms as if—

He paused and stared about him as the train came to an abrupt halt at his home station, and passengers arose all about him swarming out.

He let his paper fall from his numb fingers and tried to stand upon his feet. The two youths in front of him were noisily dragging one another up, laughing irresponsibly. The one who had spoken those first terrible words caught the falling newspaper and returned it to Thornton’s nerveless hand. The father lifted his stricken eyes and recognized the youth as the son of a neighbor, a classmate of Betty’s in high school. Thornton’s face was ashen, but the boy was not looking at him. He was still employed in a whispered line of jokes with his companion, his eyes following a girl who had just come down the aisle. The little swine! He had not even known that the father of Betty had heard what he had said! Would he have cared if he had noticed?

The stricken father stood there dazed, filled with loathing of life, trying to think what he should do. He seemed to lack the power to move out of the car. Yet he knew that when all the others were out he must get out quickly and go after those boys and—What should he do? What could he do that he would not have to explain and thus bring his Betty into disgrace! Oh, he understood now why men sometimes became murderers!

But when he had gone out to the platform and the train had passed on its way, he seemed dazed by the dark. He tried to look around for those boys, but they were gone. Before long everyone else was gone, too, and he was left standing alone on that platform with the rows of lights and the sound of the station agent slamming the late baggage into the baggage room, getting ready for the next train down to the city.

He dragged his heavy feet across the track. He had the feeling his heart was a great burden that he had to carry home and that his feet were too frail for the task. His head, too, bothered him. He could not think. He could only hear those awful words about his Betty beat over and over in his brain, and he could not decide what to do. Should he go to Dudley Weston’s house, ask for Mr. Weston senior, and demand—What should he demand? What was adequate for a young girl’s name and intimate sweetness defamed even in thought?

He knew of course that there were stories being told about the frankness of youth, the lengths to which they would go, the orgies, the debaucheries—But these were not young people like his own. Such a thing could never touch his family, reared in refinement, guarded and taught the right from babyhood with such a home and such a mother! No, of course not! Betty would never allow intimacies! And yet these boys had dared—Had said that she—

He would get to that point and every time would halt and recall the boy’s words, phrases what Betty had said, what Betty had—Oh, God! Could there be any punishment for desecration like that?

Oh, yes, the boys and girls had stolen kisses when he was young, and thought it smart, had held hands on a sleigh ride or a hayride, or coming home in the moonlight. But nothing like this!

Petting parties! Was that what they meant when they mentioned in the papers and magazines the doings of young people? And referred to them lightly! The writers could not have understood! Oh, it could not be that a thing like this, a loathsome cancer, could steal into the heart and life of a rose of a girl like his Betty and defame it!

Yet all the while in the back of his mind was that fear growing as he dragged his heavy feet along the path, the fear that Betty had inadvertently been a party to the whole thing. Giddy and pretty, fun loving, daring, she might have led her companions on unwittingly He got no further than that. Yet it was something that might bring shame on her sweet self if brought to the light of inquiry, and what was he to do?

He groaned aloud so that a passerby hurrying down to the next train turned and looked after him and wondered if he ought to offer help.

And now the necessity for getting home and seeing Betty rose within him like a frenzy. One look at her sweet flower face would of course dispel these groundless fears and give him strength to go out and bring vengeance on her maligners. He felt sure that all he needed to set his spirit right and give it the accustomed strength to act was to look in his Betty’s eyes and see her sweet, pure smile. His little daughter Betty!

And then he came within sight of his home, a comely stone dwelling with welcoming windows set with shaded lamps and a glow of firelight in the cheerless night.

He paused a moment to look at it all once more and think how dear it was before he stepped within and learned the truth. Before its charm could be shadowed by anything that could sadden the beautiful life they had lived within. Why had he thought they needed another home? This one had been so gracious, so wonderful, so satisfying. Even if he came to have millions, why should he change such a home as this for the fairest mansion earth could offer?

There was Eleanor standing by the fire, one foot resting on the fender, and Doris hanging on her mother’s arm. Jane was playing something on the piano, a dashing little jazzy melody that rang out cheerily through the closed window. Chris was seated in the window reading the sports page of the evening paper, and John was working away in the corner with his radio. Thornton saw all this as he stepped up on the porch and hungrily looked in the window. His home! Why hadn’t he been more mindful, more grateful for having such a home?

And they were all waiting for him. He must be very late! It seemed ages since he had got off the train and started to walk home. He could see through the open door beyond that the table was ready. The pantry swing door opened a crack, and the maid looked in crossly and out again.

But where was Betty?

His heart contracted sharply, and he hastened to open the door and step within to dispel that ghost of fear again.

Betty was just coming down the stairs as he closed the door and looked around. She was dressed in a little rosy taffeta, slim and straight to her narrow waist and then hooped on the hips and flaring out like the petals of a lovely flower. Her exquisite head with its sleek gold cap of close-cut shining curls was tilted delicately as if she knew her power, and her slim, white lovely arms and neck gleamed against the darkness of the staircase as if they were also of the texture of the rose. She poised on her little high-heeled silver shoes, fussing with a spray of silk roses on her shoulder and called crossly to her father where he stood staring by the door.

“Well, is that you, Chester, come at last? You better cut this out! I’ve got to go out this evening, and I can’t be kept waiting all hours! We were just going to eat without you! I didn’t see any sense myself waiting all this time. Come on, Eleanor, he’s here at last, and you better give him a dose of medicine. He looks like a stewed prune. Do get a hustle on, I can’t wait all night!”

Chapter 2

The lovely little daughter pirouetted lightly on the lower step of the stair till the light over her head showed full upon her loveliness, accentuated here and there—a touch of carmine on the pouting imperious little mouth; a soft blush on the cheek that he had always called her lovely complexion; a darkening of lash and brow; a shadow under the great blue eyes that somehow wore a dashing look of boldness and impertinence tonight that he had never seen before. It seemed that the hall light was cruel. Those overhead lights were always severe. When she got out to the table he would see her as she really was, and then this horrible fear that was gripping his heart now so that he could scarcely breathe would leave him forever. Just let him get a good look into her dear eyes and see her smile. He wished she wouldn’t call him Chester in that pert tone. It didn’t sound respectful. When she had first taken it up playfully it had been a joke, but tonight—well—tonight it hurt!

The ghost stepped nearer and gripped him by the throat. He must drive this awful thing away. He must get to the dining room quickly! Perhaps he was going to be sick! He must swallow a cup of coffee. That would make it all right, of course. There was nothing in all this. Of course there was nothing at all—nothing at all!

Seated at the table, he passed his hand over his eyes and looked about on them all, trying to focus his eyes on Betty’s petulant face. It was plain that Betty was displeased with him. Yet somehow her face did not look quite so disturbing here as it had under the weird light of the hall chandelier. It was better blended, less suggestive of paint and powder. Of course he was quite accustomed to the ever-present powder puff that all girls nowadays played with in public, but it had never entered his head that his daughter wore anything like what people called “makeup.” That was low and common to his thinking, and quite unflattering for a girl of respectable family.

Chris broke in upon his thoughts with a sudden request for money.

The father tried to summon a natural voice:

“Why, Chris, you had your usual allowance, and it is only ten days into the month. What do you want of more money?” he asked, feeling that his voice sounded very far away and not at all decided. His mind really was on Betty.

But Chris seemed almost to resent his query:

“Well, I want it!” he said crisply, as if his father had no right to ask the question.

“What’s the matter with your allowance? You’ll have to give an explanation. What have you done with it?”

“He–he–he’s lost it playin’ pool!” chimed in Johnny joyously with a grin of triumph toward his older brother.

“Shut up! You infant! You don’t know what you’re talking about!” said Chris angrily.

“I do so! I was lookin’ in Shark’s window with Bill Lafferty when you lost. I heard Skinny Rector tell you he’s goin’ ta tell our dad if you didn’t pay up tanight!”

Chris shoved his chair back noisily.

