Victor Ollnee's Discipline - LightNovelsOnl.com
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"If you knew how I hate that business and everything connected with it!"
"I do, and it seems absurd to me. Your mother's life is very wonderful and very beautiful to me."
He changed the subject. "Did that man Pettus call just now?"
"Yes."
"He's a scoundrel--that chap. A four-flusher."
"What makes you think that?"
"Well, the very looks of the man."
She laughed. "He isn't pretty, but he's a very decent citizen--and has a lovely wife and two daughters."
"He's a slob--his face gives him away--and besides, Mr. Carew the other night--"
"I know," she interrupted; "Mr. Carew is sure we're all going to be ruined by your mother and the Universal Transportation Company."
"I hope you haven't put your money into anything Pettus has control of?"
"Oh, don't let's talk business on a morning like this. It's criminal--let's talk about trees and birds and flowers." She might have added "and love," for when youth and springtime meet, even on a city boulevard, love is the most important subject in the encyclopedia of life. So they walked and talked and jested in the way of young men and maidens, and Victor talked of himself, finding his life-history vastly absorbing when discussed by a tall girl with a splendid profile and a cultivated voice. He watched her buy her stamps at the drug-store, finding in her every movement something adorable. The poise of her bust and her fine head appealed to him with power; but her humor, her cool, clear gaze, checked the crude compliments which he was moved to utter.
She could not be addressed as he had been accustomed to address his girl cla.s.smates at Winona.
This walk completed the severance of the ties which bound him to the university. His desire to return to his games weakened. His ambition to s.h.i.+ne as an athlete faded. He wished to prove to this proud girl that he was neither boy nor dreamer, and that he was competent to take care of himself and his mother as well.
As they were re-entering the house, he said: "Don't utter a word of what I've told you. I'm going to test whether my mother has the power to read my mind or not."
"I understand," she returned, "and I'm glad you're going to share in our seance to-night."
He frowned. "Don't say 'seance.' I hate that word."
She laughed. "Aren't you fierce! But I'll respect your prejudices so far as an utterly unprejudiced person can."
"Do you call yourself an unprejudiced person?"
"I try to be."
"But you're not. You have a prejudice against me," he insisted, forcing the personal note.
"Oh, you're quite mistaken," she replied; "in fact I think you're rather nice--for a boy." And she went away, leaving him to fume under this indignity.
Mrs. Joyce and Mrs. Ollnee came in soon afterward, and they all took tea together quite as casually as if they were not on the edge of something very thrilling and profoundly mysterious. Mrs. Joyce politely asked Victor what he had been doing, but his answers were evasive. He made no mention of Pettus, though he was burning with desire to warn her against him.
Soon afterward they went to his mother's room, and once safely inside the door he turned upon her. "Mother, are you going to sit for Pettus to-night?"
"I expect him, but I'm not sitting for him specially."
"I won't have him in the circle! He is a slimy old beast. I hate him--and Mr. Carew warned us against him. He wasn't guessing, mother, he _knows_ that this old four-flusher is up to some deviltry. How did he find you?"
"He called us up."
"I simply will not have him sit with you again, and you must not advise any one to put a cent into his concern. Where are you going to have this performance?"
"I thought of sitting here, but I need the old table. You mended it, didn't you?"
"Yes, I mended it."
"And you had a message from _Altair_?"
"How did you learn that?"
"I felt it," she answered, gravely. "She said danger threatened--did she tell you what the danger was?"
"No; who is _Altair_ supposed to be?"
"She is a very pure and high spirit--a girl of wonderful beauty--so they say. I have never seen her myself--she told me to-day that she would watch over you."
At this moment a whisper was heard in the air just above her head.
"_Lucy!_"
"Yes, father."
"_Take the boy--sit--the old place. Leave Pettus out._"
"Yes, father."
"_I will be there. Pettus is under investigation._"
"Much obliged," said Victor; and then he heard close to his ear a faint whisper: "_Victor, you shall see me--Altair._"
He was staring straight at his mother's lips at the moment, and yet he was unable to detect any visible part in the production of the voice.
She explained the whisper. "Altair is smiling at you. She says she will be with us to-night."
All this was very shocking to Victor. Utterly disconcerted and unable to confront her at the moment, he left the room. The whole problem of her mental condition, the central kernel of her philosophy was involved in that one whisper. To solve that was to solve it all. It was not so much a question of how she did it, it was a question of her right to deceive him.
He seized the time between tea and dinner to return to the library. For an hour he dug into the spongy soil of metaphysics, and it happened that he fell at last upon the Crookes and Zollner experiments (quoted at greater length in a volume of collected experience) and found there clear and direct testimony as to the mind's mastery of matter. There was abundant evidence of the handling of fire by the medium Home, and Slade's ability to float in the air was attested by well-known witnesses, but beyond this and closer to his own day, he came upon a detailed study of an Italian psychic with her "supernumerary hands," a story which should have made the materialization of a letter seem very simple. But it did not. All the testimony of these great men, abundant as it was, slid from his mind as harmlessly as water from oiled silk.
Apparently, it failed to alter the texture of his thought in the slightest degree. His world was the world of youth, the good old wholesome, stable world, and he refused to be convinced.
At dinner he was angered, in spite of Leo's presence, by his mother's returning confidence and ease of manner. His own position had been weakened, he felt, by his acquiescence in the sitting. His desire to satisfy himself, to solve his mother's mystery, had led him to abandon his stern resolution--and he regretted it. He ate sparingly and took no wine, being resolved to retain a perfectly clear head for the evening's experiment. He was grateful to Leo for keeping the talk on subjects of general interest, even though he had little part in it, and his liking for her deepened.
As he neared the test he began to sharply realize that for the first time in all his life he was about to take part in one of his mother's hated "performances," and his breath was troubled by the excitement of it. "I will make this test conclusive," he said to himself, and his jaw squared. "There will be no nonsense to-night."
The papers of the day had remained free from any further allusion to "the Spiritual Blood-Suckers," and it really seemed as if the cloud might be lifting, and this consideration made his partic.i.p.ation in the sitting all the more like a return to a lower and less defensible position. He was irritated by the methodical action with which his mother proceeded to set the stage for her farce. Wood, who seemed quite at home, a.s.sisted in these preparations, leaving Victor leaning in sullen silence against the wall.
Mrs. Joyce took a seat directly opposite the little psychic, Wood sat at her left, while Victor, with Leo at his right, completed the little crescent. Mrs. Ollnee, with her small, battered table before her, faced them across its top. Victor made no objection to this arrangement, but kept an alert eye on every movement. He watched her closely. She first breathed into one of the horns and put it beside her, then held one of the slates between her palms for a little time. "I hope this will be illuminated to-night," she said.
This remark gave Victor a twinge of disgust and bewildered pain. "She is too little and sweet and fine to be the high priest of such jugglery,"