This was the serious and seemly parade, the propriety of whose behavior was to-day almost disintegrated when the lady of the bridge walked up the street in the shadow of a lacy, lavender parasol carried by Joseph Louden.The congregation of the church across the Square, that to which Joe's step-aunt had been late, was just debouching, almost in mass, upon Main Street, when these two went by.It is not quite the truth to say that all except the children came to a dead halt, but it is not very far from it.The air was thick with subdued exclamations and whisperings.
Here is no mystery.Joe was probably the only person of respectable derivation in Canaan who had not known for weeks that Ariel Tabor was on her way home.And the news that she had arrived the night before had been widely disseminated on the way to church, entering church, IN church (even so!), and coming out of church.An account of her house in the Avenue Henri Martin, and of her portrait in the Salon--a mysterious business to many, and not lacking in grandeur for that!--had occupied two columns in the Tocsin, on a day, some months before, when Joe had found himself inimically head-lined on the first page, and had dropped the paper without reading further.Ariel's name had been in the mouth of Canaan for a long time; unfortunately for Joe, however, not in the mouth of that Canaan which held converse with him.
Joe had not known her.The women recognized her, infallibly, at first glance; even those who had quite forgotten her.And the women told their men.Hence the un-Sunday-like demeanor of the procession, for few towns hold it more unseemly to stand and stare at passers-by, especially on the Sabbath.--BUT Ariel Tabor returned--and walking with--WITH JOE LOUDEN!...