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A Difficult Case
by
“I don’t see how you could have been more so!” she retorted, in tender indignation with him against himself. “And I think what he said was terrible. It was bad enough for him to pretend to believe that he was not going to live again, but for him to tell you that he was afraid he was!” An image sufficiently monstrous to typify Hilbrook’s wickedness failed to present itself to Mrs. Ewbert, and she went out to give the maid instructions for something unusually nourishing for Ewbert at their mid-day dinner. “You look fairly fagged out, Clarence,” she said, when she came back; “and I insist upon your not going up to that dreadful old man’s again,–at least, not till you’ve got over this shock.”
“Oh, I don’t think it has affected me seriously,” he returned lightly.
“Yes, it has! yes, it has!” she declared. “It’s just like your thinking you hadn’t taken cold, the other day when you were caught in the rain; and the next morning you got up with a sore throat, and it was Sunday morning, too.”
Ewbert could not deny this, and he had no great wish to see Hilbrook soon again. He consented to wait for Hilbrook to come to him, before trying to satisfy these scruples of conscience which he had hinted at; and he reasonably hoped that the painful points would cease to rankle with the lapse of time, if there should be a long interval before they met.
That night, before the Ewberts had finished their tea, there came a ring at the door, from which Mrs. Ewbert disconsolately foreboded a premature evening call. “And just when I was counting on a long, quiet, restful time for you, and getting you to bed early!” she lamented in undertone to her husband; to the maid who passed through the room with an inquiring glance, to the front door, she sighed, still in undertone, “Oh yes, of course we’re at home.”
They both listened for the voice at the door, to make out who was there; but the voice was so low that they were still in ignorance while the maid was showing the visitor into the library, and until she came back to them.
“It’s that old gentleman who lives all alone by himself on the hill over the brook,” she explained; and Mrs. Ewbert rose with an air of authority, waving her husband to keep his seat.
“Now, Clarence, I am simply not going to let you go in. You are sick enough as it is, and if you are going to let that awful old man spend the whole evening here, and drain the life out of you! I will see him, and tell him”–
“No, no, Emily! It won’t do. I must see him. It isn’t true that I’m sick. He’s old, and he has a right to the best we can do for him. Think of his loneliness! I shall certainly not let you send him away.” Ewbert was excitedly gulping his second cup of tea; he pushed his chair back, and flung his napkin down as he added, “You can come in, too, and see that I get off alive.”
“I shall not come near you,” she answered resentfully; but Ewbert had not closed the door behind him, and she felt it her duty to listen.
IX.
Mrs. Ewbert heard old Hilbrook begin at once in a high senile key without any form of response to her husband’s greeting: “There was one thing you said to-day that I’ve been thinkin’ over, and I’ve come down to talk with you about it.”
“Yes?” Ewbert queried submissively, though he was aware of being quite as fagged as his wife accused him of being, after he spoke.
“Yes,” Hilbrook returned. “I guess I ha’n’t been exactly up and down with myself. I guess I’ve been playing fast and loose with myself. I guess you’re right about my wantin’ to have enough consciousness to enjoy my unconsciousness,” and the old gentleman gave a laugh of rather weird enjoyment. “There are things,” he resumed seriously, “that are deeper in us than anything we call ourselves. I supposed I had gone to the bottom, but I guess I hadn’t. All the while there was something down there that I hadn’t got at; but you reached it and touched it, and now I know it’s there. I don’t know but it’s my Soul that’s been havin’ its say all the time, and me not listenin’. I guess you made your point.”