4167 lines
155 KiB
Plaintext
4167 lines
155 KiB
Plaintext
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[pg/etext93/alexb10.txt]
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Alexander's Bridge by Willa Cather [Cather #3]
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December, 1993 [Etext #94]
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Alexander's Bridge by Willa Cather
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CHAPTER I
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Late one brilliant April afternoon Professor
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Lucius Wilson stood at the head of Chestnut Street,
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looking about him with the pleased air of a man
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of taste who does not very often get to Boston.
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He had lived there as a student, but for
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twenty years and more, since he had been
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Professor of Philosophy in a Western
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university, he had seldom come East except
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to take a steamer for some foreign port.
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Wilson was standing quite still, contemplating
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with a whimsical smile the slanting street,
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with its worn paving, its irregular, gravely
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colored houses, and the row of naked trees on
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which the thin sunlight was still shining.
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The gleam of the river at the foot of the hill
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made him blink a little, not so much because it
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was too bright as because he found it so pleasant.
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The few passers-by glanced at him unconcernedly,
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and even the children who hurried along with their
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school-bags under their arms seemed to find it
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perfectly natural that a tall brown gentleman
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should be standing there, looking up through
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his glasses at the gray housetops.
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The sun sank rapidly; the silvery light
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had faded from the bare boughs and the
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watery twilight was setting in when Wilson
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at last walked down the hill, descending into
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cooler and cooler depths of grayish shadow.
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His nostril, long unused to it, was quick to
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detect the smell of wood smoke in the air,
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blended with the odor of moist spring earth
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and the saltiness that came up the river with
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the tide. He crossed Charles Street between
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jangling street cars and shelving lumber
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drays, and after a moment of uncertainty
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wound into Brimmer Street. The street was
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quiet, deserted, and hung with a thin bluish
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haze. He had already fixed his sharp eye
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upon the house which he reasoned should be
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his objective point, when he noticed a woman
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approaching rapidly from the opposite direction.
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Always an interested observer of women,
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Wilson would have slackened his pace
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anywhere to follow this one with his impersonal,
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appreciative glance. She was a person
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of distinction he saw at once, and, moreover,
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very handsome. She was tall, carried her
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beautiful head proudly, and moved with ease
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and certainty. One immediately took for
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granted the costly privileges and fine spaces
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that must lie in the background from which
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such a figure could emerge with this rapid
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and elegant gait. Wilson noted her dress,
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too,--for, in his way, he had an eye for such
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things,--particularly her brown furs and her
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hat. He got a blurred impression of her fine
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color, the violets she wore, her white gloves,
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and, curiously enough, of her veil, as she turned
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up a flight of steps in front of him and disappeared.
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Wilson was able to enjoy lovely things
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that passed him on the wing as completely
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and deliberately as if they had been dug-up
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marvels, long anticipated, and definitely fixed
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at the end of a railway journey. For a few
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pleasurable seconds he quite forgot where he
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was going, and only after the door had closed
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behind her did he realize that the young
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woman had entered the house to which he
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had directed his trunk from the South Station
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that morning. He hesitated a moment before
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mounting the steps. "Can that," he murmured
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in amazement,--"can that possibly have been
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Mrs. Alexander?"
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When the servant admitted him, Mrs. Alexander
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was still standing in the hallway.
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She heard him give his name, and came
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forward holding out her hand.
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"Is it you, indeed, Professor Wilson? I
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was afraid that you might get here before I
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did. I was detained at a concert, and Bartley
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telephoned that he would be late. Thomas
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will show you your room. Had you rather
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have your tea brought to you there, or will
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you have it down here with me, while we
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wait for Bartley?"
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Wilson was pleased to find that he had been
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the cause of her rapid walk, and with her
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he was even more vastly pleased than before.
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He followed her through the drawing-room
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into the library, where the wide back windows
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looked out upon the garden and the sunset
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and a fine stretch of silver-colored river.
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A harp-shaped elm stood stripped against
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the pale-colored evening sky, with ragged
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last year's birds' nests in its forks,
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and through the bare branches the evening star
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quivered in the misty air. The long brown
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room breathed the peace of a rich and amply
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guarded quiet. Tea was brought in immediately
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and placed in front of the wood fire.
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Mrs. Alexander sat down in a high-backed
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chair and began to pour it, while Wilson sank
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into a low seat opposite her and took his cup
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with a great sense of ease and harmony and comfort.
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"You have had a long journey, haven't you?"
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Mrs. Alexander asked, after showing gracious
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concern about his tea. "And I am so sorry
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Bartley is late. He's often tired when he's late.
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He flatters himself that it is a little
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on his account that you have come to this
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Congress of Psychologists."
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"It is," Wilson assented, selecting his
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muffin carefully; "and I hope he won't be
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tired tonight. But, on my own account,
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I'm glad to have a few moments alone with you,
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before Bartley comes. I was somehow afraid
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that my knowing him so well would not put me
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in the way of getting to know you."
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"That's very nice of you." She nodded at
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him above her cup and smiled, but there was
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a little formal tightness in her tone which had
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not been there when she greeted him in the hall.
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Wilson leaned forward. "Have I said something awkward?
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I live very far out of the world, you know.
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But I didn't mean that you would exactly fade dim,
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even if Bartley were here."
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Mrs. Alexander laughed relentingly.
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"Oh, I'm not so vain! How terribly
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discerning you are."
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She looked straight at Wilson, and he felt
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that this quick, frank glance brought about
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an understanding between them.
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He liked everything about her, he told himself,
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but he particularly liked her eyes;
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when she looked at one directly for a moment
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they were like a glimpse of fine windy sky
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that may bring all sorts of weather.
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"Since you noticed something," Mrs. Alexander
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went on, "it must have been a flash of the
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distrust I have come to feel whenever
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I meet any of the people who knew Bartley
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when he was a boy. It is always as if
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they were talking of someone I had never met.
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Really, Professor Wilson, it would seem
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that he grew up among the strangest people.
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They usually say that he has turned out very well,
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or remark that he always was a fine fellow.
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I never know what reply to make."
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Wilson chuckled and leaned back in his chair,
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shaking his left foot gently. "I expect the
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fact is that we none of us knew him very well,
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Mrs. Alexander. Though I will say for myself
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that I was always confident he'd do
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something extraordinary."
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Mrs. Alexander's shoulders gave a slight
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movement, suggestive of impatience.
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"Oh, I should think that might have been
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a safe prediction. Another cup, please?"
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"Yes, thank you. But predicting, in the
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case of boys, is not so easy as you might
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imagine, Mrs. Alexander. Some get a bad
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hurt early and lose their courage; and some
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never get a fair wind. Bartley"--he dropped
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his chin on the back of his long hand and looked
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at her admiringly--"Bartley caught the wind early,
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and it has sung in his sails ever since."
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Mrs. Alexander sat looking into the fire
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with intent preoccupation, and Wilson
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studied her half-averted face. He liked the
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suggestion of stormy possibilities in the proud
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curve of her lip and nostril. Without that,
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he reflected, she would be too cold.
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"I should like to know what he was really
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like when he was a boy. I don't believe
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he remembers," she said suddenly.
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"Won't you smoke, Mr. Wilson?"
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Wilson lit a cigarette. "No, I don't suppose
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he does. He was never introspective. He was
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simply the most tremendous response to stimuli
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I have ever known. We didn't know exactly
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what to do with him."
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A servant came in and noiselessly removed
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the tea-tray. Mrs. Alexander screened
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her face from the firelight, which was
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beginning to throw wavering bright spots
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on her dress and hair as the dusk deepened.
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"Of course," she said, "I now and again
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hear stories about things that happened
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when he was in college."
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"But that isn't what you want." Wilson wrinkled
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his brows and looked at her with the smiling
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familiarity that had come about so quickly.
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"What you want is a picture of him, standing
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back there at the other end of twenty years.
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You want to look down through my memory."
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She dropped her hands in her lap. "Yes, yes;
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that's exactly what I want."
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At this moment they heard the front door
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shut with a jar, and Wilson laughed as
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Mrs. Alexander rose quickly. "There he is.
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Away with perspective! No past, no future
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for Bartley; just the fiery moment. The only
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moment that ever was or will be in the world!"
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The door from the hall opened, a voice
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called "Winifred?" hurriedly, and a big man
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came through the drawing-room with a quick,
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heavy tread, bringing with him a smell of
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cigar smoke and chill out-of-doors air.
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When Alexander reached the library door,
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he switched on the lights and stood six feet
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and more in the archway, glowing with strength
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and cordiality and rugged, blond good looks.
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There were other bridge-builders in the
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world, certainly, but it was always Alexander's
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picture that the Sunday Supplement men wanted,
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because he looked as a tamer of rivers
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ought to look. Under his tumbled sandy
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hair his head seemed as hard and powerful
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as a catapult, and his shoulders looked
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strong enough in themselves to support
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a span of any one of his ten great bridges
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that cut the air above as many rivers.
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After dinner Alexander took Wilson up to
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his study. It was a large room over the
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library, and looked out upon the black river
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and the row of white lights along the
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Cambridge Embankment. The room was not at all
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what one might expect of an engineer's study.
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Wilson felt at once the harmony of beautiful
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things that have lived long together without
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obtrusions of ugliness or change. It was none
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of Alexander's doing, of course; those warm
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consonances of color had been blending and
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mellowing before he was born. But the wonder
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was that he was not out of place there,--
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that it all seemed to glow like the inevitable
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background for his vigor and vehemence. He
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sat before the fire, his shoulders deep in the
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cushions of his chair, his powerful head upright,
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his hair rumpled above his broad forehead.
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He sat heavily, a cigar in his large,
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smooth hand, a flush of after-dinner color in
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his face, which wind and sun and exposure to
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all sorts of weather had left fair and clearskinned.
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"You are off for England on Saturday,
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Bartley, Mrs. Alexander tells me."
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"Yes, for a few weeks only. There's a
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meeting of British engineers, and I'm doing
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another bridge in Canada, you know."
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"Oh, every one knows about that. And it
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was in Canada that you met your wife, wasn't it?"
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Yes, at Allway. She was visiting her
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great-aunt there. A most remarkable old lady.
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I was working with MacKeller then, an old
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Scotch engineer who had picked me up in
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London and taken me back to Quebec with him.
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He had the contract for the Allway Bridge,
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but before he began work on it he found out
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that he was going to die, and he advised
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the committee to turn the job over to me.
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Otherwise I'd never have got anything good
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so early. MacKeller was an old friend of
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Mrs. Pemberton, Winifred's aunt. He had
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mentioned me to her, so when I went to
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Allway she asked me to come to see her.
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She was a wonderful old lady."
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"Like her niece?" Wilson queried.
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Bartley laughed. "She had been very
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handsome, but not in Winifred's way.
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When I knew her she was little and fragile,
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very pink and white, with a splendid head and a
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face like fine old lace, somehow,--but perhaps
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I always think of that because she wore a lace
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scarf on her hair. She had such a flavor
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of life about her. She had known Gordon and
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Livingstone and Beaconsfield when she was
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young,--every one. She was the first woman
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of that sort I'd ever known. You know how it
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is in the West,--old people are poked out of
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the way. Aunt Eleanor fascinated me as few
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young women have ever done. I used to go up from
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the works to have tea with her, and sit talking
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to her for hours. It was very stimulating,
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for she couldn't tolerate stupidity."
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"It must have been then that your luck began,
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Bartley," said Wilson, flicking his cigar
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ash with his long finger. "It's curious,
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watching boys," he went on reflectively.
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"I'm sure I did you justice in the matter of ability.
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Yet I always used to feel that there was a
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weak spot where some day strain would tell.
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Even after you began to climb, I stood down
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in the crowd and watched you with--well,
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not with confidence. The more dazzling the
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front you presented, the higher your facade
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rose, the more I expected to see a big crack
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zigzagging from top to bottom,"--he indicated
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its course in the air with his forefinger,--
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"then a crash and clouds of dust. It was curious.
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I had such a clear picture of it. And another
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curious thing, Bartley," Wilson spoke with
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deliberateness and settled deeper into his
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chair, "is that I don't feel it any longer.
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I am sure of you."
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Alexander laughed. "Nonsense! It's not I
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you feel sure of; it's Winifred. People often
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make that mistake."
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"No, I'm serious, Alexander. You've changed.
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You have decided to leave some birds in the bushes.
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You used to want them all."
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Alexander's chair creaked. "I still want a
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good many," he said rather gloomily. "After
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all, life doesn't offer a man much. You work
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like the devil and think you're getting on,
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and suddenly you discover that you've only been
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getting yourself tied up. A million details
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drink you dry. Your life keeps going for
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things you don't want, and all the while you
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are being built alive into a social structure
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you don't care a rap about. I sometimes
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wonder what sort of chap I'd have been if I
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hadn't been this sort; I want to go and live
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out his potentialities, too. I haven't
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forgotten that there are birds in the bushes."
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Bartley stopped and sat frowning into the fire,
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his shoulders thrust forward as if he were
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about to spring at something. Wilson watched him,
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wondering. His old pupil always stimulated him
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at first, and then vastly wearied him.
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The machinery was always pounding away in this man,
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and Wilson preferred companions of a more reflective
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habit of mind. He could not help feeling that
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there were unreasoning and unreasonable
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activities going on in Alexander all the while;
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that even after dinner, when most men
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achieve a decent impersonality, Bartley had
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merely closed the door of the engine-room
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and come up for an airing. The machinery
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itself was still pounding on.
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Bartley's abstraction and Wilson's reflections
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were cut short by a rustle at the door,
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and almost before they could rise Mrs.
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Alexander was standing by the hearth.
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Alexander brought a chair for her,
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but she shook her head.
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"No, dear, thank you. I only came in to
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see whether you and Professor Wilson were
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quite comfortable. I am going down to the
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music-room."
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"Why not practice here? Wilson and I are
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growing very dull. We are tired of talk."
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"Yes, I beg you, Mrs. Alexander,"
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Wilson began, but he got no further.
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"Why, certainly, if you won't find me
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too noisy. I am working on the Schumann
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`Carnival,' and, though I don't practice a
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great many hours, I am very methodical,"
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Mrs. Alexander explained, as she crossed to
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an upright piano that stood at the back of
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the room, near the windows.
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Wilson followed, and, having seen her seated,
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dropped into a chair behind her. She played
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brilliantly and with great musical feeling.
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Wilson could not imagine her permitting
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herself to do anything badly, but he was
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surprised at the cleanness of her execution.
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He wondered how a woman with so many
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duties had managed to keep herself up to a
|
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|
standard really professional. It must take
|
||
|
a great deal of time, certainly, and Bartley
|
||
|
must take a great deal of time. Wilson reflected
|
||
|
that he had never before known a woman who
|
||
|
had been able, for any considerable while,
|
||
|
to support both a personal and an
|
||
|
intellectual passion. Sitting behind her,
|
||
|
he watched her with perplexed admiration,
|
||
|
shading his eyes with his hand. In her dinner dress
|
||
|
she looked even younger than in street clothes,
|
||
|
and, for all her composure and self-sufficiency,
|
||
|
she seemed to him strangely alert and vibrating,
|
||
|
as if in her, too, there were something
|
||
|
never altogether at rest. He felt
|
||
|
that he knew pretty much what she
|
||
|
demanded in people and what she demanded
|
||
|
from life, and he wondered how she squared
|
||
|
Bartley. After ten years she must know him;
|
||
|
and however one took him, however much
|
||
|
one admired him, one had to admit that he
|
||
|
simply wouldn't square. He was a natural
|
||
|
force, certainly, but beyond that, Wilson felt,
|
||
|
he was not anything very really or for very long
|
||
|
at a time.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Wilson glanced toward the fire, where
|
||
|
Bartley's profile was still wreathed in cigar
|
||
|
smoke that curled up more and more slowly.
|
||
|
His shoulders were sunk deep in the cushions
|
||
|
and one hand hung large and passive over the
|
||
|
arm of his chair. He had slipped on a purple
|
||
|
velvet smoking-coat. His wife, Wilson surmised,
|
||
|
had chosen it. She was clearly very proud
|
||
|
of his good looks and his fine color.
|
||
|
But, with the glow of an immediate interest
|
||
|
gone out of it, the engineer's face looked
|
||
|
tired, even a little haggard. The three lines
|
||
|
in his forehead, directly above the nose, deepened
|
||
|
as he sat thinking, and his powerful head
|
||
|
drooped forward heavily. Although Alexander
|
||
|
was only forty-three, Wilson thought that
|
||
|
beneath his vigorous color he detected the
|
||
|
dulling weariness of on-coming middle age.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The next afternoon, at the hour when the river
|
||
|
was beginning to redden under the declining sun,
|
||
|
Wilson again found himself facing Mrs. Alexander
|
||
|
at the tea-table in the library.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Well," he remarked, when he was bidden
|
||
|
to give an account of himself, "there was
|
||
|
a long morning with the psychologists,
|
||
|
luncheon with Bartley at his club,
|
||
|
more psychologists, and here I am.
|
||
|
I've looked forward to this hour all day."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Mrs. Alexander smiled at him across the
|
||
|
vapor from the kettle. "And do you
|
||
|
remember where we stopped yesterday?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Perfectly. I was going to show you a
|
||
|
picture. But I doubt whether I have color
|
||
|
enough in me. Bartley makes me feel a faded
|
||
|
monochrome. You can't get at the young
|
||
|
Bartley except by means of color." Wilson
|
||
|
paused and deliberated. Suddenly he broke
|
||
|
out: "He wasn't a remarkable student, you
|
||
|
know, though he was always strong in higher
|
||
|
mathematics. His work in my own department
|
||
|
was quite ordinary. It was as a powerfully
|
||
|
equipped nature that I found him interesting.
|
||
|
That is the most interesting thing a teacher
|
||
|
can find. It has the fascination of a
|
||
|
scientific discovery. We come across other
|
||
|
pleasing and endearing qualities so much
|
||
|
oftener than we find force."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"And, after all," said Mrs. Alexander,
|
||
|
"that is the thing we all live upon.
|
||
|
It is the thing that takes us forward."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Wilson thought she spoke a little wistfully.
|
||
|
"Exactly," he assented warmly. "It builds
|
||
|
the bridges into the future, over which
|
||
|
the feet of every one of us will go."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"How interested I am to hear you put it
|
||
|
in that way. The bridges into the future--
|
||
|
I often say that to myself. Bartley's bridges
|
||
|
always seem to me like that. Have you ever
|
||
|
seen his first suspension bridge in Canada,
|
||
|
the one he was doing when I first knew him?
|
||
|
I hope you will see it sometime. We were
|
||
|
married as soon as it was finished, and you
|
||
|
will laugh when I tell you that it always has a
|
||
|
rather bridal look to me. It is over the wildest
|
||
|
river, with mists and clouds always battling
|
||
|
about it, and it is as delicate as a cobweb
|
||
|
hanging in the sky. It really was a bridge into
|
||
|
the future. You have only to look at it to feel
|
||
|
that it meant the beginning of a great career.
|
||
|
But I have a photograph of it here." She drew a
|
||
|
portfolio from behind a bookcase. "And there,
|
||
|
you see, on the hill, is my aunt's house."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Wilson took up the photograph. "Bartley was
|
||
|
telling me something about your aunt last night.
|
||
|
She must have been a delightful person."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Winifred laughed. "The bridge, you see,
|
||
|
was just at the foot of the hill, and the noise
|
||
|
of the engines annoyed her very much at first.
|
||
|
But after she met Bartley she pretended
|
||
|
to like it, and said it was a good thing to
|
||
|
be reminded that there were things going on
|
||
|
in the world. She loved life, and Bartley
|
||
|
brought a great deal of it in to her when
|
||
|
he came to the house. Aunt Eleanor was very
|
||
|
worldly in a frank, Early-Victorian manner.
|
||
|
She liked men of action, and disliked young
|
||
|
men who were careful of themselves and
|
||
|
who, as she put it, were always trimming
|
||
|
their wick as if they were afraid of their oil's
|
||
|
giving out. MacKeller, Bartley's first chief,
|
||
|
was an old friend of my aunt, and he told her
|
||
|
that Bartley was a wild, ill-governed youth,
|
||
|
which really pleased her very much.
|
||
|
I remember we were sitting alone in the dusk
|
||
|
after Bartley had been there for the first time.
|
||
|
I knew that Aunt Eleanor had found him much
|
||
|
to her taste, but she hadn't said anything.
|
||
|
Presently she came out, with a chuckle:
|
||
|
`MacKeller found him sowing wild oats in
|
||
|
London, I believe. I hope he didn't stop him
|
||
|
too soon. Life coquets with dashing fellows.
|
||
|
The coming men are always like that.
|
||
|
We must have him to dinner, my dear.'
|
||
|
And we did. She grew much fonder of Bartley
|
||
|
than she was of me. I had been studying in
|
||
|
Vienna, and she thought that absurd.
|
||
|
She was interested in the army and in politics,
|
||
|
and she had a great contempt for music and
|
||
|
art and philosophy. She used to declare that
|
||
|
the Prince Consort had brought all that stuff
|
||
|
over out of Germany. She always sniffed
|
||
|
when Bartley asked me to play for him. She
|
||
|
considered that a newfangled way of making
|
||
|
a match of it."
|
||
|
|
||
|
When Alexander came in a few moments later,
|
||
|
he found Wilson and his wife still
|
||
|
confronting the photograph. "Oh, let us
|
||
|
get that out of the way," he said, laughing.
|
||
|
"Winifred, Thomas can bring my trunk down.
|
||
|
I've decided to go over to New York
|
||
|
to-morrow night and take a fast boat.
|
||
|
I shall save two days."
|
||
|
|
||
|
CHAPTER II
|
||
|
|
||
|
On the night of his arrival in London,
|
||
|
Alexander went immediately to the hotel on the
|
||
|
Embankment at which he always stopped,
|
||
|
and in the lobby he was accosted by an old
|
||
|
acquaintance, Maurice Mainhall, who fell
|
||
|
upon him with effusive cordiality and
|
||
|
indicated a willingness to dine with him.
|
||
|
Bartley never dined alone if he could help it,
|
||
|
and Mainhall was a good gossip who always knew
|
||
|
what had been going on in town; especially,
|
||
|
he knew everything that was not printed in
|
||
|
the newspapers. The nephew of one of the
|
||
|
standard Victorian novelists, Mainhall bobbed
|
||
|
about among the various literary cliques of
|
||
|
London and its outlying suburbs, careful to
|
||
|
lose touch with none of them. He had written
|
||
|
a number of books himself; among them a
|
||
|
"History of Dancing," a "History of Costume,"
|
||
|
a "Key to Shakespeare's Sonnets," a study of
|
||
|
"The Poetry of Ernest Dowson," etc.