“Aw, baloney! Dad if you’re gonta listen to an infant, I’m done! Keep yer money. There’s plenty of places I can get money if you won’t give me what I want! Other boys don’t get this kinda treatment in their homes—want ta know every nosey little thing and listen to an infant!”

He complained all the way through the hall in a loud voice, and the front door slammed on his final word.

The family sat in a perturbed silence for an instant till the mother broke it in a worried voice that had a hidden sob in its texture.

“He hasn’t eaten a mouthful, Chester.”

“Well, what can you expect?” reproached Betty. “You can’t treat a young man as if he were a three-year-old. If Chester wants Chrissie to stay at home, he’ll have to shell out a little more liberally from now on. Chrissie’s almost grown up and isn’t allowed anything compared to other boys. Why, we’re the only two in our set that haven’t got cars to come to school with, and I think it’s scabby! I’m getting ashamed to go out of the house.”

“That’ll be about all from you, Betty!” said her father in a cold voice that was so new to him that he felt frightened at it. Was he actually talking to his little Betty this way?

“On second thought, you needn’t go out anymore until we’ve had a thorough understanding on this subject and a few others,” he added.

Betty stared at him in astonishment for an instant and then burst into a mocking laugh:

“Try and do it!” she sneered. “How do you get that way, Chet? It isn’t in the least agreeable.”

“Now Betty,” began her mother anxiously, “don’t hurt your father. You know he didn’t mean—”

“He better not!” said Betty imperiously.

“We gotta boy in our school ut says ya don’t havta obey parunts,” broke forth ten-year-old John. “He says, ‘What they gotta do about it?’ He says they ain’t got any more right ta say what ya shall do an’ what ya shan’t ’n we have. He says we all got the same rights—”

“John, leave the room this minute!” said his father sternly.

Johnny looked up aghast, his well-loaded fork halfway to his lips. He was not used to hearing his father speak like that.

“Go!” said Thornton.

Johnny hastily enveloped the forkful.

“But I was just gonta tell you about the club we got. It’s called ‘Junior Radicals.’ We—”

“Johnny, your mouth is too full to talk,” pleaded the distressed mother.

“Go!” There was something in his father’s voice that Johnny Thornton had never heard before. He made sure of another forkful of chicken stuffing and reached for a second hot biscuit as he rose reluctantly from his chair, but his father’s hand came out in a grip like a vise and rendered his small sinewy wrist utterly useless. The biscuit dropped from his nerveless fingers dully on the tablecloth, and Johnny Thornton walked hastily toward the door, a little faster than his feet could quite keep up, propelled by a power outside his own volition. He had never known his father could be so tall and strong.

“Great cats!” remarked Betty contemptuously as the dining room door closed sharply. “Chester must be crazy! I never knew him to be so off his feed before! I’m going to get out of the picture before anything more happens. Tra-la-Eleanor. I wish you joy! You better beat it yourself till the weather clears.”

“But Betty! Your father said—” began Mrs. Thornton.

But Betty was gone out through the kitchen and up the back stairs to her room. Her closing remark as she sped through the swing door into the pantry was:

“Bilge!”

The door upstairs into Johnny’s room was heard to close firmly and a key to turn in the lock. Then Thornton’s steps came slowly, unsteadily down, almost haltingly, his wife thought. Could Chester have been drinking? But no, of course not. He hated the stuff. He never touched it. It must be business. She ought to have told Betty to be more considerate.

When he opened the dining room door again his face was white as a sheet and his eyes were staring ahead as if he saw a ghost. He marched sternly to his seat and sat down, but he made no attempt whatever to eat. Instead he looked around his depleted dinner table.

“Where is Betty?” he asked in a voice that was husky with feeling.

“Why, I think she’s gone up to her room, dear,” said his wife placatingly.

Thornton’s face did not relax, and Jane who had been biding her time silently, mindful of the fig pudding, which was her favorite dessert, decided to leave while the going was good. But when she slid stealthily from her seat to go out, her father’s voice recalled her.

“Sit down!” he said severely. “And don’t leave the table until dinner is finished.”

