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PAGE 8

Hector
by [?]

I was going on: “You believe she will–“

“Did you ever hear,” he interrupted, “of Jane Welsh Carlyle?”

I thought about that answer of Joe’s most of the evening, and it struck me he was right. It was one of those things you couldn’t possibly explain to save your life, but you knew it: everybody had got to help Hector. Everybody had to get behind him and push. Hector took it for granted in a way that passed the love of woman!

And yet, as we sat at Mary’s supper-table, that evening, I don’t know that I ever felt less real liking for any of my kin than I felt for Hector, though, perhaps, that was because he seemed to keep rubbing it in on me in indirect ways that I had done him an injury by not helping him with the National Committee, and that I ought to know it, after his triumph of the afternoon. I could see that Mary agreed with him, though in her gentle way.

Young Lane and Miss Rainey stayed for supper, too, and were very quiet. Miss Rainey struck me as a quiet girl generally, and Joe never talked, anyway, when in Hector’s company. For that matter, nobody else did; there was mighty little chance. The truth is, Hector had an impediment of speech: he couldn’t listen.

Of course he talked only about himself. That followed, because it was all there was in him. Not that it always seemed to be about himself. For instance, I remember one of his ways of rubbing it into me, that evening. He had been delivering himself of some opinions on the nature of Genius, fragments (like his “credentials”–I had a sneaking idea) of some undeveloped oration or other. “Look at Napoleon!” he bade us, while Mary was cutting the pie. “Could Barras with all his jealous and malevolent opposition, could Barras with all his craft, all his machinations, with all the machinery of the State, could Barras oppose the upward flight of that mighty spirit? No! Barras, who should have been the faithful friend, the helper, the disciple and believer, Barras, I say, set himself to destroy the youth whose genius he denied, and Barras was himself destroyed! He fell, for he had dared to oppose the path of one of the eternal stars!”

That was a sample, and I don’t exaggerate it. I couldn’t exaggerate Hector; it’s beyond me; he always exaggerated himself beyond anybody else’s power to do it. But I loved to hear Joe Lane’s chuckle and I got one out of him when I offered him a cigar as we went out on the porch.

“Take one,” I said. “It’s one of Barras’s best.”

“Better get in line,” was all he added to the chuckle.

* * * * *

A good many visitors dropped in, during the evening, Greenville’s greatest come to congratulate Hector on the speech. Everybody in the county was talking about him that night, they said. Hector received these people in his old-fashioned-statesman manner, though I noticed that already he shook hands like a candidate. He would grasp the caller’s hand quickly and decidedly, instead of letting the other do the gripping. And I could see that all those who came in, even hard-headed men twice his age, treated him deferentially, with the air of intimate respect that he somehow managed to exact from people. Perhaps I don’t do him justice: he was a “mighty myster’us” boy!

I sat and smoked, lounging in one of Mary’s comfortable porch-chairs. I managed without trouble to be in the background and I couldn’t help putting in most of my time studying Joe Lane and Miss Rainey. Those two were sitting, on the side-steps of the porch, a little apart from the rest of us–and a little apart from each other, too. Lord knows how you get such strong impressions, but I was very soon perfectly sure that these two young people were in love with each other and that they both knew it, but that they had given each other up. I was sure, too, that they were both under Hector’s spell, and preposterous as it may seem, that they were under his will, and that Hector’s plans included Miss Rainey for himself.