|
||
|
Although Mainhall's enthusiasm was often
|
||
|
tiresome, and although he was often unable
|
||
|
to distinguish between facts and vivid
|
||
|
figments of his imagination, his imperturbable
|
||
|
good nature overcame even the people whom he
|
||
|
bored most, so that they ended by becoming,
|
||
|
in a reluctant manner, his friends.
|
||
|
In appearance, Mainhall was astonishingly
|
||
|
like the conventional stage-Englishman of
|
||
|
American drama: tall and thin, with high,
|
||
|
hitching shoulders and a small head glistening
|
||
|
with closely brushed yellow hair. He spoke
|
||
|
with an extreme Oxford accent, and when he was
|
||
|
talking well, his face sometimes wore the rapt
|
||
|
expression of a very emotional man listening
|
||
|
to music. Mainhall liked Alexander because
|
||
|
he was an engineer. He had preconceived
|
||
|
ideas about everything, and his idea about
|
||
|
Americans was that they should be engineers
|
||
|
or mechanics. He hated them when they
|
||
|
presumed to be anything else.
|
||
|
|
||
|
While they sat at dinner Mainhall acquainted
|
||
|
Bartley with the fortunes of his old friends
|
||
|
in London, and as they left the table he
|
||
|
proposed that they should go to see Hugh
|
||
|
MacConnell's new comedy, "Bog Lights."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"It's really quite the best thing MacConnell's done,"
|
||
|
he explained as they got into a hansom.
|
||
|
"It's tremendously well put on, too.
|
||
|
Florence Merrill and Cyril Henderson.
|
||
|
But Hilda Burgoyne's the hit of the piece.
|
||
|
Hugh's written a delightful part for her,
|
||
|
and she's quite inexpressible. It's been on
|
||
|
only two weeks, and I've been half a dozen times
|
||
|
already. I happen to have MacConnell's box
|
||
|
for tonight or there'd be no chance of our
|
||
|
getting places. There's everything in seeing
|
||
|
Hilda while she's fresh in a part. She's apt to
|
||
|
grow a bit stale after a time. The ones who
|
||
|
have any imagination do."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Hilda Burgoyne!" Alexander exclaimed mildly.
|
||
|
"Why, I haven't heard of her for--years."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Mainhall laughed. "Then you can't have
|
||
|
heard much at all, my dear Alexander.
|
||
|
It's only lately, since MacConnell and his
|
||
|
set have got hold of her, that she's come up.
|
||
|
Myself, I always knew she had it in her.
|
||
|
If we had one real critic in London--but what
|
||
|
can one expect? Do you know, Alexander,"--
|
||
|
Mainhall looked with perplexity up into the
|
||
|
top of the hansom and rubbed his pink cheek
|
||
|
with his gloved finger,--"do you know, I sometimes
|
||
|
think of taking to criticism seriously myself.
|
||
|
In a way, it would be a sacrifice;
|
||
|
but, dear me, we do need some one."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Just then they drove up to the Duke of York's,
|
||
|
so Alexander did not commit himself,
|
||
|
but followed Mainhall into the theatre.
|
||
|
When they entered the stage-box on the left the
|
||
|
first act was well under way, the scene being
|
||
|
the interior of a cabin in the south of Ireland.
|
||
|
As they sat down, a burst of applause drew
|
||
|
Alexander's attention to the stage. Miss
|
||
|
Burgoyne and her donkey were thrusting their
|
||
|
heads in at the half door. "After all,"
|
||
|
he reflected, "there's small probability of
|
||
|
her recognizing me. She doubtless hasn't thought
|
||
|
of me for years." He felt the enthusiasm of
|
||
|
the house at once, and in a few moments he
|
||
|
was caught up by the current of MacConnell's
|
||
|
irresistible comedy. The audience had
|
||
|
come forewarned, evidently, and whenever
|
||
|
the ragged slip of a donkey-girl ran upon the
|
||
|
stage there was a deep murmur of approbation,
|
||
|
every one smiled and glowed, and Mainhall
|
||
|
hitched his heavy chair a little nearer the
|
||
|
brass railing.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"You see," he murmured in Alexander's ear,
|
||
|
as the curtain fell on the first act,
|
||
|
"one almost never sees a part like that done
|
||
|
without smartness or mawkishness. Of course,
|
||
|
Hilda is Irish,--the Burgoynes have been
|
||
|
stage people for generations,--and she has the
|
||
|
Irish voice. It's delightful to hear it in a
|
||
|
London theatre. That laugh, now, when she
|
||
|
doubles over at the hips--who ever heard it
|
||
|
out of Galway? She saves her hand, too.
|
||
|
She's at her best in the second act. She's
|
||
|
really MacConnell's poetic motif, you see;
|
||
|
makes the whole thing a fairy tale."
|
||
|
|
||
|
The second act opened before Philly
|
||
|
Doyle's underground still, with Peggy and
|
||
|
her battered donkey come in to smuggle a
|
||
|
load of potheen across the bog, and to bring
|
||
|
Philly word of what was doing in the world
|
||
|
without, and of what was happening along
|
||
|
the roadsides and ditches with the first gleam
|
||
|
of fine weather. Alexander, annoyed by
|
||
|
Mainhall's sighs and exclamations, watched
|
||
|
her with keen, half-skeptical interest. As
|
||
|
Mainhall had said, she was the second act;
|
||
|
the plot and feeling alike depended upon her
|
||
|
lightness of foot, her lightness of touch, upon
|
||
|
the shrewdness and deft fancifulness that
|
||
|
played alternately, and sometimes together,
|
||
|
in her mirthful brown eyes. When she began
|
||
|
to dance, by way of showing the gossoons what
|
||
|
she had seen in the fairy rings at night,
|
||
|
the house broke into a prolonged uproar.
|
||
|
After her dance she withdrew from the dialogue
|
||
|
and retreated to the ditch wall back of Philly's
|
||
|
burrow, where she sat singing "The Rising of the Moon"
|
||
|
and making a wreath of primroses for her donkey.
|
||
|
|
||
|
When the act was over Alexander and Mainhall
|
||
|
strolled out into the corridor. They met
|
||
|
a good many acquaintances; Mainhall, indeed,
|
||
|
knew almost every one, and he babbled on incontinently,
|
||
|
screwing his small head about over his high collar.
|
||
|
Presently he hailed a tall, bearded man, grim-browed
|
||
|
and rather battered-looking, who had his opera cloak
|
||
|
on his arm and his hat in his hand, and who seemed
|
||
|
to be on the point of leaving the theatre.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"MacConnell, let me introduce Mr. Bartley
|
||
|
Alexander. I say! It's going famously
|
||
|
to-night, Mac. And what an audience!
|
||
|
You'll never do anything like this again, mark me.
|
||
|
A man writes to the top of his bent only once."
|
||
|
|
||
|
The playwright gave Mainhall a curious look
|
||
|
out of his deep-set faded eyes and made a
|
||
|
wry face. "And have I done anything so
|
||
|
fool as that, now?" he asked.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"That's what I was saying," Mainhall lounged
|
||
|
a little nearer and dropped into a tone
|
||
|
even more conspicuously confidential.
|
||
|
"And you'll never bring Hilda out like
|
||
|
this again. Dear me, Mac, the girl
|
||
|
couldn't possibly be better, you know."
|
||
|
|
||
|
MacConnell grunted. "She'll do well
|
||
|
enough if she keeps her pace and doesn't
|
||
|
go off on us in the middle of the season,
|
||
|
as she's more than like to do."
|
||
|
|
||
|
He nodded curtly and made for the door,
|
||
|
dodging acquaintances as he went.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Poor old Hugh," Mainhall murmured.
|
||
|
"He's hit terribly hard. He's been wanting
|
||
|
to marry Hilda these three years and more.
|
||
|
She doesn't take up with anybody, you know.
|
||
|
Irene Burgoyne, one of her family, told me in
|
||
|
confidence that there was a romance somewhere
|
||
|
back in the beginning. One of your countrymen,
|
||
|
Alexander, by the way; an American student
|
||
|
whom she met in Paris, I believe. I dare say
|
||
|
it's quite true that there's never been any one else."
|
||
|
Mainhall vouched for her constancy with a loftiness
|
||
|
that made Alexander smile, even while a kind of
|
||
|
rapid excitement was tingling through him.
|
||
|
Blinking up at the lights, Mainhall added
|
||
|
in his luxurious, worldly way: "She's an elegant
|
||
|
little person, and quite capable of an extravagant
|
||
|
bit of sentiment like that. Here comes
|
||
|
Sir Harry Towne. He's another who's
|
||
|
awfully keen about her. Let me introduce you.
|
||
|
Sir Harry Towne, Mr. Bartley Alexander,
|
||
|
the American engineer."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Sir Harry Towne bowed and said that he had
|
||
|
met Mr. Alexander and his wife in Tokyo.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Mainhall cut in impatiently.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I say, Sir Harry, the little girl's
|
||
|
going famously to-night, isn't she?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
Sir Harry wrinkled his brows judiciously.
|
||
|
"Do you know, I thought the dance a bit
|
||
|
conscious to-night, for the first time. The fact
|
||
|
is, she's feeling rather seedy, poor child.
|
||
|
Westmere and I were back after the first act,
|
||
|
and we thought she seemed quite uncertain of
|
||
|
herself. A little attack of nerves, possibly."
|
||
|
|
||
|
He bowed as the warning bell rang, and
|
||
|
Mainhall whispered: "You know Lord Westmere,
|
||
|
of course,--the stooped man with the
|
||
|
long gray mustache, talking to Lady Dowle.
|
||
|
Lady Westmere is very fond of Hilda."
|
||
|
|
||
|
When they reached their box the house
|
||
|
was darkened and the orchestra was playing
|
||
|
"The Cloak of Old Gaul." In a moment
|
||
|
Peggy was on the stage again, and Alexander
|
||
|
applauded vigorously with the rest. He even
|
||
|
leaned forward over the rail a little. For some
|
||
|
reason he felt pleased and flattered by the
|
||
|
enthusiasm of the audience. In the half-light
|
||
|
he looked about at the stalls and boxes and
|
||
|
smiled a little consciously, recalling with
|
||
|
amusement Sir Harry's judicial frown.
|
||
|
He was beginning to feel a keen interest in
|
||
|
the slender, barefoot donkey-girl who slipped
|
||
|
in and out of the play, singing, like some one
|
||
|
winding through a hilly field. He leaned
|
||
|
forward and beamed felicitations as warmly
|
||
|
as Mainhall himself when, at the end of the
|
||
|
play, she came again and again before the
|
||
|
curtain, panting a little and flushed, her eyes
|
||
|
dancing and her eager, nervous little mouth
|
||
|
tremulous with excitement.
|
||
|
|
||
|
When Alexander returned to his hotel--
|
||
|
he shook Mainhall at the door of the theatre--
|
||
|
he had some supper brought up to his room,
|
||
|
and it was late before he went to bed.
|
||
|
He had not thought of Hilda Burgoyne for
|
||
|
years; indeed, he had almost forgotten her.
|
||
|
He had last written to her from Canada,
|
||
|
after he first met Winifred, telling her that
|
||
|
everything was changed with him--that he had
|
||
|
met a woman whom he would marry if he could;
|
||
|
if he could not, then all the more was
|
||
|
everything changed for him. Hilda had never
|
||
|
replied to his letter. He felt guilty and
|
||
|
unhappy about her for a time, but after
|
||
|
Winifred promised to marry him he really forgot
|
||
|
Hilda altogether. When he wrote her that
|
||
|
everything was changed for him, he was telling
|
||
|
the truth. After he met Winifred Pemberton
|
||
|
he seemed to himself like a different man.
|
||
|
One night when he and Winifred were
|
||
|
sitting together on the bridge, he told her
|
||
|
that things had happened while he was studying
|
||
|
abroad that he was sorry for,--one thing in
|
||
|
particular,--and he asked her whether she
|
||
|
thought she ought to know about them.
|
||
|
She considered a moment and then said
|
||
|
"No, I think not, though I am glad you ask me.
|
||
|
You see, one can't be jealous about things
|
||
|
in general; but about particular, definite,
|
||
|
personal things,"--here she had thrown her
|
||
|
hands up to his shoulders with a quick,
|
||
|
impulsive gesture--"oh, about those I should be
|
||
|
very jealous. I should torture myself--I couldn't
|
||
|
help it." After that it was easy to forget,
|
||
|
actually to forget. He wondered to-night,
|
||
|
as he poured his wine, how many times he had
|
||
|
thought of Hilda in the last ten years.
|
||
|
He had been in London more or less,
|
||
|
but he had never happened to hear of her.
|
||
|
"All the same," he lifted his glass, "here's to you,
|
||
|
little Hilda. You've made things come your way,
|
||
|
and I never thought you'd do it.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Of course," he reflected, "she always had
|
||
|
that combination of something homely and
|
||
|
sensible, and something utterly wild and daft.
|
||
|
But I never thought she'd do anything.
|
||
|
She hadn't much ambition then, and she was
|
||
|
too fond of trifles. She must care about the
|
||
|
theatre a great deal more than she used to.
|
||
|
Perhaps she has me to thank for something,
|
||
|
after all. Sometimes a little jolt like that
|
||
|
does one good. She was a daft, generous
|
||
|
little thing. I'm glad she's held her own since.
|
||
|
After all, we were awfully young. It was youth
|
||
|
and poverty and proximity, and everything
|
||
|
was young and kindly. I shouldn't wonder
|
||
|
if she could laugh about it with me now.
|
||
|
I shouldn't wonder-- But they've probably
|
||
|
spoiled her, so that she'd be tiresome if
|
||
|
one met her again."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Bartley smiled and yawned and went to bed.
|
||
|
|
||
|
CHAPTER III
|
||
|
|
||
|
The next evening Alexander dined alone at
|
||
|
a club, and at about nine o'clock he dropped in
|
||
|
at the Duke of York's. The house was sold
|
||
|
out and he stood through the second act.
|
||
|
When he returned to his hotel he examined
|
||
|
the new directory, and found Miss Burgoyne's
|
||
|
address still given as off Bedford Square,
|
||
|
though at a new number. He remembered that,
|
||
|
in so far as she had been brought up at all,
|
||
|
she had been brought up in Bloomsbury.
|
||
|
Her father and mother played in the
|
||
|
provinces most of the year, and she was left a
|
||
|
great deal in the care of an old aunt who was
|
||
|
crippled by rheumatism and who had had to
|
||
|
leave the stage altogether. In the days when
|
||
|
Alexander knew her, Hilda always managed to have
|
||
|
a lodging of some sort about Bedford Square,
|
||
|
because she clung tenaciously to such
|
||
|
scraps and shreds of memories as were
|
||
|
connected with it. The mummy room of the
|
||
|
British Museum had been one of the chief
|
||
|
delights of her childhood. That forbidding
|
||
|
pile was the goal of her truant fancy, and she
|
||
|
was sometimes taken there for a treat, as
|
||
|
other children are taken to the theatre. It was
|
||
|
long since Alexander had thought of any of
|
||
|
these things, but now they came back to him
|
||
|
quite fresh, and had a significance they did
|
||
|
not have when they were first told him in his
|
||
|
restless twenties. So she was still in the
|
||
|
old neighborhood, near Bedford Square.
|
||
|
The new number probably meant increased
|
||
|
prosperity. He hoped so. He would like to know
|
||
|
that she was snugly settled. He looked at his
|
||
|
watch. It was a quarter past ten; she would
|
||
|
not be home for a good two hours yet, and he
|
||
|
might as well walk over and have a look at
|
||
|
the place. He remembered the shortest way.
|
||
|
|
||
|
It was a warm, smoky evening, and there
|
||
|
was a grimy moon. He went through Covent
|
||
|
Garden to Oxford Street, and as he turned
|
||
|
into Museum Street he walked more slowly,
|
||
|
smiling at his own nervousness as he
|
||
|
approached the sullen gray mass at the end.
|
||
|
He had not been inside the Museum, actually,
|
||
|
since he and Hilda used to meet there;
|
||
|
sometimes to set out for gay adventures at
|
||
|
Twickenham or Richmond, sometimes to linger
|
||
|
about the place for a while and to ponder by
|
||
|
Lord Elgin's marbles upon the lastingness of
|
||
|
some things, or, in the mummy room, upon
|
||
|
the awful brevity of others. Since then
|
||
|
Bartley had always thought of the British
|
||
|
Museum as the ultimate repository of mortality,
|
||
|
where all the dead things in the world were
|
||
|
assembled to make one's hour of youth the
|
||
|
more precious. One trembled lest before he
|
||
|
got out it might somehow escape him, lest he
|
||
|
might drop the glass from over-eagerness and
|
||
|
see it shivered on the stone floor at his feet.
|
||
|
How one hid his youth under his coat and
|
||
|
hugged it! And how good it was to turn
|
||
|
one's back upon all that vaulted cold, to take
|
||
|
Hilda's arm and hurry out of the great door
|
||
|
and down the steps into the sunlight among
|
||
|
the pigeons--to know that the warm and vital
|
||
|
thing within him was still there and had not
|
||
|
been snatched away to flush Caesar's lean
|
||
|
cheek or to feed the veins of some bearded
|
||
|
Assyrian king. They in their day had carried
|
||
|
the flaming liquor, but to-day was his! So the
|
||
|
song used to run in his head those summer
|
||
|
mornings a dozen years ago. Alexander
|
||
|
walked by the place very quietly, as if
|
||
|
he were afraid of waking some one.
|
||
|
|
||
|
He crossed Bedford Square and found the
|
||
|
number he was looking for. The house,
|
||
|
a comfortable, well-kept place enough,
|
||
|
was dark except for the four front windows
|
||
|
on the second floor, where a low, even light was
|
||
|
burning behind the white muslin sash curtains.
|
||
|
Outside there were window boxes, painted white
|
||
|
and full of flowers. Bartley was making
|
||
|
a third round of the Square when he heard the
|
||
|
far-flung hoof-beats of a hansom-cab horse,
|
||
|
driven rapidly. He looked at his watch,
|
||
|
and was astonished to find that it was
|
||
|
a few minutes after twelve. He turned and
|
||
|
walked back along the iron railing as the
|
||
|
cab came up to Hilda's number and stopped.
|
||
|
The hansom must have been one that she employed
|
||
|
regularly, for she did not stop to pay the driver.
|
||
|
She stepped out quickly and lightly.
|
||
|
He heard her cheerful "Good-night, cabby,"
|
||
|
as she ran up the steps and opened the
|
||
|
door with a latchkey. In a few moments the
|
||
|
lights flared up brightly behind the white
|
||
|
curtains, and as he walked away he heard a
|
||
|
window raised. But he had gone too far to
|
||
|
look up without turning round. He went back
|
||
|
to his hotel, feeling that he had had a good
|
||
|
evening, and he slept well.
|
||
|
|
||
|
For the next few days Alexander was very busy.
|
||
|
He took a desk in the office of a Scotch
|
||
|
engineering firm on Henrietta Street,
|
||
|
and was at work almost constantly.
|
||
|
He avoided the clubs and usually dined alone
|
||
|
at his hotel. One afternoon, after he had tea,
|
||
|
he started for a walk down the Embankment
|
||
|
toward Westminster, intending to end his
|
||
|
stroll at Bedford Square and to ask whether
|
||
|
Miss Burgoyne would let him take her to the
|
||
|
theatre. But he did not go so far. When he
|
||
|
reached the Abbey, he turned back and
|
||
|
crossed Westminster Bridge and sat down to
|
||
|
watch the trails of smoke behind the Houses
|
||
|
of Parliament catch fire with the sunset.
|
||
|
The slender towers were washed by a rain of
|
||
|
golden light and licked by little flickering
|
||
|
flames; Somerset House and the bleached
|
||
|
gray pinnacles about Whitehall were floated
|
||
|
in a luminous haze. The yellow light poured
|
||
|
through the trees and the leaves seemed to
|
||
|
burn with soft fires. There was a smell of
|
||
|
acacias in the air everywhere, and the
|
||
|
laburnums were dripping gold over the walls
|
||
|
of the gardens. It was a sweet, lonely kind
|
||
|
of summer evening. Remembering Hilda as she
|
||
|
used to be, was doubtless more satisfactory
|
||
|
than seeing her as she must be now--and,
|
||
|
after all, Alexander asked himself, what was
|
||
|
it but his own young years that he was
|
||
|
remembering?
|
||
|
|
||
|
He crossed back to Westminster, went up
|
||
|
to the Temple, and sat down to smoke in
|
||
|
the Middle Temple gardens, listening to the
|
||
|
thin voice of the fountain and smelling the
|
||
|
spice of the sycamores that came out heavily
|
||
|
in the damp evening air. He thought, as he
|
||
|
sat there, about a great many things: about
|
||
|
his own youth and Hilda's; above all, he
|
||
|
thought of how glorious it had been, and how
|
||
|
quickly it had passed; and, when it had
|
||
|
passed, how little worth while anything was.
|
||
|
None of the things he had gained in the least
|
||
|
compensated. In the last six years his
|
||
|
reputation had become, as the saying is, popular.
|
||
|
Four years ago he had been called to Japan to
|
||
|
deliver, at the Emperor's request, a course of
|
||
|
lectures at the Imperial University, and had
|
||
|
instituted reforms throughout the islands, not
|
||
|
only in the practice of bridge-building but in
|
||
|
drainage and road-making. On his return he
|
||
|
had undertaken the bridge at Moorlock, in
|
||
|
Canada, the most important piece of bridge-
|
||
|
building going on in the world,--a test,
|
||
|
indeed, of how far the latest practice in bridge
|
||
|
structure could be carried. It was a spectacular
|
||
|
undertaking by reason of its very size, and
|
||
|
Bartley realized that, whatever else he might
|
||
|
do, he would probably always be known as
|
||
|
the engineer who designed the great Moorlock
|
||
|
Bridge, the longest cantilever in existence.
|
||
|
Yet it was to him the least satisfactory thing
|
||
|
he had ever done. He was cramped in every
|
||
|
way by a niggardly commission, and was
|
||
|
using lighter structural material than he
|
||
|
thought proper. He had vexations enough,
|
||
|
too, with his work at home. He had several
|
||
|
bridges under way in the United States, and
|
||
|
they were always being held up by strikes and
|
||
|
delays resulting from a general industrial unrest.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Though Alexander often told himself he
|
||
|
had never put more into his work than he had
|
||
|
done in the last few years, he had to admit
|
||
|
that he had never got so little out of it.