Jane stuck up her chin indignantly:

“I was just going up to my room,” she said defiantly. “I’ve got some ’mportant studying to do.”

“Sit down!” thundered her father uncompromisingly.

Jane slid into her seat sullenly.

Mrs. Thornton looked at her husband almost tearfully and explained in a low voice to the sulky girl:

“Daddy comes home tired out and doesn’t want to be worried. He isn’t feeling well, I’m sure. He wants it to be quiet and orderly and not everybody jumping up and running out—”

“He went out himself,” said Jane impertinently.

“Hush!” said the mother with a fearful glance at her husband. But little Doris diverted the attention suddenly, contributing her bit to the conversation, having been turning over her mind for a suitable topic ever since her brother’s summary exit. It seemed the dramatic moment for her to enter the limelight also.

“We got a new book in school today. Our teacher read it to us. It’s a story about a lady that lived in a tree and could do things with her toes just as well as with her hands. And by ’im by she got to be a real lady and came down outta the tree and lived in a house. She was one of our aunt’s sisters, the teacher said.”

“You mean ancestors,” corrected Jane, coming out of her sulks with a giggle to correct the baby of the family.

“No, aunt’s sisters!” insisted Doris. “She ’estinctly said aunt’s sisters.”

“What does all this mean, Eleanor?” said Thornton, looking at his wife. “Do you mean they are stuffing that kind of bosh down babies? In school?”

“It’s her science class,” asserted Jane importantly. “They’re just starting to learn about how the earth began, all gases and things you know, and how everything developed of itself, and then animals came, and some of ’em turned into men. We had it all two years ago, but now they’re beginning it in the first grade.”

“What utter nonsense!” said Thornton angrily. “It’s all well enough for some highbrows to think they believe in evolution if they want to, but they have no right to stuff it down children’s throats, not my children, anyway. And in the public school. Eleanor, haven’t you taught these children any of the Bible?”

“Why, of course, Chester,” quavered his wife soothingly. “They had all the Bible stories read to them. You know about Adam and Eve, darling. Why, Jane you got a prize once in Sunday school for telling the story of creation. How can you let Daddy think that you don’t know—”

“Oh, of course I remember all that, Mud,” said the thirteen-year-old, “but that’s all out of date. Didn’t you know, simply nobody believes the Bible anymore? My teacher said the other day, simply nobody that really knows anything believes it anymore. She said there were some places in the New Testament that were true to history, but the rest was all fanciful, kind of like legends and things, especially all that about Adam and Eve. It was just like mythology, you know. Didn’t you and Daddy know that? I suppose you haven’t been paying attention to what went on since you stopped school, you know, but my teacher says almost nothing in the Bible is true anymore. It isn’t scientific! Why, even the children in the elementary school know that!”

“That will do!” thundered Thornton furiously. “Eleanor, this is unspeakable! Why haven’t you known what kind of bosh our children were being taught? Where are the rest of them? I want to sift this matter out and know just where we stand! This is awful! Send for them all to come back! I want to see them right away.”

Mrs. Thornton looked distressed. She had been listening to Betty’s tiptoeing feet overhead, and now she knew they had ceased. She was even sure she had heard the creak of the back stairs and the opening of the kitchen door. Therefore she stalled:

“Suppose we go away from the table, anyway, Chester,” she suggested, “so that the maid can clear away. You’ve scarcely eaten a thing. Jane, you and Doris take your pudding up to the sitting room while your father finishes. He is all tired out and ought not to be disturbed while he eats. Take another cup of coffee, Chester, dear. Your nerves are all worn out. You must have had a hard day today. I’m afraid things haven’t gone as well as you hoped at the office. But never mind, dear! Don’t let it worry you. Whatever comes, we’ve got each other. Remember that and be thankful.”

“Got each other!” exclaimed Chester strickenly. “But have we?”

