The Crux: A Novel. Gilman Charlotte Perkins

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Susie."

      "I like you," Susie answered. "You bring out my 'best and highest' – if I've got any. She don't. She's like a lovely, faint, bright – bubble! I want to prick it!"

      Vivian smiled down upon her.

      "You bad little mouse!" she said. "Come, give me the books."

      "Leave them with me, and I'll bring them in the car." Susie looked anxious to make amends for her bit of blasphemy.

      "All right, dear. Thank you. I'll be home by that time, probably."

      In the street she stopped before a little shop where papers and magazines were sold.

      "I believe Father'd like the new Centurion," she said to herself, and got it for him, chatting a little with the one-armed man who kept the place. She stopped again at a small florist's and bought a little bag of bulbs.

      "Your mother's forgotten about those, I guess," said Mrs. Crothers, the florist's wife, "but they'll do just as well now. Lucky you thought of them before it got too late in the season. Bennie was awfully pleased with that red and blue pencil you gave him, Miss Lane."

      Vivian walked on. A child ran out suddenly from a gate and seized upon her.

      "Aren't you coming in to see me – ever?" she demanded.

      Vivian stooped and kissed her.

      "Yes, dear, but not to-night. How's that dear baby getting on?"

      "She's better," said the little girl. "Mother said thank you – lots of times. Wait a minute – "

      The child fumbled in Vivian's coat pocket with a mischievous upward glance, fished out a handful of peanuts, and ran up the path laughing while the tall girl smiled down upon her lovingly.

      A long-legged boy was lounging along the wet sidewalk. Vivian caught up with him and he joined her with eagerness.

      "Good evening, Miss Lane. Say – are you coming to the club to-morrow night?"

      She smiled cordially.

      "Of course I am, Johnny. I wouldn't disappoint my boys for anything – nor myself, either."

      They walked on together chatting until, at the minister's house, she bade him a cheery "good-night."

      Mrs. St. Cloud was at the window pensively watching the western sky. She saw the girl coming and let her in with a tender, radiant smile – a lovely being in a most unlovely room.

      There was a chill refinement above subdued confusion in that Cambridge-Bainville parlor, where the higher culture of the second Mrs. Williams, superimposed upon the lower culture of the first, as that upon the varying tastes of a combined ancestry, made the place somehow suggestive of excavations at Abydos.

      It was much the kind of parlor Vivian had been accustomed to from childhood, but Mrs. St. Cloud was of a type quite new to her. Clothed in soft, clinging fabrics, always with a misty, veiled effect to them, wearing pale amber, large, dull stones of uncertain shapes, and slender chains that glittered here and there among her scarfs and laces, sinking gracefully among deep cushions, even able to sink gracefully into a common Bainville chair – this beautiful woman had captured the girl's imagination from the first.

      Clearly known, she was a sister of Mrs. Williams, visiting indefinitely. Vaguely – and very frequently – hinted, her husband had "left her," and "she did not believe in divorce." Against her background of dumb patience, he shone darkly forth as A Brute of unknown cruelties. Nothing against him would she ever say, and every young masculine heart yearned to make life brighter to the Ideal Woman, so strangely neglected; also some older ones. Her Young Men's Bible Class was the pride of Mr. Williams' heart and joy of such young men as the town possessed; most of Bainville's boys had gone.

      "A wonderful uplifting influence," Mr. Williams called her, and refused to say anything, even when directly approached, as to "the facts" of her trouble. "It is an old story," he would say. "She bears up wonderfully. She sacrifices her life rather than her principles."

      To Vivian, sitting now on a hassock at the lady's feet and looking up at her with adoring eyes, she was indeed a star, a saint, a cloud of mystery.

      She reached out a soft hand, white, slender, delicately kept, wearing one thin gold ring, and stroked the girl's smooth hair. Vivian seized the hand and kissed it, blushing as she did so.

      "You foolish child! Don't waste your young affection on an old lady like me."

      "Old! You! You don't look as old as I do this minute!" said the girl with hushed intensity.

      "Life wears on you, I'm afraid, my dear… Do you ever hear from him?"

      To no one else, not even to Susie, could Vivian speak of what now seemed the tragedy of her lost youth.

      "No," said she. "Never now. He did write once or twice – at first."

      "He writes to his aunt, of course?"

      "Yes," said Vivian. "But not often. And he never – says anything."

      "I understand. Poor child! You must be true, and wait." And the lady turned the thin ring on her finger. Vivian watched her in a passion of admiring tenderness.

      "Oh, you understand!" she exclaimed. "You understand!"

      "I understand, my dear," said Mrs. St. Cloud.

      When Vivian reached her own gate she leaned her arms upon it and looked first one way and then the other, down the long, still street. The country was in sight at both ends – the low, monotonous, wooded hills that shut them in. It was all familiar, wearingly familiar. She had known it continuously for such part of her lifetime as was sensitive to landscape effects, and had at times a mad wish for an earthquake to change the outlines a little.

      The infrequent trolley car passed just then and Sue Elder joined her, to take the short cut home through the Lane's yard.

      "Here you are," she said cheerfully, "and here are the books."

      Vivian thanked her.

      "Oh, say – come in after supper, can't you? Aunt Rella's had another letter from Mort."

      Vivian's sombre eyes lit up a little.

      "How's he getting on? In the same business he was last year?" she asked with an elaborately cheerful air. Morton had seemed to change occupations oftener than he wrote letters.

      "Yes, I believe so. I guess he's well. He never says much, you know. I don't think it's good for him out there – good for any boy." And Susie looked quite the older sister.

      "What are they to do? They can't stay here."

      "No, I suppose not – but we have to."

      "Dr. Bellair didn't," remarked Vivian. "I like her – tremendously, don't you?" In truth, Dr. Bellair was already a close second to Mrs. St. Cloud in the girl's hero-worshipping heart.

      "Oh, yes; she's splendid! Aunt Rella is so glad to have her with us. They have great times recalling their school days together. Aunty used to like her then, though she is five years older – but you'd never dream it. And I think she's real handsome."

      "She's not beautiful," said Vivian, with decision, "but she's a lot better.

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