|
||
|
He was paying for success, too, in the demands
|
||
|
made on his time by boards of civic enterprise
|
||
|
and committees of public welfare. The obligations
|
||
|
imposed by his wife's fortune and position
|
||
|
were sometimes distracting to a man who
|
||
|
followed his profession, and he was
|
||
|
expected to be interested in a great many
|
||
|
worthy endeavors on her account as well as
|
||
|
on his own. His existence was becoming a
|
||
|
network of great and little details. He had
|
||
|
expected that success would bring him
|
||
|
freedom and power; but it had brought only
|
||
|
power that was in itself another kind of
|
||
|
restraint. He had always meant to keep his
|
||
|
personal liberty at all costs, as old MacKeller,
|
||
|
his first chief, had done, and not, like so
|
||
|
many American engineers, to become a part
|
||
|
of a professional movement, a cautious board
|
||
|
member, a Nestor de pontibus. He happened
|
||
|
to be engaged in work of public utility, but
|
||
|
he was not willing to become what is called a
|
||
|
public man. He found himself living exactly
|
||
|
the kind of life he had determined to escape.
|
||
|
What, he asked himself, did he want with
|
||
|
these genial honors and substantial comforts?
|
||
|
Hardships and difficulties he had carried
|
||
|
lightly; overwork had not exhausted him; but this
|
||
|
dead calm of middle life which confronted him,--
|
||
|
of that he was afraid. He was not ready for it.
|
||
|
It was like being buried alive. In his youth
|
||
|
he would not have believed such a thing possible.
|
||
|
The one thing he had really wanted all his life
|
||
|
was to be free; and there was still something
|
||
|
unconquered in him, something besides the
|
||
|
strong work-horse that his profession had made of him.
|
||
|
He felt rich to-night in the possession of that
|
||
|
unstultified survival; in the light of his
|
||
|
experience, it was more precious than honors
|
||
|
or achievement. In all those busy, successful
|
||
|
years there had been nothing so good as this
|
||
|
hour of wild light-heartedness. This feeling
|
||
|
was the only happiness that was real to him,
|
||
|
and such hours were the only ones in which
|
||
|
he could feel his own continuous identity--
|
||
|
feel the boy he had been in the rough days of
|
||
|
the old West, feel the youth who had worked
|
||
|
his way across the ocean on a cattle-ship and
|
||
|
gone to study in Paris without a dollar in his
|
||
|
pocket. The man who sat in his offices in
|
||
|
Boston was only a powerful machine. Under
|
||
|
the activities of that machine the person who,
|
||
|
in such moments as this, he felt to be himself,
|
||
|
was fading and dying. He remembered how,
|
||
|
when he was a little boy and his father
|
||
|
called him in the morning, he used to leap
|
||
|
from his bed into the full consciousness of
|
||
|
himself. That consciousness was Life itself.
|
||
|
Whatever took its place, action, reflection,
|
||
|
the power of concentrated thought, were only
|
||
|
functions of a mechanism useful to society;
|
||
|
things that could be bought in the market.
|
||
|
There was only one thing that had an
|
||
|
absolute value for each individual, and it was
|
||
|
just that original impulse, that internal heat,
|
||
|
that feeling of one's self in one's own breast.
|
||
|
|
||
|
When Alexander walked back to his hotel,
|
||
|
the red and green lights were blinking
|
||
|
along the docks on the farther shore,
|
||
|
and the soft white stars were shining
|
||
|
in the wide sky above the river.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The next night, and the next, Alexander
|
||
|
repeated this same foolish performance.
|
||
|
It was always Miss Burgoyne whom he started
|
||
|
out to find, and he got no farther than the
|
||
|
Temple gardens and the Embankment. It was
|
||
|
a pleasant kind of loneliness. To a man who
|
||
|
was so little given to reflection, whose dreams
|
||
|
always took the form of definite ideas,
|
||
|
reaching into the future, there was a seductive
|
||
|
excitement in renewing old experiences in
|
||
|
imagination. He started out upon these walks
|
||
|
half guiltily, with a curious longing and
|
||
|
expectancy which were wholly gratified by
|
||
|
solitude. Solitude, but not solitariness;
|
||
|
for he walked shoulder to shoulder with a
|
||
|
shadowy companion--not little Hilda Burgoyne,
|
||
|
by any means, but some one vastly dearer to him
|
||
|
than she had ever been--his own young self,
|
||
|
the youth who had waited for him upon the
|
||
|
steps of the British Museum that night, and
|
||
|
who, though he had tried to pass so quietly,
|
||
|
had known him and come down and linked
|
||
|
an arm in his.
|
||
|
|
||
|
It was not until long afterward that
|
||
|
Alexander learned that for him this youth
|
||
|
was the most dangerous of companions.
|
||
|
|
||
|
One Sunday evening, at Lady Walford's,
|
||
|
Alexander did at last meet Hilda Burgoyne.
|
||
|
Mainhall had told him that she would probably
|
||
|
be there. He looked about for her rather
|
||
|
nervously, and finally found her at the farther
|
||
|
end of the large drawing-room, the centre of
|
||
|
a circle of men, young and old. She was
|
||
|
apparently telling them a story. They were
|
||
|
all laughing and bending toward her. When
|
||
|
she saw Alexander, she rose quickly and put
|
||
|
out her hand. The other men drew back a
|
||
|
little to let him approach.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Mr. Alexander! I am delighted. Have you been
|
||
|
in London long?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
Bartley bowed, somewhat laboriously,
|
||
|
over her hand. "Long enough to have seen
|
||
|
you more than once. How fine it all is!"
|
||
|
|
||
|
She laughed as if she were pleased. "I'm glad
|
||
|
you think so. I like it. Won't you join us here?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Miss Burgoyne was just telling us about
|
||
|
a donkey-boy she had in Galway last summer,"
|
||
|
Sir Harry Towne explained as the circle
|
||
|
closed up again. Lord Westmere stroked
|
||
|
his long white mustache with his bloodless
|
||
|
hand and looked at Alexander blankly.
|
||
|
Hilda was a good story-teller. She was
|
||
|
sitting on the edge of her chair, as if she
|
||
|
had alighted there for a moment only.
|
||
|
Her primrose satin gown seemed like a soft sheath
|
||
|
for her slender, supple figure, and its delicate
|
||
|
color suited her white Irish skin and brown
|
||
|
hair. Whatever she wore, people felt the
|
||
|
charm of her active, girlish body with its
|
||
|
slender hips and quick, eager shoulders.
|
||
|
Alexander heard little of the story, but he
|
||
|
watched Hilda intently. She must certainly,
|
||
|
he reflected, be thirty, and he was honestly
|
||
|
delighted to see that the years had treated her
|
||
|
so indulgently. If her face had changed at all,
|
||
|
it was in a slight hardening of the mouth--
|
||
|
still eager enough to be very disconcerting
|
||
|
at times, he felt--and in an added air of self-
|
||
|
possession and self-reliance. She carried her
|
||
|
head, too, a little more resolutely.
|
||
|
|
||
|
When the story was finished, Miss Burgoyne
|
||
|
turned pointedly to Alexander, and the
|
||
|
other men drifted away.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I thought I saw you in MacConnell's box
|
||
|
with Mainhall one evening, but I supposed
|
||
|
you had left town before this."
|
||
|
|
||
|
She looked at him frankly and cordially,
|
||
|
as if he were indeed merely an old friend
|
||
|
whom she was glad to meet again.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"No, I've been mooning about here."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Hilda laughed gayly. "Mooning! I see
|
||
|
you mooning! You must be the busiest man
|
||
|
in the world. Time and success have done
|
||
|
well by you, you know. You're handsomer
|
||
|
than ever and you've gained a grand manner."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Alexander blushed and bowed. "Time and
|
||
|
success have been good friends to both of us.
|
||
|
Aren't you tremendously pleased with yourself?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
She laughed again and shrugged her shoulders.
|
||
|
"Oh, so-so. But I want to hear about you.
|
||
|
Several years ago I read such a lot in the
|
||
|
papers about the wonderful things you did
|
||
|
in Japan, and how the Emperor decorated you.
|
||
|
What was it, Commander of the Order of
|
||
|
the Rising Sun? That sounds like `The
|
||
|
Mikado.' And what about your new bridge--
|
||
|
in Canada, isn't it, and it's to be the longest
|
||
|
one in the world and has some queer name I
|
||
|
can't remember."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Bartley shook his head and smiled drolly.
|
||
|
"Since when have you been interested in
|
||
|
bridges? Or have you learned to be interested
|
||
|
in everything? And is that a part of success?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Why, how absurd! As if I were not
|
||
|
always interested!" Hilda exclaimed.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Well, I think we won't talk about bridges here,
|
||
|
at any rate." Bartley looked down at the toe
|
||
|
of her yellow slipper which was tapping the rug
|
||
|
impatiently under the hem of her gown.
|
||
|
"But I wonder whether you'd think me impertinent
|
||
|
if I asked you to let me come to see you sometime
|
||
|
and tell you about them?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Why should I? Ever so many people
|
||
|
come on Sunday afternoons."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I know. Mainhall offered to take me.
|
||
|
But you must know that I've been in London
|
||
|
several times within the last few years, and
|
||
|
you might very well think that just now is a
|
||
|
rather inopportune time--"
|
||
|
|
||
|
She cut him short. "Nonsense. One of the
|
||
|
pleasantest things about success is that it
|
||
|
makes people want to look one up, if that's
|
||
|
what you mean. I'm like every one else--
|
||
|
more agreeable to meet when things are going
|
||
|
well with me. Don't you suppose it gives me
|
||
|
any pleasure to do something that people like?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Does it? Oh, how fine it all is, your
|
||
|
coming on like this! But I didn't want you to
|
||
|
think it was because of that I wanted to see you."
|
||
|
He spoke very seriously and looked down at the floor.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Hilda studied him in wide-eyed astonishment
|
||
|
for a moment, and then broke into a low,
|
||
|
amused laugh. "My dear Mr. Alexander,
|
||
|
you have strange delicacies. If you please,
|
||
|
that is exactly why you wish to see me.
|
||
|
We understand that, do we not?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
Bartley looked ruffled and turned the seal
|
||
|
ring on his little finger about awkwardly.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Hilda leaned back in her chair, watching
|
||
|
him indulgently out of her shrewd eyes.
|
||
|
"Come, don't be angry, but don't try to pose
|
||
|
for me, or to be anything but what you are.
|
||
|
If you care to come, it's yourself I'll be glad
|
||
|
to see, and you thinking well of yourself.
|
||
|
Don't try to wear a cloak of humility; it
|
||
|
doesn't become you. Stalk in as you are and
|
||
|
don't make excuses. I'm not accustomed to
|
||
|
inquiring into the motives of my guests. That
|
||
|
would hardly be safe, even for Lady Walford,
|
||
|
in a great house like this."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Sunday afternoon, then," said Alexander,
|
||
|
as she rose to join her hostess.
|
||
|
"How early may I come?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
She gave him her hand and flushed and
|
||
|
laughed. He bent over it a little stiffly.
|
||
|
She went away on Lady Walford's arm, and as he
|
||
|
stood watching her yellow train glide down
|
||
|
the long floor he looked rather sullen. He felt
|
||
|
that he had not come out of it very brilliantly.
|
||
|
|
||
|
CHAPTER IV
|
||
|
|
||
|
On Sunday afternoon Alexander remembered
|
||
|
Miss Burgoyne's invitation and called at her
|
||
|
apartment. He found it a delightful little
|
||
|
place and he met charming people there.
|
||
|
Hilda lived alone, attended by a very pretty
|
||
|
and competent French servant who answered
|
||
|
the door and brought in the tea. Alexander
|
||
|
arrived early, and some twenty-odd people
|
||
|
dropped in during the course of the afternoon.
|
||
|
Hugh MacConnell came with his sister,
|
||
|
and stood about, managing his tea-cup
|
||
|
awkwardly and watching every one out of his
|
||
|
deep-set, faded eyes. He seemed to have
|
||
|
made a resolute effort at tidiness of attire,
|
||
|
and his sister, a robust, florid woman with a
|
||
|
splendid joviality about her, kept eyeing his
|
||
|
freshly creased clothes apprehensively. It was
|
||
|
not very long, indeed, before his coat hung
|
||
|
with a discouraged sag from his gaunt shoulders
|
||
|
and his hair and beard were rumpled as
|
||
|
if he had been out in a gale. His dry humor
|
||
|
went under a cloud of absent-minded kindliness
|
||
|
which, Mainhall explained, always overtook
|
||
|
him here. He was never so witty or so
|
||
|
sharp here as elsewhere, and Alexander
|
||
|
thought he behaved as if he were an elderly
|
||
|
relative come in to a young girl's party.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The editor of a monthly review came
|
||
|
with his wife, and Lady Kildare, the Irish
|
||
|
philanthropist, brought her young nephew,
|
||
|
Robert Owen, who had come up from Oxford,
|
||
|
and who was visibly excited and gratified
|
||
|
by his first introduction to Miss Burgoyne.
|
||
|
Hilda was very nice to him, and he sat on
|
||
|
the edge of his chair, flushed with his
|
||
|
conversational efforts and moving his chin
|
||
|
about nervously over his high collar.
|
||
|
Sarah Frost, the novelist, came with her husband,
|
||
|
a very genial and placid old scholar who had
|
||
|
become slightly deranged upon the subject of
|
||
|
the fourth dimension. On other matters he
|
||
|
was perfectly rational and he was easy and
|
||
|
pleasing in conversation. He looked very
|
||
|
much like Agassiz, and his wife, in her
|
||
|
old-fashioned black silk dress, overskirted and
|
||
|
tight-sleeved, reminded Alexander of the early
|
||
|
pictures of Mrs. Browning. Hilda seemed
|
||
|
particularly fond of this quaint couple,
|
||
|
and Bartley himself was so pleased with their
|
||
|
mild and thoughtful converse that he took his
|
||
|
leave when they did, and walked with them
|
||
|
over to Oxford Street, where they waited for
|
||
|
their 'bus. They asked him to come to see
|
||
|
them in Chelsea, and they spoke very tenderly
|
||
|
of Hilda. "She's a dear, unworldly little
|
||
|
thing," said the philosopher absently;
|
||
|
"more like the stage people of my young days--
|
||
|
folk ofsimple manners. There aren't many such left.
|
||
|
American tours have spoiled them, I'm afraid.
|
||
|
They have all grown very smart. Lamb wouldn't
|
||
|
care a great deal about many of them, I fancy."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Alexander went back to Bedford Square
|
||
|
a second Sunday afternoon. He had a long
|
||
|
talk with MacConnell, but he got no word with
|
||
|
Hilda alone, and he left in a discontented
|
||
|
state of mind. For the rest of the week
|
||
|
he was nervous and unsettled, and kept
|
||
|
rushing his work as if he were preparing for
|
||
|
immediate departure. On Thursday afternoon
|
||
|
he cut short a committee meeting, jumped into
|
||
|
a hansom, and drove to Bedford Square.
|
||
|
He sent up his card, but it came back to
|
||
|
him with a message scribbled across the front.
|
||
|
|
||
|
So sorry I can't see you. Will you come and
|
||
|
dine with me Sunday evening at half-past seven?
|
||
|
|
||
|
H.B.
|
||
|
|
||
|
When Bartley arrived at Bedford Square on
|
||
|
Sunday evening, Marie, the pretty little
|
||
|
French girl, met him at the door and conducted
|
||
|
him upstairs. Hilda was writing in her
|
||
|
living-room, under the light of a tall desk lamp.
|
||
|
Bartley recognized the primrose satin gown
|
||
|
she had worn that first evening at Lady Walford's.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I'm so pleased that you think me worth
|
||
|
that yellow dress, you know," he said, taking
|
||
|
her hand and looking her over admiringly
|
||
|
from the toes of her canary slippers to her
|
||
|
smoothly parted brown hair. "Yes, it's very,
|
||
|
very pretty. Every one at Lady Walford's was
|
||
|
looking at it."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Hilda curtsied. "Is that why you think it
|
||
|
pretty? I've no need for fine clothes in Mac's
|
||
|
play this time, so I can afford a few duddies
|
||
|
for myself. It's owing to that same chance,
|
||
|
by the way, that I am able to ask you to dinner.
|
||
|
I don't need Marie to dress me this season,
|
||
|
so she keeps house for me, and my little Galway
|
||
|
girl has gone home for a visit. I should never
|
||
|
have asked you if Molly had been here,
|
||
|
for I remember you don't like English cookery."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Alexander walked about the room, looking at everything.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I haven't had a chance yet to tell you
|
||
|
what a jolly little place I think this is.
|
||
|
Where did you get those etchings?
|
||
|
They're quite unusual, aren't they?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Lady Westmere sent them to me from Rome
|
||
|
last Christmas. She is very much interested
|
||
|
in the American artist who did them.
|
||
|
They are all sketches made about the Villa
|
||
|
d'Este, you see. He painted that group of
|
||
|
cypresses for the Salon, and it was bought
|
||
|
for the Luxembourg."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Alexander walked over to the bookcases.
|
||
|
"It's the air of the whole place here that
|
||
|
I like. You haven't got anything that doesn't
|
||
|
belong. Seems to me it looks particularly
|
||
|
well to-night. And you have so many flowers.
|
||
|
I like these little yellow irises."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Rooms always look better by lamplight
|
||
|
--in London, at least. Though Marie is clean
|
||
|
--really clean, as the French are. Why do
|
||
|
you look at the flowers so critically? Marie
|
||
|
got them all fresh in Covent Garden market
|
||
|
yesterday morning."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I'm glad," said Alexander simply.
|
||
|
"I can't tell you how glad I am to have
|
||
|
you so pretty and comfortable here, and to hear
|
||
|
every one saying such nice things about you.
|
||
|
You've got awfully nice friends," he added
|
||
|
humbly, picking up a little jade elephant from
|
||
|
her desk. "Those fellows are all very loyal,
|
||
|
even Mainhall. They don't talk of any one
|
||
|
else as they do of you."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Hilda sat down on the couch and said
|
||
|
seriously: "I've a neat little sum in the bank,
|
||
|
too, now, and I own a mite of a hut in
|
||
|
Galway. It's not worth much, but I love it.
|
||
|
I've managed to save something every year,
|
||
|
and that with helping my three sisters now
|
||
|
and then, and tiding poor Cousin Mike over
|
||
|
bad seasons. He's that gifted, you know,
|
||
|
but he will drink and loses more good
|
||
|
engagements than other fellows ever get.
|
||
|
And I've traveled a bit, too."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Marie opened the door and smilingly
|
||
|
announced that dinner was served.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"My dining-room," Hilda explained, as
|
||
|
she led the way, "is the tiniest place
|
||
|
you have ever seen."
|
||
|
|
||
|
It was a tiny room, hung all round with
|
||
|
French prints, above which ran a shelf full
|
||
|
of china. Hilda saw Alexander look up at it.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"It's not particularly rare," she said,
|
||
|
"but some of it was my mother's. Heaven knows
|
||
|
how she managed to keep it whole, through all
|
||
|
our wanderings, or in what baskets and bundles
|
||
|
and theatre trunks it hasn't been stowed away.
|
||
|
We always had our tea out of those blue cups
|
||
|
when I was a little girl, sometimes in the
|
||
|
queerest lodgings, and sometimes on a trunk
|
||
|
at the theatre--queer theatres, for that matter."
|
||
|
|
||
|
It was a wonderful little dinner. There was
|
||
|
watercress soup, and sole, and a delightful
|
||
|
omelette stuffed with mushrooms and truffles,
|
||
|
and two small rare ducklings, and artichokes,
|
||
|
and a dry yellow Rhone wine of which Bartley
|
||
|
had always been very fond. He drank it
|
||
|
appreciatively and remarked that there was
|
||
|
still no other he liked so well.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I have some champagne for you, too. I
|
||
|
don't drink it myself, but I like to see it
|
||
|
behave when it's poured. There is nothing
|
||
|
else that looks so jolly."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Thank you. But I don't like it so well as
|
||
|
this." Bartley held the yellow wine against
|
||
|
the light and squinted into it as he turned the
|
||
|
glass slowly about. "You have traveled, you
|
||
|
say. Have you been in Paris much these late
|
||
|
years?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
Hilda lowered one of the candle-shades
|
||
|
carefully. "Oh, yes, I go over to Paris often.
|
||
|
There are few changes in the old Quarter.
|
||
|
Dear old Madame Anger is dead--but perhaps
|
||
|
you don't remember her?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Don't I, though! I'm so sorry to hear it.
|
||
|
How did her son turn out? I remember how
|
||
|
she saved and scraped for him, and how he
|
||
|
always lay abed till ten o'clock. He was the
|
||
|
laziest fellow at the Beaux Arts; and that's
|
||
|
saying a good deal."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Well, he is still clever and lazy. They
|
||
|
say he is a good architect when he will work.
|
||
|
He's a big, handsome creature, and he hates
|
||
|
Americans as much as ever. But Angel--do
|
||
|
you remember Angel?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Perfectly. Did she ever get back to
|
||
|
Brittany and her bains de mer?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Ah, no. Poor Angel! She got tired of
|
||
|
cooking and scouring the coppers in Madame
|
||
|
Anger's little kitchen, so she ran away with a
|
||
|
soldier, and then with another soldier.
|
||
|
Too bad! She still lives about the Quarter,
|
||
|
and, though there is always a soldat, she has
|
||
|
become a blanchisseuse de fin. She did my blouses
|
||
|
beautifully the last time I was there, and was
|
||
|
so delighted to see me again. I gave her all
|
||
|
my old clothes, even my old hats, though she
|
||
|
always wears her Breton headdress. Her hair
|
||
|
is still like flax, and her blue eyes are just like
|
||
|
a baby's, and she has the same three freckles
|
||
|
on her little nose, and talks about going back
|
||
|
to her bains de mer."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Bartley looked at Hilda across the yellow
|
||
|
light of the candles and broke into a low,
|
||
|
happy laugh. "How jolly it was being young,
|
||
|
Hilda! Do you remember that first walk we
|
||
|
took together in Paris? We walked down to
|
||
|
the Place Saint-Michel to buy some lilacs.
|
||
|
Do you remember how sweet they smelled?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Indeed I do. Come, we'll have our
|
||
|
coffee in the other room, and you can smoke."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Hilda rose quickly, as if she wished to
|
||
|
change the drift of their talk, but Bartley
|
||
|
found it pleasant to continue it.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"What a warm, soft spring evening that
|
||
|
was," he went on, as they sat down in the
|
||
|
study with the coffee on a little table between
|
||
|
them; "and the sky, over the bridges, was just
|
||
|
the color of the lilacs. We walked on down
|
||
|
by the river, didn't we?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
Hilda laughed and looked at him questioningly.
