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diff --git a/old/12347-8.txt b/old/12347-8.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..88c6a25 --- /dev/null +++ b/old/12347-8.txt @@ -0,0 +1,13286 @@ +The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Morgesons, by Elizabeth Stoddard + + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with +almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + + + + +Title: The Morgesons + +Author: Elizabeth Stoddard + +Release Date: May 14, 2004 [eBook #12347] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 + + +***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MORGESONS*** + + +E-text prepared by Leah Moser and the Project Gutenberg Online Distributed +Proofreading Team + + + +THE MORGESONS + +A Novel + +BY ELIZABETH STODDARD + +1901 + + + + + + + + "Time is a clever devil,"--BALZAC + + + + + +[Illustration: Portrait of Elizabeth Stoddard from a Daguerreotype.] + + + + + +PREFACE. + + +I suppose it was environment that caused me to write these novels; +but the mystery of it is, that when I left my native village I did +not dream that imagination would lead me there again, for the simple +annals of our village and domestic ways did not interest me; neither +was I in the least studious. My years were passed in an attempt to +have a good time, according to the desires and fancies of youth. Of +literature and the literary life, I and my tribe knew nothing; we had +not discovered "sermons in stones." Where then was the panorama of +my stories and novels stored, that was unrolled in my new sphere? Of +course, being moderately intelligent I read everything that came in +my way, but merely for amusement. It had been laid up against me as a +persistent fault, which was not profitable; I should peruse moral, +and pious works, or take up sewing,--that interminable thing, "white +seam," which filled the leisure moments of the right-minded. To +the _personnel_ of writers I gave little heed; it was the hero they +created that charmed me, like Miss Porter's gallant Pole, Sobieski, or +the ardent Ernest Maltravers, of Bulwer. + +I had now come to live among those who made books, and were interested +in all their material, for all was for the glory of the whole. +Prefaces, notes, indexes, were unnoticed by me,--even Walter Scott's +and Lord Byron's. I began to get glimpses of a profound ignorance, and +did not like the position as an outside consideration. These mental +productive adversities abased me. I was well enough in my way, but +nothing was expected from me in their way, and when I beheld their +ardor in composition, and its fine emulation, like "a sheep before her +shearers," I was dumb. The environment pressed upon me, my pride was +touched; my situation, though "tolerable, was not to be endured." + +Fortunate or not, we were poor. It was not strange that I should +marry, said those who knew the step I had taken; but that I should +follow that old idyl; and accept the destiny of a garret and a +crust with a poet, was incredible! Therefore, being apart from the +diversions of society, I had many idle hours. One day when my husband +was sitting at the receipt of customs, for he had obtained a modest +appointment, I sat by a little desk, where my portfolio lay open. +A pen was near, which I took up, and it began to write, wildly like +"Planchette" upon her board, or like a kitten clutching a ball of yarn +fearfully. But doing it again--I could not say why--my mind began upon +a festival in my childhood, which my mother arranged for several poor +old people at Thanksgiving. I finished the sketch in private, and gave +it the title of "A Christmas Dinner," as one more modern. I put in +occasional "fiblets" about the respectable guests, Mrs. Carver +and Mrs. Chandler, and one dreadful little girl foisted upon me to +entertain. It pleased the editor of _Harper's Magazine_, who accepted +it, and sent me a check which would look wondrous small now. I wrote +similar sketches, which were published in that magazine. Then I +announced my intention of writing a "long story," and was told by him +of the customs that he thought I "lacked the constructive faculty." +I hope that I am writing an object lesson, either of learning how, or +not learning how, to write. + +I labored daily, when alone, for weeks; how many sheets of foolscap I +covered, and dashed to earth, was never told. Since, by my "infinite +pains and groans," I have been reminded of Barkis, in "David +Copperfield," when he crawled out of his bed to get a guinea from +his strong box for David's dinner. Naturally, I sent the story to +_Harper's Magazine_, and it was curtly refused. My husband, moved by +pity by my discouragement, sent it to Mr. Lowell, then editor of the +_Atlantic Monthly_. In a few days I received a letter from him, which +made me very happy. He accepted the story, and wrote me then, and +afterwards, letters of advice and suggestion. I think he saw through +my mind, its struggles, its ignorance, and its ambition. Also I got my +guinea for my pains. The _Atlantic Monthly_ sent me a hundred dollars. +I doubt but for Mr. Lowell's interest and kindness I should ever have +tried prose again. I owe a debt of gratitude to him which I shall +always give to his noble memory. + +My story did not set the river on fire, as stories are apt to do +nowadays. It attracted so little notice from those I knew, and +knew of, that naturally my ambition would have been crushed. +Notwithstanding, and saying nothing to anybody, I began "The +Morgesons," and everywhere I went, like Mary's lamb, my MS. was sure +to go. Meandering along the path of that family, I took them much to +heart, and finished their record within a year. I may say here, that +the clans I marshaled for my pages had vanished from the sphere +of reality--in my early day the village Squire, peerless in blue +broadcloth, who scolded, advised, and helped his poorer neighbors; the +widows, or maidens, who accepting service "as a favor," often remained +a lifetime as friend as well as "help;" the race of coast-wise +captains and traders, from Maine to Florida, as acute as they were +ignorant; the rovers of the Atlantic and the Pacific, were gone not +to return. If with these characters I have deserved the name of +"realist," I have also clothed my skeletons with the robe of romance. +"The Morgesons" completed, and no objections made to its publication, +it was published. As an author friend happened to be with us, almost +on the day it was out, I gave it to him to read, and he returned it to +me with the remark that there were "a good many _whiches_ in it." That +there were, I must own, and that it was difficult to extirpate them. I +was annoyed at their fertility. The inhabitants of my ancient dwelling +place pounced upon "The Morgesons," because they were convinced it +would prove to be a version of my relations, and my own life. I think +one copy passed from hand to hand, but the interest in it soon blew +over, and I have not been noticed there since. + +"Two Men" I began as I did the others, with a single motive; the +shadow of a man passed before me, and I built a visionary fabric round +him. I have never tried to girdle the earth; my limits are narrow; the +modern novel, as Andrew Lang lately calls it,--with its love-making, +disquisition, description, history, theology, ethics,--I have +no sprinkling of. My last novel, "Temple House," was personally +conducted, so far that I went to Plymouth to find a suitable abode for +my hero, Angus Gates, and to measure with my eye the distance between +the bar in the bay and the shore, the scene of a famous wreck before +the Revolution. As my stories and novels were never in touch with my +actual life, they seem now as if they were written by a ghost of +their time. It is to strangers from strange places that I owe the most +sympathetic recognition. Some have come to me, and from many I have +had letters that warmed my heart, and cheered my mind. Beside the name +of Mr. Lowell, I mention two New England names, to spare me the +fate of the prophet of the Gospel, the late Maria Louise Pool, whose +lamentable death came far too early, and Nathaniel Hawthorne, who +lived to read "The Morgesons" only, and to write me a characteristic +letter. With some slight criticism, he wrote, "Pray pardon my +frankness, for what is the use of saying anything, unless we say what +we think?... Otherwise it seemed to me as genuine and lifelike as +anything that pen and ink can do. There are very few books of which +I take the trouble to have any opinion at all, or of which I +could retain any memory so long after reading them as I do of 'The +Morgesons.'" + +Could better words be written for the send-off of these novels? + +ELIZABETH STODDARD. New York, May 2nd, 1901. + + + + +TO MRS. KATHARINE HOOKER + +OF LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA + +THESE NOVELS ARE DEDICATED IN GRATEFUL REMEMBRANCE OF A KIND DEED + +ELIZABETH STODDARD + + + + + + +CHAPTER I. + + +"That child," said my aunt Mercy, looking at me with indigo-colored +eyes, "is possessed." + +When my aunt said this I was climbing a chest of drawers, by its +knobs, in order to reach the book-shelves above it, where my favorite +work, "The Northern Regions," was kept, together with "Baxter's +Saints' Rest," and other volumes of that sort, belonging to my mother; +and those my father bought for his own reading, and which I liked, +though I only caught a glimpse of their meaning by strenuous study. +To this day Sheridan's Comedies, Sterne's Sentimental Journey, and +Captain Cook's Voyages are so mixed up in my remembrance that I am +still uncertain whether it was Sterne who ate baked dog with Maria, or +Sheridan who wept over a dead ass in the Sandwich Islands. + +After I had made a dash at and captured my book, I seated myself with +difficulty on the edge of the chest of drawers, and was soon lost in +an Esquimaux hut. Presently, in crossing my feet, my shoes, which were +large, dropped on the painted floor with a loud noise. I looked at my +aunt; her regards were still fixed upon me, but they did not interfere +with her occupation of knitting; neither did they interrupt her habit +of chewing cloves, flagroot, or grains of rice. If these articles were +not at hand, she chewed a small chip. + +"Aunt Merce, poor Hepburn chewed his shoes, when he was in Davis's +Straits." + +"Mary, look at that child's stockings." + +Mother raised her eyes from the _Boston Recorder_, and the article +she had been absorbed in the proceedings of an Ecclesiastical Council, +which had discussed (she read aloud to Aunt Merce) the conduct of +Brother Thaddeus Turner, pastor of the Congregational Church of +Hyena. Brother Thaddeus had spoken lightly of the difference between +Sprinkling and Immersion, and had even called Hyena's Baptist minister +"_Brother_." He was contumacious at first, was Brother Thaddeus, but +Brother Boanerges from Andover finally floored him. + +"Cassandra," said mother, presently, "come here." + +I obeyed with reluctance, making a show of turning down a leaf. + +"Child," she continued, and her eyes wandered over me dreamily, till +they dropped on my stockings; "why will you waste so much time on +unprofitable stories?" + +"Mother, I hate good stories, all but the Shepherd of Salisbury Plain; +I like that, because it makes me hungry to read about the roasted +potatoes the shepherd had for breakfast and supper. Would it make me +thankful if you only gave me potatoes without salt?" + +"Not unless your heart is right before God." + +"'_The Lord my Shepherd is_,'" sang Aunt Merce. + +I put my hands over my ears, and looked defiantly round the room. +Its walls are no longer standing, and the hands of its builders have +crumbled to dust. Some mental accident impressed this picture on the +purblind memory of childhood. + +We were in mother's winter room. She was in a low, chintz-covered +chair; Aunt Merce sat by the window, in a straight-backed chair, that +rocked querulously, and likewise covered with chintz, of a red and +yellow pattern. Before the lower half of the windows were curtains of +red serge, which she rattled apart on their brass rods, whenever she +heard a footstep, or the creak of a wheel in the road below. The walls +were hung with white paper, through which ran thread-like stripes of +green. A square of green and chocolate-colored English carpet covered +the middle of the floor, and a row of straw chairs stood around it, +on the bare, lead-colored boards. A huge bed, with a chintz top shaped +like an elephant's back, was in one corner, and a six-legged mahogany +table in another. One side of the room where the fireplace was set +was paneled in wood; its fire had burned down in the shining Franklin +stove, and broken brands were standing upright. The charred backlog +still smoldered, its sap hissed and bubbled at each end. + +Aunt Merce rummaged her pocket for flagroot; mother resumed her paper. + +"May I put on, for a little while, my new slippers?" I asked, longing +to escape the oppressive atmosphere of the room. + +"Yes," answered mother, "but come in soon, it will be supper-time." + +I bounded away, found my slippers, and was walking down stairs on +tiptoe, holding up my linsey-woolsey frock, when I saw the door of my +great-grandfather's room ajar. I pushed it open, went in, and saw a +very old man, his head bound with a red-silk handkerchief, bolstered +in bed. His wife, grandmother-in-law, sat by the fire reading a great +Bible. + +"Marm Tamor, will you please show me Ruth and Boaz?" I asked. + +She complied by turning over the leaves till she came to the picture. + +"Did Ruth love Boaz dreadfully much?" + +"Oh, oh," groaned the old man, "what is the imp doing here? Drive her +away. Scat." + +I skipped out by a side door, down an alley paved with blue pebbles, +swung the high gate open, and walked up and down the gravel walk which +bordered the roadside, admiring my slippers, and wishing that some +acquaintance with poor shoes could see me. I thought then I would +climb the high gateposts, which had a flat top, and take there the +position of the little girl in "The Shawl Dance." I had no sooner +taken it than Aunt Merce appeared at the door, and gave a shriek at +the sight, which tempted me to jump toward her with extended arms. I +was seized and carried into the house, where supper was administered, +and I was put to bed. + + + + + + +CHAPTER II. + + +At this time I was ten years old. We lived in a New England village, +Surrey, which was situated on an inlet of a large bay that opened into +the Atlantic. From the observatory of our house we could see how the +inlet was pinched by the long claws of the land, which nearly enclosed +it. Opposite the village, some ten miles across, a range of islands +shut out the main waters of the bay. For miles on the outer side +of the curving prongs of land stretched a rugged, desolate coast, +indented with coves and creeks, lined with bowlders of granite half +sunken in the sea, and edged by beaches overgrown with pale sedge, or +covered with beds of seaweed. Nothing alive, except the gulls, abode +on these solitary shores. No lighthouse stood on any point, to shake +its long, warning light across the mariners' wake. Now and then a +drowned man floated in among the sedge, or a small craft went to +pieces on the rocks. When an easterly wind prevailed, the coast +resounded with the bellowing sea, which brought us tidings from those +inaccessible spots. We heard its roar as it leaped over the rocks +on Gloster Point, and its long, unbroken wail when it rolled in on +Whitefoot Beach. In mild weather, too, when our harbor was quiet, we +still heard its whimper. Behind the village, the ground rose toward +the north, where the horizon was bounded by woods of oak and pine, +intersected by crooked roads, which led to towns and villages near +us. The inland scenery was tame; no hill or dale broke its dull +uniformity. Cornfields and meadows of red grass walled with gray +stone, lay between the village and the border of the woods. Seaward +it was enchanting--beautiful under the sun and moon and clouds. Our +family had lived in Surrey for years. Probably some Puritan of +the name of Morgeson had moved from an earlier settlement, and, +appropriating a few acres in what was now its center, lived long +enough upon them to see his sons and daughters married to the sons and +daughters of similar settlers. So our name was in perpetuation, though +none of our race ever made a mark in his circle, or attained a place +among the great ones of his day. The family recipes for curing herbs +and hams, and making cordials, were in better preservation than the +memory of their makers. It is certain that they were not a progressive +or changeable family. No tradition of any individuality remains +concerning them. There was a confusion in the minds of the survivors +of the various generations about the degree of their relationship to +those who were buried, and whose names and ages simply were cut in the +stones which headed their graves. The _meum_ and _tuum_ of blood were +inextricably mixed; so they contented themselves with giving their +children the old Christian names which were carved on the headstones, +and which, in time, added a still more profound darkness to the +anti-heraldic memory of the Morgesons. They had no knowledge of +that treasure which so many of our New England families are boastful +of--the Ancestor who came over in the Mayflower, or by himself, with +a grant of land from Parliament. It was not known whether two or three +brothers sailed together from the Old World and settled in the New. +They had no portrait, nor curious chair, nor rusty weapon--no old +Bible, nor drinking cup, nor remnant of brocade. + +_Morgeson_--_Born_--_Lived_--_Died_--were all their archives. But +there is a dignity in mere perpetuity, a strength in the narrowest +affinities. This dignity and strength were theirs. They are still +vital in our rural population. Occasionally something fine is their +result; an aboriginal reappears to prove the plastic powers of nature. + +My great-grandfather, Locke Morgeson, the old man whose head I saw +bound in a red handkerchief, was the first noticeable man of the name. +He was a scale of enthusiasms, ranging from the melancholy to the +sarcastic. When I heard him talked of, it seemed to me that he was +born under the influence of the sea, while the rest of the tribe +inherited the character of the landscape. Comprehension of life, and +comprehension of self, came too late for him to make either of value. +The spirit of progress, however, which prompted his schemes benefited +others. The most that could be said of him was that he had the +rudiments of a Founder. + +My father, whose name was Locke Morgeson also, married early. My +mother was five years his elder; her maiden name was Mary Warren. She +was the daughter of Philip Warren, of Barmouth, near Surrey. He was +the best of the Barmouth tailors, though he never changed the cut of +his garments; he was a rigidly pious man, of great influence in the +church, and was descended from Sir Edward Warren, a gentleman of +Devon, who was knighted by Queen Elizabeth. The name of his more +immediate ancestor, Richard Warren, was in "New England's Memorial." +How father first met mother I know not. She was singularly +beautiful--beautiful even to the day of her death; but she was poor, +and without connection, for Philip Warren was the last of his name. +What the Warrens might have been was nothing to the Morgesons; they +themselves had no past, and only realized the present. They never +thought of inquiring into that matter, so they opposed, with great +promptness, father's wish to marry Mary Warren. All, except old Locke +Morgeson, his grandfather, who rode over to Barmouth to see her one +day, and when he came back told father to take her, offered him half +his house to live in, and promised to push him in the world. His offer +quelled the rioters, silencing in particular the opposition of John +Morgeson, father's father. + +In a month from this time, Locke Morgeson, Jr., took Mary