Chapter Seven
RACHEL was glad
to escape and be by herself. A plan was slowly forming in her
mind, and she wanted to be alone and think it out carefully.
But before she had walked two blocks she was annoyed to find
Rollin Page walking beside her.
"Sorry to
disturb your thoughts, Miss Winslow, but I happened to be
going your way and had an idea you might not object. In fact,
I've been walking here for a whole block and you haven't
objected."
"I did not
see you," said Rachel briefly.
"I
wouldn't mind that if you only thought of me once in a
while," said Rollin suddenly. He took one last nervous
puff on his cigar, tossed it into the street and walked along
with a pale look on his face.
Rachel was
surprised, but not startled. She had known Rollin as a boy,
and there had been a time when they had used each other's
first name familiarly. Lately, however, something in Rachel's
manner had put an end to that. She was used to his direct
attempts at compliments and was sometimes amused by them.
Today she honestly wished him anywhere else.
"Do you
ever think of me, Miss Winslow?" asked Rollin after a
pause.
"Oh, yes,
quite often!" said Rachel with a smile.
"Are you
thinking of me now?"
"Yes.
That is--yes--I am."
"What?"
"Do you
want me to be absolutely truthful?"
"Of
course."
"Then I
was thinking that I wished you were not here." Rollin bit
his lip and looked gloomy.
"Now look
here, Rachel--oh, I know that's forbidden, but I've got to
speak some time!--you know how I feel. What makes you treat me
so? You used to like me a little, you know."
"Did I?
Of course we used to get on very well as boy and girl. But we
are older now."
Rachel still
spoke in the light, easy way she had used since her first
annoyance at seeing him. She was still somewhat preoccupied
with her plan which had been disturbed by Rollin's sudden
appearance.
They walked
along in silence a little way. The avenue was full of people.
Among the persons passing was Jasper Chase. He saw Rachel and
Rollin and bowed as they went by. Rollin was watching Rachel
closely.
"I wish I
was Jasper Chase. Maybe I would stand some chance then,"
he said moodily.
Rachel colored
in spite of herself. She did not say anything and quickened
her pace a little. Rollin seemed determined to say something,
and Rachel seemed helpless to prevent him. After all, she
thought, he might as well know the truth one time as another.
"You know
well enough, Rachel, how I feel toward you. Isn't there any
hope? I could make you happy. I've loved you a good many
years--"
"Why, how
old do you think I am?" broke in Rachel with a nervous
laugh. She was shaken out of her usual poise of manner.
"You know
what I mean," went on Rollin doggedly. "And you have
no right to laugh at me just because I want you to marry
me."
"I'm not!
But it is useless for you to speak, Rollin," said Rachel
after a little hesitation, and then using his name in such a
frank, simple way that he could attach no meaning to it beyond
the familiarity of the old family acquaintance. "It is
impossible." She was still a little agitated by the fact
of receiving a proposal of marriage on the avenue. But the
noise on the street and sidewalk made the conversation as
private as if they were in the house.
"Would
that is--do you think--if you gave me time I would "
"No!"
said Rachel. She spoke firmly; perhaps, she thought afterward,
although she did not mean to, she spoke harshly.
They walked on
for some time without a word. They were nearing Rachel's home
and she was anxious to end the scene.
As they turned
off the avenue into one of the quieter streets Rollin spoke
suddenly and with more manliness than he had yet shown. There
was a distinct note of dignity in his voice that was new to
Rachel.
"Miss
Winslow, I ask you to be my wife. Is there any hope for me
that you will ever consent?"
"None in
the least." Rachel spoke decidedly.
"Will you
tell me why?" He asked the question as if he had a right
to a truthful answer.
"Because
I do not feel toward you as a woman ought to feel toward the
man she marries."
"In other
words, you do not love me?"
"I do not
and I cannot."
"Why?"
That was another question, and Rachel was a little surprised
that he should ask it.
"Because--"
she hesitated for fear she might say too much in an attempt to
speak the exact truth.
"Tell me
just why. You can't hurt me more than you have already."
"Well, I
do not and I cannot love you because you have no purpose in
life. What do you ever do to make the world better? You spend
your time in club life, in amusements, in travel, in luxury.
What is there in such a life to attract a woman?"
"Not
much, I guess," said Rollin with a bitter laugh.
"Still, I don't know that I'm any worse than the rest of
the men around me. I'm not so bad as some. I'm glad to know
your reasons."
He suddenly
stopped, took off his hat, bowed gravely and turned back.
Rachel went on home and hurried into her room, disturbed in
many ways by the event which had so unexpectedly thrust itself
into her experience.
When she had
time to think it all over she found herself condemned by the
very judgment she had passed on Rollin Page. What purpose had
she in life? She had been abroad and studied music with one of
the famous teachers of Europe. She had come home to Raymond
and had been singing in the First Church choir now for a year.