|
||
|
He saw a gleam in her eyes that he remembered
|
||
|
even better than the episode he was recalling.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I think we did," she answered demurely.
|
||
|
"It was on the Quai we met that woman
|
||
|
who was crying so bitterly. I gave her a spray
|
||
|
of lilac, I remember, and you gave her a
|
||
|
franc. I was frightened at your prodigality."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I expect it was the last franc I had.
|
||
|
What a strong brown face she had, and very
|
||
|
tragic. She looked at us with such despair and
|
||
|
longing, out from under her black shawl.
|
||
|
What she wanted from us was neither our
|
||
|
flowers nor our francs, but just our youth.
|
||
|
I remember it touched me so. I would have
|
||
|
given her some of mine off my back, if I could.
|
||
|
I had enough and to spare then," Bartley mused,
|
||
|
and looked thoughtfully at his cigar.
|
||
|
|
||
|
They were both remembering what the
|
||
|
woman had said when she took the money:
|
||
|
"God give you a happy love!" It was not in
|
||
|
the ingratiating tone of the habitual beggar:
|
||
|
it had come out of the depths of the poor creature's
|
||
|
sorrow, vibrating with pity for their youth
|
||
|
and despair at the terribleness of human life;
|
||
|
it had the anguish of a voice of prophecy.
|
||
|
Until she spoke, Bartley had not realized
|
||
|
that he was in love. The strange woman,
|
||
|
and her passionate sentence that rang
|
||
|
out so sharply, had frightened them both.
|
||
|
They went home sadly with the lilacs, back
|
||
|
to the Rue Saint-Jacques, walking very slowly,
|
||
|
arm in arm. When they reached the house
|
||
|
where Hilda lodged, Bartley went across the
|
||
|
court with her, and up the dark old stairs to
|
||
|
the third landing; and there he had kissed her
|
||
|
for the first time. He had shut his eyes to
|
||
|
give him the courage, he remembered, and
|
||
|
she had trembled so--
|
||
|
|
||
|
Bartley started when Hilda rang the little
|
||
|
bell beside her. "Dear me, why did you do
|
||
|
that? I had quite forgotten--I was back there.
|
||
|
It was very jolly," he murmured lazily, as
|
||
|
Marie came in to take away the coffee.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Hilda laughed and went over to the
|
||
|
piano. "Well, we are neither of us twenty
|
||
|
now, you know. Have I told you about my
|
||
|
new play? Mac is writing one; really for me
|
||
|
this time. You see, I'm coming on."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I've seen nothing else. What kind of a
|
||
|
part is it? Shall you wear yellow gowns?
|
||
|
I hope so."
|
||
|
|
||
|
He was looking at her round slender figure,
|
||
|
as she stood by the piano, turning over a
|
||
|
pile of music, and he felt the energy in every
|
||
|
line of it.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"No, it isn't a dress-up part. He doesn't
|
||
|
seem to fancy me in fine feathers. He says
|
||
|
I ought to be minding the pigs at home, and I
|
||
|
suppose I ought. But he's given me some
|
||
|
good Irish songs. Listen."
|
||
|
|
||
|
She sat down at the piano and sang.
|
||
|
When she finished, Alexander shook himself
|
||
|
out of a reverie.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Sing `The Harp That Once,' Hilda.
|
||
|
You used to sing it so well."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Nonsense. Of course I can't really sing,
|
||
|
except the way my mother and grandmother
|
||
|
did before me. Most actresses nowadays
|
||
|
learn to sing properly, so I tried a master;
|
||
|
but he confused me, just!"
|
||
|
|
||
|
Alexander laughed. "All the same, sing it, Hilda."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Hilda started up from the stool and
|
||
|
moved restlessly toward the window.
|
||
|
"It's really too warm in this room to sing.
|
||
|
Don't you feel it?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
Alexander went over and opened the
|
||
|
window for her. "Aren't you afraid to let the
|
||
|
wind low like that on your neck? Can't I get
|
||
|
a scarf or something?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Ask a theatre lady if she's afraid of drafts!"
|
||
|
Hilda laughed. "But perhaps, as I'm so warm--
|
||
|
give me your handkerchief. There, just in front."
|
||
|
He slipped the corners carefully under her shoulder-straps.
|
||
|
"There, that will do. It looks like a bib."
|
||
|
She pushed his hand away quickly and stood
|
||
|
looking out into the deserted square.
|
||
|
"Isn't London a tomb on Sunday night?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
Alexander caught the agitation in her voice.
|
||
|
He stood a little behind her, and tried to
|
||
|
steady himself as he said: "It's soft and misty.
|
||
|
See how white the stars are."
|
||
|
|
||
|
For a long time neither Hilda nor Bartley spoke.
|
||
|
They stood close together, looking out
|
||
|
into the wan, watery sky, breathing always
|
||
|
more quickly and lightly, and it seemed as if
|
||
|
all the clocks in the world had stopped.
|
||
|
Suddenly he moved the clenched hand he held
|
||
|
behind him and dropped it violently at
|
||
|
his side. He felt a tremor run through
|
||
|
the slender yellow figure in front of him.
|
||
|
|
||
|
She caught his handkerchief from her
|
||
|
throat and thrust it at him without turning
|
||
|
round. "Here, take it. You must go now,
|
||
|
Bartley. Good-night."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Bartley leaned over her shoulder, without
|
||
|
touching her, and whispered in her ear:
|
||
|
"You are giving me a chance?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Yes. Take it and go. This isn't fair,
|
||
|
you know. Good-night."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Alexander unclenched the two hands at
|
||
|
his sides. With one he threw down the
|
||
|
window and with the other--still standing
|
||
|
behind her--he drew her back against him.
|
||
|
|
||
|
She uttered a little cry, threw her arms
|
||
|
over her head, and drew his face down to hers.
|
||
|
"Are you going to let me love you a little, Bartley?"
|
||
|
she whispered.
|
||
|
|
||
|
CHAPTER V
|
||
|
|
||
|
It was the afternoon of the day before Christmas.
|
||
|
Mrs. Alexander had been driving about all the morning,
|
||
|
leaving presents at the houses of her friends.
|
||
|
She lunched alone, and as she rose from the table
|
||
|
she spoke to the butler: "Thomas, I am going down
|
||
|
to the kitchen now to see Norah. In half an hour
|
||
|
you are to bring the greens up from the cellar
|
||
|
and put them in the library. Mr. Alexander
|
||
|
will be home at three to hang them himself.
|
||
|
Don't forget the stepladder, and plenty of tacks
|
||
|
and string. You may bring the azaleas upstairs.
|
||
|
Take the white one to Mr. Alexander's study.
|
||
|
Put the two pink ones in this room,
|
||
|
and the red one in the drawing-room."
|
||
|
|
||
|
A little before three o'clock Mrs. Alexander
|
||
|
went into the library to see that everything
|
||
|
was ready. She pulled the window shades high,
|
||
|
for the weather was dark and stormy,
|
||
|
and there was little light, even in the streets.
|
||
|
A foot of snow had fallen during the morning,
|
||
|
and the wide space over the river was
|
||
|
thick with flying flakes that fell and
|
||
|
wreathed the masses of floating ice.
|
||
|
Winifred was standing by the window when
|
||
|
she heard the front door open. She hurried
|
||
|
to the hall as Alexander came stamping in,
|
||
|
covered with snow. He kissed her joyfully
|
||
|
and brushed away the snow that fell on her hair.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I wish I had asked you to meet me at
|
||
|
the office and walk home with me, Winifred.
|
||
|
The Common is beautiful. The boys have swept
|
||
|
the snow off the pond and are skating furiously.
|
||
|
Did the cyclamens come?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"An hour ago. What splendid ones!
|
||
|
But aren't you frightfully extravagant?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Not for Christmas-time. I'll go upstairs and
|
||
|
change my coat. I shall be down in a moment.
|
||
|
Tell Thomas to get everything ready."
|
||
|
|
||
|
When Alexander reappeared, he took his wife's
|
||
|
arm and went with her into the library.
|
||
|
"When did the azaleas get here?
|
||
|
Thomas has got the white one in my room."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I told him to put it there."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"But, I say, it's much the finest of the lot!"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"That's why I had it put there. There is
|
||
|
too much color in that room for a red one,
|
||
|
you know."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Bartley began to sort the greens. "It looks
|
||
|
very splendid there, but I feel piggish
|
||
|
to have it. However, we really spend more
|
||
|
time there than anywhere else in the house.
|
||
|
Will you hand me the holly?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
He climbed up the stepladder, which creaked
|
||
|
under his weight, and began to twist the
|
||
|
tough stems of the holly into the frame-
|
||
|
work of the chandelier.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I forgot to tell you that I had a letter
|
||
|
from Wilson, this morning, explaining his
|
||
|
telegram. He is coming on because an old
|
||
|
uncle up in Vermont has conveniently died
|
||
|
and left Wilson a little money--something
|
||
|
like ten thousand. He's coming on to settle up
|
||
|
the estate. Won't it be jolly to have him?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"And how fine that he's come into a little
|
||
|
money. I can see him posting down State
|
||
|
Street to the steamship offices. He will get
|
||
|
a good many trips out of that ten thousand.
|
||
|
What can have detained him? I expected him
|
||
|
here for luncheon."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Those trains from Albany are always
|
||
|
late. He'll be along sometime this afternoon.
|
||
|
And now, don't you want to go upstairs and
|
||
|
lie down for an hour? You've had a busy morning
|
||
|
and I don't want you to be tired to-night."
|
||
|
|
||
|
After his wife went upstairs Alexander
|
||
|
worked energetically at the greens for a few
|
||
|
moments. Then, as he was cutting off a
|
||
|
length of string, he sighed suddenly and sat
|
||
|
down, staring out of the window at the snow.
|
||
|
The animation died out of his face, but in his
|
||
|
eyes there was a restless light, a look of
|
||
|
apprehension and suspense. He kept clasping
|
||
|
and unclasping his big hands as if he were
|
||
|
trying to realize something. The clock ticked
|
||
|
through the minutes of a half-hour and the
|
||
|
afternoon outside began to thicken and darken
|
||
|
turbidly. Alexander, since he first sat down,
|
||
|
had not changed his position. He leaned
|
||
|
forward, his hands between his knees, scarcely
|
||
|
breathing, as if he were holding himself
|
||
|
away from his surroundings, from the room,
|
||
|
and from the very chair in which he sat, from
|
||
|
everything except the wild eddies of snow
|
||
|
above the river on which his eyes were fixed
|
||
|
with feverish intentness, as if he were trying
|
||
|
to project himself thither. When at last
|
||
|
Lucius Wilson was announced, Alexander
|
||
|
sprang eagerly to his feet and hurried
|
||
|
to meet his old instructor.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Hello, Wilson. What luck! Come into
|
||
|
the library. We are to have a lot of people to
|
||
|
dinner to-night, and Winifred's lying down.
|
||
|
You will excuse her, won't you? And now
|
||
|
what about yourself? Sit down and tell me
|
||
|
everything."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I think I'd rather move about, if you don't mind.
|
||
|
I've been sitting in the train for a week,
|
||
|
it seems to me." Wilson stood before
|
||
|
the fire with his hands behind him and
|
||
|
looked about the room. "You HAVE been busy.
|
||
|
Bartley, if I'd had my choice of all possible
|
||
|
places in which to spend Christmas, your house
|
||
|
would certainly be the place I'd have chosen.
|
||
|
Happy people do a great deal for their friends.
|
||
|
A house like this throws its warmth out.
|
||
|
I felt it distinctly as I was coming through
|
||
|
the Berkshires. I could scarcely believe that
|
||
|
I was to see Mrs. Bartley again so soon."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Thank you, Wilson. She'll be as glad to
|
||
|
see you. Shall we have tea now? I'll ring
|
||
|
for Thomas to clear away this litter.
|
||
|
Winifred says I always wreck the house when
|
||
|
I try to do anything. Do you know, I am quite tired.
|
||
|
Looks as if I were not used to work, doesn't it?"
|
||
|
Alexander laughed and dropped into a chair.
|
||
|
"You know, I'm sailing the day after New Year's."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Again? Why, you've been over twice
|
||
|
since I was here in the spring, haven't you?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Oh, I was in London about ten days in
|
||
|
the summer. Went to escape the hot weather
|
||
|
more than anything else. I shan't be gone
|
||
|
more than a month this time. Winifred and I
|
||
|
have been up in Canada for most of the
|
||
|
autumn. That Moorlock Bridge is on my back
|
||
|
all the time. I never had so much trouble
|
||
|
with a job before." Alexander moved about
|
||
|
restlessly and fell to poking the fire.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Haven't I seen in the papers that there
|
||
|
is some trouble about a tidewater bridge of
|
||
|
yours in New Jersey?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Oh, that doesn't amount to anything.
|
||
|
It's held up by a steel strike. A bother,
|
||
|
of course, but the sort of thing one is always
|
||
|
having to put up with. But the Moorlock
|
||
|
Bridge is a continual anxiety. You see,
|
||
|
the truth is, we are having to build pretty well to
|
||
|
the strain limit up there. They've crowded
|
||
|
me too much on the cost. It's all very well
|
||
|
if everything goes well, but these estimates have
|
||
|
never been used for anything of such length
|
||
|
before. However, there's nothing to be done.
|
||
|
They hold me to the scale I've used in shorter
|
||
|
bridges. The last thing a bridge commission
|
||
|
cares about is the kind of bridge you build."
|
||
|
|
||
|
When Bartley had finished dressing for
|
||
|
dinner he went into his study, where he
|
||
|
found his wife arranging flowers on his
|
||
|
writing-table.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"These pink roses just came from Mrs. Hastings,"
|
||
|
she said, smiling, "and I am sure she meant them for you."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Bartley looked about with an air of satisfaction
|
||
|
at the greens and the wreaths in the windows.
|
||
|
"Have you a moment, Winifred? I have just now
|
||
|
been thinking that this is our twelfth Christmas.
|
||
|
Can you realize it?" He went up to the table
|
||
|
and took her hands away from the flowers,
|
||
|
drying them with his pocket handkerchief.
|
||
|
"They've been awfully happy ones, all of them,
|
||
|
haven't they?" He took her in his arms and bent back,
|
||
|
lifting her a little and giving her a long kiss.
|
||
|
"You are happy, aren't you Winifred? More than
|
||
|
anything else in the world, I want you to be happy.
|
||
|
Sometimes, of late, I've thought you looked
|
||
|
as if you were troubled."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"No; it's only when you are troubled and
|
||
|
harassed that I feel worried, Bartley.
|
||
|
I wish you always seemed as you do to-night.
|
||
|
But you don't, always." She looked earnestly
|
||
|
and inquiringly into his eyes.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Alexander took her two hands from his
|
||
|
shoulders and swung them back and forth in
|
||
|
his own, laughing his big blond laugh.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I'm growing older, my dear; that's what
|
||
|
you feel. Now, may I show you something?
|
||
|
I meant to save them until to-morrow, but I
|
||
|
want you to wear them to-night." He took a
|
||
|
little leather box out of his pocket and
|
||
|
opened it. On the white velvet lay two long
|
||
|
pendants of curiously worked gold, set with pearls.
|
||
|
Winifred looked from the box to Bartley and exclaimed:--
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Where did you ever find such gold work, Bartley?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"It's old Flemish. Isn't it fine?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"They are the most beautiful things, dear.
|
||
|
But, you know, I never wear earrings."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Yes, yes, I know. But I want you to
|
||
|
wear them. I have always wanted you to.
|
||
|
So few women can. There must be a good ear,
|
||
|
to begin with, and a nose"--he waved his
|
||
|
hand--"above reproach. Most women look
|
||
|
silly in them. They go only with faces like
|
||
|
yours--very, very proud, and just a little hard."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Winifred laughed as she went over to the
|
||
|
mirror and fitted the delicate springs to the
|
||
|
lobes of her ears. "Oh, Bartley, that old
|
||
|
foolishness about my being hard. It really
|
||
|
hurts my feelings. But I must go down now.
|
||
|
People are beginning to come."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Bartley drew her arm about his neck and went
|
||
|
to the door with her. "Not hard to me, Winifred,"
|
||
|
he whispered. "Never, never hard to me."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Left alone, he paced up and down his
|
||
|
study. He was at home again, among all the
|
||
|
dear familiar things that spoke to him of so
|
||
|
many happy years. His house to-night would
|
||
|
be full of charming people, who liked and
|
||
|
admired him. Yet all the time, underneath his
|
||
|
pleasure and hopefulness and satisfaction, he
|
||
|
was conscious of the vibration of an unnatural
|
||
|
excitement. Amid this light and warmth and
|
||
|
friendliness, he sometimes started and shuddered,
|
||
|
as if some one had stepped on his grave.
|
||
|
Something had broken loose in him of which
|
||
|
he knew nothing except that it was sullen
|
||
|
and powerful, and that it wrung and tortured him.
|
||
|
Sometimes it came upon him softly, in enervating reveries.
|
||
|
Sometimes it battered him like the cannon rolling in the
|
||
|
hold of the vessel. Always, now, it brought with it
|
||
|
a sense of quickened life, of stimulating danger.
|
||
|
To-night it came upon him suddenly, as he was
|
||
|
walking the floor, after his wife left him.
|
||
|
It seemed impossible; he could not believe it.
|
||
|
He glanced entreatingly at the door, as if to
|
||
|
call her back. He heard voices in the hall below,
|
||
|
and knew that he must go down. Going over to the window,
|
||
|
he looked out at the lights across the river.
|
||
|
How could this happen here, in his own house,
|
||
|
among the things he loved? What was it that
|
||
|
reached in out of the darkness and thrilled
|
||
|
him? As he stood there he had a feeling that
|
||
|
he would never escape. He shut his eyes and
|
||
|
pressed his forehead against the cold window
|
||
|
glass, breathing in the chill that came through
|
||
|
it. "That this," he groaned, "that this should
|
||
|
have happened to ME!"
|
||
|
|
||
|
On New Year's day a thaw set in, and
|
||
|
during the night torrents of rain fell.
|
||
|
In the morning, the morning of Alexander's
|
||
|
departure for England, the river was streaked
|
||
|
with fog and the rain drove hard against the
|
||
|
windows of the breakfast-room. Alexander had
|
||
|
finished his coffee and was pacing up and
|
||
|
down. His wife sat at the table, watching
|
||
|
him. She was pale and unnaturally calm.
|
||
|
When Thomas brought the letters, Bartley
|
||
|
sank into his chair and ran them over rapidly.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Here's a note from old Wilson. He's safe
|
||
|
back at his grind, and says he had a bully time.
|
||
|
`The memory of Mrs. Bartley will make my
|
||
|
whole winter fragrant.' Just like him.
|
||
|
He will go on getting measureless satisfaction
|
||
|
out of you by his study fire. What a man he is
|
||
|
for looking on at life!" Bartley sighed,
|
||
|
pushed the letters back impatiently,
|
||
|
and went over to the window. "This is a
|
||
|
nasty sort of day to sail. I've a notion to
|
||
|
call it off. Next week would be time enough."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"That would only mean starting twice.
|
||
|
It wouldn't really help you out at all,"
|
||
|
Mrs. Alexander spoke soothingly. "And you'd
|
||
|
come back late for all your engagements."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Bartley began jingling some loose coins in
|
||
|
his pocket. "I wish things would let me rest.
|
||
|
I'm tired of work, tired of people, tired of
|
||
|
trailing about." He looked out at the
|
||
|
storm-beaten river.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Winifred came up behind him and put a
|
||
|
hand on his shoulder. "That's what you
|
||
|
always say, poor Bartley! At bottom you really
|
||
|
like all these things. Can't you remember that?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
He put his arm about her. "All the same,
|
||
|
life runs smoothly enough with some people,
|
||
|
and with me it's always a messy sort of patchwork.
|
||
|
It's like the song; peace is where I am not.
|
||
|
How can you face it all with so much fortitude?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
She looked at him with that clear gaze
|
||
|
which Wilson had so much admired, which
|
||
|
he had felt implied such high confidence and
|
||
|
fearless pride. "Oh, I faced that long ago,
|
||
|
when you were on your first bridge, up at old
|
||
|
Allway. I knew then that your paths were
|
||
|
not to be paths of peace, but I decided that
|
||
|
I wanted to follow them."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Bartley and his wife stood silent for a
|
||
|
long time; the fire crackled in the grate,
|
||
|
the rain beat insistently upon the windows,
|
||
|
and the sleepy Angora looked up at them curiously.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Presently Thomas made a discreet sound at the door.
|
||
|
"Shall Edward bring down your trunks, sir?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Yes; they are ready. Tell him not to forget
|
||
|
the big portfolio on the study table."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Thomas withdrew, closing the door softly.
|
||
|
Bartley turned away from his wife, still
|
||
|
holding her hand. "It never gets any easier,
|
||
|
Winifred."
|
||
|
|
||
|
They both started at the sound of the
|
||
|
carriage on the pavement outside. Alexander
|
||
|
sat down and leaned his head on his hand.
|
||
|
His wife bent over him. "Courage," she said
|
||
|
gayly. Bartley rose and rang the bell. Thomas
|
||
|
brought him his hat and stick and ulster. At
|
||
|
the sight of these, the supercilious Angora
|
||
|
moved restlessly, quitted her red cushion by
|
||
|
the fire, and came up, waving her tail in
|
||
|
vexation at these ominous indications of
|
||
|
change. Alexander stooped to stroke her, and
|
||
|
then plunged into his coat and drew on his
|
||
|
gloves. His wife held his stick, smiling.
|
||
|
Bartley smiled too, and his eyes cleared.
|
||
|
"I'll work like the devil, Winifred, and be home
|
||
|
again before you realize I've gone." He kissed
|
||
|
her quickly several times, hurried out of the
|
||
|
front door into the rain, and waved to her
|
||
|
from the carriage window as the driver was
|
||
|
starting his melancholy, dripping black
|
||
|
horses. Alexander sat with his hands clenched
|
||
|
on his knees. As the carriage turned up the hill,
|
||
|
he lifted one hand and brought it down violently.
|
||
|
"This time"--he spoke aloud and through his set teeth--
|
||
|
"this time I'm going to end it!"
|
||
|
|
||
|
On the afternoon of the third day out,
|
||
|
Alexander was sitting well to the stern,
|
||
|
on the windward side where the chairs were
|
||
|
few, his rugs over him and the collar of his
|
||
|
fur-lined coat turned up about his ears.
|
||
|
The weather had so far been dark and raw.