“Of course we have,” cheered his wife. “Now dear, drink that hot coffee and you’ll feel better. Come, and then we’ll go into the library and you’ll lie on the couch and tell me all about it. Then by and by when you are rested I’ll call the children and you can talk to them, or perhaps tomorrow morning. You know you are in no frame of mind to talk calmly to them, and in the classes I’ve been attending about child rearing they say it is simply fatal to talk excitedly to a child, that it arouses antagonism, and that really is the worst thing we can do. You know really they are human beings like ourselves and have to be given a chance to express themselves. They won’t stand for radical discipline such as you and I passed through. Really Chester, the children of today are quite, quite different from a few years ago. You know things have changed, and young people have developed. There is a more independent attitude—”

“Stop!” cried Thornton. “Stop right there! Eleanor, if you have swallowed that rot whole and are going to take that attitude I shall go mad. Express themselves! I feel as if the whole universe has gone crazy.”

“But Chester, dear, you are overwrought—!”

“I should say I am overwrought. Eleanor, you don’t know what you are talking about. Listen!”

“Well, drink your coffee,” she said soothingly. “At least drink your coffee before I ring for Hetty, and then we’ll go into the other room and you shall tell me everything. You poor dear, I’m afraid you are going to be sick!”

“I don’t want any coffee! I can’t eat! I tell you, Eleanor, I must see the children! I must see Betty first! No, I can’t tell you anything till I have a talk with Betty. It is too dreadful! I want to understand the whole thing better before I tell you. Come, quick! Get Betty. I must see her at once.”

She tried to persuade him to lie on the couch and let her cover him up before she called her daughter. She poked the fire into a blaze and stalled for time by turning the hall light out so it would not shine in his eyes, but he pranced back and forth and refused to even sit down.

So at length she went upstairs to call Betty.

But Betty’s room was a whirlpool of garments: little silk doodads, trailing negligees, powder puffs, with an eddy of diminutive high-heeled shoes in one corner and a strapped pile of schoolbooks submerged in a chair under a torn evening frock. But no Betty!

It was as her mother had expected. Betty had made good her escape.

Mrs. Thornton passed through the confusion with deft hands, picking up and straightening as she went, hanging the flimsy little inadequate rags her daughter called clothing on the hooks in her closet, sweeping the clutter of ridiculous shoes into a quiet bag on the door, smoothing the bed, tidying the bureau. She stalled again for time. If only Chester would fall asleep he would be more reasonable. He would not blame the children. Something terrible must have happened in the business world that he should come home like this. He was usually so fond of the children, so interested in all that they had to tell about school life, so proud of Betty’s looks, and Jane’s music.

Probably the deal that he had hoped for so long had fallen through, and she knew that that meant a great loss of money. But he would pull out of it. He always did. And he was yet a vigorous man, young for his years, and keen in business ability, beloved and respected. All would be right. All she had to do was to soothe him now for a little while. If he would only fall asleep—

She heard his voice calling her impatiently:

“Where is Betty? Why doesn’t she come down at once?”

The mother hastened down with a placating air:

“Chester, I’m afraid she’s gone, but she ought to be back before very late. Suppose you just lie down here and tell me all about it. You know that always makes things better—”

But he interrupted her:

“Gone? Where has she gone!” There was alarm in his voice and in the startled eyes he turned on her.

“Why, you see, Chester, she had plans this evening—”

“Yes, I believe she told me so,” he shouted, “but I told her at the table that she was to stay at home!”

“Hush, Chester, the maids will hear you! Let me explain. You see, Chester, she really couldn’t stay at home. It was an engagement of two weeks standing. She had promised!”

“Couldn’t!” he said, his voice still loud with alarm and excitement. “Couldn’t obey her father? Well, I’d like to know why not?”

“Why, because there were other people involved. Chester, you really didn’t give her any chance to explain, you know, and it was getting late. You remember you kept us waiting for dinner—”

“Involved? Who else was involved? Where has my daughter gone? I want to understand this thing perfectly. Where is Betty?”

“Why, Chester!” said his wife, aghast. She had not seen her husband so roused in years. He must be losing his mind.

“Listen, dear, she has only gone to a little high school dance. She’ll probably be home before long now. They don’t usually stay very late.”

“But why should that be more important than obeying her father?”

“Because she had promised to go with one of the boys, one of her classmates, and she couldn’t leave him without a partner.”

He wheeled on her.

“Who has she gone with?”

“Why, Chester, how strangely you act! Just one of the boys she has known all her life.”

“WHO?”

“Only Dudley Weston, our neighbor,” said the mother complacently, sure that the name would cool her husband’s heated temper. But his eyes fairly blazed.

“Dudley Weston!” he cried, and his voice was like a moan. “That little viper!”

“Why, Chester! Now I’m sure you must have a fever or something. It is only yesterday you told me he was growing into a fine manly fellow and said how handsome he was as he went down the street.”

The man groaned.

“Well, I don’t think so anymore. Betty might as well have gone with the devil from hell.”

“Now, Chester, you are swearing! I never heard you swear before. Oh, what shall I do?”

But he paid no heed to her words. He was searching behind the hall table for his hat that had fallen on the floor.

“Where is that dance?” asked Betty’s father.

“It is at the high school hall,” said Mrs. Thornton. “Oh, Chester! What are you going to do? You are not going after her? You are not going in public to mortify our daughter! Our little Betty! Oh, Chester! She will never forgive you! She won’t come! I’m sure she won’t come. She is very angry at you already. If you do a thing like that you will alienate her forever. Chester, you mustn’t!”

She was crying now, great tears rolling down her cheeks, though she seemed unaware of them. She caught hold of his coat and held him with all her slender strength.

Something in her frail sweetness and agony touched him even in his wrought-up state. He looked down at her, and for a moment his eyes softened with deep pity and tenderness.

“Listen, Eleanor, you don’t understand. You must trust me in this. I know what I’m about. And our Betty is in terrible danger. That boy is rotten! I heard him talking tonight in the train! About our Betty! Saying unspeakable, loathsome things about her! Oh, I would have saved you this if possible. He was boasting—I can’t tell you all, not now anyway, there isn’t time. I must get Betty before it is too late. Where is Jane? Call Jane. I want her to stay with you. Jane!”

He sprang up the stairs and flung her door wide, but there was no Jane there. He turned to his wife who had come stumbling up the stairs after him, the tears still flooding her face.

“Where is Jane?” he asked now with that strained white look about his eyes returning.

“She has just gone over to Emily Carter’s to study her lessons. She asked me if she might go. They often study together. She’ll be home by nine o’clock.”

He glanced at his watch.

“Nine o’clock! Why, it’s past nine now! I’ll just step around and bring her back. I don’t like her running around the streets at this hour of the night even a block. She’s too young, and there are too many devils around. Besides, I want her to stay with you.”

Then with sudden tenderness he stooped and kissed her.

“Don’t cry, Eleanor. I didn’t mean to be harsh. But you didn’t understand. It was pretty bad and shook me a good deal, but we’ll pull out of this somehow.”

Then he was gone out into the night, leaving his wife with the worst alarm in her heart she had had in all the years of her married life. What would Betty do now? And what might not Chester do, when he found that Betty would not obey him in public? She recalled all the recent lectures on child rearing and sat weakly down on the lower step of the stairs and wept again.

Then out from the little front room near the linen closet at the end of the hall where Johnny had his haunts there arose a raucous voice singing from Johnny’s radio:

“I’m a little boy,

And I love a little girl!”

And the mother on the stairs wept and wondered what the lecturer would tell her to do under the circumstances.

Chapter 3

The Carters lived halfway down the next block.

Thornton reflected that he had better take the car to save time. He could explain to Jane on the way home that her mother was feeling worried about something, and he wanted her to stay up with her till he returned. Then he could drop her at the door and drive right on to the high school.

But when he stopped at the Carters’ door he was surprised to find the house all dark, both upstairs and down. Probably the children were up in some back sitting room studying, or in Emily’s bedroom. He frowned anxiously as he rang the bell and waited impatiently. It seemed terrible to think that Betty had gone off with that unspeakable boy! And how was he to go about it to explain it to her? He would probably have to let her mother do it. It would be such a humiliation for his delicate-mind- Betty to hear the foul words that had been used about her. Perhaps a hint from her mother would be sufficient without having to humble her by having her father tell his awful experience. That would have to be her mother’s part. His was to deal with the lad.

He brought his mind back from his unhappy reflections to ring the doorbell again. Surely these people had not retired at half past nine! And if so, what had become of Jane?

He rang a third time, this time prolonging the pressure until he could hear the distant whir of the bell from the front steps.

A window was pushed up slowly above his head, and a voice called casually.

“Who down dar? What you-all want? Ain’t nobuddy hum ’cept jes me an’ the baby.”

“I’m Mr. Thornton,” explained Chester. “I’ve come for my daughter, Jane. Won’t you tell her to come right down? I’m in a hurry.”

“Her ain’t hyear no moh! Her ’n’ Em’ly went out som’ers. Said they wuz goin’ down t’ the drugsto’ at the cohneh fer a soda. Reckum they’ll return d’reckly. But you cawn’t nevvah tell. Mistah Cahteh an’ his wife don’ gon’ ta town ta the thee-a-tre, an’ Em’ly she gene’lly does as she please when dey out. I can’t be bothahd! You jes’ try the drugsto’ ef yoh wants yoh gal in a hurry. Mebbe yoh find her! I gotta go back. The baby’s cryin’!”

The window went down with a slam.

A sudden sense of fury descended upon Chester Thornton. Why did all these things have to happen to him at once! Just when things were looking up and everything was hopeful! Here was life in a terrible mess! Little Jane, too! Just a baby! Wandering around the streets at night with another child. He never did like those Carters. They were common! Common! That’s what they were! Or the girl would know better than to take another child out alone at night.

He climbed wrathfully into the car and stepped furiously on the gas, startling a furtive cat into a streak of shadow.

Now, where should he look for Jane in case she was not at the drugstore? But perhaps Jane had already gone home. Yes, of course, that was it. Jane wouldn’t go to corner drugstores alone at night. Jane knew she was to go home. That was the explanation. She had been told to return at nine o’clock. She was not common herself, even if she did like to go sometimes with a common child. Probably it was not in the least necessary for him to hunt further; of course she had gone home, and he had missed her in the dark. Nevertheless, now that he was here he would make sure.

He parked his car hastily in front of the brightly lighted store, and leaving the engine going he sprang out to look in the window.

There was a crowd in the drugstore. The soda fountain was always popular of course at this hour of the evening, even in winter. The nearby college and prep school supplied a continuous flow of patrons.

Thornton stopped at the window, lowered his head to look under a poster of a bold miss advertising a new brand of cigarettes, but the crowd inside the window was too close for him to get a good survey of the entire store. He went up the steps and flung open the door, and just as he did so the crowd parted to let out an elderly woman with a large bottle and an anxious air of haste. For an instant Thornton got a glimpse of an open space beyond the crowd, and a young delicate little face strangely familiar, whirling giddily before a circle of admiring spectators.

Almost instantly the crowd closed up again, and a noisy cheer followed. Several rough young voices called out familiarly:

“Go to it, kid!”

“Give us another one of those high kicks, Jane!”

With strange premonition Thornton pushed aside the crowd of college fellows that stood in his way and brought himself inside the circle of onlookers, unmindful of the resistance of the youths who blocked his way.

“Say, what’s your haste, old gent?” one flung up at him as he elbowed his way to the front.

And there was Jane, his little child Jane, with her short kilted skirt tucked up like a ballet girl, her delicate features aflame with excitement, a bold, abandoned challenge in her big blue eyes, her close-cropped dark curls quivering, her bare childish knees above their rolled down stockings flashing white against the dark background of the mahogany showcase. Jane, dancing in solo, to the clamor of a jazzy radio in some unseen depth of the store’s recesses. Jane, dancing for the amusement of a score of lustful-eyed youths who watched her all agog and cheered her on with none-too-delicate phraseology. Seemingly regardless, she danced on light as thistledown yet vulgarly suggestive in a dance that might have had its origin in the slums.

