THE COURIER. 11 A BABY'S VOICE. Jt is an admitted fact that in tbo matter of self-sale and barter mobt women can be wicked very gracefully. Having received through Hymen, agent, the awards of Mammon, they smile and wear good clothes, and only a few die of broken hearts, while none is so register ed in their burial certificates. But, once in a while, with all good intention to be gracefully, contentedly and smil ingly wicked, same woman broaks down in her role. Such n catastrrpho overtook Corinno Jamison in the fifth year of her married life. She had gone into it with her eyes wide open and she had meant to march on bravely to the end. She had detested old Sergius Jamison from the first time boo knew that ho had pitted his gold against her beauty and birth and poverty, and she bad fairly loathed him when he took her hand at the altar to slip thereon the little link that was to chafe and fret and weigh down until it waB more galling and heavy than a hundred-weight of iron chains. But she had married him, and on his part he had paid royally all that she had asked. He had dressed her like a queen; her home was tbo most elegant in a city of elegant homes; her servants were numerous and well-trained; her carriages and horses beyond criticism. He had given her brother Herbert his course at Harvard and sent Jonne to Fans to Maichesi where Jecne had basely turned her bank on Song and wedded an English lord, a proceeding of which her gonerouB brother-in-law highly approved, and testified thereunto substantially by the magniflcance of her trousseau. Thinking over all these things it almort seemed aa if he had done enough to be forgiven being himself. What if he did say 'I seen" and pick bis teeth at table in an emphatic way and adver tise loudly that he wbb taking soup; what if hie entire conversation was one of unending recital 'of what he" had and how he bad made it; what if his jokes were coarse and his anecdotes vulgar and his caresses after wine were nauBe ating in their lewdness? He had paid and paid royally, nobody could deny. But there was something on her aide, too, she thought; she, too, bad paid. The boy, four ears old now he had squared accounts; it was in the hope of such compensation that the man bad made the bargain. She knew that, and he had had his desire granted. There was an heir to all the wealth of Sergius Jamison; a son whose every feature duplicated his father; a son who, at four years old, fairly revelled in display and who bid fair to spend his father's millions in no quiet fashion. There had been very little of the mother feel ing in the biith of her son; she had felt crushed under the humiliation of the terms of her sale and had feverishly yearned to balance the ledger of obliga tion; through months she bad agonized lest the child be not a son and her joy in his advent was only the joy of a woman who had cancelled a debt. Of the spontaneous maternal love, which even a mare displays toward her colt or a lioness toward her whelps, she bad felt not a throb toward the boy. He was his father incarnate and the at mosphere of the father that enveloped the child repelled the affection that the ordinary mother would have felt in Bpite of environments. With the sense of the debt almost, if dA entirely paid, she had lost her bold on her role; it had been harder every year to weBr her clotbea smilingly and gracefully to carry her chains. When the little girl bad come, eighteen months before, she had gathered ber to her heart n a passionate outburst of mother love, deep enough and strong enaugh to bring, for a time, forgetful noes of the father. But after that it bad seemed a crucilixion to be a wifo, even in a mask. Sho had lost her powor of gracious subservience to bis moods; she had even let him boo the contempt she felt for bis braggadocio and he had lot her, in turn, feel the iron hand of ownership. De tecting her passion for the one child and her indifference towards the other he had lopt no opportunity of hurting her pride and mothor-lovo by disparag ing and neglocting tho one while heap ing benefits upon tho other; and go it had gono on daily for eighteen months, until now tho woman hml lot slip from her grasp every vestige of powor to bold her part in tho drama. So Hho had thought it all over and brought horself up to tbo pilch of reso lution: "God required no more than ono could stand," she thought, "and if it got to the place where tbo Eternal Beyond had less torror than the Certain Present, then God knew that tho limit was reached and would be merciful accordingly. She could not go on in this way any longer; she could not even be a make believe wife and she would not be the mother of any more of Sorgius Jamison's children. She bad given value received for tbo price he had paid and now tbey were quits. As to tho children, it was not like she was u mother that was needed; there was money enough to buy every care that was necessary. In the matter of mother love the little girl was young enough soon to get over missing it and the boy for the first something like mother-love for him wrenched ber heartstrings into a vibration of pain; well," bitterly, "he had never known it to mise; she had made up ber mind; after all, it was not bard, and" here she actually smiled "was it not a most fitting finale that one who had sold herself, a slave in Hymen's mart, should choose coward's death?'' Then she went about her preparations very calmly, as calmly, she recollected, (ib when she had robed herself for her brHal five years before. There should be no scandal to reflect upon tho chil dren in after yenra; a convenient neuralgia, an overdose of morphino, a shocking accident, a gorgeous funeral and it was all over. And bo she was almost deferential to ber husband at dinner, where a number of guests were assembled, acd but for a neuralgic headache, which increased as the even ing wore on, would have been in higher spirits than her hueband had ever seen ber. The headache at last was the palpable cause of her early withdrawal from her guests, protesting that the pain was nothing serious and would disappear by morning. Shi would not trust herself, as was her nightly custom, to go through the baby's nursery, which opened into her own room and whose door was always ajar, but walked straight into her own apartment, press ing her bands to her throbbing temples, whose simulated ache had grown into a real agony of pain. She disrobed me chanically and shook the white powder into the glass and turned toward the carafe for wa'er. A rustling behind her made ber pause and look around. There framed in the curtains of the doorway, in ber little, white gown, with her 9yes heavy with sleep and her red lips all atremble, stood her baby-git 1. "Mudder," Bbe said, "Baby wants mudder." The woman put down the carafe and tumbler and kneeling down, in a passion of tears, caught up the little creature and rooked her on her bosom. "You shall bav9 mother, too," she sobbed and whispered; "we will go together, you and 1." In that moment she knew that she could not leave the child; that nothing, nothing, was or ever could be to much to ber as the clinging arms of the baby that "wanted mother," and so, without faltering in' her resolution, as regarded herself, she reached out further to add to tbo crim against herself that one of all others at which mankind turns sick and which wo call Murder. "Yes," Bho thought, as Bho moved backward and forward with tho gold of tho child's hair catching the light of tho gaB, "they would, go together; it didn't matter if thoro was a scandal; tho boy would not Buffor, being a boy, and Bho could novor go, now, out into that alluring Boyond with hor baby's cry in hor ears. Sho could not bo at noace, oven in paradise, without bor baby.'' And then, hh sho hold hor and kissod the littlo rosy palms, thoro camo back to hor mind something that re peated and ropoatod itsolf over and ovor again, something about tho "Pure in hoart shall see God.' "You will, ray littlo one," sho whisperod ovor tho goldon head, and then a groat horror came upon hor. What if thoy did "go together" and the puro was separated from tho impure, and hor arms woro loosened and tho child was taken away where purity might bask in tho prosonco li&lDmiJiw?&p-'!aaamtpnamaw r HARPER'S PERIODICALS Tt Magazine, Weekly, Bazar, Literature, Round Tab&e, $4.00, with Courier, 4 00, with Courier, 4.00, with Courier, 4.00, with Courier, 1.00, with Courier, $4.00 4.00 4.00 4.00 1.00 '1 OTHER PERIODICALS SAME GLUBBING MTE THE W a , , 0 , , ft ft , m r -r .-1 r - - z 7 it Western Club Woman t Jt v J it it it , it it For ONE DOfofoAR and SEVENTY-FIVE as it A magazine devoted to interests of clubs and The Courier cents a year. t $ $ e $ $ $ ' $ ', & ', v U