She was well paid. Up to that Sunday two weeks ago she had
been quite satisfied with herself and with her position. She
had shared her mother's ambition, and anticipated growing
triumphs in the musical world. What possible career was before
her except the regular career of every singer?
She asked the
question again and, in the light of her recent reply to
Rollin, asked again, if she had any very great purpose in life
herself. What would Jesus do? There was a fortune in her
voice. She knew it, not necessarily as a matter of personal
pride or professional egotism, but simply as a fact. And she
was obliged to acknowledge that until two weeks ago she had
purposed to use her voice to make money and win admiration and
applause. Was that a much higher purpose, after all, than
Rollin Page lived for?
She sat in her
room a long time and finally went downstairs, resolved to have
a frank talk with her mother about the concert company's offer
and the new plan which was gradually shaping in her mind. She
had already had one talk with her mother and knew that she
expected Rachel to accept the offer and enter on a successful
career as a public singer.
"Mother,"
Rachel said, coming at once to the point, much as she dreaded
the interview, "I have decided not to go out with the
company. I have a good reason for it."
Mrs. Winslow
was a large, handsome woman, fond of much company, ambitious
for distinction in society and devoted, according to her
definitions of success, to the success of her children. Her
youngest boy, Louis, two years younger than Rachel, was ready
to graduate from a military academy in the summer. Meanwhile
she and Rachel were at home together. Rachel's father, like
Virginia's, had died while the family was abroad. Like
Virginia she found herself, under her present rule of conduct,
in complete antagonism with her own immediate home circle.
Mrs. Winslow waited for Rachel to go on.
"You know
the promise I made two weeks ago, mother?"
"Mr.
Maxwell's promise?"
"No,
mine. You know what it was, do you not, mother?"
"I
suppose I do. Of course all the church members mean to imitate
Christ and follow Him, as far as is consistent with our
present day surroundings. But what has that to do with your
decision in the concert company matter?"
"It has
everything to do with it. After asking, 'What would Jesus do?'
and going to the source of authority for wisdom, I have been
obliged to say that I do not believe He would, in my case,
make that use of my voice."
"Why? Is
there anything wrong about such a career ? "
"No, I
don't know that I can say there is."
"Do you
presume to sit in judgment on other people who go out to sing
in this way? Do you presume to say they are doing what Christ
would not do?"
"Mother,
I wish you to understand me. I judge no one else; I condemn no
other professional singer. I simply decide my own course. As I
look at it, I have a conviction that Jesus would do something
else."
"What
else?" Mrs. Winslow had not yet lost her temper. She did
not understand the situation nor Rachel in the midst of it,
but she was anxious that her daughter's course should be as
distinguished as her natural gifts promised. And she felt
confident that when the present unusual religious excitement
in the First Church had passed away Rachel would go on with
her public life according to the wishes of the family. She was
totally unprepared for Rachel's next remark.
"What?
Something that will serve mankind where it most needs the
service of song. Mother, I have made up my mind to use my
voice in some way so as to satisfy my own soul that I am doing
something better than pleasing fashionable audiences, or
making money, or even gratifying my own love of singing. I am
going to do something that will satisfy me when I ask: 'What
would Jesus do?' I am not satisfied, and cannot be, when I
think of myself as singing myself into the career of a concert
company performer."
Rachel spoke
with a vigor and earnestness that surprised her mother. But
Mrs. Winslow was angry now; and she never tried to conceal her
feelings.
"It is
simply absurd! Rachel, you are a fanatic! What can you
do?"
"The
world has been served by men and women who have given it other
things that were gifts. Why should I, because I am blessed
with a natural gift, at once proceed to put a market price on
it and make all the money I can out of it? You know, mother,
that you have taught me to think of a musical career always in
the light of financial and social success. I have been unable,
since I made my promise two weeks ago, to imagine Jesus
joining a concert company to do what I should do and live the
life I should have to live if I joined it."
Mrs. Winslow
rose and then sat down again. With a great effort she composed
herself.
"What do
you intend to do then? You have not answered my
question."
"I shall
continue to sing for the time being in the church. I am
pledged to sing there through the spring. During the week I am
going to sing at the White Cross meetings, down in the
Rectangle."
"What!
Rachel Winslow! Do you know what you are saying? Do you know
what sort of people those are down there?"
Rachel almost
quailed before her mother. For a moment she shrank back and
was silent. Then she spoke firmly: "I know very well.
That is the reason I am going. Mr. and Mrs. Gray have been
working there several weeks. I learned only this morning that
they want singers from the churches to help them in their
meetings. They use a tent. It is in a part of the city where
Christian work is most needed. I shall offer them my help.