As her father entered upon the scene Jane was in the midst of an intricate whirl of arms and legs, white knees all mixed up with rippling skirts and flying arms, white hands fluttering, one dark lock of hair longer than the rest, waving like a crest over the pretty forehead. Her vivid little face with its forward impudent smile flashed back and forth so rapidly that for an instant Thornton did not know his own child. Then, as the shaft of bitter assurance entered his soul, she finished with several high kicks and a lazily graceful handspring, coming upright with shining eyes and glowing cheeks and a little saucy tilt of triumph, openly aware of the admiration of her audience.

The irreverent onlookers broke forth into coarse jests and cheers once more, raised neglected cigarettes, and quickly wove a blue haze of smoke about their favorite; they gathered closer about her, reaching for her with bold, intimate hands.

Suddenly they fell back and a hush came over them all. Jane had seen her father!

Jane’s delicate little features grew suddenly drawn and mature. Jane’s big dark eyes stood out in her little white face, the color ebbed away, and a kind of panic of fright spread over her face. Even the shell-pink ears, so carefully uncovered by the barber’s shears, so boyish in their bareness, were white as if they were dead. Jane stood and stared at her father, for she had never seen such a look on his face as she saw now. Not at least since the day in her babyhood when she had put her mother’s diamond ring down the sewer pipe in the street, and her father had taken her to his study and given her the soundest spanking she ever remembered to have had. Jane stood still in her tracks and watched him come, felt a sudden leadenness in her knees and hands, and wished for a nice convenient hole to open through that tessellated marble floor and let her down anywhere; she did not in the least care where.

Emily Carter, standing at the soda fountain counter with a young man almost twice her age, sucking soda through a double straw, watched him come and giggled excitedly. The crowd of college boys with a sprinkling of prep boys, away without leave to purchase cigarettes, saw the fright in their favorite’s eyes, and a long low murmur like a young menace swept among them; but Chester Thornton came on with two long strides and gripped his daughter by the arm.

Without a word he led her out, her boyish head held high, a side sweep of frightened grimace on her face turned toward her former audience.

One or two of the bolder boys tried to step in his way and protest against the removal of their entertainer, but Chester Thornton swept them aside as if they had been made of cardboard and took Jane out to the car.

“Get in!” he said sternly. His voice sounded like a knell.

Jane tried to summon a natural voice:

“I’ve left my coat and hat behind,” she said, as if it were quite a natural thing to have done in a corner drugstore at ten o’clock at night. “I’ll have to go back and get them, Daddy.” Her voice had reached almost a cheerful tone now.

“Get in!” commanded her father.

“But Daddy! It’s my best hat and coat!”

Thornton shoved his daughter forcefully into the seat and slammed the car door shut.

Jane began to cry. She was angry at herself for crying, but she could not keep the tears back. She had never seen her indulgent father act like this. It must be true, as Betty had said, that Daddy had gone crazy.

“I’m cold!” she chattered.

He paid no heed to her.

As the car turned around she saw Emily Carter come to the door to watch her with an awed, sober look; then she heard a jeering laugh ring out from one of the boys, and her face grew crimson with mortification. He had no right! Her daddy had no right!

“I’ve got to stop at Emily’s and get my books,” she said as they whirled down the block. “I’ve got very important lessons to study for tomorrow.”

“You should have thought of that before you went down to display yourself before the loafers of the town,” he said curtly.

“Why, Daddy, I only went down for a minute. Emily had to get some toothpaste her mother had sent her for this afternoon and she had forgotten, and then the boys asked me to give the dance we are going to have in our school play!”

Thornton was silent and grim, driving hard. They flashed past the dark Carter house, and Jane put a detaining hand on his arm.

“This is the house, Daddy! I really must get those books. I’m going to have to sit up late now to get done. There’s a test tomorrow—”

“You’re mistaken!” said her father crisply. “The test was tonight! And you have failed! You needn’t worry about your books. You’ll not need them anymore. You’re done with that school forever!”

“Daddy!”