|
||
|
For two hours he had been watching the low,
|
||
|
dirty sky and the beating of the heavy rain
|
||
|
upon the iron-colored sea. There was a long,
|
||
|
oily swell that made exercise laborious.
|
||
|
The decks smelled of damp woolens, and the air
|
||
|
was so humid that drops of moisture kept
|
||
|
gathering upon his hair and mustache.
|
||
|
He seldom moved except to brush them away.
|
||
|
The great open spaces made him passive and
|
||
|
the restlessness of the water quieted him.
|
||
|
He intended during the voyage to decide upon a
|
||
|
course of action, but he held all this away
|
||
|
from him for the present and lay in a blessed
|
||
|
gray oblivion. Deep down in him somewhere
|
||
|
his resolution was weakening and strengthening,
|
||
|
ebbing and flowing. The thing that perturbed
|
||
|
him went on as steadily as his pulse,
|
||
|
but he was almost unconscious of it.
|
||
|
He was submerged in the vast impersonal
|
||
|
grayness about him, and at intervals the sidelong
|
||
|
roll of the boat measured off time like the ticking
|
||
|
of a clock. He felt released from everything
|
||
|
that troubled and perplexed him. It was as if
|
||
|
he had tricked and outwitted torturing memories,
|
||
|
had actually managed to get on board without them.
|
||
|
He thought of nothing at all. If his mind now
|
||
|
and again picked a face out of the grayness,
|
||
|
it was Lucius Wilson's, or the face of an old schoolmate,
|
||
|
forgotten for years; or it was the slim outline of a
|
||
|
favorite greyhound he used to hunt jack-rabbits with
|
||
|
when he was a boy.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Toward six o'clock the wind rose and
|
||
|
tugged at the tarpaulin and brought the swell
|
||
|
higher. After dinner Alexander came back to
|
||
|
the wet deck, piled his damp rugs over him
|
||
|
again, and sat smoking, losing himself in the
|
||
|
obliterating blackness and drowsing in the
|
||
|
rush of the gale. Before he went below a few
|
||
|
bright stars were pricked off between heavily
|
||
|
moving masses of cloud.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The next morning was bright and mild,
|
||
|
with a fresh breeze. Alexander felt the need
|
||
|
of exercise even before he came out of his
|
||
|
cabin. When he went on deck the sky was
|
||
|
blue and blinding, with heavy whiffs of white
|
||
|
cloud, smoke-colored at the edges, moving
|
||
|
rapidly across it. The water was roughish,
|
||
|
a cold, clear indigo breaking into whitecaps.
|
||
|
Bartley walked for two hours, and then
|
||
|
stretched himself in the sun until lunch-time.
|
||
|
|
||
|
In the afternoon he wrote a long letter to
|
||
|
Winifred. Later, as he walked the deck
|
||
|
through a splendid golden sunset, his spirits
|
||
|
rose continually. It was agreeable to come to
|
||
|
himself again after several days of numbness
|
||
|
and torpor. He stayed out until the last tinge
|
||
|
of violet had faded from the water. There was
|
||
|
literally a taste of life on his lips as he sat
|
||
|
down to dinner and ordered a bottle of champagne.
|
||
|
He was late in finishing his dinner,
|
||
|
and drank rather more wine than he had
|
||
|
meant to. When he went above, the wind had
|
||
|
risen and the deck was almost deserted. As he
|
||
|
stepped out of the door a gale lifted his heavy
|
||
|
fur coat about his shoulders. He fought his
|
||
|
way up the deck with keen exhilaration.
|
||
|
The moment he stepped, almost out of breath,
|
||
|
behind the shelter of the stern, the wind was
|
||
|
cut off, and he felt, like a rush of warm air,
|
||
|
a sense of close and intimate companionship.
|
||
|
He started back and tore his coat open as if
|
||
|
something warm were actually clinging to
|
||
|
him beneath it. He hurried up the deck and
|
||
|
went into the saloon parlor, full of women
|
||
|
who had retreated thither from the sharp wind.
|
||
|
He threw himself upon them. He talked delightfully
|
||
|
to the older ones and played accompaniments for the
|
||
|
younger ones until the last sleepy girl had followed
|
||
|
her mother below. Then he went into the smoking-room.
|
||
|
He played bridge until two o'clock in the morning,
|
||
|
and managed to lose a considerable sum of money
|
||
|
without really noticing that he was doing so.
|
||
|
|
||
|
After the break of one fine day the
|
||
|
weather was pretty consistently dull.
|
||
|
When the low sky thinned a trifle, the pale white
|
||
|
spot of a sun did no more than throw a bluish
|
||
|
lustre on the water, giving it the dark brightness
|
||
|
of newly cut lead. Through one after another
|
||
|
of those gray days Alexander drowsed and mused,
|
||
|
drinking in the grateful moisture. But the complete
|
||
|
peace of the first part of the voyage was over.
|
||
|
Sometimes he rose suddenly from his chair as if driven out,
|
||
|
and paced the deck for hours. People noticed
|
||
|
his propensity for walking in rough weather,
|
||
|
and watched him curiously as he did his
|
||
|
rounds. From his abstraction and the determined
|
||
|
set of his jaw, they fancied he must be thinking
|
||
|
about his bridge. Every one had heard of
|
||
|
the new cantilever bridge in Canada.
|
||
|
|
||
|
But Alexander was not thinking about his work.
|
||
|
After the fourth night out, when his will
|
||
|
suddenly softened under his hands, he had been
|
||
|
continually hammering away at himself.
|
||
|
More and more often, when he first wakened
|
||
|
in the morning or when he stepped into a warm
|
||
|
place after being chilled on the deck,
|
||
|
he felt a sudden painful delight at being
|
||
|
nearer another shore. Sometimes when he
|
||
|
was most despondent, when he thought himself
|
||
|
worn out with this struggle, in a flash he
|
||
|
was free of it and leaped into an overwhelming
|
||
|
consciousness of himself. On the instant
|
||
|
he felt that marvelous return of the
|
||
|
impetuousness, the intense excitement,
|
||
|
the increasing expectancy of youth.
|
||
|
|
||
|
CHAPTER VI
|
||
|
|
||
|
The last two days of the voyage Bartley
|
||
|
found almost intolerable. The stop at
|
||
|
Queenstown, the tedious passage up the Mersey,
|
||
|
were things that he noted dimly through his
|
||
|
growing impatience. He had planned to stop
|
||
|
in Liverpool; but, instead, he took the boat
|
||
|
train for London.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Emerging at Euston at half-past three
|
||
|
o'clock in the afternoon, Alexander had his
|
||
|
luggage sent to the Savoy and drove at once
|
||
|
to Bedford Square. When Marie met him at
|
||
|
the door, even her strong sense of the
|
||
|
proprieties could not restrain her surprise
|
||
|
and delight. She blushed and smiled and fumbled
|
||
|
his card in her confusion before she ran
|
||
|
upstairs. Alexander paced up and down the
|
||
|
hallway, buttoning and unbuttoning his overcoat,
|
||
|
until she returned and took him up to Hilda's
|
||
|
living-room. The room was empty when he entered.
|
||
|
A coal fire was crackling in the grate and
|
||
|
the lamps were lit, for it was already
|
||
|
beginning to grow dark outside. Alexander
|
||
|
did not sit down. He stood his ground
|
||
|
over by the windows until Hilda came in.
|
||
|
She called his name on the threshold, but in
|
||
|
her swift flight across the room she felt a
|
||
|
change in him and caught herself up so deftly
|
||
|
that he could not tell just when she did it.
|
||
|
She merely brushed his cheek with her lips and
|
||
|
put a hand lightly and joyously on either shoulder.
|
||
|
"Oh, what a grand thing to happen on a
|
||
|
raw day! I felt it in my bones when I woke
|
||
|
this morning that something splendid was
|
||
|
going to turn up. I thought it might be Sister
|
||
|
Kate or Cousin Mike would be happening along.
|
||
|
I never dreamed it would be you, Bartley.
|
||
|
But why do you let me chatter on like this?
|
||
|
Come over to the fire; you're chilled through."
|
||
|
|
||
|
She pushed him toward the big chair by the fire,
|
||
|
and sat down on a stool at the opposite side
|
||
|
of the hearth, her knees drawn up to her chin,
|
||
|
laughing like a happy little girl.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"When did you come, Bartley, and how
|
||
|
did it happen? You haven't spoken a word."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I got in about ten minutes ago. I landed
|
||
|
at Liverpool this morning and came down on
|
||
|
the boat train."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Alexander leaned forward and warmed his hands
|
||
|
before the blaze. Hilda watched him with perplexity.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"There's something troubling you, Bartley.
|
||
|
What is it?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
Bartley bent lower over the fire. "It's the
|
||
|
whole thing that troubles me, Hilda. You and I."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Hilda took a quick, soft breath. She
|
||
|
looked at his heavy shoulders and big,
|
||
|
determined head, thrust forward like
|
||
|
a catapult in leash.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"What about us, Bartley?" she asked in a
|
||
|
thin voice.
|
||
|
|
||
|
He locked and unlocked his hands over
|
||
|
the grate and spread his fingers close to the
|
||
|
bluish flame, while the coals crackled and the
|
||
|
clock ticked and a street vendor began to call
|
||
|
under the window. At last Alexander brought
|
||
|
out one word:--
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Everything!"
|
||
|
|
||
|
Hilda was pale by this time, and her
|
||
|
eyes were wide with fright. She looked about
|
||
|
desperately from Bartley to the door, then to
|
||
|
the windows, and back again to Bartley. She
|
||
|
rose uncertainly, touched his hair with her
|
||
|
hand, then sank back upon her stool.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I'll do anything you wish me to, Bartley,"
|
||
|
she said tremulously. "I can't stand
|
||
|
seeing you miserable."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I can't live with myself any longer,"
|
||
|
he answered roughly.
|
||
|
|
||
|
He rose and pushed the chair behind him
|
||
|
and began to walk miserably about the room,
|
||
|
seeming to find it too small for him.
|
||
|
He pulled up a window as if the air were heavy.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Hilda watched him from her corner,
|
||
|
trembling and scarcely breathing, dark shadows
|
||
|
growing about her eyes.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"It . . . it hasn't always made you miserable,
|
||
|
has it?" Her eyelids fell and her lips quivered.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Always. But it's worse now. It's unbearable.
|
||
|
It tortures me every minute."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"But why NOW?" she asked piteously,
|
||
|
wringing her hands.
|
||
|
|
||
|
He ignored her question. "I am not a
|
||
|
man who can live two lives," he went on
|
||
|
feverishly. "Each life spoils the other.
|
||
|
I get nothing but misery out of either.
|
||
|
The world is all there, just as it used to be,
|
||
|
but I can't get at it any more. There is this
|
||
|
deception between me and everything."
|
||
|
|
||
|
At that word "deception," spoken with such
|
||
|
self-contempt, the color flashed back into
|
||
|
Hilda's face as suddenly as if she had been
|
||
|
struck by a whiplash. She bit her lip
|
||
|
and looked down at her hands, which were
|
||
|
clasped tightly in front of her.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Could you--could you sit down and talk
|
||
|
about it quietly, Bartley, as if I were
|
||
|
a friend, and not some one who had to be defied?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
He dropped back heavily into his chair by
|
||
|
the fire. "It was myself I was defying, Hilda.
|
||
|
I have thought about it until I am worn out."
|
||
|
|
||
|
He looked at her and his haggard face softened.
|
||
|
He put out his hand toward her as he looked away
|
||
|
again into the fire.
|
||
|
|
||
|
She crept across to him, drawing her
|
||
|
stool after her. "When did you first begin to
|
||
|
feel like this, Bartley?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"After the very first. The first was--
|
||
|
sort of in play, wasn't it?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
Hilda's face quivered, but she whispered:
|
||
|
"Yes, I think it must have been. But why didn't
|
||
|
you tell me when you were here in the summer?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
Alexander groaned. "I meant to, but somehow
|
||
|
I couldn't. We had only a few days,
|
||
|
and your new play was just on, and you were so happy."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Yes, I was happy, wasn't I?" She pressed
|
||
|
his hand gently in gratitude.
|
||
|
"Weren't you happy then, at all?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
She closed her eyes and took a deep breath,
|
||
|
as if to draw in again the fragrance of
|
||
|
those days. Something of their troubling
|
||
|
sweetness came back to Alexander, too.
|
||
|
He moved uneasily and his chair creaked.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Yes, I was then. You know. But afterward. . ."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Yes, yes," she hurried, pulling her hand gently
|
||
|
away from him. Presently it stole back to his coat sleeve.
|
||
|
"Please tell me one thing, Bartley. At least,
|
||
|
tell me that you believe I thought I was making you happy."
|
||
|
|
||
|
His hand shut down quickly over the
|
||
|
questioning fingers on his sleeves.
|
||
|
"Yes, Hilda; I know that," he said simply.
|
||
|
|
||
|
She leaned her head against his arm and spoke softly:--
|
||
|
|
||
|
"You see, my mistake was in wanting you to
|
||
|
have everything. I wanted you to eat all
|
||
|
the cakes and have them, too. I somehow
|
||
|
believed that I could take all the bad
|
||
|
consequences for you. I wanted you always to be
|
||
|
happy and handsome and successful--to have
|
||
|
all the things that a great man ought to have,
|
||
|
and, once in a way, the careless holidays that
|
||
|
great men are not permitted."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Bartley gave a bitter little laugh, and
|
||
|
Hilda looked up and read in the deepening
|
||
|
lines of his face that youth and Bartley
|
||
|
would not much longer struggle together.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I understand, Bartley. I was wrong. But I
|
||
|
didn't know. You've only to tell me now.
|
||
|
What must I do that I've not done, or what
|
||
|
must I not do?" She listened intently, but she
|
||
|
heard nothing but the creaking of his chair.
|
||
|
"You want me to say it?" she whispered.
|
||
|
"You want to tell me that you can only see
|
||
|
me like this, as old friends do, or out in the
|
||
|
world among people? I can do that."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I can't," he said heavily.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Hilda shivered and sat still. Bartley leaned
|
||
|
his head in his hands and spoke through his teeth.
|
||
|
"It's got to be a clean break, Hilda.
|
||
|
I can't see you at all, anywhere.
|
||
|
What I mean is that I want you to
|
||
|
promise never to see me again,
|
||
|
no matter how often I come, no matter how hard I beg."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Hilda sprang up like a flame. She stood
|
||
|
over him with her hands clenched at her side,
|
||
|
her body rigid.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"No!" she gasped. "It's too late to ask that.
|
||
|
Do you hear me, Bartley? It's too late.
|
||
|
I won't promise. It's abominable of you to ask me.
|
||
|
Keep away if you wish; when have I ever followed you?
|
||
|
But, if you come to me, I'll do as I see fit.
|
||
|
The shamefulness of your asking me to do that!
|
||
|
If you come to me, I'll do as I see fit.
|
||
|
Do you understand? Bartley, you're cowardly!"
|
||
|
|
||
|
Alexander rose and shook himself angrily.
|
||
|
"Yes, I know I'm cowardly. I'm afraid of myself.
|
||
|
I don't trust myself any more. I carried it all
|
||
|
lightly enough at first, but now I don't dare trifle with it.
|
||
|
It's getting the better of me. It's different now.
|
||
|
I'm growing older, and you've got my young self here with you.
|
||
|
It's through him that I've come to wish for you all
|
||
|
and all the time." He took her roughly in his arms.
|
||
|
"Do you know what I mean?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
Hilda held her face back from him and began
|
||
|
to cry bitterly. "Oh, Bartley, what am I to do?
|
||
|
Why didn't you let me be angry with you?
|
||
|
You ask me to stay away from you because
|
||
|
you want me! And I've got nobody but you.
|
||
|
I will do anything you say--but that!
|
||
|
I will ask the least imaginable,
|
||
|
but I must have SOMETHING!"
|
||
|
|
||
|
Bartley turned away and sank down in his chair again.
|
||
|
Hilda sat on the arm of it and put her hands lightly
|
||
|
on his shoulders.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Just something Bartley. I must have you to think of
|
||
|
through the months and months of loneliness.
|
||
|
I must see you. I must know about you.
|
||
|
The sight of you, Bartley, to see you living
|
||
|
and happy and successful--can I never
|
||
|
make you understand what that means to me?"
|
||
|
She pressed his shoulders gently.
|
||
|
"You see, loving some one as I love you
|
||
|
makes the whole world different.
|
||
|
If I'd met you later, if I hadn't loved you so well--
|
||
|
but that's all over, long ago. Then came all
|
||
|
those years without you, lonely and hurt
|
||
|
and discouraged; those decent young fellows
|
||
|
and poor Mac, and me never heeding--hard as
|
||
|
a steel spring. And then you came back, not
|
||
|
caring very much, but it made no difference."
|
||
|
|
||
|
She slid to the floor beside him, as if she
|
||
|
were too tired to sit up any longer. Bartley
|
||
|
bent over and took her in his arms, kissing
|
||
|
her mouth and her wet, tired eyes.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Don't cry, don't cry," he whispered.
|
||
|
"We've tortured each other enough for tonight.
|
||
|
Forget everything except that I am here."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I think I have forgotten everything but
|
||
|
that already," she murmured. "Ah, your dear arms!"
|
||
|
|
||
|
CHAPTER VII
|
||
|
|
||
|
During the fortnight that Alexander was
|
||
|
in London he drove himself hard. He got
|
||
|
through a great deal of personal business
|
||
|
and saw a great many men who were doing
|
||
|
interesting things in his own profession.
|
||
|
He disliked to think of his visits to London
|
||
|
as holidays, and when he was there he worked
|
||
|
even harder than he did at home.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The day before his departure for Liverpool
|
||
|
was a singularly fine one. The thick air
|
||
|
had cleared overnight in a strong wind which
|
||
|
brought in a golden dawn and then fell off to
|
||
|
a fresh breeze. When Bartley looked out of
|
||
|
his windows from the Savoy, the river was
|
||
|
flashing silver and the gray stone along the
|
||
|
Embankment was bathed in bright, clear sunshine.
|
||
|
London had wakened to life after three weeks
|
||
|
of cold and sodden rain. Bartley breakfasted
|
||
|
hurriedly and went over his mail while the
|
||
|
hotel valet packed his trunks. Then he
|
||
|
paid his account and walked rapidly down the
|
||
|
Strand past Charing Cross Station. His spirits
|
||
|
rose with every step, and when he reached
|
||
|
Trafalgar Square, blazing in the sun, with its
|
||
|
fountains playing and its column reaching up
|
||
|
into the bright air, he signaled to a hansom,
|
||
|
and, before he knew what he was about, told
|
||
|
the driver to go to Bedford Square by way of
|
||
|
the British Museum.
|
||
|
|
||
|
When he reached Hilda's apartment she
|
||
|
met him, fresh as the morning itself.
|
||
|
Her rooms were flooded with sunshine and full
|
||
|
of the flowers he had been sending her.
|
||
|
She would never let him give her anything else.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Are you busy this morning, Hilda?" he asked
|
||
|
as he sat down, his hat and gloves in his hand.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Very. I've been up and about three hours,
|
||
|
working at my part. We open in February, you know."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Well, then you've worked enough. And so
|
||
|
have I. I've seen all my men, my packing is done,
|
||
|
and I go up to Liverpool this evening.
|
||
|
But this morning we are going to have
|
||
|
a holiday. What do you say to a drive out to
|
||
|
Kew and Richmond? You may not get another
|
||
|
day like this all winter. It's like a fine
|
||
|
April day at home. May I use your telephone?
|
||
|
I want to order the carriage."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Oh, how jolly! There, sit down at the desk.
|
||
|
And while you are telephoning I'll change my dress.
|
||
|
I shan't be long. All the morning papers are on the table."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Hilda was back in a few moments wearing a
|
||
|
long gray squirrel coat and a broad fur hat.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Bartley rose and inspected her. "Why don't
|
||
|
you wear some of those pink roses?" he asked.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"But they came only this morning,
|
||
|
and they have not even begun to open.
|
||
|
I was saving them. I am so unconsciously thrifty!"
|
||
|
She laughed as she looked about the room.
|
||
|
"You've been sending me far too many flowers,
|
||
|
Bartley. New ones every day. That's too often;
|
||
|
though I do love to open the boxes, and I take good care of them."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Why won't you let me send you any of those jade
|
||
|
or ivory things you are so fond of? Or pictures?
|
||
|
I know a good deal about pictures."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Hilda shook her large hat as she drew
|
||
|
the roses out of the tall glass. "No, there are
|
||
|
some things you can't do. There's the carriage.
|
||
|
Will you button my gloves for me?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
Bartley took her wrist and began to
|
||
|
button the long gray suede glove.
|
||
|
"How gay your eyes are this morning, Hilda."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"That's because I've been studying.
|
||
|
It always stirs me up a little."
|
||
|
|
||
|
He pushed the top of the glove up slowly.
|
||
|
"When did you learn to take hold of your
|
||
|
parts like that?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"When I had nothing else to think of.
|
||
|
Come, the carriage is waiting.
|
||
|
What a shocking while you take."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I'm in no hurry. We've plenty of time."
|
||
|
|
||
|
They found all London abroad. Piccadilly
|
||
|
was a stream of rapidly moving carriages,
|
||
|
from which flashed furs and flowers and
|
||
|
bright winter costumes. The metal trappings
|
||
|
of the harnesses shone dazzlingly, and the
|
||
|
wheels were revolving disks that threw off
|
||
|
rays of light. The parks were full of children
|
||
|
and nursemaids and joyful dogs that leaped
|
||
|
and yelped and scratched up the brown earth
|
||
|
with their paws.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I'm not going until to-morrow, you know,"
|
||
|
Bartley announced suddenly. "I'll cut
|
||
|
off a day in Liverpool. I haven't felt
|
||
|
so jolly this long while."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Hilda looked up with a smile which she
|
||
|
tried not to make too glad. "I think people
|
||
|
were meant to be happy, a little," she said.
|
||
|
|
||
|
They had lunch at Richmond and then walked
|
||
|
to Twickenham, where they had sent the carriage.
|
||
|
They drove back, with a glorious sunset behind them,
|
||
|
toward the distant gold-washed city.