Warren from +her father's house as his wife. Grandfather Warren prayed a long, +unintelligible prayer over them, helped them into the large, +yellow-bottomed chaise which belonged to Grandfather Locke, and the +young couple drove to their new home, the old mansion. Grandfather +Locke went away in the same yellow-bottomed chaise a week after, and +returned in a few days with a tall lady of fifty by his side--"Marm +Tamor," a twig of the Morgeson tree, being his third cousin, whom he +had married. This marriage was Grandfather Locke's last mistake. He +was then near eighty, but lived long enough to fulfill his promises +to father. The next year I was born, and four years after, my sister +Veronica. Grandfather Locke named us, and charged father not to +consult the Morgeson tombstones for names. + + + + + + +CHAPTER III. + + +"Mrs. Saunders," said mother, "don't let that soap boil over. Cassy, +keep away from it." + +"Lord," replied Mrs. Saunders, "there's no fat in the bones to bile. +Cassy's grown dreadful fast, ain't she? How long has the old man been +dead, Mis Morgeson?" + +"Three years, Mrs. Saunders." + +"How time do fly," remarked Mrs. Saunders, mopping her wrinkled face +with a dark-blue handkerchief. "The winter's sass is hardly put in +the cellar 'fore we have to cut off the sprouts, and up the taters +for planting agin. We shall all foller him soon." And she stirred the +bones in the great kettle with the vigor of an ogress. + +When I heard her ask the question about Grandfather Locke, the +interval that had elapsed since his death swept through my mind. What +a little girl I was at the time! How much had since happened! But no +thought remained with me long. I was about to settle whether I would +go to the beach and wade, or into the woods for snake-flowers, till +school-time, when my attention was again arrested by Mrs. Saunders +saying, "I spose Marm Tamor went off with a large slice, and Mr. John +Morgeson is mad to this day?" + +Mother was prevented from answering by the appearance of the said Mr. +John Morgeson, who darkened the threshold of the kitchen door, but +advanced no further. I looked at him with curiosity; if he were mad, +he might be interesting. He was a large, portly man, over sixty, with +splendid black hair slightly grizzled, a prominent nose, and fair +complexion. I did not like him, and determined not to speak to him. + +"Say good-morning, Cassandra," said mother, in a low voice. + +"No," I answered loudly, "I am not fond of my grandfather." + +Mrs. Saunders mopped her face again, grinning with delight behind her +handkerchief. + +"Debby, my wife, wants you, Mis Saunders, after you have made Mary's +soap," he said. + +"Surely," she answered. + +"Where is the black horse to-day?" he asked mother. + +"Locke has gone to Milford with him." + +"I wanted the black horse to-day," he said, turning away. + +"He's a mighty grand man, he is," commented Mrs. Saunders. "I am +pesky glad, Mis Morgeson, that you have never put foot in his house. I +'plaud your sperit!" + +"School-time, Cassy," said mother. "Will you have some gingerbread +to carry? Tell me when you come home what you have read in the New +Testament." + +"My boy does read beautiful," said Mrs. Saunders. "Where's the potash, +Mis Morgeson?" + +I heard the bell toll as I loitered along the roadside, pulling a +dandelion here and there, for it was in the month of May, and +throwing it in the rut for the next wheel to crush. When I reached +the schoolhouse I saw through the open door that the New Testament +exercise was over. The teacher, Mrs. Desire Cushman, a tall, slender +woman, in a flounced calico dress, was walking up and down the room; a +class of boys and girls stood in a zigzag line before her, swaying to +and fro, and drawling the multiplication table. She was yawning as +I entered, which exercise forbade her speaking, and I took my seat +without a reprimand. The flies were just coming; I watched their +sticky legs as they feebly crawled over my old unpainted notched +desk, and crumbled my gingerbread for them; but they seemed to have no +appetite. Some of the younger children were drowsy already, lulled by +the hum of the whisperers. Feeling very dull, I asked permission to go +to the water-pail for a drink; let the tin cup fall into the water so +that the floor might be splashed; made faces at the good scholars, and +did what I could to make the time pass agreeably. At noon mother sent +my dinner, with the request that I should stay till night, on account +of my being in the way while the household was in the crisis of +soap-making and whitewashing. I was exasperated, but I stayed. In the +afternoon the minister came with two strangers to visit the school. I +went through my lessons with dignified inaccuracy, and was commended. +Going back, I happened to step on a loose board under my seat. I +determined to punish Mrs. Desire for the undeserved praise I had just +received, and pushed the board till it clattered and made a dust. +When Mrs. Desire detected me she turned white with anger. I pushed it +again, making so much noise that the visitors turned to see the cause. +She shook her head in my direction, and I knew what was in store, as +we had been at enmity a long time, and she only waited for a decisive +piece of mischief on my part. As soon as the visitors had gone, she +said in a loud voice: "Cassandra Morgeson, take your books and go +home. You shall not come here another day." + +I was glad to go, and marched home with the air of a conqueror, going +to the keeping-room where mother sat with a basket of sewing. I saw +Temperance Tinkham, the help, a maiden of thirty, laying the table for +supper. + +"Don't wrinkle the tablecloth," she said crossly; "and hang up your +bonnet in the entry, where it belongs," taking it from me as she gave +the order, and going out to hang it up herself. + +"I am turned out of school, mother, for pushing a board with my foot." + +"Hi," said father, who was waiting for his supper; "come here," and he +whistled to me. He took me on his knee, while mother looked at me with +doubt and sorrow. + +"She is almost a woman, Mary." + +"Locke, do you know that I am thirty-eight?" + +"And you are thirty-three, father," I exclaimed. He looked younger. +I thought him handsome; he had a frank, firm face, an abundance of +light, curly hair, and was very robust. I took off his white +beaver hat, and pushed the curls away from his forehead. He had his +riding-whip in his hand. I took that, too, and snapped it at our +little dog, Kip. Father's clothes also pleased me--a lavender-colored +coat, with brass buttons, and trousers of the same color. I mentally +composed for myself a suit to match his, and thought how well we +should look calling at Lady Teazle's house in London, only I was +worried because my bonnet seemed to be too large for me. A loud crash +in the kitchen disturbed my dream, and Temperance rushed in, dragging +my sister Veronica, whose hair was streaming with milk; she had pulled +a panful over her from the buttery shelf, while Temperance was taking +up the supper. Father laughed, but mother said: + +"What have I done, to be so tormented by these terrible children?" + +Her mild blue eyes blazed, as she stamped her foot and clenched her +hands. Father took his hat and left the room. Veronica sat down on the +floor, with her eyes fixed upon her, and I leaned against the wall. It +was a gust that I knew would soon blow over. Veronica knew it also. At +the right moment she cried out: "Help Verry, she is sorry." + +"Do eat your supper," Temperance called out in a loud voice. "The hash +is burnt to flinders." + +She remained in the room to comment on our appetites, and encourage +Veronica, who was never hungry, to eat. + +Veronica was an elfish creature, nine years old, diminutive and pale. +Her long, silky brown hair, which was as straight as an Indian's, like +mother's, and which she tore out when angry, usually covered her face, +and her wild eyes looked wilder still peeping through it. She was too +strange-looking for ordinary people to call her pretty, and so odd in +her behavior, so full of tricks, that I did not love her. She was a +silent child, and liked to be alone. But whoever had the charge of her +must be watchful. She tasted everything, and burnt everything, within +her reach. A blazing fire was too strong a temptation to be resisted. +The disappearance of all loose articles was ascribed to her; but +nothing was said about it, for punishment made her more impish and +daring in her pursuits. She had a habit of frightening us by hiding, +and appearing from places where no one had thought of looking for her. +People shook their heads when they observed her. The Morgesons smiled +significantly when she was spoken of, and asked: + +"Do you think she is like her mother?" + +There was a conflict in mother's mind respecting Veronica. She did not +love her as she loved me; but strove the harder to fulfill her duty. +When Verry suffered long and mysterious illnesses, which made her +helpless for weeks, she watched her day and night, but rarely caressed +her. At other times Verry was left pretty much to herself and her +ways, which were so separate from mine that I scarcely saw her. We +grew up ignorant of each other's character, though Verry knew me +better than I knew her; in time I discovered that she had closely +observed me, when I was most unaware. + +We began to prosper about this time. + +"Old Locke Morgeson had a long head," people said, when they talked +of our affairs. Father profited by his grandfather's plans, and +his means, too; less visionary, he had modified and brought out +practically many of his projections. Old Locke had left little to his +son John Morgeson, in the belief that father was the man to carry out +his ideas. Besides money, he left him a tract of ground running north +and south, a few rods beyond the old house, and desired him to build +upon it. This he was now doing, and we expected to move into our new +house before autumn. + +All the Morgesons wished to put money in a company, as soon as father +could prove that it would be profitable. They were ready to own shares +in the ships which he expected to build, when it was certain that +they would make lucky voyages. He declined their offers, but they all +"knuckled" to the man who had been bold enough to break the life-long +stagnation of Surrey, and approved his plans as they matured. His mind +was filled with the hope of creating a great business which should +improve Surrey. New streets had been cut through his property and that +of grandfather, who, narrow as he was, could not resist the popular +spirit; lots had been laid out, and cottages had gone up upon them. To +matters of minor importance father gave little heed; his domestic life +was fast becoming a habit. The constant enlargement of his schemes was +already a necessary stimulant. + +I did not go back to Mrs. Desire's school. Mother said that I must be +useful at home. She sent me to Temperance, and Temperance sent me to +play, or told me to go "a visitin'." I did not care to visit, for in +consequence of being turned out of school, which was considered an +indelible disgrace and long remembered, my schoolmates regarded me in +the light of a Pariah, and put on insufferably superior airs when they +saw me. So, like Veronica, I amused myself, and passed days on the +sea-shore, or in the fields and woods, mother keeping me in long +enough to make a square of patchwork each day and to hear her read +a Psalm--a duty which I bore with patience, by guessing when the +"Selahs" would come in, and counting them. But wherever I was, or +whatever I did, no feeling of beauty ever stole into my mind. I never +turned my face up to the sky to watch the passing of a cloud, or mused +before the undulating space of sea, or looked down upon the earth with +the curiosity of thought, or spiritual aspiration. I was moved and +governed by my sensations, which continually changed, and passed +away--to come again, and deposit vague ideas which ignorantly haunted +me. The literal images of all things which I saw were impressed on my +shapeless mind, to be reproduced afterward by faculties then latent. +But what satisfaction was that? Doubtless the ideal faculty was +active in Veronica from the beginning; in me it was developed by the +experience of years. No remembrance of any ideal condition comes with +the remembrance of my childish days, and I conclude that my mind, if I +had any, existed in so rudimental a state that it had little influence +upon my character. + + + + + + +CHAPTER IV. + + +One afternoon in the following July, tired of walking in the mown +fields, and of carrying a nest of mice, which I had discovered under +a hay-rick, I concluded I would begin a system of education with them; +so arranging them on a grape-leaf, I started homeward. Going in by the +kitchen, I saw Temperance wiping the dust from the best china, which +elated me, for it was a sign that we were going to have company to +tea. + +"You evil child," she said, "where have you been? Your mother has +wanted you these hours, to dress you in your red French calico with +wings to it. Some of the members are coming to tea; Miss Seneth +Jellatt, and she that was Clarissa Tripp, Snow now, and Miss Sophrony +G. Dexter, and more besides." + +I put my mice in a basket, and begged Temperance to allow me to finish +wiping the china; she consented, adjuring me not to let it fall. "Mis +Morgeson would die if any of it should be broken." I adored it, too. +Each piece had a peach, or pear, or a bunch of cherries painted on it, +in lustrous brown. The handles were like gold cords, and the covers +had knobs of gilt grapes. + +"What preserves are you going to put on the table?" I asked. + +"Them West Ingy things Capen Curtis's son brought home, and quartered +quince, though I expect Mis Dexter will remark that the surup is +ropy." + +"I wish you wouldn't have cheese." + +"We _must_ have cheese," she said solemnly. "I expect they'll drink +our green tea till they make bladders of themselves, it is so good. +Your father is a first-rate man; he is an excellent provider, and +any woman ought to be proud of him, for he does buy number one in +provisions." + +I looked at her with admiration and respect. + +"Capen Curtis," she continued, pursuing a train of thought which the +preserves had started, "will never come home, I guess. He has been in +furen parts forever and a day; his wife has looked for him, a-twirling +her thumb and fingers, every day for ten years. I heard your mother +had engaged her to go in the new house; she'll take the upper hand of +us all. Your grandfather, Mr. John Morgeson, is willing to part with +her; tired of her, I spose. She has been housekeeping there, off +and on, these thirty years. She's fifty, if she is a day, is Hepsy +Curtis." + +"Is she as stingy as you are?" I asked. + +"You'll find out for yourself, Miss. I rather think you won't be +allowed to crumble over the buttery shelves." + +I finished the cup, and was watching her while she grated loaf-sugar +over a pile of doughnuts, when mother entered, and begged me to come +upstairs with her to be dressed. + +"Where is Verry, mother?" + +"In the parlor, with a lemon in one hand and Robinson Crusoe in the +other. She will be good, she says. Cassy, you won't teaze me to-day, +will you?" + +"No, indeed, mother," and clapping my hands, "I like you too well." + +She laughed. + +"These Morgesons beat the dogs," I heard Temperance say, as we shut +the door and went upstairs. + +I skipped over the shiny, lead-colored floor of the chamber in my +stockings, while mother was taking from the bureau a clean suit for +me, and singing "Bonny Doon," with the sweetest voice in the world. +She soon arrayed me in my red calico dress, spotted with yellow stars. +I was proud of its buckram undersleeves, though they scratched my +arms, and admired its wings, which extended over the protecting +buckram. + +"It is three o'clock; the company will come soon. Be careful of your +dress. You must stand by me at the table to hand the cups of tea." + +She left me standing in a chair, so that I might see my pantalettes in +the high-hung glass, and the effect of my balloon-like sleeves. Then +I went back to the kitchen to show myself to Temperance, and to enjoy +the progress of tea. + +The table was laid in the long keeping-room adjoining the kitchen, +covered with a striped cloth of crimson and blue, smooth as satin to +the touch. Temperance had turned the plates upside-down around the +table, and placed in a straight line through the middle a row of +edibles. She was going to have waffles, she said, and shortcake; they +were all ready to bake, and she wished to the Lord they would come and +have it over with. With the silver sugar-tongs I slyly nipped lumps +of sugar for my private eating, and surveyed my features in the +distorting mirror of the pot-bellied silver teapot, ordinarily laid up +in flannel. When the company had arrived, Temperance advised me to go +in the parlor. + +"Sit down, when you get there, and show less," she said. I went in +softly, and stood behind mother's chair, slightly abashed for a moment +in the presence of the party--some eight or ten ladies, dressed +in black levantine, or cinnamon-colored silks, who were seated in +rocking-chairs, all the rocking-chairs in the house having been +carried to the parlor for the occasion. They were knitting, and every +one had a square velvet workbag. Most of them wore lace caps, trimmed +with white satin ribbon. They were larger, more rotund, and older than +mother, whose appearance struck me by contrast. Perhaps it was the +first time I observed her dress; her face I must have studied before, +for I knew all her moods by it. Her long, lusterless, brown hair was +twisted around a high-topped tortoise-shell comb; it was so heavy and +so carelessly twisted that the comb started backward, threatening +to fall out. She had minute rings of filigreed gold in her ears. +Her dress was a gray pongee, simply made and short; I could see her +round-toed morocco shoes, tied with black ribbon. She usually took +out her shoestrings, not liking the trouble of tying them. A ruffle of +fine lace fell around her throat, and the sleeves of her short-waisted +dress were puffed at the shoulders. Her small white hands were folded +in her lap, for she was idle; on the little finger of her left hand +twinkled a brilliant garnet ring, set with diamonds. Her face was +colorless, the forehead extremely low, the nose and mouth finely cut, +the eyes of heavenly blue. Although youth had gone, she was beautiful, +with an indescribable air of individuality. She influenced all who +were near her; her atmosphere enveloped them. She was not aware of it, +being too indifferent to the world to observe what effect she had +in it, and only realized that she was to herself a self-tormentor. +Whether she attracted or repelled, the power was the same. I make no +attempt to analyze her character. I describe her as she appeared, +and as my memory now holds her. I never understood her, and for that +reason she attracted my attention. I felt puzzled now, she seemed +so different from anybody else. My observation was next drawn to +Veronica, who, entirely at home, walked up and down the room in a +blue cambric dress. She was twisting in her fingers a fine gold +chain, which hung from her neck. I caught her cunning glance as she +flourished some tansy leaves before her face, imitating Mrs. Dexter to +the life. I laughed, and she came to me. + +"See," she said softly, "I have something from heaven." She lifted her +white apron, and I saw under it, pinned to her dress, a splendid black +butterfly, spotted with red and gold. + +"It is mine," she said, "you shall not touch it. God blew it in +through the window; but it has not breathed yet." + +"Pooh; I have three mice in the kitchen." + +"Where is the mother?" + +"In the hayrick, I suppose, I left it there." + +"I hate you," she said, in an enraged voice. "I would strike you, if +it wasn't for this holy butterfly." + +"Cassandra," said Mrs. Dexter, "does