Mother!" Rachel cried out with the first passionate
utterance she had yet used, "I want to do something that
will cost me something in the way of sacrifice. I know you
will not understand me. But I am hungry to suffer for
something. What have we done all our lives for the suffering,
sinning side of Raymond? How much have we denied ourselves or
given of our personal ease and pleasure to bless the place in
which we live or imitate the life of the Savior of the world?
Are we always to go on doing as society selfishly dictates,
moving on its little narrow round of pleasures and
entertainments, and never knowing the pain of things that
cost?"
"Are you
preaching at me?" asked Mrs. Winslow slowly. Rachel rose,
and understood her mother's words.
"No. I am
preaching at myself," she replied gently. She paused a
moment as if she thought her mother would say something more,
and then went out of the room. When she reached her own room
she felt that so far as her own mother was concerned she could
expect no sympathy, nor even a fair understanding from her.
She kneeled.
It is safe to say that within the two weeks since Henry
Maxwell's church had faced that shabby figure with the faded
hat more members of his parish had been driven to their knees
in prayer than during all the previous term of his pastorate.
She rose, and
her face was wet with tears. She sat thoughtfully a little
while and then wrote a note to Virginia Page. She sent it to
her by a messenger and then went downstairs and told her
mother that she and Virginia were going down to the Rectangle
that evening to see Mr. and Mrs. Gray, the evangelists.
"Virginia's
uncle, Dr. West, will go with us, if she goes. I have asked
her to call him up by telephone and go with us. The Doctor is
a friend of the Grays, and attended some of their meetings
last winter."
Mrs. Winslow
did not say anything. Her manner showed her complete
disapproval of Rachel's course, and Rachel felt her unspoken
bitterness.
About seven
o'clock the Doctor and Virginia appeared, and together the
three started for the scene of the White Cross meetings.
The Rectangle
was the most notorious district in Raymond. It was on the
territory close by the railroad shops and the packing houses.
The great slum and tenement district of Raymond congested its
worst and most wretched elements about the Rectangle. This was
a barren field used in the summer by circus companies and
wandering showmen. It was shut in by rows of saloons, gambling
hells and cheap, dirty boarding and lodging houses.
The First
Church of Raymond had never touched the Rectangle problem. It
was too dirty, too coarse, too sinful, too awful for close
contact. Let us be honest. There had been an attempt to
cleanse this sore spot by sending down an occasional committee
of singers or Sunday-school teachers or gospel visitors from
various churches. But the First Church of Raymond, as an
institution, had never really done anything to make the
Rectangle any less a stronghold of the devil as the years went
by.
Into this
heart of the coarse part of the sin of Raymond the traveling
evangelist and his brave little wife had pitched a good-sized
tent and begun meetings. It was the spring of the year and the
evenings were beginning to be pleasant. The evangelists had
asked for the help of Christian people, and had received more
than the usual amount of encouragement. But they felt a great
need of more and better music. During the meetings on the
Sunday just gone the assistant at the organ had been taken
ill. The volunteers from the city were few and the voices were
of ordinary quality.
"There
will be a small meeting tonight, John," said his wife, as
they entered the tent a little after seven o'clock and began
to arrange the chairs and light up.
"Yes, I
fear so." Mr. Gray was a small, energetic man, with a
pleasant voice and the courage of a high-born fighter. He had
already made friends in the neighborhood and one of his
converts, a heavy-faced man who had just come in, began to
help in the arranging of seats.
It was after
eight o'clock when Alexander Powers opened the door of his
office and started for home. He was going to take a car at the
corner of the Rectangle. But he was roused by a voice coming
from the tent.
It was the
voice of Rachel Winslow. It struck through his consciousness
of struggle over his own question that had sent him into the
Divine Presence for an answer. He had not yet reached a
conclusion. He was tortured with uncertainty. His whole
previous course of action as a railroad man was the poorest
possible preparation for anything sacrificial. And he could
not yet say what he would do in the matter.
Hark! What was
she singing? How did Rachel Winslow happen to be down here?
Several windows near by went up. Some men quarreling near a
saloon stopped and listened. Other figures were walking
rapidly in the direction of the Rectangle and the tent. Surely
Rachel Winslow had never sung like that in the First Church.
It was a marvelous voice. What was it she was singing? Again
Alexander Powers, Superintendent of the machine shops, paused
and listened,
"Where He
leads me I will follow,
Where He leads me I will follow,
Where He leads me I will follow,
I'll go with Him, with Him.
All the way!"
The brutal,
coarse, impure life of the Rectangle stirred itself into new
life as the song, as pure as the surroundings were vile,
floated out and into saloon and den and foul lodging. Some one
stumbled hastily by Alexander Powers and said in answer to a
question: "De tent's beginning to run over tonight.
That's what the talent calls music, eh?"