Kate took her mother’s jewelry, which had been left to her, and sold it at the local jeweler’s. All Silvertree knew that Kate Barrington had left her home in anger and that her father had shown her the back of his hand.
IV
Honora Fulham, sitting in her upper room and jealously guarding the slumbers of Patience and Patricia, her tiny but already remarkable twin daughters, heard a familiar voice in the lower hallway. She dropped her book, “The Psychological Significance of the Family Group,” and ran to the chamber door. A second later she was hanging over the banisters.
“Kate!” she called with a penetrating whisper. “You!”
“Yes, Honora, it’s bad Kate. She’s come to you—a penny nobody else wanted.”
Honora Fulham sailed down the stairs with the generous bearing of a ship answering a signal of distress. The women fell into each other’s arms, and in that moment of communion dismissed all those little alien half-feelings which grow up between friends when their enlarging experience has driven them along different roads. Honora led the way to her austere drawing-room, from which, with a rigorous desire to economize labor, she had excluded all that was superfluous, and there, in the bare, orderly room, the two women—their girlhood definitely behind them—faced each other. Kate noted a curious retraction in Honora, an indescribable retrenchment of her old-time self, as if her florescence had been clipped by trained hands, so that the bloom should not be too exuberant; and Honora swiftly appraised Kate’s suggestion of freedom and force.
“Kate,” she announced, “you look like a kind eagle.”
“A wounded one, then, Honora.”
“You’ve a story for me, I see. Sit down and tell it.”
So Kate told it, compelling the history of her humiliating failure to stand out before the calm, adjudging mind of her friend.
“But oughtn’t we to forgive everything to the old?” cried Honora at the conclusion of the recital.
“Oh, is father old?” responded Kate in anguish. “He doesn’t seem old—only formidable. If I’d thought I’d been wrong I never would have come up here to ask you to sustain me in my obstinacy. Truly, Honora, it isn’t a question of age. He’s hardly beyond his prime, and he has been using all of his will, which has grown strong with having his own way, to break me down the way most of the men in Silvertree have broken their women down. I was getting to be just like the others, and to start when I heard him coming in at the door, and to hide things from him so that he wouldn’t rage. I’d have been lying next.”
“Kate!”
“Oh, you think it isn’t decent for me to speak that way of my father! You can’t think how it seems to me—how—how irreligious! But let me save my soul, Honora! Let me do that!”
The girl’s pallid face, sharpened and intensified, bore the imprint of genuine misery. Honora Fulham, strong of nerve and quick of understanding, embraced her with a full sisterly glance.