creasing number of descendants.
The name was unstained. Such are the strange incongruities in the
hearts of men, that few realized the extent to which Wallis Plimpton
had partaken of the general hero-worship of Phil Goodrich. He had
assiduously cultivated his regard, at times discreetly boasted of it,
and yet had never been sure of it. And now fate, in the form of his
master, Eldon Parr had ironically compelled him at one stroke to undo
the work of years. As soon as the meeting broke up, he crossed the room.
"I can't tell you how much I regret this, Phil," he said. "Charlotte has
very strong convictions, you know, and so have I. You can understand,
I am sure, how certain articles of belief might be necessary to one
person, and not to another."
"Yes," said Phil, "I can understand. We needn't mention the articles,
Wallis." And he turned his back.
He never knew the pain he inflicted. Wallis Plimpton looked at the
rector, who stood talking to Mr. Waring, and for the first time in his
life recoiled from an overture.
Something in the faces of both men warned him away.
Even Everett Constable, as they went home in the cars together, was
brief with him, and passed no comments when Mr. Plimpton recovered
sufficiently to elaborate on the justification of their act, and upon
the extraordinary stand taken by Phil Goodrich and Mr. Waring.
"They might have told us what they were going to do."
Everett Constable eyed him.
"Would it have made any difference, Plimpton?" he demanded.
After that they rode in silence, until they came to a certain West End
corner, where they both descended. Little Mr. Constable's sensations
were, if anything, less enviable, and he had not Mr. Plimpton's
recuperative powers. He had sold that night, for a mess of pottage, the
friendship and respect of three generations. And he had fought, for pay,
against his own people.
And lastly, there was Langmaid, whose feelings almost defy analysis. He
chose to walk through the still night the four miles--that separated
him from his home. And he went back over the years of his life until he
found, in the rubbish of the past, a forgotten and tarnished jewel. The
discovery pained him. For that jewel was the ideal he had carried away,
as a youth, from the old law school at the bottom of Hamilton Place,--a
gift from no less a man than the great lawyer and public-spirited
citizen, Judge Henry Goodrich--Philip Goodrich's grandfather,
whose seated statue ma
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