"It's a hair from the dog that's bit her," the priest said. "She's a silly-girl. She's been playing at black masses along with that Mrs. Profumo and the fellow who's name I can't remember. You could tell that. They cut the throat of a white kid and splash its blood about. . . . That was at the back of her mind. . . . It's not very serious. A parcel of silly, idle girls. It's not much more than palmistry or fortune-telling to them if one has to weigh it, for all it's ugliness, as a sin. As far as their volition goes, and it's volition that's the essence of prayer, black or white. . . . But it was at the back of her mind, and she won't forget to-night."
"Of course, that's your affair, Father," Mrs. Satterthwaite said lazily. "You hit her pretty hard. I don't suppose she's ever been hit so hard. What was it you wouldn't tell her?"
"Only," the priest said, "I wouldn't tell her because the thought's best not put in her head. . . . But her hell on earth will come when her husband goes running, blind, head down, mad after another woman."
Mrs. Satterthwaite looked at nothing; then she nodded.
"Yes," she said; "I hadn't thought of it. . . . But will he? He is a very sound fellow, isn't he?"
"What's to stop it?" the priest asked. "What in the world but the grace of our blessed Lord, which he hasn't got and doesn't ask for? And then . . . He's a young man, full-blooded, and they won't be living . . . maritalement. Not if I know him. And then. . . . Then she'll tear the house down. The world will echo with her wrongs."
"Do you mean to say," Mrs. Satterthwaite said, "that Sylvia would do anything vulgar?"
"Doesn't every woman who's had a man to torture for years when she loses him?" the priest asked. "The more she's made an occupation of torturing him the less right she thinks she has to lose him."
Mrs. Satterthwaite looked gloomily into the dusk.
"That poor devil. . . ." she said. "Will he get any peace anywhere? . . . What's the matter, Father?" The Father said: