A Daughter of the Land - Page 54/249

But in planning to get the "whip hand" Mrs. Holt reckoned without

Kate. She had been under the whip hand all her life. Her dash to

freedom had not been accomplished without both mental and physical

hurt. She was doing nothing but going over her past life

minutely, and as she realized more fully with each review how

barren and unlovely it had been, all the strength and fresh young

pride in her arose in imperative demand for something better in

the future. She listened with interest to what George Holt said

to her. All her life she had been driven by a man of inflexible

will, his very soul inoculated with greed for possessions which

would give him power; his body endowed with unfailing strength to

meet the demands he made on it, and his heart wholly lacking in

sentiment; but she did not propose to start her new life by

speaking of her family to strangers. George Holt's experiences

had been those of a son spoiled by a weak woman, one day petted,

the next bribed, the next nagged, again left to his own devices

for days, with strong inherited tendencies to be fought,

tendencies to what he did not say. Looking at his heavy jaw and

swarthy face, Kate supplied "temper" and "not much inclination to

work." He had asked her to teach him, she would begin by setting

him an example in the dignity of self-control; then she would make

him work. How she would make that big, strong man work! As she

sat there on the bank of the ravine, with a background of

delicately leafed bushes and the light of the setting sun on her

face and her hair, George Holt studied her closely, mentally and

physically, and would have given all he possessed if he had not

been so hasty. He saw that she had a good brain and courage to

follow her convictions, while on closer study he decided that she

was moulded on the finest physical lines of any woman he ever had

seen, also his study of medicine taught him to recognize glowing

health, and to set a right estimate on it. Truly he was sorry, to

the bottom of his soul, but he did not believe in being too

humble. He said as much in apology as he felt forced, and then

set himself the task of calling out and parading the level best he

could think up concerning himself, or life in general. He had

tried farming, teaching, merchandise, and law before he had

decided his vocation was medicine.

On account of Robert Gray, Kate was much interested in this, but

when she asked what college he was attending, he said he was going

to a school in Chicago that was preparing to revolutionize the

world of medicine. Then he started on a hobby that he had ridden

for months, paying for the privilege, so Kate learned with

surprise and no small dismay that in a few months a man could take

a course in medicine that would enable him "to cure any ill to

which the human flesh is heir," as he expressed it, without

knowing anything of surgery, or drugs, or using either. Kate was

amazed and said so at once. She disconcertingly inquired what he

would do with patients who had sustained fractured skulls,

developed cancers, or been exposed to smallpox. But the man

before her proposed to deal with none of those disagreeable

things, or their like. He was going to make fame and fortune

in the world by treating mental and muscular troubles. He was

going to be a Zonoletic Doctor. He turned teacher and spelled it

for her, because she never had heard the word. Kate looked at

George Holt long and with intense interest, while her mind was

busy with new thoughts. On her pillow that night she decided that

if she were a man, driven by a desire to heal the suffering of the

world, she would be the man who took the long exhaustive course of

training that enabled him to deal with accidents, contagions, and

germ developments.