Wild Youth | Page 2

Gilbert Parker
this is Mrs. Mazarine. Shake hands with the Mayor, Mrs.
Mazarine."
Mazarine did not speak very loud, but as an animal senses the truth of a
danger far off with an unshakable certainty, the crowd at the station
seemed to know by instinct what he said.
"Hell--that old whale and her!" growled Jonas Billings, the keeper of
the livery-stable.
At Mazarine's words the Young Doctor, a man of rare gifts,
individuality and authority in the place, who had come to the station to
see a patient off to the mountains by this train, drew in his breath
sharply, as though a spirit of repugnance was in his heart. This
happened during the first years of the Young Doctor's career at
Askatoon, when he was still alive with human prejudices, although he
had a nature well balanced and singularly just. The strife between his
prejudices and his sense of justice was what made him always
interesting in all the great prairie and foothill country of which
Askatoon was the centre.
He had got his shock, indeed, before Mazarine had introduced his wife
to the Mayor. Not for nothing had he studied the human mind in its
relation to the human body, and the expression of that mind speaking
through the body. The instant Joel Mazarine and his wife stepped out of
the train, he knew they were what they were to each other. That was a
real achievement in knowledge, because Mazarine was certainly
sixty-five if he was a day, and his wife was a slim, willowy slip of a
girl, not more than nineteen years of age, with the most wonderful Irish
blue eyes and long dark lashes. There was nothing of the wife or
woman about her, save something in the eyes, which seemed to belong
to ages past and gone, something so solemnly wise, yet so painfully
confused, that there flashed into the Young Doctor's mind at first
glance of her the vision of a young bird caught from its thoughtless,
sunbright journeyings, its reckless freedom of winged life, into the
captivity of a cage.
She smiled, this child, as she shook hands with the Mayor, and it had

the appeal of one who had learned the value of smiling--as though it
answered many a question and took the place of words and the trials of
the tongue. It was pitifully mechanical. As the Young Doctor saw, it
was the smile of a captive in a strange uncomprehended world, more a
dream than a reality.
"Mrs. Mazarine, welcome," said the Mayor after an abashed pause.
"We're proud of this town, but we'll be prouder still, now you've come."
The girl-wife smiled again. At the same time it was as though she
glanced apprehensively out of the corner of her eye at the old man by
her side, as she said:
"Thank you. There seems to be plenty of room for us out here, so we
needn't get in each other's way.... I've never been on the prairie before,"
she added.
The Young Doctor realized that her reply had meanings which would
escape the understanding of the Mayor, and her apprehensive glance
had told him of the gruesome jealousy of this old man at her side. The
Mayor's polite words had caused the long, clean-shaven upper lip of the
old man with the look of a debauched prophet, to lengthen surlily; and
he noticed that a wide, flat foot in a big knee-boot, inside trousers too
short, tapped the ground impatiently.
"We must be getting on to Tralee," said a voice that seemed to force its
way through bronchial obstructions. "Come, Mrs. Mazarine."
He laid a big, flat, tropical hand, which gave the impression of being
splayed, on the girl's shoulder. The gallant words of the Mayor--a
chivalrous mountain man--had set dark elements working. As the new
master of Tralee stepped forward, the Young Doctor could not help
noticing how large and hairy were the ears that stood far out from the
devilish head. It was a huge, steel-twisted, primitive man, who
somehow gave the impression of a gorilla. The face was repulsive in its
combination of surly smugness, as shown by the long upper lip, by a
repellent darkness round the small, furtive eyes, by a hardness in the
huge, bearded jaw, and by a mouth of primary animalism.

The Mayor caught sight of the Young Doctor, and he stopped the
incongruous pair as they moved to the station doorway, the girl in front,
as though driven.
"Mr. Mazarine, you've got to know the man who counts for more in
Askatoon than anybody else; Doctor, you've got to know Mr.
Mazarine," said the generous Mayor.
Repugnance was in full possession of the Young Doctor, but he was
scientific and he was philosophic, if nothing else. He shook hands with
Mazarine
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