|
||
|
It was one of those rare afternoons
|
||
|
when all the thickness and shadow of London
|
||
|
are changed to a kind of shining, pulsing,
|
||
|
special atmosphere; when the smoky vapors
|
||
|
become fluttering golden clouds, nacreous
|
||
|
veils of pink and amber; when all that
|
||
|
bleakness of gray stone and dullness of dirty
|
||
|
brick trembles in aureate light, and all the
|
||
|
roofs and spires, and one great dome, are
|
||
|
floated in golden haze. On such rare
|
||
|
afternoons the ugliest of cities becomes
|
||
|
the most poetic, and months of sodden days
|
||
|
are offset by a moment of miracle.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"It's like that with us Londoners, too,"
|
||
|
Hilda was saying. "Everything is awfully
|
||
|
grim and cheerless, our weather and our
|
||
|
houses and our ways of amusing ourselves.
|
||
|
But we can be happier than anybody.
|
||
|
We can go mad with joy, as the people do out
|
||
|
in the fields on a fine Whitsunday.
|
||
|
We make the most of our moment."
|
||
|
|
||
|
She thrust her little chin out defiantly
|
||
|
over her gray fur collar, and Bartley looked
|
||
|
down at her and laughed.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"You are a plucky one, you." He patted her glove
|
||
|
with his hand. "Yes, you are a plucky one."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Hilda sighed. "No, I'm not. Not about
|
||
|
some things, at any rate. It doesn't take pluck
|
||
|
to fight for one's moment, but it takes pluck
|
||
|
to go without--a lot. More than I have.
|
||
|
I can't help it," she added fiercely.
|
||
|
|
||
|
After miles of outlying streets and little
|
||
|
gloomy houses, they reached London itself,
|
||
|
red and roaring and murky, with a thick
|
||
|
dampness coming up from the river, that
|
||
|
betokened fog again to-morrow. The streets
|
||
|
were full of people who had worked indoors
|
||
|
all through the priceless day and had now
|
||
|
come hungrily out to drink the muddy lees of
|
||
|
it. They stood in long black lines, waiting
|
||
|
before the pit entrances of the theatres--
|
||
|
short-coated boys, and girls in sailor hats,
|
||
|
all shivering and chatting gayly. There was
|
||
|
a blurred rhythm in all the dull city noises--
|
||
|
in the clatter of the cab horses and the rumbling
|
||
|
of the busses, in the street calls, and in the
|
||
|
undulating tramp, tramp of the crowd. It was
|
||
|
like the deep vibration of some vast underground
|
||
|
machinery, and like the muffled pulsations
|
||
|
of millions of human hearts.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[See "The Barrel Organ by Alfred Noyes. Ed.]
|
||
|
[I have placed it at the end for your convenience]
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Seems good to get back, doesn't it?"
|
||
|
Bartley whispered, as they drove from
|
||
|
Bayswater Road into Oxford Street.
|
||
|
"London always makes me want to live more
|
||
|
than any other city in the world. You remember
|
||
|
our priestess mummy over in the mummy-room,
|
||
|
and how we used to long to go and bring her out
|
||
|
on nights like this? Three thousand years! Ugh!"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"All the same, I believe she used to feel it
|
||
|
when we stood there and watched her and wished
|
||
|
her well. I believe she used to remember,"
|
||
|
Hilda said thoughtfully.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I hope so. Now let's go to some awfully
|
||
|
jolly place for dinner before we go home.
|
||
|
I could eat all the dinners there are in
|
||
|
London to-night. Where shall I tell the driver?
|
||
|
The Piccadilly Restaurant? The music's good there."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"There are too many people there whom
|
||
|
one knows. Why not that little French place
|
||
|
in Soho, where we went so often when you
|
||
|
were here in the summer? I love it,
|
||
|
and I've never been there with any one but you.
|
||
|
Sometimes I go by myself, when I am particularly lonely."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Very well, the sole's good there.
|
||
|
How many street pianos there are about to-night!
|
||
|
The fine weather must have thawed them out.
|
||
|
We've had five miles of `Il Trovatore' now.
|
||
|
They always make me feel jaunty.
|
||
|
Are you comfy, and not too tired?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
I'm not tired at all. I was just wondering
|
||
|
how people can ever die. Why did you
|
||
|
remind me of the mummy? Life seems the
|
||
|
strongest and most indestructible thing in the
|
||
|
world. Do you really believe that all those
|
||
|
people rushing about down there, going to
|
||
|
good dinners and clubs and theatres, will be
|
||
|
dead some day, and not care about anything?
|
||
|
I don't believe it, and I know I shan't die,
|
||
|
ever! You see, I feel too--too powerful!"
|
||
|
|
||
|
The carriage stopped. Bartley sprang out
|
||
|
and swung her quickly to the pavement.
|
||
|
As he lifted her in his two hands he whispered:
|
||
|
"You are--powerful!"
|
||
|
|
||
|
CHAPTER VIII
|
||
|
|
||
|
The last rehearsal was over, a tedious dress
|
||
|
rehearsal which had lasted all day and exhausted
|
||
|
the patience of every one who had to do with it.
|
||
|
When Hilda had dressed for the street and
|
||
|
came out of her dressing-room, she found
|
||
|
Hugh MacConnell waiting for her in the corridor.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"The fog's thicker than ever, Hilda.
|
||
|
There have been a great many accidents to-day.
|
||
|
It's positively unsafe for you to be out alone.
|
||
|
Will you let me take you home?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"How good of you, Mac. If you are going with me,
|
||
|
I think I'd rather walk. I've had no exercise to-day,
|
||
|
and all this has made me nervous."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I shouldn't wonder," said MacConnell dryly.
|
||
|
Hilda pulled down her veil and they stepped
|
||
|
out into the thick brown wash that submerged
|
||
|
St. Martin's Lane. MacConnell took her hand
|
||
|
and tucked it snugly under his arm.
|
||
|
"I'm sorry I was such a savage. I hope
|
||
|
you didn't think I made an ass of myself."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Not a bit of it. I don't wonder you were
|
||
|
peppery. Those things are awfully trying.
|
||
|
How do you think it's going?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Magnificently. That's why I got so stirred up.
|
||
|
We are going to hear from this, both of us.
|
||
|
And that reminds me; I've got news for you.
|
||
|
They are going to begin repairs on the
|
||
|
theatre about the middle of March,
|
||
|
and we are to run over to New York for six weeks.
|
||
|
Bennett told me yesterday that it was decided."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Hilda looked up delightedly at the tall
|
||
|
gray figure beside her. He was the only thing
|
||
|
she could see, for they were moving through
|
||
|
a dense opaqueness, as if they were walking
|
||
|
at the bottom of the ocean.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Oh, Mac, how glad I am! And they
|
||
|
love your things over there, don't they?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Shall you be glad for--any other reason, Hilda?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
MacConnell put his hand in front of her to ward
|
||
|
off some dark object. It proved to be only a lamp-post,
|
||
|
and they beat in farther from the edge of the pavement.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"What do you mean, Mac?" Hilda asked
|
||
|
nervously.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I was just thinking there might be people
|
||
|
over there you'd be glad to see," he brought
|
||
|
out awkwardly. Hilda said nothing, and as
|
||
|
they walked on MacConnell spoke again,
|
||
|
apologetically: "I hope you don't mind
|
||
|
my knowing about it, Hilda. Don't stiffen up
|
||
|
like that. No one else knows, and I didn't try
|
||
|
to find out anything. I felt it, even before
|
||
|
I knew who he was. I knew there was somebody,
|
||
|
and that it wasn't I."
|
||
|
|
||
|
They crossed Oxford Street in silence,
|
||
|
feeling their way. The busses had stopped
|
||
|
running and the cab-drivers were leading
|
||
|
their horses. When they reached the other side,
|
||
|
MacConnell said suddenly, "I hope you are happy."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Terribly, dangerously happy, Mac,"--
|
||
|
Hilda spoke quietly, pressing the rough sleeve
|
||
|
of his greatcoat with her gloved hand.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"You've always thought me too old for
|
||
|
you, Hilda,--oh, of course you've never said
|
||
|
just that,--and here this fellow is not more
|
||
|
than eight years younger than I. I've always
|
||
|
felt that if I could get out of my old case I
|
||
|
might win you yet. It's a fine, brave youth
|
||
|
I carry inside me, only he'll never be seen."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Nonsense, Mac. That has nothing to do with it.
|
||
|
It's because you seem too close to me,
|
||
|
too much my own kind. It would be like
|
||
|
marrying Cousin Mike, almost. I really tried
|
||
|
to care as you wanted me to, away back in the beginning."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Well, here we are, turning out of the Square.
|
||
|
You are not angry with me, Hilda? Thank you
|
||
|
for this walk, my dear. Go in and get dry things
|
||
|
on at once. You'll be having a great night to-morrow."
|
||
|
|
||
|
She put out her hand. "Thank you, Mac,
|
||
|
for everything. Good-night."
|
||
|
|
||
|
MacConnell trudged off through the fog,
|
||
|
and she went slowly upstairs. Her slippers
|
||
|
and dressing gown were waiting for her
|
||
|
before the fire. "I shall certainly see him
|
||
|
in New York. He will see by the papers that
|
||
|
we are coming. Perhaps he knows it already,"
|
||
|
Hilda kept thinking as she undressed.
|
||
|
"Perhaps he will be at the dock. No, scarcely
|
||
|
that; but I may meet him in the street even
|
||
|
before he comes to see me." Marie placed the
|
||
|
tea-table by the fire and brought Hilda her letters.
|
||
|
She looked them over, and started as she came
|
||
|
to one in a handwriting that she did not often see;
|
||
|
Alexander had written to her only twice before,
|
||
|
and he did not allow her to write to him at all.
|
||
|
"Thank you, Marie. You may go now."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Hilda sat down by the table with the
|
||
|
letter in her hand, still unopened. She looked
|
||
|
at it intently, turned it over, and felt its
|
||
|
thickness with her fingers. She believed that
|
||
|
she sometimes had a kind of second-sight
|
||
|
about letters, and could tell before she read
|
||
|
them whether they brought good or evil tidings.
|
||
|
She put this one down on the table in front
|
||
|
of her while she poured her tea. At last,
|
||
|
with a little shiver of expectancy,
|
||
|
she tore open the envelope and read:--
|
||
|
|
||
|
Boston, February--
|
||
|
MY DEAR HILDA:--
|
||
|
|
||
|
It is after twelve o'clock. Every one else
|
||
|
is in bed and I am sitting alone in my study.
|
||
|
I have been happier in this room than anywhere
|
||
|
else in the world. Happiness like that makes
|
||
|
one insolent. I used to think these four walls
|
||
|
could stand against anything. And now I
|
||
|
scarcely know myself here. Now I know
|
||
|
that no one can build his security upon the
|
||
|
nobleness of another person. Two people,
|
||
|
when they love each other, grow alike in their
|
||
|
tastes and habits and pride, but their moral
|
||
|
natures (whatever we may mean by that
|
||
|
canting expression) are never welded. The
|
||
|
base one goes on being base, and the noble
|
||
|
one noble, to the end.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The last week has been a bad one; I have been
|
||
|
realizing how things used to be with me.
|
||
|
Sometimes I get used to being dead inside,
|
||
|
but lately it has been as if a window
|
||
|
beside me had suddenly opened, and as if all
|
||
|
the smells of spring blew in to me. There is
|
||
|
a garden out there, with stars overhead, where
|
||
|
I used to walk at night when I had a single
|
||
|
purpose and a single heart. I can remember
|
||
|
how I used to feel there, how beautiful
|
||
|
everything about me was, and what life and
|
||
|
power and freedom I felt in myself. When the
|
||
|
window opens I know exactly how it would
|
||
|
feel to be out there. But that garden is closed
|
||
|
to me. How is it, I ask myself, that everything
|
||
|
can be so different with me when nothing here
|
||
|
has changed? I am in my own house, in my own study, in the
|
||
|
midst of all these quiet streets where my friends live.
|
||
|
They are all safe and at peace with themselves.
|
||
|
But I am never at peace. I feel always on the edge
|
||
|
of danger and change.
|
||
|
|
||
|
I keep remembering locoed horses I used
|
||
|
to see on the range when I was a boy.
|
||
|
They changed like that. We used to catch them
|
||
|
and put them up in the corral, and they developed
|
||
|
great cunning. They would pretend to eat their oats
|
||
|
like the other horses, but we knew they were always
|
||
|
scheming to get back at the loco.
|
||
|
|
||
|
It seems that a man is meant to live only
|
||
|
one life in this world. When he tries to live a
|
||
|
second, he develops another nature. I feel as
|
||
|
if a second man had been grafted into me.
|
||
|
At first he seemed only a pleasure-loving
|
||
|
simpleton, of whose company I was rather ashamed,
|
||
|
and whom I used to hide under my coat
|
||
|
when I walked the Embankment, in London.
|
||
|
But now he is strong and sullen, and he is
|
||
|
fighting for his life at the cost of mine.
|
||
|
That is his one activity: to grow strong.
|
||
|
No creature ever wanted so much to live.
|
||
|
Eventually, I suppose, he will absorb me altogether.
|
||
|
Believe me, you will hate me then.
|
||
|
|
||
|
And what have you to do, Hilda, with
|
||
|
this ugly story? Nothing at all. The little boy
|
||
|
drank of the prettiest brook in the forest and
|
||
|
he became a stag. I write all this because I
|
||
|
can never tell it to you, and because it seems
|
||
|
as if I could not keep silent any longer. And
|
||
|
because I suffer, Hilda. If any one I loved
|
||
|
suffered like this, I'd want to know it. Help
|
||
|
me, Hilda!
|
||
|
|
||
|
B.A.
|
||
|
|
||
|
CHAPTER IX
|
||
|
|
||
|
On the last Saturday in April, the New York "Times"
|
||
|
published an account of the strike complications
|
||
|
which were delaying Alexander's New Jersey bridge,
|
||
|
and stated that the engineer himself was in town
|
||
|
and at his office on West Tenth Street.
|
||
|
|
||
|
On Sunday, the day after this notice appeared,
|
||
|
Alexander worked all day at his Tenth Street rooms.
|
||
|
His business often called him to New York,
|
||
|
and he had kept an apartment there for years,
|
||
|
subletting it when he went abroad for any length of time.
|
||
|
Besides his sleeping-room and bath, there was a
|
||
|
large room, formerly a painter's studio, which he
|
||
|
used as a study and office. It was furnished
|
||
|
with the cast-off possessions of his bachelor
|
||
|
days and with odd things which he sheltered
|
||
|
for friends of his who followed itinerant and
|
||
|
more or less artistic callings. Over the fireplace
|
||
|
there was a large old-fashioned gilt mirror.
|
||
|
Alexander's big work-table stood in front
|
||
|
of one of the three windows, and above the
|
||
|
couch hung the one picture in the room, a big
|
||
|
canvas of charming color and spirit, a study
|
||
|
of the Luxembourg Gardens in early spring,
|
||
|
painted in his youth by a man who had since
|
||
|
become a portrait-painter of international
|
||
|
renown. He had done it for Alexander when
|
||
|
they were students together in Paris.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Sunday was a cold, raw day and a fine rain
|
||
|
fell continuously. When Alexander came back
|
||
|
from dinner he put more wood on his fire,
|
||
|
made himself comfortable, and settled
|
||
|
down at his desk, where he began checking
|
||
|
over estimate sheets. It was after nine o'clock
|
||
|
and he was lighting a second pipe, when he
|
||
|
thought he heard a sound at his door. He
|
||
|
started and listened, holding the burning
|
||
|
match in his hand; again he heard the same
|
||
|
sound, like a firm, light tap. He rose and
|
||
|
crossed the room quickly. When he threw
|
||
|
open the door he recognized the figure that
|
||
|
shrank back into the bare, dimly lit hallway.
|
||
|
He stood for a moment in awkward constraint,
|
||
|
his pipe in his hand.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Come in," he said to Hilda at last, and
|
||
|
closed the door behind her. He pointed to a
|
||
|
chair by the fire and went back to his worktable.
|
||
|
"Won't you sit down?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
He was standing behind the table,
|
||
|
turning over a pile of blueprints nervously.
|
||
|
The yellow light from the student's lamp fell on
|
||
|
his hands and the purple sleeves of his velvet
|
||
|
smoking-jacket, but his flushed face and big,
|
||
|
hard head were in the shadow. There was
|
||
|
something about him that made Hilda wish
|
||
|
herself at her hotel again, in the street below,
|
||
|
anywhere but where she was.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Of course I know, Bartley," she said at
|
||
|
last, "that after this you won't owe me the
|
||
|
least consideration. But we sail on Tuesday.
|
||
|
I saw that interview in the paper yesterday,
|
||
|
telling where you were, and I thought I had
|
||
|
to see you. That's all. Good-night; I'm going now."
|
||
|
She turned and her hand closed on the door-knob.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Alexander hurried toward her and took
|
||
|
her gently by the arm. "Sit down, Hilda;
|
||
|
you're wet through. Let me take off your coat
|
||
|
--and your boots; they're oozing water."
|
||
|
He knelt down and began to unlace her shoes,
|
||
|
while Hilda shrank into the chair. "Here, put
|
||
|
your feet on this stool. You don't mean to say
|
||
|
you walked down--and without overshoes!"
|
||
|
|
||
|
Hilda hid her face in her hands. "I was
|
||
|
afraid to take a cab. Can't you see, Bartley,
|
||
|
that I'm terribly frightened? I've been
|
||
|
through this a hundred times to-day. Don't
|
||
|
be any more angry than you can help. I was
|
||
|
all right until I knew you were in town.
|
||
|
If you'd sent me a note, or telephoned me,
|
||
|
or anything! But you won't let me write to you,
|
||
|
and I had to see you after that letter, that
|
||
|
terrible letter you wrote me when you got home."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Alexander faced her, resting his arm on
|
||
|
the mantel behind him, and began to brush
|
||
|
the sleeve of his jacket. "Is this the way you
|
||
|
mean to answer it, Hilda?" he asked unsteadily.
|
||
|
|
||
|
She was afraid to look up at him.
|
||
|
"Didn't--didn't you mean even to say goodby
|
||
|
to me, Bartley? Did you mean just to--
|
||
|
quit me?" she asked. "I came to tell you that
|
||
|
I'm willing to do as you asked me. But it's no
|
||
|
use talking about that now. Give me my things,
|
||
|
please." She put her hand out toward the fender.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Alexander sat down on the arm of her chair.
|
||
|
"Did you think I had forgotten you were
|
||
|
in town, Hilda? Do you think I kept away by accident?
|
||
|
Did you suppose I didn't know you were sailing on Tuesday?
|
||
|
There is a letter for you there, in my desk drawer.
|
||
|
It was to have reached you on the steamer. I was
|
||
|
all the morning writing it. I told myself that
|
||
|
if I were really thinking of you, and not of myself,
|
||
|
a letter would be better than nothing.
|
||
|
Marks on paper mean something to you."
|
||
|
He paused. "They never did to me."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Hilda smiled up at him beautifully and
|
||
|
put her hand on his sleeve. "Oh, Bartley!
|
||
|
Did you write to me? Why didn't you telephone
|
||
|
me to let me know that you had? Then I wouldn't
|
||
|
have come."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Alexander slipped his arm about her. "I didn't know
|
||
|
it before, Hilda, on my honor I didn't, but I believe
|
||
|
it was because, deep down in me somewhere, I was hoping
|
||
|
I might drive you to do just this. I've watched
|
||
|
that door all day. I've jumped up if the fire crackled.
|
||
|
I think I have felt that you were coming."
|
||
|
He bent his face over her hair.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"And I," she whispered,--"I felt that you were feeling that.
|
||
|
But when I came, I thought I had been mistaken."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Alexander started up and began to walk up and down the room.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"No, you weren't mistaken. I've been up in Canada
|
||
|
with my bridge, and I arranged not to come to New York
|
||
|
until after you had gone. Then, when your manager
|
||
|
added two more weeks, I was already committed."
|
||
|
He dropped upon the stool in front of her and
|
||
|
sat with his hands hanging between his knees.
|
||
|
"What am I to do, Hilda?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"That's what I wanted to see you about,
|
||
|
Bartley. I'm going to do what you asked me
|
||
|
to do when you were in London. Only I'll do
|
||
|
it more completely. I'm going to marry."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Who?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Oh, it doesn't matter much! One of them.
|
||
|
Only not Mac. I'm too fond of him."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Alexander moved restlessly. "Are you joking, Hilda?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Indeed I'm not."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Then you don't know what you're talking about."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Yes, I know very well. I've thought
|
||
|
about it a great deal, and I've quite decided.
|
||
|
I never used to understand how women did things
|
||
|
like that, but I know now. It's because they can't
|
||
|
be at the mercy of the man they love any longer."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Alexander flushed angrily. "So it's better
|
||
|
to be at the mercy of a man you don't love?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Under such circumstances, infinitely!"
|
||
|
|
||
|
There was a flash in her eyes that made
|
||
|
Alexander's fall. He got up and went over to
|
||
|
the window, threw it open, and leaned out.
|
||
|
He heard Hilda moving about behind him.
|
||
|
When he looked over his shoulder she was
|
||
|
lacing her boots. He went back and stood
|
||
|
over her.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Hilda you'd better think a while longer
|
||
|
before you do that. I don't know what I
|
||
|
ought to say, but I don't believe you'd be
|
||
|
happy; truly I don't. Aren't you trying to
|
||
|
frighten me?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
She tied the knot of the last lacing and
|
||
|
put her boot-heel down firmly. "No; I'm
|
||
|
telling you what I've made up my mind to do.
|
||
|
I suppose I would better do it without telling you.
|
||
|
But afterward I shan't have an opportunity to explain,
|
||
|
for I shan't be seeing you again."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Alexander started to speak, but caught himself.
|
||
|
When Hilda rose he sat down on the arm of her chair
|
||
|
and drew her back into it.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I wouldn't be so much alarmed if I didn't
|
||
|
know how utterly reckless you CAN be.
|
||
|
Don't do anything like that rashly."
|
||
|
His face grew troubled. "You wouldn't be happy.
|
||
|
You are not that kind of woman. I'd never have
|
||
|
another hour's peace if I helped to make you
|
||
|
do a thing like that." He took her face
|
||
|
between his hands and looked down into it.
|
||
|
"You see, you are different, Hilda. Don't you
|
||
|
know you are?" His voice grew softer, his
|
||
|
touch more and more tender. "Some women
|
||
|
can do that sort of thing, but you--you can
|
||
|
love as queens did, in the old time."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Hilda had heard that soft, deep tone in his
|
||
|
voice only once before. She closed her eyes;
|
||
|
her lips and eyelids trembled. "Only one, Bartley.
|
||
|
Only one. And he threw it back at me a second time."
|
||
|
|
||
|
She felt the strength leap in the arms
|
||
|
that held her so lightly.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Try him again, Hilda. Try him once again."
|
||
|
|
||
|
She looked up into his eyes, and hid her
|
||
|
face in her hands.
|
||
|
|
||
|
CHAPTER X
|
||
|
|
||
|
On Tuesday afternoon a Boston lawyer,
|
||
|
who had been trying a case in Vermont,
|
||
|
was standing on the siding at White River Junction
|
||
|
when the Canadian Express pulled by on its
|
||
|
northward journey. As the day-coaches at
|
||
|
the rear end of the long train swept by him,
|
||
|
the lawyer noticed at one of the windows a
|
||
|
man's head, with thick rumpled hair.
|
||
|
"Curious," he thought; "that looked like
|
||
|
Alexander, but what would he be doing back
|
||
|
there in the daycoaches?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
It was, indeed, Alexander.
|
||
|
|
||
|
That morning a telegram from Moorlock
|
||
|
had reached him, telling him that there was
|
||
|
serious trouble with the bridge and that he
|
||
|
was needed there at once, so he had caught
|
||
|
the first train out of New York. He had taken
|
||
|
a seat in a day-coach to avoid the risk of
|
||
|
meeting any one he knew, and because he did
|
||
|
not wish to be comfortable. When the
|
||
|
telegram arrived, Alexander was at his rooms
|
||
|
on Tenth Street, packing his bag to go to Boston.
|
||
|
On Monday night he had written a long letter
|
||
|
to his wife, but when morning came he was
|
||
|
afraid to send it, and the letter was still
|
||
|
in his pocket. Winifred was not a woman
|
||
|
who could bear disappointment. She demanded
|
||
|
a great deal of herself and of the people
|
||
|
she loved; and she never failed herself.
|
||
|
If he told her now, he knew, it would be
|
||
|
irretrievable. There would be no going back.
|
||
|
He would lose the thing he valued most in
|
||
|
the world; he would be destroying himself
|
||
|
and his own happiness. There would be
|
||
|
nothing for him afterward. He seemed to see
|
||
|
himself dragging out a restless existence on
|
||
|
the Continent--Cannes, Hyeres, Algiers, Cairo--
|
||
|
among smartly dressed, disabled men of
|
||
|
every nationality; forever going on journeys
|
||
|
that led nowhere; hurrying to catch trains
|
||
|
that he might just as well miss; getting up in
|
||
|
the morning with a great bustle and splashing
|
||
|
of water, to begin a day that had no purpose
|
||
|
and no meaning; dining late to shorten the
|
||
|
night, sleeping late to shorten the day.
|
||
|
|
||
|
And for what? For a mere folly, a masquerade,
|
||
|
a little thing that he could not let go.
|
||
|
AND HE COULD EVEN LET IT GO, he told himself.
|
||
|
But he had promised to be in London at mid-
|
||
|
summer, and he knew that he would go. . . .
|
||
|
It was impossible to live like this any longer.
|
||
|
|
||
|
And this, then, was to be the disaster
|
||
|
that his old professor had foreseen for him:
|
||
|
the crack in the wall, the crash, the cloud
|
||
|
of dust. And he could not understand how it
|
||
|
had come about. He felt that he himself was
|
||
|
unchanged, that he was still there, the same
|
||
|
man he had been five years ago, and that he
|
||
|
was sitting stupidly by and letting some
|
||
|
resolute offshoot of himself spoil his life for
|
||
|
him. This new force was not he, it was but a
|
||
|
part of him. He would not even admit that it
|
||
|
was stronger than he; but it was more active.
|
||
|
It was by its energy that this new feeling got
|
||
|
the better of him. His wife was the woman
|
||
|
who had made his life, gratified his pride,
|
||
|
given direction to his tastes and habits.
|
||
|
The life they led together seemed to him beautiful.
|
||
|
Winifred still was, as she had always been,
|
||
|
Romance for him, and whenever he was deeply
|
||
|
stirred he turned to her. When the grandeur
|
||
|
and beauty of the world challenged him--
|
||
|
as it challenges even the most self-absorbed people--
|
||
|
he always answered with her name. That was his
|
||
|
reply to the question put by the mountains and the stars;
|
||
|
to all the spiritual aspects of life. In his feeling
|
||
|
for his wife there was all the tenderness,
|
||
|
all the pride, all the devotion of which he was
|
||
|
capable. There was everything but energy;
|
||
|
the energy of youth which must register itself
|
||
|
and cut its name before it passes. This new
|
||
|
feeling was so fresh, so unsatisfied and light
|
||
|
of foot. It ran and was not wearied, anticipated
|
||
|
him everywhere. It put a girdle round the
|
||
|
earth while he was going from New York
|
||
|
to Moorlock. At this moment, it was tingling
|
||
|
through him, exultant, and live as quicksilver,
|
||
|
whispering, "In July you will be in England."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Already he dreaded the long, empty days at sea,
|
||
|
the monotonous Irish coast, the sluggish
|
||
|
passage up the Mersey, the flash of the
|
||
|
boat train through the summer country.
|
||
|
He closed his eyes and gave himself up to the
|
||
|
feeling of rapid motion and to swift,
|
||
|
terrifying thoughts. He was sitting so, his face
|
||
|
shaded by his hand, when the Boston lawyer
|
||
|
saw him from the siding at White River Junction.
|
||
|
|
||
|
When at last Alexander roused himself,
|
||
|
the afternoon had waned to sunset. The train
|
||
|
was passing through a gray country and the
|
||
|
sky overhead was flushed with a wide flood of
|
||
|
clear color. There was a rose-colored light
|
||
|
over the gray rocks and hills and meadows.
|
||
|
Off to the left, under the approach of a
|
||
|
weather-stained wooden bridge, a group of
|
||
|
boys were sitting around a little fire.
|
||
|
The smell of the wood smoke blew in at the window.
|
||
|
Except for an old farmer, jogging along the highroad
|
||
|
in his box-wagon, there was not another living
|
||
|
creature to be seen. Alexander looked back wistfully
|
||
|
at the boys, camped on the edge of a little marsh,
|
||
|
crouching under their shelter and looking gravely
|
||
|
at their fire. They took his mind back a long way,
|
||
|
to a campfire on a sandbar in a Western river,
|
||
|
and he wished he could go back and sit down with them.
|
||
|
He could remember exactly how the world had looked then.
|
||
|
|
||
|
It was quite dark and Alexander was still
|
||
|
thinking of the boys, when it occurred to him
|
||
|
that the train must be nearing Allway.
|
||
|
In going to his new bridge at Moorlock he had
|
||
|
always to pass through Allway. The train
|
||
|
stopped at Allway Mills, then wound two
|
||
|
miles up the river, and then the hollow sound
|
||
|
under his feet told Bartley that he was on his
|
||
|
first bridge again. The bridge seemed longer
|
||
|
than it had ever seemed before, and he was
|
||
|
glad when he felt the beat of the wheels on
|
||
|
the solid roadbed again. He did not like
|
||
|
coming and going across that bridge, or
|
||
|
remembering the man who built it. And was he,
|
||
|
indeed, the same man who used to walk that
|
||
|
bridge at night, promising such things to
|
||
|
himself and to the stars? And yet, he could
|
||
|
remember it all so well: the quiet hills
|
||
|
sleeping in the moonlight, the slender skeleton
|
||
|
of the bridge reaching out into the river, and
|
||
|
up yonder, alone on the hill, the big white house;
|
||
|
upstairs, in Winifred's window, the light that told
|
||
|
him she was still awake and still thinking of him.
|
||
|
And after the light went out he walked alone,
|
||
|
taking the heavens into his confidence,
|
||
|
unable to tear himself away from the
|
||
|
white magic of the night, unwilling to sleep
|
||
|
because longing was so sweet to him, and because,
|
||
|
for the first time since first the hills were
|
||
|
hung with moonlight, there was a lover in the world.
|
||
|
And always there was the sound of the rushing water
|
||
|
underneath, the sound which, more than anything else,
|
||
|
meant death; the wearing away of things under the
|
||
|
impact of physical forces which men could
|
||
|
direct but never circumvent or diminish.
|
||
|
Then, in the exaltation of love, more than
|
||
|
ever it seemed to him to mean death, the only
|
||
|
other thing as strong as love. Under the moon,
|
||
|
under the cold, splendid stars, there were only
|
||
|
those two things awake and sleepless; death and love,
|
||
|
the rushing river and his burning heart.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Alexander sat up and looked about him.
|
||
|
The train was tearing on through the darkness.
|
||
|
All his companions in the day-coach were
|
||
|
either dozing or sleeping heavily,
|
||
|
and the murky lamps were turned low.
|
||
|
How came he here among all these dirty people?
|
||
|
Why was he going to London? What did it
|
||
|
mean--what was the answer? How could this
|
||
|
happen to a man who had lived through that
|
||
|
magical spring and summer, and who had felt
|
||
|
that the stars themselves were but flaming
|
||
|
particles in the far-away infinitudes of his love?
|
||
|
|
||
|
What had he done to lose it? How could
|
||
|
he endure the baseness of life without it?
|
||
|
And with every revolution of the wheels beneath
|
||
|
him, the unquiet quicksilver in his breast told
|
||
|
him that at midsummer he would be in London.
|
||
|
He remembered his last night there: the red
|
||
|
foggy darkness, the hungry crowds before
|
||
|
the theatres, the hand-organs, the feverish
|
||
|
rhythm of the blurred, crowded streets, and
|
||
|
the feeling of letting himself go with the
|
||
|
crowd. He shuddered and looked about him
|
||
|
at the poor unconscious companions of his
|
||
|
journey, unkempt and travel-stained, now
|
||
|
doubled in unlovely attitudes, who had come
|
||
|
to stand to him for the ugliness he had
|
||
|
brought into the world.
|
||
|
|
||
|
And those boys back there, beginning it
|
||
|
all just as he had begun it; he wished he
|
||
|
could promise them better luck. Ah, if one
|
||
|
could promise any one better luck, if one
|
||
|
could assure a single human being of happiness!
|
||
|
He had thought he could do so, once;
|
||
|
and it was thinking of that that he at last fell
|
||
|
asleep. In his sleep, as if it had nothing
|
||
|
fresher to work upon, his mind went back
|
||
|
and tortured itself with something years and
|
||
|
years away, an old, long-forgotten sorrow
|
||
|
of his childhood.
|
||
|
|
||
|
When Alexander awoke in the morning,
|
||
|
the sun was just rising through pale golden
|
||
|
ripples of cloud, and the fresh yellow light
|
||
|
was vibrating through the pine woods.
|
||
|
The white birches, with their little
|
||
|
unfolding leaves, gleamed in the lowlands,
|
||
|
and the marsh meadows were already coming to life
|
||
|
with their first green, a thin, bright color
|
||
|
which had run over them like fire. As the
|
||
|
train rushed along the trestles, thousands of
|
||
|
wild birds rose screaming into the light.
|
||
|
The sky was already a pale blue and of the
|
||
|
clearness of crystal. Bartley caught up his bag
|
||
|
and hurried through the Pullman coaches until he
|
||
|
found the conductor. There was a stateroom unoccupied,
|
||
|
and he took it and set about changing his clothes.
|
||
|
Last night he would not have believed that anything
|
||
|
could be so pleasant as the cold water he dashed
|
||
|
over his head and shoulders and the freshness
|
||
|
of clean linen on his body.
|
||
|
|
||
|
After he had dressed, Alexander sat down
|
||
|
at the window and drew into his lungs
|
||
|
deep breaths of the pine-scented air.
|
||
|
He had awakened with all his old sense of power.
|
||
|
He could not believe that things were as bad with
|
||
|
him as they had seemed last night, that there
|
||
|
was no way to set them entirely right.
|
||
|
Even if he went to London at midsummer,
|
||
|
what would that mean except that he was a fool?
|
||
|
And he had been a fool before. That was not
|
||
|
the reality of his life. Yet he knew that he
|
||
|
would go to London.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Half an hour later the train stopped at
|
||
|
Moorlock. Alexander sprang to the platform
|
||
|
and hurried up the siding, waving to Philip
|
||
|
Horton, one of his assistants, who was
|
||
|
anxiously looking up at the windows of
|
||
|
the coaches. Bartley took his arm and
|
||
|
they went together into the station buffet.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I'll have my coffee first, Philip.
|
||
|
Have you had yours? And now,
|
||
|
what seems to be the matter up here?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
The young man, in a hurried, nervous way,
|
||
|
began his explanation.
|
||
|
|
||
|
But Alexander cut him short. "When did
|
||
|
you stop work?" he asked sharply.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The young engineer looked confused.
|
||
|
"I haven't stopped work yet, Mr. Alexander.
|
||
|
I didn't feel that I could go so far without
|
||
|
definite authorization from you."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Then why didn't you say in your telegram
|
||
|
exactly what you thought, and ask for your
|
||
|
authorization? You'd have got it quick enough."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Well, really, Mr. Alexander, I couldn't be
|
||
|
absolutely sure, you know, and I didn't like
|
||
|
to take the responsibility of making it public."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Alexander pushed back his chair and rose.
|
||
|
"Anything I do can be made public, Phil.
|
||
|
You say that you believe the lower chords
|
||
|
are showing strain, and that even the
|
||
|
workmen have been talking about it,
|
||
|
and yet you've gone on adding weight."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I'm sorry, Mr. Alexander, but I had
|
||
|
counted on your getting here yesterday.
|
||
|
My first telegram missed you somehow.
|
||
|
I sent one Sunday evening, to the same address,
|
||
|
but it was returned to me."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Have you a carriage out there?
|
||
|
I must stop to send a wire."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Alexander went up to the telegraph-desk and
|
||
|
penciled the following message to his wife:--
|
||
|
|
||
|
I may have to be here for some time.
|
||
|
Can you come up at once? Urgent.
|
||
|
|
||
|
BARTLEY.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The Moorlock Bridge lay three miles
|
||
|
above the town. When they were seated in
|
||
|
the carriage, Alexander began to question his
|
||
|
assistant further. If it were true that the
|
||
|
compression members showed strain, with the
|
||
|
bridge only two thirds done, then there was
|
||
|
nothing to do but pull the whole structure
|
||
|
down and begin over again. Horton kept
|
||
|
repeating that he was sure there could be
|
||
|
nothing wrong with the estimates.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Alexander grew impatient. "That's all
|
||
|
true, Phil, but we never were justified in
|
||
|
assuming that a scale that was perfectly safe
|
||
|
for an ordinary bridge would work with
|
||
|
anything of such length. It's all very well on
|
||
|
paper, but it remains to be seen whether it
|
||
|
can be done in practice. I should have thrown
|
||
|
up the job when they crowded me. It's all
|
||
|
nonsense to try to do what other engineers
|
||
|
are doing when you know they're not sound."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"But just now, when there is such competition,"
|
||
|
the younger man demurred. "And certainly
|
||
|
that's the new line of development."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Alexander shrugged his shoulders and
|
||
|
made no reply.
|
||
|
|
||
|
When they reached the bridge works,
|
||
|
Alexander began his examination immediately.
|
||
|
An hour later he sent for the superintendent.
|
||
|
"I think you had better stop work out there
|
||
|
at once, Dan. I should say that the lower chord
|
||
|
here might buckle at any moment. I told
|
||
|
the Commission that we were using higher
|
||
|
unit stresses than any practice has established,
|
||
|
and we've put the dead load at a low estimate.
|
||
|
Theoretically it worked out well enough,
|
||
|
but it had never actually been tried."
|
||
|
Alexander put on his overcoat and took
|
||
|
the superintendent by the arm. "Don't look
|
||
|
so chopfallen, Dan. It's a jolt, but we've
|
||
|
got to face it. It isn't the end of the world,
|
||
|
you know. Now we'll go out and call the men
|
||
|
off quietly. They're already nervous,
|
||
|
Horton tells me, and there's no use alarming them.
|
||
|
I'll go with you, and we'll send the end
|
||
|
riveters in first."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Alexander and the superintendent picked
|
||
|
their way out slowly over the long span.
|
||
|
They went deliberately, stopping to see what
|
||
|
each gang was doing, as if they were on an
|
||
|
ordinary round of inspection. When they
|
||
|
reached the end of the river span, Alexander
|
||
|
nodded to the superintendent, who quietly
|
||
|
gave an order to the foreman. The men in the
|
||
|
end gang picked up their tools and, glancing
|
||
|
curiously at each other, started back across
|
||
|
the bridge toward the river-bank. Alexander
|
||
|
himself remained standing where they had
|
||
|
been working, looking about him. It was hard
|
||
|
to believe, as he looked back over it,
|
||
|
that the whole great span was incurably disabled,
|
||
|
was already as good as condemned,
|
||
|
because something was out of line in
|
||
|
the lower chord of the cantilever arm.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The end riveters had reached the bank
|
||
|
and were dispersing among the tool-houses,
|
||
|
and the second gang had picked up their tools
|
||
|
and were starting toward the shore. Alexander,
|
||
|
still standing at the end of the river span,
|
||
|
saw the lower chord of the cantilever arm
|
||
|
give a little, like an elbow bending.
|
||
|
He shouted and ran after the second gang,
|
||
|
but by this time every one knew that the big
|
||
|
river span was slowly settling. There was
|
||
|
a burst of shouting that was immediately drowned
|
||
|
by the scream and cracking of tearing iron,
|
||
|
as all the tension work began to pull asunder.
|
||
|
Once the chords began to buckle, there were
|
||
|
thousands of tons of ironwork, all riveted together
|
||
|
and lying in midair without support. It tore
|
||
|
itself to pieces with roaring and grinding and
|
||
|
noises that were like the shrieks of a steam whistle.
|
||
|
There was no shock of any kind; the bridge had no
|
||
|
impetus except from its own weight.
|
||
|
It lurched neither to right nor left,
|
||
|
but sank almost in a vertical line,
|
||
|
snapping and breaking and tearing as it went,
|
||
|
because no integral part could bear for an instant
|
||
|
the enormous strain loosed upon it.
|
||
|
Some of the men jumped and some ran,
|
||
|
trying to make the shore.
|
||
|
|
||
|
At the first shriek of the tearing iron,
|
||
|
Alexander jumped from the downstream side
|
||
|
of the bridge. He struck the water without
|
||
|
injury and disappeared. He was under the
|
||
|
river a long time and had great difficulty
|
||
|
in holding his breath. When it seemed impossible,
|
||
|
and his chest was about to heave, he thought he
|
||
|
heard his wife telling him that he could hold out
|
||
|
a little longer. An instant later his face cleared the water.
|
||
|
For a moment, in the depths of the river, he had realized
|
||
|
what it would mean to die a hypocrite, and to lie dead
|
||
|
under the last abandonment of her tenderness.
|
||
|
But once in the light and air, he knew he should
|
||
|
live to tell her and to recover all he had lost.
|
||
|
Now, at last, he felt sure of himself.
|
||
|
He was not startled. It seemed to him
|
||
|
that he had been through something of
|
||
|
this sort before. There was nothing horrible
|
||
|
about it. This, too, was life, and life was
|
||
|
activity, just as it was in Boston or in London.
|
||
|
He was himself, and there was something
|
||
|
to be done; everything seemed perfectly
|
||
|
natural. Alexander was a strong swimmer,
|
||
|
but he had gone scarcely a dozen strokes
|
||
|
when the bridge itself, which had been settling
|
||
|
faster and faster, crashed into the water
|
||
|
behind him. Immediately the river was full
|
||
|
of drowning men. A gang of French Canadians
|
||
|
fell almost on top of him. He thought he had
|
||
|
cleared them, when they began coming up all
|
||
|
around him, clutching at him and at each
|
||
|
other. Some of them could swim, but they
|
||
|
were either hurt or crazed with fright.
|
||
|
Alexander tried to beat them off, but there
|
||
|
were too many of them. One caught him about
|
||
|
the neck, another gripped him about the middle,
|
||
|
and they went down together. When he sank,
|
||
|
his wife seemed to be there in the water
|
||
|
beside him, telling him to keep his head,
|
||
|
that if he could hold out the men would drown
|
||
|
and release him. There was something he
|
||
|
wanted to tell his wife, but he could not
|
||
|
think clearly for the roaring in his ears.
|
||
|
Suddenly he remembered what it was.
|
||
|
He caught his breath, and then she let him go.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The work of recovering the dead went
|
||
|
on all day and all the following night.
|
||
|
By the next morning forty-eight bodies had been
|
||
|
taken out of the river, but there were still
|
||
|
twenty missing. Many of the men had fallen
|
||
|
with the bridge and were held down under
|
||
|
the debris. Early on the morning of the
|
||
|
second day a closed carriage was driven slowly
|
||
|
along the river-bank and stopped a little
|
||
|
below the works, where the river boiled and
|
||
|
churned about the great iron carcass which
|
||
|
lay in a straight line two thirds across it.
|
||
|
The carriage stood there hour after hour,
|
||
|
and word soon spread among the crowds on
|
||
|
the shore that its occupant was the wife
|
||
|
of the Chief Engineer; his body had not
|
||
|
yet been found. The widows of the lost workmen,
|
||
|
moving up and down the bank with shawls
|
||
|
over their heads, some of them carrying
|
||
|
babies, looked at the rusty hired hack many
|
||
|
times that morning. They drew near it and
|
||
|
walked about it, but none of them ventured
|
||
|
to peer within. Even half-indifferent sight-
|
||
|
seers dropped their voices as they told a
|
||
|
newcomer: "You see that carriage over there?
|
||
|
That's Mrs. Alexander. They haven't found
|
||
|
him yet. She got off the train this morning.
|
||
|
Horton met her. She heard it in Boston yesterday
|
||
|
--heard the newsboys crying it in the street.
|
||
|
|
||
|
At noon Philip Horton made his way
|
||
|
through the crowd with a tray and a tin
|
||
|
coffee-pot from the camp kitchen. When he
|
||
|
reached the carriage he found Mrs. Alexander
|
||
|
just as he had left her in the early morning,
|
||
|
leaning forward a little, with her hand on the
|
||
|
lowered window, looking at the river. Hour
|
||
|
after hour she had been watching the water,
|
||
|
the lonely, useless stone towers, and the
|
||
|
convulsed mass of iron wreckage over which
|
||
|
the angry river continually spat up its yellow
|
||
|
foam.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Those poor women out there, do they
|
||
|
blame him very much?" she asked, as she
|
||
|
handed the coffee-cup back to Horton.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Nobody blames him, Mrs. Alexander.
|
||
|
If any one is to blame, I'm afraid it's I.
|
||
|
I should have stopped work before he came.
|
||
|
He said so as soon as I met him. I tried
|
||
|
to get him here a day earlier, but my telegram
|
||
|
missed him, somehow. He didn't have time
|
||
|
really to explain to me. If he'd got here
|
||
|
Monday, he'd have had all the men off at once.
|
||
|
But, you see, Mrs. Alexander, such a thing never
|
||
|
happened before. According to all human calculations,
|
||
|
it simply couldn't happen."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Horton leaned wearily against the front
|
||
|
wheel of the cab. He had not had his clothes
|
||
|
off for thirty hours, and the stimulus of violent
|
||
|
excitement was beginning to wear off.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Don't be afraid to tell me the worst,
|
||
|
Mr. Horton. Don't leave me to the dread of
|
||
|
finding out things that people may be saying.
|
||
|
If he is blamed, if he needs any one to speak
|
||
|
for him,"--for the first time her voice broke
|
||
|
and a flush of life, tearful, painful, and
|
||
|
confused, swept over her rigid pallor,--
|
||
|
"if he needs any one, tell me, show me what to do."
|
||
|
She began to sob, and Horton hurried away.
|
||
|
|
||
|
When he came back at four o'clock in the
|
||
|
afternoon he was carrying his hat in his hand,
|
||
|
and Winifred knew as soon as she saw him
|
||
|
that they had found Bartley. She opened the
|
||
|
carriage door before he reached her and
|
||
|
stepped to the ground.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Horton put out his hand as if to hold her
|
||
|
back and spoke pleadingly: "Won't you drive
|
||
|
up to my house, Mrs. Alexander? They will
|
||
|
take him up there."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Take me to him now, please. I shall not
|
||
|
make any trouble."
|
||
|
|
||
|
The group of men down under the riverbank
|
||
|
fell back when they saw a woman coming,
|
||
|
and one of them threw a tarpaulin over
|
||
|
the stretcher. They took off their hats
|
||
|
and caps as Winifred approached, and although
|
||
|
she had pulled her veil down over her face
|
||
|
they did not look up at her. She was taller
|
||
|
than Horton, and some of the men thought
|
||
|
she was the tallest woman they had ever seen.
|
||
|
"As tall as himself," some one whispered.
|
||
|
Horton motioned to the men, and six of them
|
||
|
lifted the stretcher and began to carry it up
|
||
|
the embankment. Winifred followed them the
|
||
|
half-mile to Horton's house. She walked
|
||
|
quietly, without once breaking or stumbling.
|
||
|
When the bearers put the stretcher down in
|
||
|
Horton's spare bedroom, she thanked them
|
||
|
and gave her hand to each in turn. The men
|
||
|
went out of the house and through the yard
|
||
|
with their caps in their hands. They were
|
||
|
too much confused to say anything
|
||
|
as they went down the hill.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Horton himself was almost as deeply perplexed.
|
||
|
"Mamie," he said to his wife, when he came out
|
||
|
of the spare room half an hour later,
|
||
|
"will you take Mrs. Alexander the things
|
||
|
she needs? She is going to do everything
|
||
|
herself. Just stay about where you can
|
||
|
hear her and go in if she wants you."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Everything happened as Alexander had
|
||
|
foreseen in that moment of prescience under
|
||
|
the river. With her own hands she washed
|
||
|
him clean of every mark of disaster. All night
|
||
|
he was alone with her in the still house,
|
||
|
his great head lying deep in the pillow.
|
||
|
In the pocket of his coat Winifred found the
|
||
|
letter that he had written her the night before
|
||
|
he left New York, water-soaked and illegible,
|
||
|
but because of its length, she knew it had
|
||
|
been meant for her.
|
||
|
|
||
|
For Alexander death was an easy creditor.
|
||
|
Fortune, which had smiled upon him
|
||
|
consistently all his life, did not desert him in
|
||
|
the end. His harshest critics did not doubt that,
|
||
|
had he lived, he would have retrieved himself.
|
||
|
Even Lucius Wilson did not see in this accident
|
||
|
the disaster he had once foretold.
|
||
|
|
||
|
When a great man dies in his prime there
|
||
|
is no surgeon who can say whether he did well;
|
||
|
whether or not the future was his, as it
|
||
|
seemed to be. The mind that society had
|
||
|
come to regard as a powerful and reliable
|
||
|
machine, dedicated to its service, may for a
|
||
|
long time have been sick within itself and
|
||
|
bent upon its own destruction.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
EPILOGUE
|
||
|
|
||
|
Professor Wilson had been living in London
|
||
|
for six years and he was just back from a visit
|
||
|
to America. One afternoon, soon after his
|
||
|
return, he put on his frock-coat and drove in
|
||
|
a hansom to pay a call upon Hilda Burgoyne,
|
||
|
who still lived at her old number, off Bedford
|
||
|
Square. He and Miss Burgoyne had been fast
|
||
|
friends for a long time. He had first noticed
|
||
|
her about the corridors of the British Museum,
|
||
|
where he read constantly. Her being there
|
||
|
so often had made him feel that he would
|
||
|
like to know her, and as she was not an
|
||
|
inaccessible person, an introduction was
|
||
|
not difficult. The preliminaries once over,
|
||
|
they came to depend a great deal upon each
|
||
|
other, and Wilson, after his day's reading,
|
||
|
often went round to Bedford Square for his
|
||
|
tea. They had much more in common than
|
||
|
their memories of a common friend. Indeed,
|
||
|
they seldom spoke of him. They saved that
|
||
|
for the deep moments which do not come
|
||
|
often, and then their talk of him was mostly
|
||
|
silence. Wilson knew that Hilda had loved
|
||
|
him; more than this he had not tried to know.
|
||
|
|
||
|
It was late when Wilson reached Hilda's
|
||
|
apartment on this particular December
|
||
|
afternoon, and he found her alone. She sent
|
||
|
for fresh tea and made him comfortable, as she
|
||
|
had such a knack of making people comfortable.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"How good you were to come back
|
||
|
before Christmas! I quite dreaded the
|
||
|
Holidays without you. You've helped me over a
|
||
|
good many Christmases." She smiled at him gayly.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"As if you needed me for that! But, at
|
||
|
any rate, I needed YOU. How well you are
|
||
|
looking, my dear, and how rested."
|
||
|
|
||
|
He peered up at her from his low chair,
|
||
|
balancing the tips of his long fingers together
|
||
|
in a judicial manner which had grown on him
|
||
|
with years.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Hilda laughed as she carefully poured his
|
||
|
cream. "That means that I was looking very
|
||
|
seedy at the end of the season, doesn't it?
|
||
|
Well, we must show wear at last, you know."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Wilson took the cup gratefully. "Ah, no
|
||
|
need to remind a man of seventy, who has
|
||
|
just been home to find that he has survived
|
||
|
all his contemporaries. I was most gently
|
||
|
treated--as a sort of precious relic. But, do
|
||
|
you know, it made me feel awkward to be
|
||
|
hanging about still."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Seventy? Never mention it to me." Hilda looked
|
||
|
appreciatively at the Professor's alert face,
|
||
|
with so many kindly lines about the mouth
|
||
|
and so many quizzical ones about the eyes.
|
||
|
"You've got to hang about for me, you know.
|
||
|
I can't even let you go home again.
|
||
|
You must stay put, now that I have you back.
|
||
|
You're the realest thing I have."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Wilson chuckled. "Dear me, am I? Out of
|
||
|
so many conquests and the spoils of
|
||
|
conquered cities! You've really missed me?
|
||
|
Well, then, I shall hang. Even if you have
|
||
|
at last to put ME in the mummy-room with the others.
|
||
|
You'll visit me often, won't you?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Every day in the calendar. Here, your cigarettes
|
||
|
are in this drawer, where you left them."
|
||
|
She struck a match and lit one for him.
|
||
|
"But you did, after all, enjoy being at home again?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Oh, yes. I found the long railway journeys
|
||
|
trying. People live a thousand miles apart.
|
||
|
But I did it thoroughly; I was all over the place.
|
||
|
It was in Boston I lingered longest."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Ah, you saw Mrs. Alexander?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Often. I dined with her, and had tea
|
||
|
there a dozen different times, I should think.
|
||
|
Indeed, it was to see her that I lingered on
|
||
|
and on. I found that I still loved to go to the
|
||
|
house. It always seemed as if Bartley were
|
||
|
there, somehow, and that at any moment one
|
||
|
might hear his heavy tramp on the stairs. Do
|
||
|
you know, I kept feeling that he must be up
|
||
|
in his study." The Professor looked reflectively
|
||
|
into the grate. "I should really have liked
|
||
|
to go up there. That was where I had my last
|
||
|
long talk with him. But Mrs. Alexander never
|
||
|
suggested it."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Why?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
Wilson was a little startled by her tone,
|
||
|
and he turned his head so quickly that his
|
||
|
cuff-link caught the string of his nose-glasses
|
||
|
and pulled them awry. "Why? Why, dear
|
||
|
me, I don't know. She probably never
|
||
|
thought of it."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Hilda bit her lip. "I don't know what
|
||
|
made me say that. I didn't mean to interrupt.
|
||
|
Go on please, and tell me how it was."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Well, it was like that. Almost as if he
|
||
|
were there. In a way, he really is there.
|
||
|
She never lets him go. It's the most beautiful
|
||
|
and dignified sorrow I've ever known. It's so
|
||
|
beautiful that it has its compensations,
|
||
|
I should think. Its very completeness
|
||
|
is a compensation. It gives her a fixed star
|
||
|
to steer by. She doesn't drift. We sat there
|
||
|
evening after evening in the quiet of that
|
||
|
magically haunted room, and watched the
|
||
|
sunset burn on the river, and felt him.
|
||
|
Felt him with a difference, of course."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Hilda leaned forward, her elbow on her knee,
|
||
|
her chin on her hand. "With a difference?
|
||
|
Because of her, you mean?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
Wilson's brow wrinkled. "Something like that, yes.
|
||
|
Of course, as time goes on, to her he becomes
|
||
|
more and more their simple personal relation."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Hilda studied the droop of the Professor's
|
||
|
head intently. "You didn't altogether like
|
||
|
that? You felt it wasn't wholly fair to him?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
Wilson shook himself and readjusted his
|
||
|
glasses. "Oh, fair enough. More than fair.
|
||
|
Of course, I always felt that my image of him
|
||
|
was just a little different from hers.
|
||
|
No relation is so complete that it can hold
|
||
|
absolutely all of a person. And I liked him
|
||
|
just as he was; his deviations, too;
|
||
|
the places where he didn't square."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Hilda considered vaguely. "Has she
|
||
|
grown much older?" she asked at last.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Yes, and no. In a tragic way she is even
|
||
|
handsomer. But colder. Cold for everything
|
||
|
but him. `Forget thyself to marble'; I kept
|
||
|
thinking of that. Her happiness was a
|
||
|
happiness a deux, not apart from the world,
|
||
|
but actually against it. And now her grief is like
|
||
|
that. She saves herself for it and doesn't even
|
||
|
go through the form of seeing people much.
|
||
|
I'm sorry. It would be better for her, and
|
||
|
might be so good for them, if she could let
|
||
|
other people in."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Perhaps she's afraid of letting him out a little,
|
||
|
of sharing him with somebody."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Wilson put down his cup and looked up
|
||
|
with vague alarm. "Dear me, it takes a woman
|
||
|
to think of that, now! I don't, you know,
|
||
|
think we ought to be hard on her. More,
|
||
|
even, than the rest of us she didn't choose her
|
||
|
destiny. She underwent it. And it has left her
|
||
|
chilled. As to her not wishing to take the
|
||
|
world into her confidence--well, it is a pretty
|
||
|
brutal and stupid world, after all, you know."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Hilda leaned forward. "Yes, I know, I know.
|
||
|
Only I can't help being glad that there was
|
||
|
something for him even in stupid and vulgar people.
|
||
|
My little Marie worshiped him. When she is dusting
|
||
|
I always know when she has come to his picture."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Wilson nodded. "Oh, yes! He left an echo.
|
||
|
The ripples go on in all of us.
|
||
|
He belonged to the people who make the play,
|
||
|
and most of us are only onlookers at the best.
|
||
|
We shouldn't wonder too much at Mrs. Alexander.
|
||
|
She must feel how useless it would be to
|
||
|
stir about, that she may as well sit still;
|
||
|
that nothing can happen to her after Bartley."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Yes," said Hilda softly, "nothing can
|
||
|
happen to one after Bartley."
|
||
|
|
||
|
They both sat looking into the fire.
|
||
|
|
||
|
**End of the Project Gutenberg Etext of
|
||
|
**Alexander's Bridge, by Willa Cather**
|
||
|
|
||
|
Here is a copy of "The Barrel Organ" by Alfred Noyes,
|
||
|
who was also the author of "The Highwayman."
|
||
|
|
||
|
THE BARREL ORGAN
|
||
|
|
||
|
by Alfred Noyes
|
||
|
|
||
|
THE MILLENNIUM FULCRUM ELECTRONIC EDITION, 1988
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
There's a barrel-organ caroling across a golden street,
|
||
|
In the City as the sun sinks low;
|
||
|
And the music's not immortal; but the world has made it sweet
|
||
|
And fulfilled it with the sunset glow;
|
||
|
And it pulses through the pleasures of the City and the pain
|
||
|
That surround the singing organ like a large eternal light;
|
||
|
And they've given it a glory and a part to play again
|
||
|
In the Symphony that rules the day and the night.
|
||
|
|
||
|
And now it's marching onward through the realms of old romance,
|
||
|
And trolling out a fond familiar tune,
|
||
|
And now it's roaring cannon down to fight the King of France,
|
||
|
And now it's prattling softly to the moon,
|
||
|
And all around the organ there's a sea without a shore
|
||
|
Of human joys and wonders and regrets;
|
||
|
To remember and to recompense the music evermore
|
||
|
For what the cold machinery forgets. . . .
|
||
|
|
||
|
Yes; as the music changes,
|
||
|
Like a prismatic glass,
|
||
|
It takes the light and ranges
|
||
|
Through all the moods that pass;
|
||
|
Dissects the common carnival
|
||
|
Of passions and regrets,
|
||
|
And gives the world a glimpse of all
|
||
|
The colors it forgets.
|
||
|
|
||
|
And there LA TRAVIATA sights
|
||
|
Another sadder song;
|
||
|
And there IL TROVATORE cries
|
||
|
A tale of deeper wrong;
|
||
|
And bolder knights to battle go
|
||
|
With sword and shield and lance,
|
||
|
Than ever here on earth below
|
||
|
Have whirled into -- A DANCE! --
|
||
|
|
||
|
Go down to Kew in lilac time; in lilac time; in lilac time;
|
||
|
Go down to Kew in lilac time; (it isn't far from London!)
|
||
|
And you shall wander hand in hand with love in summer's wonderland;
|
||
|
Go down to Kew in lilac time; (it isn't far from London!)
|
||
|
|
||
|
The cherry-trees are seas of bloom and soft perfume and sweet perfume,
|
||
|
The cherry-trees are seas of bloom (and oh, so near to London!)
|
||
|
And there they say, when dawn is high and all the world's a blaze of sky
|
||
|
The cuckoo, though he's very shy, will sing a song for London.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The nightingale is rather rare and yet they say you'll hear him there
|
||
|
At Kew, at Kew in lilac time (and oh, so near to London!)
|
||
|
The linnet and the throstle, too, and after dark the long halloo
|
||
|
And golden-eyed TU-WHIT, TU WHOO of owls that ogle London.
|
||
|
|
||
|
For Noah hardly knew a bird of any kind that isn't heard
|
||
|
At Kew, at Kew in lilac time (and oh, so near to London!)
|
||
|
And when the rose begins to pout and all the chestnut spires are out
|
||
|
You'll hear the rest without a doubt, all chorusing for London: --
|
||
|
|
||
|
COME DOWN TO KEW IN LILAC TIME; IN LILAC TIME; IN LILAC TIME;
|
||
|
COME DOWN TO KEW IN LILAC TIME; (IT ISN'T FAR FROM LONDON!)
|
||
|
AND YOU SHALL WANDER HAND IN HAND WITH LOVE IN SUMMER'S WONDERLAND;
|
||
|
COME DOWN TO KEW IN LILAC TIME; (IT ISN'T FAR FROM LONDON!)
|
||
|
|
||
|
And then the troubadour begins to thrill the golden street,
|
||
|
In the City as the sun sinks low;
|
||
|
And in all the gaudy busses there are scores of weary feet
|
||
|
Marking time, sweet time, with a dull mechanic beat,
|
||
|
And a thousand hearts are plunging to a love they'll never meet,
|
||
|
Through the meadows of the sunset, through the poppies and the wheat,
|
||
|
In the land where the dead dreams go.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Verdi, Verdi, when you wrote IL TROVATORE did you dream
|
||
|
Of the City when the sun sinks low
|
||
|
Of the organ and the monkey and the many-colored stream
|
||
|
On the Piccadilly pavement, of the myriad eyes that seem
|
||
|
To be litten for a moment with a wild Italian gleam
|
||
|
As A CHE LA MORTE parodies the world's eternal theme
|
||
|
And pulses with the sunset glow?
|
||
|
|
||
|
There's a thief, perhaps, that listens with a face of frozen stone
|
||
|
In the City as the sun sinks low;
|
||
|
There's a portly man of business with a balance of his own,
|
||
|
There's a clerk and there's a butcher of a soft reposeful tone,
|
||
|
And they're all them returning to the heavens they have known:
|
||
|
They are crammed and jammed in busses and -- they're each of them alone
|
||
|
In the land where the dead dreams go.
|
||
|
|
||
|
There's a very modish woman and her smile is very bland
|
||
|
In the City as the sun sinks low;
|
||
|
And her hansom jingles onward, but her little jeweled hand
|
||
|
Is clenched a little tighter and she cannot understand
|
||
|
What she wants or why she wanders to that undiscovered land,
|
||
|
For the parties there are not at all the sort of thing she planned,
|
||
|
In the land where the dead dreams go.
|
||
|
|
||
|
There's an Oxford man that listens and his heart is crying out
|
||
|
In the City as the sun sinks low;
|
||
|
For the barge the eight, the Isis, and the coach's whoop and shout,
|
||
|
For the minute gun, the counting and the long disheveled rout,
|
||
|
For the howl along the tow-path and a fate that's still in doubt,
|
||
|
For a roughened oar to handle and a race to think about
|
||
|
In the land where the dead dreams go.
|
||
|
|
||
|
There's a laborer that listen to the voices of the dead
|
||
|
In the City as the sun sinks low;
|
||
|
And his hand begins to tremble and his face is rather red
|
||
|
As he sees a loafer watching him and -- there he turns his head
|
||
|
And stares into the sunset where his April love is fled,
|
||
|
For he hears her softly singing and his lonely soul is led
|
||
|
Through the land where the dead dreams go.
|
||
|
|
||
|
There's and old and hardened demi-rep, it's ringing in her ears,
|
||
|
In the City as the sun sinks low;
|
||
|
With the wild and empty sorrow of the love that blights and sears,
|
||
|
Oh, and if she hurries onward, then be sure, be sure she hears,
|
||
|
Hears and bears the bitter burden of the unforgotten years,
|
||
|
And her laugh's a little harsher and her eyes are brimmed with tears
|
||
|
For the land where the dead dreams go.
|
||
|
|
||
|
There's a barrel-organ caroling across a golden street,
|
||
|
In the City as the sun sinks low;
|
||
|
Though the music's only Verdi there's a world to make it sweet
|
||
|
Just as yonder yellow sunset where the earth and heaven meet
|
||
|
Mellows all the sooty City! Hark, a hundred thousand feet
|
||
|
Are marching on to glory through the poppies and the wheat
|
||
|
In the land where the dead dreams go.
|
||
|
|
||
|
So it's Jeremiah, Jeremiah,
|
||
|
What have you to say
|
||
|
When you meet the garland girls
|
||
|
Tripping on their way?
|
||
|
|
||
|
All around my gala hat
|
||
|
I wear a wreath of roses
|
||
|
(A long and lonely year it is
|
||
|
I've waited for the May!)
|
||
|
|
||
|
If any one should ask you,
|
||
|
The reason why I wear it is,
|
||
|
My own love, my true love, is coming home to-day.
|
||
|
|
||
|
It's buy a bunch of violets for the lady
|
||
|
(IT'S LILAC TIME IN LONDON; IT'S LILAC TIME IN LONDON!)
|
||
|
Buy a bunch of violets for the lady;
|
||
|
While the sky burns blue above:
|
||
|
|
||
|
On the other side of the street you'll find it shady
|
||
|
(IT'S LILAC TIME IN LONDON; IT'S LILAC TIME IN LONDON!)
|
||
|
But buy a bunch of violets for the lady;
|
||
|
And tell her she's your own true love.
|
||
|
|
||
|
There's a barrel-organ caroling across a golden street,
|
||
|
In the City as the sun sinks glittering and slow;
|
||
|
And the music's not immortal, but the world has made it sweet
|
||
|
And enriched it with the harmonies that make a song complete
|
||
|
In the deeper heavens of music where the night and morning meet,
|
||
|
As it dies into the sunset glow;
|
||
|
|
||
|
And it pulses through the pleasures of the City and the pain
|
||
|
That surround the singing organ like a large eternal light,
|
||
|
And they've given it a glory and a part of play again
|
||
|
In the Symphony that rules the day and night.
|
||
|
|
||
|
And there, as the music changes,
|
||
|
The song runs round again;
|
||
|
Once more it turns and ranges
|
||
|
Through all its joy and pain:
|
||
|
Dissects the common carnival
|
||
|
Of passions and regrets;
|
||
|
And the wheeling world remembers all
|
||
|
The wheeling song forgets.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Once more La TRAVIATA sighs
|
||
|
Another sadder song:
|
||
|
Once more IL TROVATORE cries
|
||
|
A tale of deeper wrong;
|
||
|
Once more the knights to battle go
|
||
|
With sword and shield and lance,
|
||
|
Till once, once more, the shattered foe
|
||
|
Has whirled into -- A DANCE --
|
||
|
|
||
|
Come down to Kew in lilac time; in lilac time; in lilac time;
|
||
|
Come down to Kew in lilac time; (it isn't far from London!)
|
||
|
And you shall wander hand in hand with Love in summer's wonderland;
|
||
|
Come down to Kew in lilac time; (it isn't far from London!)
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COME DOWN TO KEW IN LILAC TIME; IN LILAC TIME; IN LILAC TIME;
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COME DOWN TO KEW IN LILAC TIME; (IT ISN'T FAR FROM LONDON!)
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AND YOU SHALL WANDER HAND IN HAND WITH LOVE IN SUMMER'S WONDERLAND;
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COME DOWN TO KEW IN LILAC TIME; (IT ISN'T FAR FROM LONDON!)
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[End.]
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.
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