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"Ah! my dear sir," was the reply, "you have erred in _that_ line of thought, exactly as many others have. The truth is one and the same, to G.o.d, man, and devil."
"_Second Question_," said Dr. Hic.o.k. "Reconcile the development theory, connection of natural selection and s.e.xual relation, with the responsible immortality of the soul."
"Unquestionably," a.s.sented the other, as if to say, "Just as I expected."
"No theory of creation has any logical connection with any doctrine of immortality. What was the motive of creation?--_that_ would be a question! If you had asked me _that_! But the question, 'Where did men come from?' has no bearing on the question, 'Have they any duties now that they are here?' The two are reconciled, because they do not differ. You can't state any inconsistency between a yard measure and a fifty-six pound weight."
The doctor nodded; he sat down; he took a gla.s.s of water, and pressed his hand to his heart. "Now, then," he said to himself, "once more! If I have to stand this fifteen minutes I shall be in _some_ other world!"
The door from the inner room opened; and Mrs. Hic.o.k came singing in, carrying balanced upon her pretty pink fore-finger something or other of an airy bouquet-like fabric. Upon this she was looking with much delight.
"See, dear!" she said: "how perfectly lovely!"
Both gentlemen started, and the lady started too. She had not known of the visit; and she had not, until this instant, seen that her husband was not alone.
Dr. Hic.o.k, of course, had never given her the key to his skeleton-closet; for he was a shrewd man. He loved her too; and he thought he had provided for her absence during the ordeal. She had executed her shopping with unprecedented speed.
Why the visitor started, would be difficult to say. Perhaps her voice startled him. The happy music in it was enough like a beautified duplicate of his own thrilling sweet tones, to have made him acknowledge her for a sister--from heaven. He started, at any rate.
"Mr. Lyon, my wife," said the doctor, somewhat at a loss. Mr. Lyon bowed, and so did the lady.
"I beg your pardon, gentlemen, I am sure," she said. "I did not know you were busy, dear. There is a thunder-shower coming up. I drove home just in season."
"Oh!--only a little wager, about some conundrums," said the doctor.
Perhaps he may be excused for his fib. He did not want to annoy her unnecessarily.
"Oh, do let me know!" she said, with much eagerness. "You know how I enjoy them!"
"Well," said the doctor, "not exactly the ordinary kind. I was to puzzle my friend here with one out of three questions; and he has beaten me in two of them already. I've but one more chance."
"Only one?" she asked, with a smile. "What a bright man your friend must be! I thought n.o.body could puzzle you, dear. Stay; let _me_ ask the other question."
Both the gentlemen started again: it was quite a surprise.
"But are you a married man, Mr. Lyon?" she asked, with a blush.
"No, madam," was the reply, with a very graceful bow--"I have a mother, but no wife. Permit me to say, that, if I could believe there was a duplicate of yourself in existence, I would be as soon as possible."
"Oh, what a gallant speech!" said the lady. "Thank you, sir, very much;" and she made him a pretty little curtsy. "Then I am quite sure of my question, sir. Shall I, dear?"
The doctor quickly decided. "I am done for, anyhow," he reflected. "I begin to see that the old villain put those questions into my head himself. He hinted as much. I don't know but I'd rather she would ask it. It's better to have her kill me, I guess, than to hold out the carving-knife to him myself."
"With all my heart, my dear," said the doctor, "if Mr. Lyon consents."
Mr. Lyon looked a little disturbed; but his manner was perfect, as he replied that he regretted to seem to disoblige, but that he feared the conditions of their little bet would not allow it.
"Beg your pardon, I'm sure, for being so uncivil," said the lively little beauty, as she whispered a few words in her husband's ear.
This is what she said--
"What's mine's yours, dear. Take it. Ask him--buz, buzz, buzz."
The doctor nodded. Mrs. Hic.o.k stood by him and smiled, still holding in her pretty pink fore-finger the frail shimmering thing just mentioned; and she gave it a twirl, so that it swung quite round.
"Isn't it a love of a bonnet?" she said.
"Yes," the doctor said aloud. "I adopt the question."
"_Third Question. Which is the front side of this?_"
And he pointed to the bonnet. It must have been a bonnet, because Mrs.
Hic.o.k called it so. I shouldn't have known it from the collection of things in a kaleidoscope, bunched up together.
The lady stood before him, and twirled the wondrous fabric round and round, with the prettiest possible unconscious roguish look of defiance. The doctor's very heart stood still.
"Put it on, please," said Mr. Lyon, in the most innocent way in the world.
"Oh, no!" laughed she. "I know I'm only a woman, but I'm not _quite_ so silly! But I'll tell you what: you men put it on, if you think that will help you!" And she held out the mystery to him.
Confident in his powers of discrimination, Mr. Lyon took hold of the fairy-like combination of sparkles and threads and feathers and flowers, touching it with that sort of timid apprehension that bachelors use with a baby. He stood before the gla.s.s over the mantelpiece. First he put it across his head with one side in front, and then with the other. Then he put it lengthways of his head, and tried the effect of tying one of the two couples of strings under each of his ears. Then he put it on, the other side up; so that it swam on his head like a boat, with a high mounted bow and stern. More than once he did all this, with obvious care and thoughtfulness.
Then he came slowly back, and resumed his seat. It was growing very dark, though they had not noticed it; for the thunder-shower had been hurrying on, and already its advanced guard of wind, heavy laden with the smell of the rain, could be heard, and a few large drops splashed on the window.
The beautiful wife of the doctor laughed merrily to watch the growing discomposure of the visitor, who returned the bonnet, with undiminished courtesy, but with obvious constraint of manner.
He looked down; he drummed on the table; he looked up; and both the doctor and the doctor's wife were startled at the intense sudden anger in the dark, handsome face. Then he sprang up, and went to the window.
He looked out a moment, and then said--
"Upon my word, that is going to be a very sharp squall! The clouds are _very_ heavy. If I'm any judge, something will be struck. I can feel the electricity in the air."
While he still spoke, the first thunder-bolt crashed overhead. It was one of those close, sudden, overpoweringly awful explosions from clouds very heavy and very near, where the lightning and the thunder leap together out of the very air close about you, even as if you were in them. It was an unendurable burst of sound, and of the intense white sheety light of very near lightning. Dreadfully frightened, the poor little lady clung close to her husband. He, poor man, if possible yet more frightened, exhausted as he was by what he had been enduring, fainted dead away. Don't blame him: a cast-iron bull-dog might have fainted.
Mrs. Hic.o.k, thinking that her husband was struck dead by the lightning, screamed terribly. Then she touched him; and, seeing what was really the matter, administered cold water from the pitcher on the table. Shortly he revived.
"Where is he?" he said.
"I don't know, love. I thought you were dead. He must have gone away.
Did it strike the house?"
"Gone away? Thank G.o.d! Thank _you_, dear!" cried out the doctor.
Not knowing any adequate cause for so much emotion, she answered him--
"Now, love, don't you ever say women are not practical again. That was a practical question, you see. But didn't it strike the house? What a queer smell. Ozone: isn't that what you were telling me about? How funny, that lightning should have a smell!"
"I believe there's no doubt of it," observed Dr. Hic.o.k.
Mr. Apollo Lyon had really gone, though just how or when, n.o.body could say.