"I'll sail upon the Dog-star, I'll sail upon the Dog-star, And then pursue the morning And then pursue, and then pursue the morning.
"I'll chase the moon, till it be noon, I'll chase the moon, till it be noon, But I'll make her leave her horning.
"I'll climb the frosty mountain, I'll climb the frosty mountain, And there I'll coin the weather.
"I'll tear the rainbow from the sky And tie both ends together."
The ringing girlish voice rose high and true and clear.
"Bravo!" cried a man's voice and then:
"And she'll do it, too!"
It was at this point that Martin took Doris from the room.
In the quiet of the deserted piazza Doris looked up at Martin through tears.
"Joan is feeling her oats." Martin walked to and fro; he had been more moved by the song than he cared to confess.
"The darling!" Doris whispered. Then: "Can't you see what Miss Phillips meant, Davey? The child is talented--she shall never be held back.
Wealth can be as cruel and crippling as poverty. Be prepared, David, I mean to let Joan--free."
Martin came close and sat down.
"Go easy, Doris," he cautioned, then asked: "And how about Nancy?"
"David, I'm going to tell Nancy, after we come home from Europe--not all, of course, but enough to make her understand--about me! I cannot quite explain, but I am sure I am right in my decision. Nancy, indeed all of us, will, sooner or later, have to let Joan go! I saw that clearly as she sang. I must fill Nancy's life and she must make up to me what I am about to lose. David, is this what mothers feel?"
"Some of them, Doris. The best of them. I'm glad to see you game."
"Oh! yes. I'm glad, too--for Joan's sake. I will be giving Nancy her best and surest happiness--with me, but not Joan. And so, David, Joan must not have the slightest inkling--she must go, when her time comes, unhampered. You, Nancy, and I must contribute that to her future."
Martin saw that Doris was still trembling, she was excited, too, in her controlled way. He was anxious.
"You're seeing things in broad daylight, Doris. Why, my dear, both the girls will be snapped up before any of us catch our breaths. That is what Miss Phillips' is for. Training for fine American wives and mothers. A good job, too."
Doris smiled and shook her head. Then she said suddenly:
"David, the old spectre stalks! It seems as if I ought to know, as if the knowledge were right here, to-day."
"Come, come, now Doris! If you do not quiet down I'm going to pack you off to the hotel. Why, see here, the kids have not revealed themselves.
You're lashing yourself about nothing. Can you not reason it out this way----"
Martin sat close to the couch upon which Doris half reclined; he was almost praying that Joan would have a dozen encores--by request, apparently, she was again chasing the rainbow on her Dog-star.
"The inheritance, I mean. For I see it is that that is clutching you. My work brings me close to primitive things--I believe in inheritance down to the roots--but by heaven, we inherit from the ages, not from our next of kin alone. Each son and daughter of us comes into port with load enough to crush us, and if we kept it all we'd go under. We shuffle off a lot. It is the ability to shuffle, the opportunity to shuffle that counts. Why, look here, Doris----"
And Doris was looking, holding with all her strength to the man's words.
"That little mountain woman had more daring and courage, according to what you told me, than poor Merry ever had. She cut a wider circle, got more out of life, I bet, went out of it more satisfied. Her child, with your help, could develop into something mighty worth while for she wouldn't have so much to overcome at the start. On the other hand, Meredith's child would have to blaze her own trail, as far as any guidance from her mother is concerned. Can't you see, that's where inheritance plays the devil with hasty conclusions?"
Doris drew a long breath and sat up. She was seeking to hold to what she could not see.
"David," she whispered, "is it the knowing, or the not knowing? Could I have helped more wisely had I not shirked the truth? In there, a moment ago, it was as if Meredith were demanding. Oh! youth is awful in its possibilities of success or failure."
Martin was seriously alarmed. He had never seen Doris so shaken, but he talked on, seeking by a show of calmness to disarm her fears.
"It's the ability to shuffle off inheritance that counts, Doris. You have given these girls the strength and opportunity--to shuffle. Now, my dear, be sensible. It is up to the girls and they're all right. Hold firm to your own belief, Doris. It's about to be proved."
"Hear them." Doris dropped back. "They are still applauding Joan."
The next few months Doris always looked back upon as a connecting stretch of road between what she had but faintly feared and what became a.s.sured.
From the day Joan graduated she became the dominant influence in what followed, and Nancy, being non-resistant, was engulfed in the general rush of affairs; was absorbed and smilingly played her part as once she had played Joan's accompaniment.
Joan was not more selfish than the young generally are; she had hours of n.o.ble self-renunciation and generosity. Her ego was well developed, but it never drove her cruelly.
Doris justified what happened, when she took time to consider, by her determination to be fair to both girls and then, unconsciously focussing on Joan because Joan was always in evidence. The girl's vitality and joyousness were unfailing. Everything was of interest, and she seemed to gather the flowers of life not so much for her own enjoyment as for the glory of shedding them on others. That is what disarmed people--this lavishness of the girl. She gave spice to life, and that has its value.
If Nancy ever knew the natural desire to shine in her own light, not Joan's, she smilingly hid it--not even Doris suspected it.
After Nancy was made to understand her aunt's state of health--and it was, in the end, Martin who informed her--she rose superbly to what offered, poor child, an opportunity peculiarly her own. To her was given the sacred duty of watching the one she loved best in the world; of warding off anything that threatened her peace and comfort. Here were power and authority and, though no one suspected, she would rule in her narrow, detached kingdom. Nothing should defeat her. They should all look to her!
Almost fiercely Nancy undertook her silent task. She smiled, she learned new subtleties; she soon became the pretty barrier between Doris and any troubling thing.
With her half-afraid glance fixed upon the dazzling Joan, it was small wonder that Doris fell into the trap set for her by Martin and Nancy.
She took the girls abroad--or was it Joan that led the way? She considered, after reaching the little Italian town from which she had seen Meredith depart, how best to speak of Thornton. She got so far as the telling of Meredith's wedding in the unchanged chapel on the hill when Joan startled her by asking quite as a matter of course:
"Is our father still alive?"
Nancy turned pale and shrank before the question, but she saw that the cool tone had controlled the situation. Doris looked relieved instead of shocked.
"We've often talked of it, Nan and I," Joan proceeded; "it did not seem very vital one way or the other until now."
"As far as I know," Doris was surprised at her own calmness, "he is still alive."
"I'm glad of that," Joan remarked, and there was a glint in her eyes.
"I'd hate to have him dead--just now."
Quite without reason Doris laughed. After all, what she had conjured up as a ghost was turning into a human possibility. It was never to frighten her in the future. Joan had felled the spectre by her first stroke.
Then Nancy spoke:
"I never want to hear his name again," she said, firmly, relentlessly.
Doris looked at her in amazement. Later she confided to Joan her surprise.
"I did not know the child had such sternness."