look like her pa; the likeness is +ex-tri-ordinary. They say my William resembles me; but parients are no +judges." + +A faint murmur rose from the knitters, which signified agreement with +her remark. + +"I do think," she continued, "that it is high time Dr. Snell had a +colleague; he has outlived his usefulness. I never could say that +I thought he was the right kind of man for our congregation; his +principals as a man I have nothing to say against; but _why_ don't we +have revivals?" + +When Mrs. Dexter wished to be elegant she stepped out of the +vernacular. She was about to speak again when the whole party broke +into a loud talk on the subject she had started, not observing +Temperance, who appeared at the door, and beckoned to mother. I +followed her out. + +"The members are goin' it, ain't they?" she said. "Do see if things +are about right, Mis Morgeson." Mother made a few deviations from the +straight lines in which Temperance had ranged the viands, and told her +to put the tea on the tray, and the chairs round the table. + +"There's no place for Mr. Morgeson," observed Temperance. + +"He is in Milford," mother replied. + +"The brethren wont come, I spose, till after dark?" + +"I suppose not." + +"Glad to get rid of their wives' clack, I guess." + +From the silence which followed mother's return to the parlor, I +concluded they were performing the ancient ceremony of waiting for +some one to go through the doorway first. They came at last with an +air of indifference, as if the idea of eating had not yet occurred, +and delayed taking seats till mother urged it; then they drew up to +the table, hastily, turned the plates right-side up, spread large silk +handkerchiefs over their laps, and, with their eyes fixed on space, +preserved a dead silence, which was only broken by mother's inquiries +about their taste in milk or sugar. Temperance came in with plates +of waffles and buttered shortcake, which she offered with a cut and +thrust air, saying, as she did so, "I expect you can't eat them; I +know they are tough." + +Everybody, however, accepted both. She then handed round the +preserves, and went out to bake more waffles. + +By this time the cups had circled the table, but no one had tasted a +morsel. + +"Do help yourselves," mother entreated, whereat they fell upon the +waffles. + +"Temperance is as good a cook as ever," said one; "she is a prize, +isn't she, Mis Morgeson?" + +"She is faithful and industrious," mother replied. + +All began at once on the subject of help, and were as suddenly +quenched by the reappearance of Temperance, with fresh waffles, and a +dish of apple-fritters. + +"Do eat these if you can, ladies; the apples are only russets, and +they are kinder dead for flavoring. I see you don't eat a mite; I +expected you could not; it's poor trash." And she passed the cake +along, everybody taking a piece of each kind. + +After drinking a good many cups of tea, and praising it, their +asceticism gave way to its social effect, and they began to gossip, +ridiculing their neighbors, and occasionally launching innuendoes +against their absent lords. It is well known that when women meet +together they do not discuss their rights, but take them, in revealing +the little weaknesses and peculiarities of their husbands. The worst +wife-driver would be confounded at the air of easy superiority assumed +on these occasions by the meekest and most unsuspicious of her sex. +Insinuations of So and So's not being any better than she should +be passed from mouth to mouth, with a glance at me; and I heard the +proverb of "Little pitchers," when mother rose suddenly from the +table, and led the way to the parlor. + +"Where is Veronica?" asked Temperance, who was piling the debris +of the feast. "She has been in mischief, I'll warrant; find her, +Cassandra." + +She was upstairs putting away her butterfly, in the leaves of her +little Bible. She came down with me, and Temperance coaxed her to eat +her supper, by vowing that she should be sick abed, unless she +liked her fritters and waffles. I thought of my mice, while making +a desultory meal standing, and went to look at them; they were gone. +Wondering if Temperance had thrown the creatures away, I remembered +that I had been foolish enough to tell Veronica, and rushed back to +her. When she saw me, she raised a saucer to her face, pretending to +drink from it. + +"Verry, where are the mice?" + +"Are they gone?" + +"Tell me." + +"What will you do if I don't?" + +"I know," and I flew upstairs, tore the poor butterfly from between +the leaves of the Bible, crushed it in my hand, and brought it down to +her. She did not cry when she saw it, but choked a little, and turned +away her head. + +It was now dark, and hearing a bustle in the entry I looked out, and +saw several staid men slowly rubbing their feet on the door-mat; the +husbands had come to escort their wives home, and by nine o'clock they +all went. Veronica and I stayed by the door after they had gone. + +"Look at Mrs. Dexter," she said; "I put the mice in her workbag." + +I burst into a laugh, which she joined in presently. + +"I am sorry about the butterfly, Verry." And I attempted to take her +hand, but she pushed me away, and marched off whistling. + +A few days after this, sitting near the window at twilight, intent +upon a picture in a book of travels, of a Hindoo swinging from a high +pole with hooks in his flesh, and trying to imagine how much it +hurt him, my attention was arrested by a mention of my name in a +conversation held between mother and Mr. Park, one of the neighbors. +He occasionally spent an evening at our house, passing it in polemical +discussion, revising the prayers and exhortations which he made at +conference meetings. The good man was a little vain of having the +formulas of his creed at his tongue's end. She sometimes lost the +thread of his discourse, but argued also as if to convince herself +that she could rightly distinguish between Truth and Illusion, but +never discussed religious topics with father. Like all the Morgesons, +he was Orthodox, accepting what had been provided by others for his +spiritual accommodation. He thought it well that existing Institutions +should not be disturbed. "Something worse might be established +instead." His turn of mind, in short, was not Evangelical. + +"Are the Hindoos in earnest, mother?" and I thrust the picture before +her. She warned me off. + +"Do you think, Mr. Park, that Cassandra can understand the law of +transgression?" + +An acute perception that it was in my power to escape a moral penalty, +by willful ignorance, was revealed to me, that I could continue the +privilege of sinning with impunity. His answer was complicated, and +he quoted several passages from the Scriptures. Presently he began to +sing, and I grew lonesome; the life within me seemed a black cave. + + "_Our nature's totally depraved-- + The heart a sink of sin; + Without a change we can't be saved, + Ye must be born again_." + +Temperance opened the door. "Is Veronica going to bed to-night?" she +asked. + + + + + + +CHAPTER V. + + +The next September we moved. Our new house was large and handsome. On +the south side there was nothing between it and the sea, except a few +feet of sand. No tree or shrub intercepted the view. To the eastward a +promontory of rocks jutted into the sea, serving as a pier against +the wash of the tide, and adding a picturesqueness to the curve of the +beach. On the north side flourished an orchard, which was planted by +Grandfather Locke. Looking over the tree-tops from the upper north +windows, one would have had no suspicion of being in the neighborhood +of the sea. From these windows, in winter, we saw the nimbus of the +Northern Light. The darkness of our sky, the stillness of the night, +mysteriously reflected the perpetual condition of its own solitary +world. In summer ragged white clouds rose above the horizon, as if +they had been torn from the sky of an underworld, to sail up the +blue heaven, languish away, or turn livid with thunder, and roll off +seaward. Between the orchard and the house a lawn sloped easterly to +the border of a brook, which straggled behind the outhouses into a +meadow, and finally lost itself among the rocks on the shore. Up by +the lawn a willow hung over it, and its outer bank was fringed by +the tangled wild-grape, sweet-briar, and alder bushes. The premises, +except on the seaside, were enclosed by a high wall of rough granite. +No houses were near us, on either side of the shore; up the north road +they were scattered at intervals. + +Mother said I must be considered a young lady, and should have my own +room. Veronica was to have one opposite, divided from it by a wide +passage. This passage extended beyond the angle of the stairway, and +was cut off by a glass door. A wall ran across the lower end of the +passage; half the house was beyond its other side, so that when the +door was fastened, Veronica and myself were in a cul-de-sac. + +The establishment was put on a larger footing. Mrs. Hepsey Curtis was +installed mistress of the kitchen. Temperance declared that she could +not stand it; that she wasn't a nigger; that she must go, but she had +no home, and no friends--nothing but a wood lot, which was left her +by her father the miller. As the trees thereon grew, promising to make +timber, its value increased; at present her income was limited to the +profit from the annual sale of a cord or two of wood. So she staid on, +in spite of Hepsey. There were also two men for the garden and stable. +A boy was always attached to the house; not the same boy, but a Boy +dynasty, for as soon as one went another came, who ate a great deal--a +crime in Hepsey's eyes--and whose general duty was to carry armfuls of +wood, pails of milk, or swill, and to shut doors. + +We had many visitors. Though father had no time to devote to guests, +he was continually inviting people for us to entertain, and his +invitations were taken as a matter of course, and finally for granted. +A rich Morgeson was a new feature in the family annals, and distant +relations improved the advantage offered them by coming to spend the +summer with us, because their own houses were too hot, or the winter, +because they were too cold! Infirm old ladies, who were not related to +us, but who had nowhere else to visit, came. As his business extended, +our visiting list extended. The captains of his ships whose homes were +elsewhere brought their wives to be inconsolable with us after their +departure on their voyages. We had ministers often, who always quarter +at the best houses, and chance visitors to dinner and supper, who made +our house a way-station. There was but small opportunity to cultivate +family affinities; they were forever disturbed. Somebody was always +sitting in the laps of our Lares and Penates. Another class of +visitors deserving notice were those who preferred to occupy the +kitchen and back chambers, humbly proud and bashfully arrogant people, +who kept their hats and bonnets by them, and small bundles, to delude +themselves and us with the idea that they "had not come to stay, and +had no occasion for any attention." These people criticised us +with insinuating severity, and proposed amendments with unrelenting +affability. To this class Veronica was most attracted--it repelled me; +consequently she was petted, and I was amiably sneered at. + +This period of our family life has left small impression of dramatic +interest. There was no development of the sentiments, no betrayal of +the fluctuations of the passions which must have existed. There was +no accident to reveal, no coincidence to surprise us. Hidden among +the Powers That Be, which rule New England, lurks the Deity of the +Illicit. This Deity never obtained sovereignty in the atmosphere +where the Morgesons lived. Instead of the impression which my +after-experience suggests to me to seek, I recall arrivals and +departures, an eternal smell of cookery, a perpetual changing of beds, +and the small talk of vacant minds. + +Despite the rigors of Hepsey in the kitchen, and the careful +supervision of Temperance, there was little systematic housekeeping. +Mother had severe turns of planning, and making rules, falling upon +us in whirlwinds of reform, shortly allowing the band of habit to snap +back, and we resumed our former condition. She had no assistance from +father in her ideas of change. It was enough for him to know that he +had built a good house to shelter us, and to order the best that could +be bought for us to eat and to wear. He liked, when he went where +there were fine shops, to buy and bring home handsome shawls, bonnets, +and dresses, wholly unsuited in general to the style and taste of each +of us, but much handsomer than were needful for Surrey. They answered, +however, as patterns for the plainer materials of our neighbors. He +also bought books for us, recommended by their covers, or the opinion +of the bookseller. His failing was to buy an immense quantity of +everything he fancied. + +"I shall never have to buy this thing again," he would say; "let us +have enough." + +Veronica and I grew up ignorant of practical or economical ways. We +never saw money, never went shopping. Mother was indifferent in regard +to much of the business of ordinary life which children are taught to +understand. Father and mother both stopped at the same point with us, +but for a different reason; father, because he saw nothing beyond the +material, and mother, because her spiritual insight was confused and +perplexing. But whatever a household may be, the Destinies spin the +web to their will, put of the threads which drop hither and thither, +floating in its atmosphere, white, black, or gray. + +From the time we moved, however, we were a stirring, cheerful family, +independent of each other, but spite of our desultory tastes, mutual +habits were formed. When the want of society was felt, we sought the +dining-room, sure of meeting others with the same want. This room was +large and central, connecting with the halls, kitchen, and mother's +room. It was a caravansary where people dropped in and out on +their way to some other place. Our most public moments were during +meal-time. It was known that father was at home at breakfast and +supper, and could be consulted. As he was away at our noonday dinner, +generally we were the least disturbed then, and it was a lawless, +irregular, and unceremonious affair. Mother establisher her arm-chair +here, and a stand for her workbasket. Hepsey and Temperance were at +hand, the men came for orders, and it was convenient for the boy to +transmit the local intelligence it was his vocation to collect. The +windows commanded a view of the sea, the best in the house. This +prospect served mother for exercise. Her eyes roved over it when she +wanted a little out-of-doors life. If she desired more variety, which +was seldom, she went to the kitchen. After we moved she grew averse +to leaving the house, except to go to church. She never quitted the +dining-room after our supper till bedtime, because father rarely came +from Milford, where he went on bank days, and indeed almost every +other day, till late, and she liked to be by him while he ate his +supper and smoked a cigar. All except Veronica frequented this room; +but she was not missed or inquired for. She liked the parlor, because +the piano was there. As soon as father had bought it she astonished us +by a persistent fingering of the keys, which produced a feeble melody. +She soon played all the airs she had heard. When I saw what she could +do, I refused to take music lessons, for while I was trying to +learn "The White Cockade," she pushed me away, played it, and made +variations upon it. I pounded the keys with my fist, by way of a +farewell, and told her she should have the piano for her own. + + + + + + +CHAPTER VI. + + +One winter morning before daylight, Veronica came to my room, and +asked me if I had heard any walking about the house during the night. +She had, and was going to inquire about it. She soon returned with, +"You have a brother. Temperance says my nose is broken. He will be +like you, I suppose, and have everything he asks for. I don't care +for him; but," crying out with passion, "get up. Mother wants to see +_you_, I know." + +I dressed quickly, and went downstairs with a feeling of indignation +that such an event should have happened without my knowledge. + +There was an unwonted hush. A bright fire was burning on the +dining-room hearth, the lamps were still lighted, and father was by +the fire, smoking in a meditative manner. He put out his hand, which I +did not take, and said, "Do you like his name--Arthur?" + +"Yes," I mumbled, as I passed him, and went to the kitchen, where +Hepsey and Temperance were superintending the steeping of certain +aromatic herbs, which stood round the fire in silver porringers and +earthen pitchers. + +"Another Morgeson's come," said Temperance. "There's enough of them, +such as they are--not but what they are good enough," correcting +herself hastily. + +"Go into your mother's room, softly," said Hepsey, rubbing her fingers +against her thumb--her habit when she was in a tranquil frame of mind. + +"_You_ are mighty glad, Hepsey," said Temperance. + +"Locke Morgeson ought to have a son," she replied, "to leave his money +to." + +"I vow," answered Temperance, "girls are thought nothing of in this +'ligous section; they may go to the poor house, as long as the sons +have plenty." + +An uncommon fit or shyness seized me, mixed with a feeling of dread, +as I crept into the room where mother was. My eyes first fell upon +an elderly woman, who wore a long, wide, black apron, whose strings +girded the middle of her cushion-like form. She was taking snuff. It +was the widow Mehitable Allen, a lady whom I had often seen in other +houses on similar occasions. + +"Shoo," she whispered nasally. + +I was arrested, but turned my eyes toward mother; hers were closed. +Presently she murmured, "Thank God," opened them, and saw me. A smile +lighted her pale countenance. "Cassy, my darling, kiss me. I am glad +it is not a woman." As I returned her kiss her glance dropped on a +small bunch by her side, which Mehitable took and deftly unrolled, +informing me as she did so that it was a "Rouser." + +Aunt Mercy came the next day. She had not paid us a visit in a long +time, being confined at home with the care of her father, Grandfather +Warren. She took charge of Veronica and me, if taking charge means +a series of guerilla skirmishes on both sides. I soon discovered, +however, that she was prone to laughter, and that I could provoke +it; we got on better after that discovery; but Veronica, disdaining +artifice, was very cross with her. Aunt Mercy had a spark of fun in +her composition, which was not quite crushed out by her religious +education. She frequented the church oftener than mother, sang more +hymns, attended all the anniversary celebrations, but she had no +dreams, no enthusiasm. Her religion had leveled all needs and all +aspirations. What the day brought forth answered her. She inspired me +with a secret pity; for I knew she carried in her bosom the knowledge +that she was an old maid. + +Before mother left her room Veronica was taken ill, and was not +convalescent till spring. Delicacy of constitution the doctor called +her disorder. She had no strength, no appetite, and looked more elfish +than ever. She would not stay in bed, and could not sit up, so father +had a chair made for her, in which she could recline comfortably. Aunt +Merce put her in it every morning, and took her out every evening. My +presence irritated her, so I visited her but seldom. She said I looked +so well, it hurt her, and wished me to keep out of her sight, begged +me never to talk loud in the vicinity of her room, my voice was +so breezy. She amused herself in her own strange way. One of her +amusements was to cut off her hair, lock by lock, and cut it short +before she was well enough to walk about. She played on a jewsharp, +and on a little fife when her breath permitted, and invented grotesque +costumes out of bits of silk and lace. Temperance was much engaged, +at her dictation, in the composition of elaborate dishes, which she +rarely ate, but forced Temperance to. She was more patient with her +than any other person; with us she was excessively high-tempered, +especially with father. She could not bear to catch a glimpse of the +sea, nor to hear it; if she heard it echoing in the house, she played +on her fife, or jewsharp, or asked Aunt Merce to sing some old song. +But she liked the view from the north windows, even when the boughs +were bare and the fields barren. When the grass came, she ordered +handfuls to be brought her and put in saucers of water. With the +coming of the blossoms she began to mend. As for me, I was as much an +animal as ever--robust in health--inattentive, and seeking excitement +and exhilaration. I went everywhere, to Bible class, to Sunday school, +and to every funeral which took place within our precincts. But I +never looked upon the dead; perhaps that sight would have marred the +slumbrous security which possessed me--the instinctive faith in the +durability of my own powers of life. + +But a change was approaching. Aunt Merce considered my present state a +hopeless one. She was outside the orbit of the family planet, and saw +the tendency of its revolutions, perceiving that father and mother +were absorbed in their individual affairs. She called mother's +attention to my non-improvement, and proposed that I should return +to Barmouth with her for a year, and become a pupil in a young lady's +school, which had been recently established there, by a graduate of +the Nipswich Female Seminary, a school distinguished for its ethics. +Mother looked astonished, when she heard this proposal. "What!" she +began with vehemence, "shall I subject"--but checked herself when she +caught my eye, and continued more calmly: "We will decide soon." + +It was decided that I should go, without my being consulted in the +matter. I felt resentful against mother, and could not understand +till afterward, why she had consented to the plan. It was because she +wished me to comprehend the influences of her early life, and learn +some of the lessons she had been taught. At first, father "poohed" +at the plan, but finally said it was a good place to tame me. When +Veronica heard that I was going, she told me that I would be stifled, +if I lived at Grandfather Warren's; but added that the plums in his +garden were good, and advised me to sit on the yellow stone doorstep, +under which the toads lived. She also informed me that she was glad of +it, and hoped I would stay forever. + +To Barmouth I went, and in May entered Miss Black's genteel school. +Miss Black had a conviction that her vocation was teaching. Necessity +did not compel it, for she was connected with one of the richest +families in Barmouth. At the end of the week my curiosity regarding my +new position was quenched, and I dropped into the depths of my first +wretchedness. I frantically demanded of father, who had stopped to +see me on his way to Milford, to be taken home. He firmly resisted me. +Once a month, I should go home and spend a Sunday, if I chose, and he +would come to Barmouth every week. + +My agitation and despair clouded his face for a moment, then it +cleared, and pinching my chin, he said, "Why don't you look like your +mother?" + +"But she _is_ like her mother," said Aunt Merce. + +"Well, Cassy, good-by"; and he gave me a kiss with cruel nonchalance. +I knew my year must be stayed out. + + + + + + +CHAPTER VII. + + +My life at Grandfather Warren's was one kind of penance and my life +in Miss Black's school another. Both differed from our home-life. +My filaments found no nourishment, creeping between the two; but +the fibers of youth are strong, and they do not perish. Grandfather +Warren's house reminded me of the casket which imprisoned the Genii. +I had let loose a Presence I had no power over--the embodiment of its +gloom, its sternness, and its silence. + +With feeling comes observation; after that, one reasons. I began to +observe. Aunt Mercy was not the Aunt Merce I had known at home. She +wore a mask before her father. There was constraint between them; +each repressed the other. The result of this relation was a formal, +petrifying, unyielding system,--a system which, from the fact of its +satisfying neither, was kept up the more rigidly; on the one side +from a morbid conscience, which reiterated its monitions against +the dictates of the natural heart; on the other, out of respect and +timidity. + +Grandfather Warren was a little, lean, leather-colored man. His head +was habitually bent, his eyes cast down; but when he raised them to +peer about, their sharpness and clear intelligence gave his face +a wonderful vitality. He chafed his small, well-shaped hands +continually; his long polished nails clicked together with a shelly +noise, like that which beetles make flying against the ceiling. His +features were delicate and handsome; gentle blood ran in his veins, +as I have said. All classes in Barmouth treated him with invariable +courtesy. He was aboriginal in character, not to be moved by +antecedent or changed by innovation--a Puritan, without gentleness or +tenderness. He scarcely concealed his contempt for the emollients +of life, or for those who needed them. He whined over no misfortune, +pined for no pleasure. His two sons, who broke loose from him, went +into the world, lived a wild, merry life, and died there, he never +named. He found his wife dead by his side one morning. He did not go +frantic, but selected a text for the funeral sermon; and when he stood +by the uncovered grave, took off his hat and thanked his friends for +their kindness with a loud, steady voice. Aunt Mercy told me that +after her mother's death his habit of chafing his hands commenced; +it was all the difference she saw in him, for he never spoke of his +trouble or acknowledged his grief by sign or word. + +Though he had been frugal and industrious all his life, he had no more +property than the old, rambling house we lived in, and a long, narrow +garden attached to it, where there were a few plum and quince trees, a +row of currant bushes, Aunt Mercy's beds of chamomile and sage, and a +few flowers. At the end of the garden was a peaked-roof pigsty; it +was cleanly kept, and its inhabitant had his meals served with the +regularity which characterized all that Grandfather Warren did. +Beautiful pigeons lived in the roof, and were on friendly terms with +the occupant on the lower floor. The house was not unpicturesque. It +was built on a corner, facing two streets. One front was a story high, +with a slanting roof; the other, which was two-storied, sloped like +a giraffe's back, down to a wood-shed. Clean cobwebs hung from its +rafters, and neat heaps of fragrant chips were piled on the floor. + +The house had many rooms, all more or less dark and irregularly +shaped. The construction of the chambers was so involved, I could +not get out of one without going into another. Some of the ceilings +slanted suddenly, and some so gradually that where I could stand +erect, and where I must stoop, I never remembered, until my head +was unpleasantly grazed, or my eyes filled with flakes of ancient +lime-dust. A long chamber in the middle of the house was the shop, +always smelling of woolen shreds. At sunset, summer or winter, Aunt +Mercy sprinkled water on the unpainted floor, and swept it. While she +swept I made my thumb sore, by snipping the bits of cloth that were +scattered on the long counter by the window with Grand'ther's shears, +or I scrawled figures with gray chalk, where I thought they might +catch his eye. When she had finished sweeping she carefully sorted +the scraps, and put them into boxes under the counter; then she neatly +rolled up the brown-paper curtains, which had been let down to +exclude the afternoon sun; shook the old patchwork cushions in the +osier-bottomed chairs; watered the rose-geranium and the monthly rose, +which flourished wonderfully in that fluffy atmosphere; set every pin +and needle in its place, and shut the door, which was opened again at +sunrise. Of late years, Grand'ther's occupation had declined. No new +customers came. A few, who did not change the fashion of their garb, +still patronized him. His income was barely three hundred dollars a +year--eked out to this amount by some small pay for offices connected +with the church, of which he was a prominent member. From this income +he paid his pulpit tithe, gave to the poor, and lived independent and +respectable. Mother endeavored in an unobtrusive way to add to his +comfort; but he would only accept a few herrings from the Surrey +Weir every spring, and a basket of apples every fall. He invariably +returned her presents by giving her a share of his plums and quinces. + +I had only seen Grand'ther Warren at odd intervals. He rarely came +to our house; when he did, he rode down on the top of the Barmouth +stagecoach, returning in a few hours. As mother never liked to go to +Barmouth, she seldom came to see me. + + + + + + +CHAPTER VIII. + + +It was five o'clock on Saturday afternoon when father left me. Aunt +Mercy continued her preparations for tea, and when it was ready, went +to the foot of the stairs, and called, "Supper." Grand'ther came down +immediately followed by two tall, cadaverous women, Ruth and Sally +Aikin, tailoresses, who sewed for him spring and fall. Living several +miles from Barmouth, they stayed through the week, going home on +Saturday night, to return on Monday morning. We stood behind the heavy +oak chairs round the table, one of which Grand'ther tipped backward, +and said a long grace, not a word of which was heard; for his teeth +were gone, and he prayed in his throat. Aunt Mercy's "Moltee" rubbed +against me, with her back and tail erect. I pinched the latter, and +she gave a wail. Aunt Mercy passed her hand across her mouth, but the +eyes of the two women were stony in their sockets. Grand'ther ended +his grace with an upward jerk of his head as we seated ourselves. +He looked sharply at me, his gray eyebrows rising hair by hair, +and shaking a spoon at me said, "You are playing over your mother's +capers." + +"The caper-bush grows on the shores of the Mediterranean sea, +Grand'ther. Miss Black had it for a theme, out of the _Penny +Magazine_; it is full of themes." + +"She had better give you a gospel theme." + +He was as inarticulate when he quoted Scripture as when he prayed, but +I heard something about "thorns"; then he helped us to baked Indian +pudding--our invariable Saturday night's repast. Aunt Mercy passed +cups of tea; I heard the gulping swallow of it in every throat, the +silence was so profound. After the pudding we had dried apple-pie, +which we ate from our hands, like bread. Grand'ther ate fast, not +troubling himself to ask us if we would have more, but making the +necessary motions to that effect by touching the spoon in the pudding +or knife on the pie. Ruth and Sally still kept their eyes fixed on +some invisible object at a distance. What a disagreeable interest I +felt in them! What had they in common with me? What could they enjoy? +How unpleasant their dingy, crumbled, needle-pricked fingers were! +Sally hiccoughed, and Ruth suffered from internal rumblings. Without +waiting for each other when we had finished, we put our chairs against +the wall and left the room. I rushed into the garden and trampled the +chamomile bed. I had heard that it grew faster for being subjected +to that process, and thought of the two women I had just seen while I +crushed the spongy plants. Had _they_ been trampled upon? A feeling +of pity stung me; I ran into the house, and found them on the point of +departure, with little bundles in their hands. + +"Aunt Mercy will let me carry your bundles a part of the way for you; +shall I?" + +"No, indeed," said Ruth, in a mild voice; "there's no heft in them; +they are mites to carry." + +"Besides," chimed Sally, "you couldn't be trusted with them." + +"Are they worth anything?" I inquired, noticing then that both wore +better dresses, and that the bundles contained their shop-gowns. + +"What made you pinch the moltee's tail?" asked Sally. "If you pinched +my cat's tail, I would give you a sound whipping." + +"How could she, Sally," said Ruth, "when our cat's tail is cut short +off?" + +"For all the world," remarked Sally, "that's the only way she can +be managed. If things are cut off, and kept out of sight, or never +mentioned before her, she may behave very well; not otherwise." + +"Good-by, Miss Ruth, and Sally, good-by," modulating my voice to +accents of grief, and making a "cheese." + +They retreated with a less staid pace than usual, and I sought Aunt +Mercy, who was preparing the Sunday's dinner. Twilight drew near, and +the Sunday's clouds began to fall on my spirits. Between sundown and +nine o'clock was a tedious interval. I was not allowed to go to bed, +nor to read a secular book, or to amuse myself with anything. A dim +oil-lamp burned on the high shelf of the middle room, our ordinary +gathering-place. Aunt Mercy sat there, rocking in a low chair; the +doors were open, and I wandered softly about. The smell of the +garden herbs came in faintly, and now and then I heard a noise in +the water-butt under the spout, the snapping of an old rafter, or +something falling behind the wall. The toads crawled from under the +plantain leaves, and hopped across the broad stone before the kitchen +door, and the irreverent cat, with whom I sympathized, raced like mad +in the grass. Growing duller, I went to the cellar door, which was in +the front entry, opened it, and stared down in the black gulf, till +I saw a gray rock rise at the foot of the stairs which affected my +imagination. The foundation of the house was on the spurs of a great +granite bed, which rose from the Surrey shores, dipped and cropped +out in the center of Barmouth. It came through the ground again in the +woodhouse, smooth and round, like the bald head of some old Titan, and +in the border of the garden it burst through in narrow ridges full +of seams. As I contemplated the rock, and inhaled a moldy atmosphere +whose component parts were charcoal and potatoes, I heard the first +stroke of the nine o'clock bell, which hung in the belfry of the +church across the street. Although it was so near us that we could +hear the bellrope whistle in its grooves, and its last hoarse breath +in the belfry, there was no reverberation of its clang in the house; +the rock under us struck back its voice. It was an old Spanish bell, +Aunt Mercy told me. How it reached Barmouth she did not know. I +recognized its complaining voice afterward. It told me it could never +forget it had been baptized a Catholic; and it pined for the beggar +who rang it in the land of fan-leaved chestnuts! It would growl and +strangle as much as possible in the hands of Benjamin Beals, the +bell-ringer and coffin-maker of Barmouth. Except in the morning when +it called me up, I was glad to hear it. It was the signal of time +past; the oftener I heard it, the nearer I was to the end of my year. +Before it ceased to ring now Aunt Mercy called me in a low voice. I +returned to the middle room, and took a seat in one of the oak chairs, +whose back of upright rods was my nightly penance. Aunt Mercy took the +lamp from the shelf, and placed it upon a small oak stand, where +the Bible lay. Grand'ther entered, and sitting by the stand read a +chapter. His voice was like opium. Presently my head rolled across the +rods, and I felt conscious of slipping down the glassy seat. After +he had read the chapter he prayed. If the chapter had been long, the +prayer was short; if the chapter had been short, the prayer was long. +When he had ceased praying, he left the room without speaking, and +betook himself to bed. Aunt Mercy dragged me up the steep stairs, +undressed me, and I crept into bed, drugged with a monotony which +served but to deepen the sleep of youth and health. When the bell rang +the next morning, Aunt Mercy gave me a preparatory shake before she +began to dress, and while she walked up and down the room lacing her +stays entreated me to get up. + +If the word lively could ever be used in reference to our life, it +might be in regard to Sunday. The well was so near the church that the +house was used as an inn for the accommodation of the church-goers who +lived at any distance, and who did not return home between the morning +and afternoon services. A regular set took dinner with us, and +there were parties who brought lunch, which they ate off their +handkerchiefs, on their knees. It was also a watering-place for the +Sunday-school scholars, who filed in troops before the pail in the +well-room, and drank from the cocoanut dipper. When the weather was +warm our parlor was open, as it was to-day. Aunt Mercy had dusted it +and ornamented the hearth with bunches of lilacs in a broken pitcher. +Twelve yellow chairs, a mahogany stand, a dark rag-carpet, some +speckled Pacific sea-shells on the shelf, among which stood a whale's +tooth with a drawing of a cranky ship thereon, and an ostrich's egg +that hung by a string from the ceiling, were the adornments of the +room. When we were dressed for church, we looked out of the window +till the bell tolled, and the chaise of the Baxters and Sawyers had +driven to the gate; then we went ourselves. Grand'ther had preceded +us, and was already in his seat. Aunt Mercy went up to the head of the +pew, a little out of breath, from the tightness of her dress, and the +ordeal of the Baxter and Sawyer eyes, for the pew, though off a side +aisle, was in the neighborhood of the elite of the church; a clove, +however, tranquilized her. I fixed my feet on a cricket, and examined +the bonnets. The house filled rapidly, and last of all the minister +entered. The singers began an anthem, singing in an advanced style of +the art, I observed, for they shouted "_Armen_," while our singers in +Surrey bellowed "_Amen_." When the sermon began I settled myself +into a vague speculation concerning my future days of freedom; but my +dreams were disturbed by the conduct of the Hickspold boys, who were +in a pew in front of us. As in the morning, so in the afternoon and +all the Sundays in the year. The variations of the season served but +to deepen the uniformity of my heartsickness. + + + + + + +CHAPTER IX. + + +Aunt Mercy had not introduced me to Miss Black as the daughter of +Locke Morgeson, the richest man in Surrey, but simply as her niece. +Her pride prevented her from making any exhibition of my antecedents, +which was wise, considering that I had none. My grandfather, +John Morgeson, was a nobody,--merely a "Co."; and though my +great-grandfather, Locke Morgeson, was worthy to be called a Somebody, +it was not his destiny to make a stir in the world. Many of the +families of my Barmouth schoolmates had the fulcrum of a moneyed +grandfather. The knowledge of the girls did not extend to that period +in the family history when its patriarchs started in the pursuit of +Gain. Elmira Sawyer, one of Miss Black's pupils, never heard that her +grandfather "Black Peter," as he was called, had made excursions, +in an earlier part of his life, on the River Congo, or that he was +familiar with the soundings of Loango Bay. As he returned from his +voyages, bringing more and more money, he enlarged his estate, and +grew more and more respectable, retiring at last from the sea, to +become a worthy landsman; he paid taxes to church and state, and +even had a silver communion cup, among the pewter service used on +the occasion of the Lord's Supper; but he never was brought to +the approval of that project of the Congregational Churches,--the +colonization of the Blacks to Liberia. Neither was Hersila Allen aware +that the pink calico in which I first saw her was remotely owing to +West India Rum. Nor did Charlotte Alden, the proudest girl in school, +know that her grandfather's, Squire Alden's, stepping-stone to +fortune was the loss of the brig _Capricorn_, which was wrecked in +the vicinity of a comfortable port, on her passage out to the +whaling-ground. An auger had been added to the meager outfit, and long +after the sea had leaked through the hole bored through her bottom, +and swallowed her, and the insurance had been paid, the truth leaked +out that the captain had received instructions, which had been +fulfilled. Whereupon two Insurance Companies went to law with him, and +a suit ensued, which ended in their paying costs, in addition to what +they had before paid Squire Alden, who winked in a derisive manner at +the Board of Directors when he received its check. + +There were others who belonged in the category of Decayed Families, +as exclusive as they were shabby. There were parvenus, which included +myself. When I entered the school it was divided into clans, each +with its spites, jealousies, and emulations. Its _esprit de corps_, +however, was developed by my arrival; the girls united against me, and +though I perceived, when I compared myself with them, that they were +partly right in their opinions, their ridicule stupefied and crushed +me. They were trained, intelligent, and adroit; I uncouth, ignorant, +and without tact. It was impossible for Miss Black not to be affected +by the general feeling in regard to me. Her pupils knew sooner than I +that she sympathized with them. She embarrassed me, when I should have +despised her. At first her regimen surprised, then filled me with a +dumb, clouded anger, which made me appear apathetic. + +Miss Emily Black was a young woman, and, I thought, a handsome one. +She had crenelated black hair, large black eyes, a Roman nose, +and long white teeth. She bit her nails when annoyed, and when her +superiority made her perceive the mental darkness of others she often +laughed. Being pious, she conducted her school after the theologic +pattern of the Nipswich Seminary, at which she had been educated. +She opened the school each day with a religious exercise, reading +something from the Bible, and commenting upon it, or questioning us +regarding our ideas of what she read. She often selected the character +of David, and was persistent in her efforts to explain and reconcile +the discrepancies in the history of the royal Son of Israel. + +"Miss _C._ Morgeson, we will call you," she said, in our first +interview; "the name of Cassandra is too peculiar." + +"My Grandfather Locke liked the name; my sister's is Veronica; do you +like that better?" + +"It is of no consequence in the premises what your sister may be +named," she replied, running her eyes over me. "What will she study, +Miss Warren?" + +Aunt Mercy's recollections of my studies were dim, and her knowledge +of my school days was not calculated to prepossess a teacher in my +favor; but after a moment's delay, she said: "What you think best." + +"Very well," she answered; "I will endeavor to fulfill my Christian +duty toward her. We will return to the school-room." + +We had held the conversation in the porch, and now Aunt Mercy gave me +a nod of encouragement, and bidding Miss Black "Good day," departed, +looking behind her as long as possible. I followed my teacher. As she +opened the door forty eyes were leveled at me; my hands were in my way +suddenly; my feet impeded my progress; how could I pass that wall of +eyes? A wisp of my dry, rough hair fell on my neck and tickled it; as +I tried to poke it under my comb, I glanced at the faces before me. +How spirited and delicate they were! The creatures had their heads +dressed as if they were at a party--in curls, or braids and ribbons. +An open, blank, _noli me tangere_ expression met my perturbed glance. +I stood still, but my head went round. Miss Black mounted her desk, +and surveyed the school-room. "Miss Charlotte Alden, the desk next you +is vacant; Miss C. Morgeson, the new pupil, may take it." + +Miss Charlotte answered, "Yes mim," and ostentatiously swept away an +accumulation of pencils, sponges, papers, and books, to make room for +me. I took the seat, previously stumbling against her, whereat all +the girls, whose regards were fixed upon me, smiled. That was my +initiation. + +The first day I was left to myself, to make studies. The school-room +was in the vestry of the church, a building near grand'ther's house. +Each girl had a desk before her. Miss Black occupied a high stool in +a square box, where she heard single recitations, or lectured a pupil. +The vestry yard, where the girls romped, and exercised with skipping +ropes, a swing, and a set of tilting-boards, commanded a view of +grand'ther's premises; his street windows were exposed to the fire of +their eyes and tongues. + +After I went home I examined myself in the glass, and drew an +unfavorable conclusion from the inspection. My hair was parted zigzag; +one shoulder was higher than the other; my dress came up to my chin, +and slipped down to my shoulder-blades. I was all waist; no hips were +developed my hands were red, and my nails chipped. I opened the trunk +where my wardrobe was packed; what belonged to me was comfortable, +in reference to weather and the wash, but not pretty. I found a +molasses-colored silk, called Turk satin--one of mother's old dresses, +made over for me, or an invidious selection of hers from the purchases +of father, who sometimes made a mistake in taste, owing to the +misrepresentations of shopkeepers and milliners. While thus engaged +Aunt Mercy came for me, and began to scold when she saw that I had +tumbled my clothes out of the trunk. + +"Aunt Mercy, these things are horrid, all of them. Look at this +shawl," and I unrolled a square silk fabric, the color of a sick +orange. "Where did this come from?" + +"Saints upon earth!" she exclaimed, "your father bought it at the best +store in New York. It was costly." + +"Now tell me, why do the pantalettes of those girls look so graceful? +They do not twirl round the ankle like a rope, as mine do." + +"I can't say," she answered, with a sigh. "But you ought to wear long +dresses; now yours are tucked, and could be let down." + +"And these red prunella boots--they look like boiled crabs." I put +them on, and walked round the room crab-fashion, till she laughed +hysterically. "Miss Charlotte Alden wears French kid slippers every +day, and I must wear mine." + +"No," she said, "you must only wear them to church." + +"I shall talk to father about that, when he comes here next." + +"Cassy, did Charlotte Alden speak to you to-day?" + +"No; but she made an acquaintance by stares." + +"Well, never mind her if she says anything unpleasant to you; the +Aldens are a high set." + +"Are they higher than we are in Surrey? Have they heard of my father, +who is equal to the President?" + +"We are all equal in the sight of God." + +"You do not look as if you thought so, Aunt Mercy. Why do you say +things in Barmouth you never said in Surrey?" + +"Come downstairs, Cassandra, and help me finish the dishes." + +Our conversation was ended; but I still had my thoughts on the clothes +question, and revolved my plans. + +After the morning exercises the next day, Miss Black called me in to +her desk. "I think," she said, "you had better study Geology. It is +important, for it will lead your mind up from nature to nature's +God. My young ladies have finished their studies in that direction; +therefore you will recite alone, once a day." + +"Yes 'em," I replied; but it was the first time that I had heard of +Geology. The compendium she gave me must have been dull and dry. I +could not get its lessons perfectly. It never inspired me with any +interest for land or sea. I could not associate any of its terms, or +descriptions, with the great rock under grand'ther's house. It was +not for Miss Black to open the nodules of my understanding, with her +hammer of instruction. She proposed Botany also. The young ladies made +botanical excursions to the fields and woods outside Barmouth; I +might as well join the class at once. It was now in the family of the +Legumes. I accompanied the class on one excursion. Not a soul appeared +to know that I was present, and I declined going again. Composition +I must write once a month. A few more details closed the interview. I +mentioned in it that father desired me to study arithmetic. Miss Black +placed me in a class; but her interests were in the higher and more +elegant branches of education. I made no more advance in the humble +walks of learning than in those adorned by the dissection of flowers, +the disruption of rocks, or the graces of composition. Though I +entered upon my duties under protest, I soon became accustomed to +their routine, and the rest of my life seemed more like a dream of the +future than a realization of the present. I refused to go home at the +end of the month. I preferred waiting, I said, to the end of the year. +I was not urged to change my mind; neither was I applauded for my +resolution. The day that I could have gone home, I asked father to +drive me to Milford, on the opposite side of the river which ran by +Barmouth. I shut my eyes tight, when the horse struck the boards of +the long wooden bridge between the towns, and opened them when we +stopped at an inn by the water side of Milford. Father took me into a +parlor, where sat a handsome, fat woman, hemming towels. + +"Is that you, Morgeson?" she said. "Is this your daughter?" + +"Yes; can I leave her with you, while I go to the bank? She has not +been here before." + +"Lord ha' mercy on us; you clip her wings, don't you? Come here, +child, and let me pull off your pelisse." + +I went to her with a haughty air; it did not please me to hear my +father called "Morgeson," by a person unknown to me. She understood my +expression, and looked up at father; they both smiled, and I was vexed +with him for his unwarrantable familiarity. Pinching my cheek with her +fat fingers, which were covered with red and green rings, she said, +"We shall do very well together. What a pretty silk pelisse, and +silver buckles, too." + +After father went out, and my bonnet was disposed of, Mrs. Tabor gave +me a huge piece of delicious sponge-cake, which softened me somewhat. + +"What is your name, dear?" + +"Morgeson." + +"It is easy to see that." + +"Well, Cassandra." + +"Oh, what a lovely name," and she drew from her workbasket a +paper-covered book; "there is no name in this novel half so pretty; I +wish the heroine's name had been Cassandra instead of Aldebrante." + +"Let me see it," I begged. + +"There is a horrid monk in it"; but she gave it to me, and was +presently called out. I devoured its pages, and for the only time in +that year of Barmouth life, I forgot my own wants and woes. She saw +my interest in the book when she came back, and coaxed it from me, +offering me more cake, which I accepted. She told me that she had +known father for years, and that he kept his horse at the inn stables, +and dined with her. "But I never knew that he had a daughter," she +continued. "Are you the only child?" + +"I have a sister," and after a moment remembered that I had a brother, +too; but did not think it a fact necessary to mention. + +"I have no children." + +"But you have novels to read." + +She laughed, and by the time father returned we were quite chatty. +After dinner I asked him to go to some shops with me. He took me to a +jeweler's, and without consulting me bought an immense mosaic brooch, +with a ruined castle on it, and a pretty ring with a gold stone. + +"Is there anything more?" he asked, "you would like?" + +"Yes, I want a pink calico dress." + +"Why?" + +"Because the girls at Miss Black's wear pink calico." + +"Why not get a pink silk?" + +"I must have a pink French calico, with a three-cornered white cloud +on it; it is the fashion." + +"The fashion!" he echoed with contempt. But the dress was bought, and +we went back to Barmouth. + +When I appeared in school with my new brooch and ring the girls +crowded round me. + +"What does that pin represent, whose estate?" inquired one, with envy +in her voice. + +"Don't the ring make the blood rush into your hand?" asked another; +"it looks so." + +"Does it?" I answered; "I'll hold up my hand in the air, as you do, to +make it white." + +"What is your father's business?" asked Elmira Sawyer, "is he a +tailor?" + +Her insolence made my head swim; but I did not reply. When recess was +over a few minutes afterward, I cried under the lid of my desk. These +girls overpowered me, for I could not conciliate them, and had no idea +of revenge, believing that their ridicule was deserved. But I thought +I should like to prove myself respectable. How could I? Grand'ther +_was_ a tailor, and I could not demean myself by assuring them that my +father was a gentleman. + +In the course of a month Aunt Mercy had my pink calico made up by +the best dressmaker in Barmouth. When I put it on I thought I looked +better than I ever had before, and went into school triumphantly +with it. The girls surveyed me in silence; but criticised me. At last +Charlotte Alden asked me in a whisper if old Mr. Warren made my dress. +She wrote on a piece of paper, in large letters--"Girls, don't let's +wear our pink calicoes again," and pushing it over to Elmira Sawyer, +made signs that the paper should be passed to all the girls. They read +it, and turning to Charlotte Alden nodded. I watched the paper as +it made its round, and saw Mary Bennett drop it on the floor with a +giggle. + +It was a rainy day, and we passed the recess indoors. I remained +quiet, looking over my lesson. "The first period ends with the +carboniferous system; the second includes the saliferous and magnesian +systems; the third comprises the oolitic and chalk systems; the +fourth--" "How attentive some people are to their lessons," I heard +Charlotte Alden say. Looking up, I saw her near me with Elmira Sawyer. + +"What is that you say?" I asked sharply. + +"I am not speaking to you." + +"I am angry," I said in a low tone, and rising, "and have borne +enough." + +"Who are _you_ that you should be angry? We have heard about your +mother, when she was in love, poor thing." + +I struck her so violent a blow in the face that she staggered +backward. "You are a liar," I said, "and you must let me alone." +Elmira Sawyer turned white, and moved away. I threw my book at her; it +hit her head, and her comb was broken by my geological systems. There +was a stir; Miss Black hurried from her desk, saying, "Young ladies, +what does this mean? Miss C. Morgeson, your temper equals your +vulgarity, I find. Take your seat in my desk." + +I obeyed her, and as we passed Mary Bennett's desk, where I saw the +paper fall, I picked it up. "See the good manners of your favorite, +Miss Black; read it." She bit her lips as she glanced over it, turned +back as if to speak to Charlotte Alden, looked at me again, and went +on: "Sit down, Miss C. Morgeson, and reflect on the blow you have +given. Will you ask pardon?" + +"I will not; you know that." + +"I have never resorted to severe punishment yet; but I fear I shall be +obliged to in your case." + +"Let me go from here." I clenched my hands, and tried to get up. She +held me down on the seat, and we looked close in each other's eyes. +"You are a bad girl." "And you are a bad woman," I replied; "mean and +cruel." She made a motion to strike me, but her hand dropped; I felt +my nostrils quiver strangely. "For shame," she said, in a tremulous +voice, and turned away. I sat on the bench at the back of the desk, +heartily tired, till school was dismissed; as Charlotte Alden passed +out, courtesying, Miss Black said she hoped she would extend a +Christian forgiveness to Miss C. Morgeson, for her unladylike +behavior. "Miss C. Morgeson is a peculiar case." + +She gave her a meaning look, which was not lost upon me. Charlotte +answered, "Certainly," and bowed to me gracefully, whereat I felt a +fresh sense of my demerits, and concluded that I was worsted in the +fray. + +Miss Black asked no explanation of the affair; it was dropped, and +none of the girls alluded to it by hint or look afterward. When I told +Aunt Mercy of it, she turned pale, and said she knew what Charlotte +Alden meant, and that perhaps mother would tell me in good time. + +"We had a good many troubles in our young days, Cassy." + + + + + + +CHAPTER X. + + +The atmosphere of my two lives was so different, that when I passed +into one, the other ceased to affect me. I forgot all that I suffered +and hated at Miss Black's, as soon as I crossed the threshold, and +entered grand'ther's house. The difference kept up a healthy mean; +either alone would perhaps have been more than I could then have +sustained. All that year my life was narrowed to that house, my +school, and the church. Father offered to take me to ride, when +he came to Barmouth, or carry me to Milford; but the motion of the +carriage, and the conveying power of the horse, created such a fearful +and realizing sense of escape, that I gave up riding with him. Aunt +Mercy seldom left home; my schoolmates did not invite me to visit +them; the seashore was too distant for me to ramble there; the +storehouses and wharves by the river-side offered no agreeable +saunterings; and the street, in Aunt Mercy's estimation, was not the +place for an idle promenade. My exercise, therefore, was confined +to the garden--a pleasant spot, now that midsummer had come, and +inhabited with winged and crawling creatures, with whom I claimed +companionship, especially with the red, furry caterpillars, that have, +alas, nearly passed away, and given place to a variegated, fantastic +tribe, which gentleman farmers are fond of writing about. + +Mother rode over to Barmouth occasionally, but seemed more glad when +she went away than when she came. Veronica came with her once, but +said she would come no more while I was there. She too would wait till +the end of the year, for I spoiled the place. She said this so calmly +that I never thought of being offended by it. I told her the episode +of the pink calico. "It is a lovely color," she said, when I showed it +to her. "If you like, I will take it home and burn it." + +As I developed the dramatic part of my story--the blow given Charlotte +Alden, Verry rubbed her face shrinkingly, as if she had felt the blow. +"Let me see your hand," she asked; "did I ever strike anybody?" + +"You threw a pail of salt downstairs, once, upon my head, and put out +my sight." + +"I wish, when you are home, you would pound Mr. Park; he talks too +much about the Resurrection. And," she added mysteriously, "he likes +mother." + +"Likes mother!" I said aghast. + +"He watches her so when she holds Arthur! Why do you stare at me? Why +do I talk to you? I am going. Now mind, I shall never leave home to go +to any school; I shall know enough without." + +While Veronica was holding this placable talk with me, I discovered in +her the high-bred air, the absence of which I deplored in myself. + +How cool and unimpressionable she looked! She did not attract me then. +My mind wandered to what I had heard Mary Bennett say, in recess one +day, that her brother had seen me in church, and came home with the +opinion that I was the handsomest girl in Miss Black's school. + +"Is it possible!" replied the girl to whom she had made the remark. "I +never should think of calling her pretty." + +"Stop, Veronica," I called; "am I pretty?" She turned back. "Everybody +in Surrey says so; and everybody says I am not." And she banged the +door against me. + +She did not come to Barmouth again. She was ill in the winter, and, +father told me, queerer than ever, and more trouble. The summer +passed, and I had no particular torment, except Miss Black's reference +to composition. I could not do justice to the themes she gave us, not +having the books from which she took them at command, and betrayed +an ignorance which excited her utmost contempt, on "The Scenery of +Singapore," "The Habits of the Hottentots," and "The Relative Merits +of Homer and Virgil." + +In October Sally and Ruth Aiken came for the fall sewing. They had +farmed it all summer, they said, and were tanned so deep a hue that +their faces bore no small resemblance to ham. Ruth brought me some +apples in an ochre-colored bag, and Sally eyed me with her old +severity. As they took their accustomed seats at the table, I thought +they had swallowed the interval of time which had gone by since they +left, so precisely the same was the moment of their leaving and that +of their coming back. I knew grand'ther no better than when I saw him +first. He was sociable to those who visited the house, but never with +those abiding in his family. Me he never noticed, except when I ate +less than usual; then he peered into my face, and said, "What ails +you?" We had the benefit of his taciturn presence continually, for he +rarely went out; and although he did not interfere with Aunt Mercy's +work, he supervised it, weighed and measured every article that was +used, and kept the cellar and garden in perfect order. + +It was approaching the season of killing the pig, and he conferred +often with Aunt Mercy on the subject. The weather was watched, and the +pig poked daily, in the hope that the fat was thickening on his ribs. +When the day of his destiny arrived, there was almost confusion in the +house, and for a week after, of evenings, grand'ther went about with a +lantern, and was not himself till a new occupant was obtained for the +vacant pen, and all his idiosyncracies revealed and understood. + +"Grand'ther," I asked, "will the beautiful pigeons that live in the +pig's roof like the horrid new pig?" + +"Yes," he answered, briskly rubbing his hands, "but they eat the pig's +corn; and I can't afford that; I shall have to shoot them, I guess." + +"Oh, don't, grand'ther." + +"I will this very day. Where's the gun, Mercy?" + +In an hour the pigeons were shot, except two which had flown away. + +"Why did you ask him not to shoot the pigeons?" said Aunt Mercy. "If +you had said nothing, he would not have done, it." + +"He is a disagreeable relation," I answered, "and I am glad he is a +tailor." + +Aunt Mercy reproved me; but the loss of the pigeons vexed her. Perhaps +grand'ther thought so, for that night he asked after her geraniums, +and told her that a gardener had promised him some fine slips for +her. She looked pleased, but did not thank him. There was already a +beautiful stand of flowers in the middle room, which was odorous the +year round with their perfume. + +The weather was now cold, and we congregated about the fire; for there +was no other comfortable room in the house. One afternoon, when I +was digging in Aunt Mercy's geranium pots, and picking off the dead +leaves, two deacons came to visit grand'ther, and, hovering over the +fire with him, complained of the lukewarmness of the church brethren +in regard to the spiritual condition of the Society. A shower of grace +was needed; there were reviving symptoms in some of the neighboring +churches, but none in Barmouth. Something must be done--a fast day +appointed, or especial prayer-meetings held. This was on Saturday; +the next day the ceremony of the Lord's Supper would take place, and +grand'ther recommended that the minister should be asked to suggest +something to the church which might remove it from its hardness. + +"Are the vessels scoured, Mercy?" he asked, after the deacons had +gone. + +"I have no sand." + +He presently brought her a biggin of fine white sand, which brought +the shore of Surrey to my mind's eye. I followed her as she carried +it to the well-room, where I saw, on the meal-chest, two large pewter +plates, two flagons of the same metal, and a dozen or more cups, some +of silver, and marked with the owner's name. They were soon cleaned. +Then she made a fire in the oven, and mixed loaves in a peculiar +shape, and launched them into the oven. She watched the bread +carefully, and took it out before it had time to brown. + +"This work belongs to the deacons' wives," she said; "but it has +been done in this house for years. The bread is not like ours--it is +unleavened." + +Grand'ther carried it into the church after she had cut it with a +sharp knife so that at the touch it would fall apart into square bits. +When the remains were brought back, I went to the closet, where they +were deposited, and took a piece of the bread, eating it reflectively, +to test its solemnizing powers. I felt none, and when Aunt Mercy +boiled the remnants with milk for a pudding, the sacred ideality of +the ceremony I had seen at church was destroyed for me. + +Was it a pity that my life was not conducted on Nature's plan, who +shows us the beautiful, while she conceals the interior? We do not see +the roots of her roses, and she hides from us her skeletons. + +November passed, with its Thanksgiving--the sole day of all the year +which grand'ther celebrated, by buying a goose for dinner, which goose +was stewed with rye dumplings, that slid over my plate like glass +balls. Sally and Ruth betook themselves to their farm, and hybernated. +December came, and with it a young woman named Caroline, to learn the +tailor's trade. Lively and pretty, she changed our atmosphere. +She broke the silence of the morning by singing the "Star-spangled +Banner," or the "Braes of Balquhither," and disturbed the monotony of +the evenings by making molasses candy, which grand'ther ate, and which +seemed to have a mollifying influence. Grand'ther kept his eye on +Caroline; but his eye had no disturbing effect. She had no perception +of his character; was fearless with him, and went contrary to all his +ideas, and he liked her for it. She even reproved him for keeping such +a long face. Her sewing, which was very bad, tried his patience so, +that if it had not been for her mother, who was a poor widow, he would +have given up the task of teaching her the trade. She said she knew +she couldn't learn it; what was the use of trying? She meant to go +West, and thought she might make a good home-missionary, as she did, +for she married a poor young man, who had forsaken the trade of a +cooper, to study for the ministry, and was helped off to Ohio by +the Society of Home Missions. She came to see me in Surrey ten years +afterward, a gaunt, hollow-eyed woman, of forbidding manners, and an +implacable faith in no rewards or punishments this side of the grave. + +I suffered so from the cold that December that I informed mother of +the fact by letter. She wrote back: + +"My child, have courage. One of these days you will feel a tender +pity, when you think of your mother's girlhood. You are learning how +she lived at your age. I trembled at the prosperity of your opening +life, and believed it best for you to have a period of contrast. I +thought you would, by and by, understand me better than I do myself; +for you are not like me, Cassy, you are like your father. You shall +never go back to Barmouth, unless you wish it. Dear Cassy, do you pray +any? I send you some new petticoats, and a shawl. Does Mercy warm the +bed for you? Your affectionate Mother." + +I dressed and undressed in Aunt Mercy's room, which was under the +roof, with benumbed fingers. My hair was like the coat of a cow in +frosty weather; it was so frowzy, and so divided against itself, that +when I tried to comb it, it streamed out like the tail of a comet. +Aunt Mercy discovered that I was afflicted with chilblains, and had +a good cry over them, telling me, at the same moment, that my French +slippers were the cause. We had but one fire in the house, except the +fire in the shop, which was allowed to go down at sunset. Sometimes +I found a remaining warmth in the goose, which had been left in +the ashes, and borrowed it for my stiffened fingers. I did not get +thoroughly warm all day, for the fire in the middle room, made of +green wood, was continually in the process of being stifled with a +greener stick, as the others kindled. The school-room was warm; but I +had a back seat by a window, where my feet were iced by a current, and +my head exposed to a draught. In January I had so bad an ague that +I was confined at home a week. But I grew fast in spite of all my +discomforts. Aunt Mercy took the tucks out of my skirts, and I burst +out where there were no tucks. I assumed a womanly shape. Stiff as +my hands were, and purple as were my arms, I could see that they were +plump and well shaped. I had lost the meagerness of childhood and +began to feel a new and delightful affluence. What an appetite I had, +too! + +"The creature will eat us out of house and home," said grand'ther one +day, looking at me, for him good-humoredly. + +"Well, don't shoot me, as you shot the pigeons." + +"Pah, have pigeons a soul?" + +In February the weather softened, and a great revival broke out. It +was the dullest time of the year in Barmouth. The ships were at +sea still, and the farmers had only to fodder their cattle, so that +everybody could attend the protracted meeting. It was the same as +Sunday at our house for nine days. Miss Black, in consequence of the +awakening, dismissed the school for two weeks, that the pupils might +profit in what she told us was The Scheme of Salvation. + +Caroline was among the first converts. I observed her from the moment +I was told she was under Conviction, till she experienced Religion. +She sang no more of mornings, and the making of molasses candy was +suspended in the evenings. I thought her less pleasing, and felt shy +of holding ordinary conversations with her, for had she not been set +apart for a mysterious work? I perceived that when she sewed between +meetings her work was worse done than ever; but grand'ther made no +mention of it. I went with Aunt Mercy to meetings three times a day, +and employed myself in scanning the countenances around me, curious to +discover the first symptoms of Conviction. + +One night when grand'ther came in to prayers, he told Aunt Mercy that +Pardon Hitch was awfully distressed in mind, in view of his sins. She +replied that he was always a good man. + +"As good as any unregenerate man can be." + +"I might as well be a thorough reprobate then," I thought, "like Sal +Thompson, who seems remarkably happy, as to try to behave as well as +Pardon Hitch, who is a model in Barmouth." + +When we went to church the next morning, I saw him in one of the back +pews, leaning against the rail, as if he had no strength. His face was +full of anguish. He sat there motionless all day. He was prayed for, +but did not seem to hear the prayers. At night his wife led him home. +By the end of the third day, he interrupted an exhorting brother by +rising, and uttering an inarticulate cry. We all looked. The tears +were streaming down his pale face, which was lighted up by a smile +of joy. He seemed like a man escaped from some great danger, torn, +bruised, breathless, but alive. The minister left the pulpit to shake +hands with him; the brethren crowded round to congratulate him, and +the meeting broke up at once. + +Neither grand'ther nor Aunt Mercy had spoken to me concerning +my interest in Religion; but on that very evening Mr. Boold, the +minister, came in to tea and asked me, while he was taking off his +overcoat, if I knew that Christ had died for me? I answered that I was +not sure of it. + +"Do you read your Bible, child?" + +"Every day." + +"And what does it teach you?" + +"I do not know." + +"Miss Mercy, I will thank you for another cup. 'Now is the day, and +now is the hour; come unto me all ye that labor and are heavy laden, I +will give you rest.'" + +"But I do not want rest; I have no burden," I said. + +"Cassandra," thundered grand'ther, "have you no respect for God nor +man?" + +"Have you read," went on the minister, "the memoir of Nathan +Dickerman? A mere child, he realized his burden of sin in time, and +died sanctified." + +I thought it best to say no more. Aunt Mercy looked disturbed, and +left the table as soon as she could with decency. + +"Cassandra," she said, when we were alone, "what will become of you?" + +"What will, indeed? You have always said that I was possessed. Why did +you not explain this fact to Mr. Boold?" + +She kissed me,--her usual treatment when she was perplexed. + +The revival culminated and declined. Sixty new members were admitted +into the church, and things settled into the old state. School was +resumed; I found that not one of my schoolmates had met with a change, +but Miss Black did not touch on the topic. My year was nearly out; +March had come and gone, and it was now April. One mild day, in +the latter part of the month, the girls went to the yard at recess. +Charlotte Alden said pleasantly that the weather was fair enough for +out-of-doors play, and asked if I would try the tilt. I gave a cordial +assent. We balanced the board so that each could seat herself, and +began to tilt slowly. As she was heavy, I was obliged to exert my +strength to keep my place, and move her. She asked if I dared to go +higher. "Oh yes, if you wish it." Happening to look round, I caught +her winking at the girls near us, and felt that she was brewing +mischief, but I had no time to dwell on it. She bore the end she was +on to the ground with a sudden jerk, and I fell from the other, some +eight feet, struck a stone, and fainted. + +The next thing that I recollect was Aunt Mercy's carrying me across +the street in her arms. She had seen my fall from the window. Reaching +the house, she let me slide on the floor in a heap, and began to wring +her hands and stamp her feet. + +"I am not hurt, Aunt Mercy." + +"You are nearly killed, you know you are. This is your last day at +that miserable school. I am going for the doctor, as soon as you say +you wont faint again." + +Thus my education at Miss Black's was finished with a blow. + +When Aunt Mercy represented to Miss Black that I was not to return to +school, and that she feared I had not made the improvement that was +expected, Miss Black asked, with hauteur, what had been expected--what +my friends _could_ expect. Aunt Mercy was intimidated, and retired as +soon as she had paid her the last quarter's bills. + +A week after my tournament with Charlotte Alden I went back to Surrey. +There was little preparation to make--few friends to bid farewell. +Ruth and Sally had emerged from their farm, and were sewing again at +grand'ther's. Sally bade me remember that riches took to themselves +wings and flew away; she _hoped_ they had not been a snare to my +mother; but she wasn't what she was, it was a fact. + +"No, she isn't," Ruth affirmed. "Do you remember, Sally, when she came +out to the farm once, and rode the white colt bare-back round the big +meadow, with her hair flying?" + +"Hold your tongue, Ruth." + +Ruth looked penitent as she gave me a paper of hollyhock seeds, and +said the flowers were a beautiful blood-red, and that I must plant +them near the sink drain. Caroline had already gone home, so Aunt +Mercy had nothing cheery but her plants and her snuff; for she had +lately contracted the habit of snuff-taking but very privately. + +"Train her well, Locke; she is skittish," said grand'ther as we got +into the chaise to go home. + +"Grand'ther, if I am ever rich enough to own a peaked-roof pig-sty, +will you come and see me?" + +"Away with you." And he went nimbly back to the house, chafing his +little hands. + + + + + + +CHAPTER XI. + + +I was going home! When we rode over the brow of the hill within a +mile of Surrey, and I saw the crescent-shaped village, and the tall +chimneys of our house on its outer edge, instead of my heart leaping +for joy, as I had expected, a sudden indifference filled it. I felt +averse to the change from the narrow ways of Barmouth, which, for the +moment, I regretted. When I entered the house, and saw mother in her +old place, her surroundings unaltered, I suffered a disappointment. +I had not had the power of transferring the atmosphere of my year's +misery to Surrey. + +The family gathered round me. I heard the wonted sound of the banging +of doors. "The doors at grand'ther's," I mused, "had list nailed +round their edges; but then he _had_ the list, being a tailor." + +"I vum," said Temperance, with her hand on her hip, and not offering to +approach me, "your hair is as thick as a mop." + +Hepsey, rubbing her fingers against her thumb, remarked that she +hoped learning had not taken away my appetite. "I have made an Indian +bannock for you, and we are going to have broiled sword-fish, besides, +for supper. Is it best to cook more, Mrs. Morgeson, now that Cassandra +has come?" + +The boy, by name Charles, came to see the new arrival, but smitten +with diffidence crept under the table, and examined me from his +retreat. + +"Don't you wish to see Arthur?" inquired mother; "he is getting his +double teeth." + +"Oh yes, and where's Veronica?" + +"She's up garret writing geography, and told me nothing in the world +must disturb her, till she had finished an account of the city of +Palmiry," said Temperance. + +"Call her when supper is ready," replied mother, who asked me to come +into the bedroom where Arthur was sleeping. He was a handsome child, +large and fair, and as I lifted his white, lax fingers, a torrent of +love swept through me, and I kissed him. + +"I am afraid I make an idol of him, Cassy." + +"Are you unhappy because you love him so well, mother, and feel that +you must make expiation?" + +"Cassandra," she spoke with haste, "did you experience any shadow of a +change during the revival at Barmouth?" + +"No more than the baby here did." + +"I shall have faith, though, that it will be well with you, because +you have had the blessing of so good a man as your grand'ther." + +"But I never heard a word of grand'ther's prayers. Do you remember his +voice?" + +A smile crept into her blue eye, as she said: "My hearing him, or not, +would make no difference, since God could hear and answer." + +"Grand'ther does not like me; I never pleased him." + +She looked astonished, then reflective. It occurred to her that she, +also, had been no favorite of his. She changed the subject. We talked +on what had happened in Surrey, and commenced a discussion on my +wardrobe, when we were summoned to tea. Temperance brought Arthur to +the table half asleep, but he roused when she drummed on his plate +with a spoon. Hepsey was stationed by the bannock, knife in hand, to +serve it. As we began our meal, Veronica came in from the kitchen, +with a plate of toasted crackers. She set the plate down, and gravely +shook hands with me, saying she had concluded to live entirely on +toast, but supposed I would eat all sorts of food, as usual. She had +grown tall; her face was still long and narrow, but prettier, and +her large, dark eyes had a slight cast, which gave her face an +indescribable expression. Distant, indifferent, and speculative as the +eyes were, a ray of fire shot into them occasionally, which made her +gaze powerful and concentrated. I was within a month of sixteen, and +Veronica was in her thirteenth year; but she looked as old as I did. +She carefully prepared her toast with milk and butter, and ate it in +silence. The plenty around me, the ease and independence, gave me a +delightful sense of comfort. The dishes were odd, some of china, some +of delf, and were continually moved out of their places, for we helped +ourselves, although Temperance stayed in the room, ostensibly as a +waiter. She was too much engaged in conversation to fulfill her duties +that way. I looked round the room; nothing had been added to it, +except red damask curtains, which were out of keeping with the +old chintz covers. It was a delightful room, however; the blue sea +glimmered between the curtains, and, turning my eyes toward it, my +heart gave the leap which I had looked for. I grew blithe as I saw it +winking under the rays of the afternoon sun, and, clapping my hands, +said I was glad to get home. We left Veronica at the table, and mother +resumed her conversation with me in a corner of the room. Presently +Temperance came in with Charles, bringing fresh plates. As soon +as they began their supper, Veronica asked Temperance how the fish +tasted. + +"Is it salt?" + +"Middling." + +"How is the bannock?" + +"Excellent. I will say it for Hepsey that she hasn't her beat as a +cook; been at it long enough," she added, in expiation of her praise. + +"Temperance, is that pound cake, or sponge?" + +"Pound." + +"Charles can eat it," Verry said with a sigh. + +"A mighty small piece he'll have--the glutton. But he has not been +here long; they are all so when they first come." + +She then gave him a large slice of the cake. + +Veronica, contrary to her wont, huddled herself on the sofa. Arthur +played round the chair of mother, who looked happy and forgetful. +After Temperance had rearranged the table for father's supper we were +quiet. I meditated how I could best amuse myself, where I should go, +and what I should do, when Veronica, whom I had forgotten, interrupted +my thoughts. + +"Mother," she said, "eating toast does not make me better-tempered; +I feel evil still. You know," turning to me, "that my temper is worse +than ever; it is like a tiger's." + +"Oh, Verry," said mother, "not quite so bad; you are too hard upon +yourself." + +"Mother, you said so to Hepsey, when I tore her turban from her head, +it was _so_ ugly. Can you forget you said such a thing?" + +"Verry, you drive me wild. Must I say that I was wrong? Say so to my +own child?" + +Verry turned her face to the wall and said no more; but she had +started a less pleasant train of thought. It was changed again by +Temperance coming with lights. Though the tall brass lamps glittered +like gold, their circle of light was small; the corners of the room +were obscure. Mr. Park, entering, retreated into one, and mother was +obliged to forego the pleasure of undressing Arthur; so she sent him +off with Temperance and Charles, whose duty it was to rock the cradle +as long as his babyship required. + +Soon after father came, and Hepsey brought in his hot supper; while he +was eating it, Grandfather John Morgeson bustled in. As he shook hands +with me, I saw that his hair had whitened; he held a tasseled cane +between his knees, and thumped the floor whenever he asked a question. +Mr. Park buzzed about the last Sunday's discourse, and mother listened +with a vague, respectful attention. Her hand was pressed against her +breast, as if she were repressing an inward voice which claimed her +attention. Leaning her head against her chair, she had quite pushed +out her comb, her hair dropped on her shoulder, and looked like a +brown, coiled serpent. Veronica, who had been silently observing her, +rose from the sofa, picked up the comb, and fastened her hair, without +speaking. As she passed she gave me a dark look. + +"Eh, Verry," said father, "are you there? Were you glad to see Cassy +home again?" + +"Should I be glad? What can _she_ do?" + +Grandfather pursed up his mouth, and turned toward mother, as if he +would like to say: "You understand bringing up children, don't you?" + +She comprehended him, and, giving her head a slight toss, told Verry +to go and play on the piano. + +"I was going," she answered pettishly, and darting out a moment after +we heard her. + +Grandfather went, and presently Mr. Park got up in a lingering way, +said that Verry must learn to play for the Lord, and bade us "Good +night." But he came back again, to ask me if I would join Dr. Snell's +Bible Class. It would meet the next evening; the boys and girls of my +own age went. I promised him to go, wondering whether I should meet an +ancient beau, Joe Bacon. Mother retired; Verry still played. + +"Her talent is wonderful," said father, taking the cigar from his +mouth. "By the way, you must take lessons in Milford; I wish you would +learn to sing." I acquiesced, but I had no wish to learn to play. I +could never perform mechanically what I heard now from Verry. When she +ceased, I woke from a dream, chaotic, but not tumultuous, beautiful, +but inharmonious. Though the fire had gone out, the lamps winked +brightly, and father, moving his cigar to the other side of his mouth, +changed his regards from one lamp to the other, and said he thought +I was growing to be an attractive girl. He asked me if I would take +pains to make myself an accomplished one also? I must, of course, be +left to myself in many things; but he hoped that I would confide in +him, if I did not ask his advice. A very strong relation of reserve +generally existed between parent and child, instead of a confidential +one, and the child was apt to discover that reserve on the part of the +parent was not superiority, but cowardice, or indifference. "Let it +not be so with us," was his conclusion. He threw away the stump of +his cigar, and went to fasten the hall-door. I took one of the brass +lamps, proposing to go to bed. As I passed through the upper entry, +Veronica opened her door. She was undressed, and had a little book +in her hand, which she shook at me, saying, "There is the day of the +month put down on which you came home; and now mind," then shut the +door. I pondered over what father had said; he had perceived something +in me which I was not aware of. I resolved to think seriously over it; +in the morning I found I had not thought of it at all. + + + + + + +CHAPTER XII. + + +The next evening I dressed my hair after the fashion of the Barmouth +girls, with the small pride of wishing to make myself look different +from the Surrey girls. I expected they would stare at me in the Bible +Class. It would be my debut as a grown girl, and I must offer myself +to their criticism. I went late, so that I might be observed by the +assembled class. It met in the upper story of Temperance Hall--a new +edifice. As I climbed the steep stairs, Joe Bacon's head came in view; +he had stationed himself on a bench at the landing to watch for my +arrival, of which he had been apprized by our satellite, Charles. Joe +was the first boy who had ever offered his arm as my escort home from +a party. After that event I had felt that there was something between +us which the world did not understand. I was flattered, therefore, +at the first glimpse of him on this occasion. When Dr. Snell made his +opening prayer, Joe thrust a Bible before me, open at the lesson of +the evening, and then, rubbing his nose with embarrassment, fixed his +eyes with timid assurance on the opposite wall. Several of my Morgeson +cousins were present, greeting me with sniffs. But I was disappointed +in Joe Bacon; how young and shabby he looked! He wore a monkey jacket, +probably a remnant of his sea-going father's wardrobe. He had done +his best, however, for his hair was greased, and combed to a marble +smoothness; its sleekness vexed me, not remembering at that moment the +pains I had taken to dress my own hair, for a more ignoble end. + +The girls gathered round me, after the class was dismissed; and when +Dr. Snell came down from his desk, he said he was glad to see me, +and that I must come to his rooms to look over the new books he had +received. Dr. Snell was no exception to the rule that a minister must +not be a native among his own people. His long residence in Surrey had +failed to make him appear like one. A bachelor, with a small +private fortune, his style of living differed from the average +of Congregational parsons. His library was the only lion in our +neighborhood. His taste as a collector made him known abroad, and he +had a reputation which was not dreamed of by his parishioners, +who thought him queer and simple. He loved old fashions; wore +knee-breeches, and silver buckles in his shoes; brewed metheglin in +his closet, and drank it from silver-pegged flagons; and kept diet +bread on a salver to offer his visitors. He lived near us on the north +road, and was very much afraid of his landlady, Mrs. Grossman, who +sat in terrible state in her parlor, the year through, wearing a black +satin cloak and an awful structure of a cap, which had a potent nod. + +I was pleased with Dr. Snell's notice; his smile was courtly and his +bow Grandisonian. + +Joe Bacon was waiting at the foot of the stairs. He obtruded his arm, +and hoarsely muttered, "See you home." I took it, and we marched along +silently, till we were beyond the sound of voices. He began, rather +inarticulately, to say how glad he was to see me, and that he hoped +he was going to have better times now; but I could make no response +to his wishes; the suspicion that he had a serious liking for me was +disgusting. As he talked on I grew irritable, and replied shortly. +When we reached our house, I slipped my hand from his arm, and ran +up the steps, turning back with my hand on the door-knob to say, +"Good-night." The lamp in the hall shone through the fanlight upon +his face; it looked intelligent with pain. I skipped down the steps. +"Please open the door, Joe." He brightened, but before he could comply +with my request Temperance flung it wide, for the purpose of making a +survey of the clouds and guessing at to-morrow's weather. His retreat +was precipitate. + +"Oh ho," said Temperance, "a feller came home with you. We shall have +somebody sitting up a-Thursday nights, I reckon, before long." + +"Nonsense with your Thursday nights." + +"Everybody is just alike. We shall have rain, see if we don't; rain or +no rain, I'll whitewash to-morrow." + +Poor Joe! That night ended my first sentiment. He died with the +measles in less than a month. + +"I wish," said Temperance, who was spelling over a newspaper, "that +Dr. Snell would come in before the plum-cake is gone, that Hepsey made +last. The old dear loves it; he is always hungry. I candidly believe +Mis Grossman keeps him short." + +I expected that Temperance would break out then about Joe; but she +never mentioned him, except to tell me that she had heard of his +death. She did not whitewash the next day, for Charles came down with +the measles, and was tended by her with a fretful tenderness. Veronica +was seized soon after, and then Arthur, and then I had them. Veronica +was the worst patient. When her room was darkened she got out of bed, +tore down the quilt that was fastened to the window, and broke three +panes of glass before she could be captured and taken back. The quilt +was not put up again, however. She cried with anger, unless her hands +were continually washed with lavender water, and made little pellets +of cotton which she stuffed in her ears and nose, so that she might +not hear or smell. + +I went to Dr. Snell's as soon as I was able. He was in his bedchamber, +writing a sermon on fine note-paper, and had disarranged the wide +ruffles of his shirt so that he looked like a mildly angry turkey. +Thrusting his spectacles up into the roots of his hair, he rose, +and led me into a large room adjoining his bedroom, which contained +nothing but tall bookcases, threw open the doors of one, pushed up a +little ladder before it, for me to mount to a row of volumes bound in +calf, whose backs were labeled "British Classics." "There," he said, +"you will find 'The Spectator,'" and trotted back to his sermon, with +his pen in his mouth. I examined the books, and selected Tom Jones and +Goldsmith's Plays to take home. From that time I grazed at pleasure in +his oddly assorted library, ranging from "The Gentleman's Magazine" +to a file of the "Boston Recorder"; but never a volume of poetry +anywhere. I became a devourer of books which I could not digest, and +their influence located in my mind curious and inconsistent relations +between facts and ideas. + +My music lessons in Milford were my only task. I remained inapt, while +Veronica played better and better; when I saw her fingers interpreting +her feelings, touching the keys of the piano as if they were the +chords of her thoughts, practice by note seemed a soulless, mechanical +effort, which I would not make. One day mother and I were reading the +separate volumes of charming Miss Austen's "Mansfield Park," when a +message arrived from Aunt Mercy, with the news of Grand'ther Warren's +dangerous illness. Mother dropped her book on the floor, but I turned +down the leaf where I was reading. She went to Barmouth immediately, +and the next day grand'ther died. He gave all he had to Aunt Mercy, +except six silver spoons, which he directed the Barmouth silversmith +to make for Caroline, who was now married to her missionary. Mother +came home to prepare for the funeral. When the bonnets, veils, and +black gloves came home, Veronica declared she would not go. As she had +been allowed to stay away from Grand'ther Warren living, why should +she be forced to go to him when dead? She was so violent in her +opposition that mother ordered Temperance to keep her in her room. +Father tried to persuade her, but she grew white, and trembled so that +he told her she should stay at home. While we were gone she sent her +bonnet to the Widow Smith's daughter, who appeared in the Poor Seats +wearing it, on the very Sunday after the funeral, when we all went +to church in our mourning to make the discovery, which discomposed us +exceedingly. + +All the church were present at grand'ther's funeral,--obsequies, as +Mr. Boold called it, who exalted his character and behavior so greatly +in his discourse that his nearest friends would not have recognized +him, although everybody knew that he was a good man. Mr. Boold +expatiated on his tenderness and delicate appreciation, and his +study of the feelings and wants of others, till he was moved to tears +himself by the picture he drew. I thought of the pigeons he had shot, +and of the summary treatment he gave me--of his coldness and silence +toward Aunt Mercy, and my eyes remained dry; but mother and Aunt Mercy +wept bitterly. After it was over, and they had gone back to the empty +house, they removed their heavy bonnets, kissed each other, said they +knew that he was in heaven, and held a comforting conversation about +the future; but my mind was chained to the edge of the yawning grave +into which I had seen his coffin lowered. + +"Shut up the old shell, Mercy," said father. "Come, and live with us." + +She was rejoiced at the prospect, for the life at our house was +congenial, and she readily and gratefully consented. She came in a few +days, with a multitude of boxes, and her plants. Mother established +her in the room next the stairs--good place for her, Veronica said, +for she could be easily locked out of our premises. The plants were +placed on a new revolving stand, which stood on the landing-place +beneath the stair window. Veronica was so delighted with them that she +made amicable overtures to Aunt Mercy, and never quarreled with her +afterward, except when she was ill. She entreated her to leave off her +bombazine dresses; the touch of them interfered with her feelings for +her, she said; in fact, their contact made her crawl all over. + +Aunt Mercy took upon herself many of mother's irksome cares; such +as remembering where the patches and old linen were--the hammer and +nails; watching the sweetmeat pots; keeping the run of the napkins and +blankets; packing the winter clothing, and having an eye on mice and +ants, moth and mold. Occasionally she read a novel; but was faithful +to all the week-day meetings, making the acquaintance thereby of +mother's tea-drinking friends, who considered her an accomplished +person, because she worked lace so beautifully, and had _such_ a +faculty for raising plants! Mother left the house in her charge, and +made several journeys with father this year. This period was perhaps +her happiest. The only annoyance, visible to me, that I can remember, +was one between her and father on the subject of charity. He was for +giving to all needy persons, while she only desired to bestow it on +the deserving, but they had renounced the wish of manufacturing +each other's habits and opinions. Whether mother ever desired the +expression of that exaltation of feeling which only lasts in a man +while he is in love, I cannot say. It was not for me to know her +heart. It is not ordained that these beautiful secrets of feeling +should be revealed, where they might prove to be the sweetest +knowledge we could have. + +Though the days flew by, days filled with the busy nothings of +prosperity, they bore no meaning. I shifted the hours, as one shifts +the kaleidoscope, with an eye only to their movement. Neither the +remembrance of yesterday nor the hope of to-morrow stimulated me. The +mere fact of breathing had ceased to be a happiness, since the day I +entered Miss Black's school. But I was not yet thoughtful. As for my +position, I was loved and I was hated, and it pleased me as much to be +hated as to be loved. My acquaintances were kind enough to let me know +that I was generally thought proud, exacting, ill-natured, and apt +to expect the best of everything. But one thing I know of myself +then--that I concealed nothing; the desires and emotions which are +usually kept as a private fund I displayed and exhausted. My audacity +shocked those who possessed this fund. My candor was called anything +but truthfulness; they named it sarcasm, cunning, coarseness, or tact, +as those were constituted who came in contact with me. Insight into +character, frankness, generosity, disinterestedness, were sometimes +given me. Veronica alone was uncompromising; she put aside by instinct +what baffled or attracted others, and, setting my real value upon me, +acted accordingly. I do not accuse her of injustice, but of a fierce +harshness which kept us apart for long years. As for her, she was +the most reticent girl I ever knew, and but for her explosive temper, +which betrayed her, she would have been a mystery. The difference in +our physical constitutions would have separated us, if there had been +no other cause. The weeks that she was confined to her room, preyed +upon by some inscrutable disease, were weeks of darkness and solitude. +Temperance and Aunt Merce took as much care of her as she would allow; +but she preferred being alone most of the time. Thus she acquired +the fortitude of an Indian; pain could extort no groan from her. +It reacted on her temper, though, for after an attack she was +exasperating. Her invention was put to the rack to tease and offend. +I kept out of her way; if by chance she caught sight of me, she forced +me to hear the bitter truth of myself. Sometimes she examined me to +learn if I had improved by the means which father so _generously_ +provided for me. "Is he not yet tired of his task?" she asked once. +And, "Do you carry everything before you, with your wide eyebrows and +sharp teeth? Temperance, where's the Buffon Dr. Snell sent me? I want +to classify Cass." + +"I'll warrant you'll find her a sheep," Temperance replied. + +"Sheep are innocent," said Veronica. "You may go," nodding to me, over +the book, and Temperance also made energetic signs to me to go, and +not bother the poor girl. + +Always regarding her from the point of view she presented, I felt +little love for her; her peculiarities offended me as they did mother. +We did not perceive the process, but Verry was educated by sickness; +her mind fed and grew on pain, and at last mastered it. The darkness +in her nature broke; by slow degrees she gained health, though never +much strength. Upon each recovery a change was visible; a spiritual +dawn had risen in her soul; moral activity blending with her ideality +made her life beautiful, even in the humblest sense. Veronica! you +were endowed with genius; but while its rays penetrated you, we did +not see them. How could we profit by what you saw and heard, when we +were blind and deaf? To us, the voices of the deep sang no epic of +grief; the speech of the woods was not articulate; the sea-gull's +flashing flight, and the dark swallow's circling sweep, were facts +only. Sunrise and sunset were not a paean to day and night, but five +o'clock A.M. or P.M. The seasons that came and went were changes +from hot to cold; to you, they were the moods of nature, which found +response in those of your own life and soul; her storms and calms were +pulses which bore a similitude to the emotions of your heart! + +Veronica's habits of isolation clung to her; she would never leave +home. The teaching she had was obtained in Surrey. But her knowledge +was greater than mine. When I went to Rosville she was reading +"Paradise Lost," and writing her opinions upon it in a large blank +book. She was also devising a plan for raising trees and flowers +in the garret, so that she might realize a picture of a tropical +wilderness. Her tastes were so contradictory that time never hung +heavy with her; though she had as little practical talent as any +person I ever knew, she was a help to both sick and well. She +remembered people's ill turns, and what was done for them; and for the +well she remembered dates and suggested agreeable occupations--gave +them happy ideas. Besides being a calendar of domestic traditions, she +was weather-wise, and prognosticated gales, meteors, high tides, and +rains. + +Home, father said, was her sphere. All that she required, he thought +he could do; but of me he was doubtful. Where did I belong? he asked. + +I was still "possessed," Aunt Merce said, and mother called me +"lawless." "What upon earth are you coming to?" asked Temperance. "You +are sowing your wild oats with a vengeance." + +"Locke Morgeson's daughter can do anything," commented the villagers. +In consequence of the unlimited power accorded me I was unpopular. +"Do you think she is handsome?" inquired my friends of each other. "In +what respect _can_ she be called a beauty?" "Though she reads, she +has no great wit," said one. "She dresses oddly for effect," another +avowed, "and her manners are ridiculous." But they borrowed my dresses +for patterns, imitated my bonnets, and adopted my colors. When I +learned to manage a sailboat, they had an aquatic mania. When I +learned to ride a horse, the ancient and moth-eaten sidesaddles of the +town were resuscitated, and old family nags were made back-sore +with the wearing of them, and their youthful spirits revived by new +beginners sliding about on their rounded sides. My whims were sneered +at, and then followed. Of course I was driven from whim to whim, to +keep them busy, and to preserve my originality, and at last I became +eccentric for eccentricity's sake. All this prepared the way for my +Nemesis. But as yet my wild oats were green and flourishing in the +field of youth. + + + + + + +CHAPTER XIII. + + +I was preaching one day to mother and Aunt Merce a sermon after the +manner of Mr. Boold, of Barmouth, taking the sofa for a desk, and +for my text "Like David's Harp of solemn sound," and had attracted +Temperance and Charles into the room by my declamation, when my +audience was unexpectedly increased by the entrance of father, with a +strange gentleman. Aunt Merce laughed hysterically; I waved my hand to +her, _à la_ Boold, and descended from my position. + +"Take a chair," said Temperance, who was never abashed, thumping one +down before the stranger. + +"What is all this?" inquired father. + +"Only a _Ranz des Vaches_, father, to please Aunt Merce." + +The stranger's eyes were fastened upon me, while father introduced us +to "Mr. Charles Morgeson, of Rosville." + +"Please receive me as a relative," he said, turning to shake hands +with mother. "We have an ancestor in common that makes a sufficient +cousinship for a claim, Mrs. Morgeson." + +"Why not have looked us up before?" I asked. + +"Why," said Veronica, who had just come in, "there are six Charles +Morgesons buried in our graveyard." + +"I supposed," he said, "that the name was extinct. I lately saw your +father's in a State Committee List, and feeling curious regarding it, +I came here." + +He bowed distantly to Veronica when she entered, but she did not +return his bow, though she looked at him fixedly. Temperance and +Hepsey hurried up a fine supper immediately. A visitor was a creature +to be fed. Feeding together removes embarrassment, and before supper +was over we were all acquainted with Mr. Morgeson. There were three +cheerful old ladies spending the week with us--the widow Desire +Carver, and her two maiden sisters, Polly and Serepta Chandler. +They filled the part of chorus in the domestic drama, saying, "Aha," +whenever there was a pause. Veronica affected these old ladies +greatly, and when they were in the house gave them her society. But +for their being there at this time, I doubt whether she would have +seen Mr. Morgeson again. That evening she played for them. Her wild, +pathetic melodies made our visitor's gray eyes flash with pleasure, +and light up his cold face with gleams of feeling; but she was not +gratified by his interest. "I think it strange that you should like my +music," she said crossly. + +"Do you" he answered, amused at her tone, "perhaps it is; but why +should I not as well as your friends here?" indicating the old ladies. + +"Ah, we like it very much," said the three, clicking their +snuff-boxes. + +"You, too, play?" he asked me. + +"Miss Cassy don't play," answered the three, looking at me over their +spectacles. "Miss Verry's sun puts out her fire." + +"Cassandra does other things better than playing," Veronica said to +Mr. Morgeson. + +"Why, Veronica," I said, surprised, going toward her. + +"Go off, go off," she replied, in an undertone, and struck up a loud +march. He had heard her, and while she played looked at her earnestly. +Then, seeming to forget the presence of the three, he turned and put +out his hand to me, with an authority I did not resist. I laid my hand +in his; it was not grasped, but upheld. Veronica immediately stopped +playing. + +He stayed several days at our house. After the first evening we found +him taciturn. He played with Arthur, spoke of his children to him, +and promised him a pony if he would go to Rosville. With father he +discussed business matters, and went out with him to the shipyards and +offices. I scarcely remember that he spoke to me, except in a casual +way, more than once. He asked me if I knew whether the sea had any +influence upon me; I replied that I had not thought of it. "There are +so many things you have not thought of," he answered, "that this is +not strange." + +Veronica observed him closely; he was aware of it, but was not +embarrassed; he met her dark gaze with one keener than her own, and +neither talked with the other. The morning he went away, while the +chaise was waiting, which was to go to Milford to meet the stagecoach, +and he was inviting us to visit him, a thought seemed to strike +him. "By the way, Morgeson, why not give Miss Cassandra a finish at +Rosville? I have told you of our Academy, and of the advantages +which Rosville affords in the way of society. What do you say, Mrs. +Morgeson, will you let her come to my house for a year?" + +"Locke decides for Cassy," she answered; "I never do now," looking at +me reproachfully. + +Cousin Charles's hawk eyes caught the look, and he heard me too, when +I tapped her shoulder till she turned round and smiled. I whispered, +"Mother, your eyes are as blue as the sea yonder, and I love you." She +glanced toward it; it was murmuring softly, creeping along the shore, +licking the rocks and sand as if recognizing a master. And I saw and +felt its steady, resistless heaving, insidious and terrible. + +"Well," said father, "we will talk of it on the way to Milford." + +"I have a kinder of a-creeping about your Cousin Charles, as you call +him," said Temperance, after she had closed the porch door. "He is too +much shut up for me. How's Mis Cousin Charles, I wonder?" + +"He is fond of flowers," remarked Aunt Merce; "he examined all my +plants, and knew all their botanical names." + +"That's a balm for every wound with you, isn't it?" Temperance said. +"I spose I can clean the parlor, unless Mis Carver and Chandler are +sitting in a row there?" + +Veronica, who had hovered between the parlor and the hall while Cousin +Charles was taking his leave, so that she might avoid the necessity +of any direct notice of him, had heard his proposition about Rosville, +said, "Cassandra will go there." + +"Do you feel it in your bones, Verry?" Temperance asked. + +"Cassandra does." + +"Do I? I believe I do." + +"You are eighteen; you are too old to go to school." + +"But I am not too old to have an agreeable time; besides, I am not +eighteen, and shall not be till four days from now." + +"You think too much of having a good time, Cassandra," said mother. "I +foresee the day when the pitcher will come back from the well broken. +You are idle and frivolous; eternally chasing after amusement." + +"God knows I don't find it." + +"I know you are not happy." + +"Tell me," I cried, striking the table with my hand, making Veronica +wink, "tell me how to feel and act." + +"I have no influence with you, nor with Veronica." + +"Because," said Verry, "we are all so different; but I like you, +mother, and all that you do." + +"Different!" she exclaimed, "children talk to parents about a +difference between them." + +"I never thought about it before." I said, "but _where_ is the family +likeness?" + +Aunt Merce laughed. + +"There's the Morgesons," I continued, "I hate 'em all." + +"All?" she echoed; "you are like this new one." + +"And Grand'ther Warren"--I continued. + +"Your talk," interrupted Aunt Merce, jumping up and walking about, "is +enough to make him rise out of his grave." + +"I believe," said Veronica, "that Grand'ther Warren nearly crushed +you and mother, when girls of our age. Did you know that you had any +wants then? or dare to dream anything beside that he laid down for +you?" + +Aunt Merce and mother exchanged glances. + +"Say, mother, what shall I do?" I asked again. + +"Do," she answered in a mechanical voice; "read the Bible, and sew +more." + +"Veronica's life is not misspent," she continued, and seeming to +forget that Verry was still there. "Why should she find work for her +hands when neither you nor I do?" + +Veronica slipped out of the room; and I sat on the floor beside +mother. I loved her in an unsatisfactory way. What could we be to +each other? We kissed tenderly; I saw she was saddened by something +regarding me, which she could not explain, because she refused to +explain me naturally. I thought she wished me to believe she could +have no infirmity in common with me--no temptations, no errors--that +she must repress all the doubts and longings of her heart for +example's sake. + +There was a weight upon me all that day, a dreary sense of +imperfection. + +When father came home he asked me if I would like to go to Rosville. +I answered, "Yes." Mother must travel with me, for he could not leave +home. The sooner I went the better. He also thought Veronica should +go. She was called and consulted, and, provided Temperance would +accompany us to take care of her, she consented. It was all arranged +that evening. Temperance said we must wait a week at least, for her +corns to be cured, and the plum-colored silk made, which had been shut +up in a band-box for three years. + +We started on our journey one bright morning in June, to go to Boston +in a stagecoach, a hundred miles from Surrey, and thence to Rosville, +forty miles further, by railroad. We stopped a night on the way +to Boston at a country inn, which stood before an egg-shaped +pond. Temperance remade our beds, declaiming the while against the +unwholesome situation of the house; the idea of anybody's living in +the vicinity of fresh water astonished her; to impose upon travelers' +health that way was too much. She went to the kitchen to learn whether +the landlady cooked, or hired a cook. She sat up all night with our +luggage in sight, to keep off what she called "prowlers"--she did +not like to say robbers, for fear of exciting our imaginations--and +frightened us by falling out of her chair toward morning. Veronica +insisted upon her going to bed, but she refused, till Veronica +threatened to sit up herself, when she carried her own carpet-bag to +bed with her. + +We arrived in Boston the next day and went to the Bromfield House in +Bromfield Street, whither father had directed us. We were ushered to +the parlor by a waiter, who seemed struck by Temperance, and who was +treated by her with respect. "Mr. Shepherd, the landlord, himself, I +guess," she whispered. + +Three cadaverous children were there eating bread and butter from a +black tray on the center-table. + +"Good Lord!" exclaimed Temperance, "what bread those children are +eating! It is made of sawdust." + +"It's good, you old cat," screamed the little girl. + +Veronica sat down by her, and offered her some sugar-plums, which the +child snatched from her hand. + +"We are missionaries," said the oldest boy, "and we are going to +Bombay next week in the _Cabot_. I'll make the natives gee, I tell +ye." + +"Mercy on us!" exclaimed Temperance, "did you ever?" + +Presently a sickly, gentle-looking man entered, in a suit of black +camlet, and carrying an umbrella; he took a seat by the children, and +ran his fingers through his hair, which already stood upright. + +"That girl gave Sis some sugar-plums," remarked the boy. + +"I hope you thanked her, Clarissa," said the father. + +"No; she didn't give me enough," the child answered. + +"They have no mother," the poor man said apologetically to Veronica, +looking up at her, and, as he caught her eye, blushing deeply. She +bowed, and moved away. Mother rang the bell, and when the waiter came +gave him a note for Mr. Shepherd, which father had written, bespeaking +his attention. Mr. Shepherd soon appeared, and conveyed us to two +pleasant rooms with an unmitigated view of the wall of the next house +from the windows. + +"This," remarked Temperance, "is worse than the pond." + +Mr. Shepherd complimented mother on her fine daughters; hoped Mr. +Morgeson would run for Congress soon told her she should have the best +the house afforded, and retired. + +I wanted to shop, and mother gave me money. I found Washington Street, +and bought six wide, embroidered belts, a gilt buckle, a variety of +ribbons, and a dozen yards of lace. I repented the whole before I got +back; for I saw other articles I wanted more. I found mother alone; +Temperance had gone out with Veronica, she said, and she had given +Veronica the same amount of money, curious to know how she would +spend it, as she had never been shopping. It was nearly dark when they +returned. + +"I like Boston," said Verry. + +"But what have you bought?" + +She displayed a beautiful gold chain, and a little cross for the +throat; a bundle of picture-books for the missionary children; a +sewing-silk shawl for Hepsey, and some toys for Arthur. + +"To-morrow, _I_ shall go shopping," said mother. "What did you buy, +Temperance?" + +"A mean shawl. In my opinion, Boston is a den of thieves." + +She untied a box, from which she took a sky-blue silk shawl, with +brown flowers woven in it. + +"I gave eighteen dollars for it, if I gave a cent, Mis Morgeson; I +know I am cheated. It's sleazy, isn't it?" + +The bell for tea rang, and Mr. Shepherd came up to escort us to the +table. Temperance delayed us, to tie on a silk apron, to protect +the plum-colored silk, for, as she observed to Mr. Shepherd, she was +afraid it would show grease badly. I could not help exchanging smiles +with Mr. Shepherd, which made Veronica frown. The whole table stared +as we seated ourselves, for we derived an importance from the fact +that we were under the personal charge of the landlord. + +"How they gawk at you," whispered Temperance. I felt my color rise. + +"The gentlemen do not guess that we are sisters," said Veronica +quietly. + +"How do I look?" I asked. + +"You know how, and that I do not agree with your opinion. You look +cruel." + +"I am cruel hungry." + +Her eyes sparkled with disdain. + +"What do you mean to do for a year?" I continued. + +"Forget you, for one thing." + +"I hope you wont be ill again, Verry." + +"I shall be," she answered with a shudder; "I need all the illnesses +that come." + +"As for me," I said, biting my bread and butter, "I feel well to my +fingers' ends; they tingle with strength. I am elated with health." + +I had not spoken the last word before I became conscious of a streak +of pain which cut me like a knife and vanished; my surprise at it was +so evident that she asked me what ailed me." + +"Nothing." + +"I never had the feeling you speak of in my finger ends," she said +sadly, looking at her slender hand. + +"Poor girl!" + +"What has come over you, Cass? An attack of compassion? Are you +meaning to leave an amiable impression with me?" + +After supper Mr. Shepherd asked mother if she would go to the theater. +The celebrated tragedian, Forrest, was playing; would the young ladies +like to see Hamlet? We all went, and my attention was divided between +Hamlet and two young men who lounged in the box door till Mr. Shepherd +looked them away. Veronica laughed at Hamlet, and Temperance said it +was stuff and nonsense. Veronica laughed at Ophelia, also, who was a +superb, black-haired woman, toying with an elegant Spanish fan, which +Hamlet in his energy broke. "It is not Shakespeare," she said. + +"Has she read Shakespeare?" I asked mother. + +"I am sure I do not know." + +That night, after mother and Veronica were asleep, I persuaded +Temperance to get up, and bore my ears with a coarse needle, which I +had bought for the purpose. It hurt me so, when she pierced one, that +I could not summon resolution to have the other operated on; so I went +to bed with a bit of sewing silk in the hole she had made. But in the +morning I roused her, to tell her I thought I could bear to have the +other ear bored. When mother appeared I showed her my ears red and +sore, insisting that I must have a certain pair of white cornelian +ear-rings, set in chased gold, and three inches long, which I had seen +in a shop window. She scolded Temperance, and then gave me the money. + +The next day mother and I started for Rosville. Veronica decided to +remain in Boston with Temperance till mother returned. She said +that if she went she might find Mrs. Morgeson as disagreeable as Mr. +Morgeson was; that she liked the Bromfield; besides, she wanted to see +the missionary children off for Bombay, and intended to go down to +the ship on the day they were to sail. She was also going to ask Mr. +Shepherd to look up a celebrated author for her. She must see one if +possible. + + + + + + +CHAPTER XIV. + + +It was sunset when we arrived in Rosville, and found Mr. Morgeson +waiting for us with his carriage at the station. From its open sides +I looked out on a tranquil, agreeable landscape; there was nothing +saline in the atmosphere. The western breeze, which blew in our faces, +had an earthy scent, with fluctuating streams of odors from trees and +flowers. As we passed through the town, Cousin Charles pointed to the +Academy, which stood at the head of a green. Pretty houses stood round +it, and streets branched from it in all directions. Flower gardens, +shrubbery, and trees were scattered everywhere. Rosville was larger +and handsomer than Surrey. + +"That is my house, on the right," he said. + +We looked down the shady street through which we were going, and saw a +modern cottage, with a piazza, and peaked roof, and on the side toward +us a large yard, and stables. + +We drove into the yard, and a woman came out on the piazza to receive +us. It was Mrs. Morgeson, or "My wife, Cousin Alice," as Mr. Morgeson +introduced her. Giving us a cordial welcome, she led us into a parlor +where tea was waiting. A servant came in for our bonnets and baskets. +Cousin Alice begged us to take tea at once. We were hardly seated when +we heard the cry of a young child; she left the table hastily, to come +back in a moment with an apology, which she made to Cousin Charles +rather than to us. I had never seen a table so well arranged, so +fastidiously neat; it glittered with glass and French china. Cousin +Charles sent away a glass and a plate, frowning at the girl who +waited; there must have been a speck or a flaw in them. The viands +were as pretty as the dishes, the lamb chops were fragile; the bread +was delicious, but cut in transparent slices, and the butter pat was +nearly stamped through with its bouquet of flowers. This was all the +feast except sponge cake, which felt like muslin in the fingers; I +could have squeezed the whole of it into my mouth. Still hungry, I +observed that Cousin Charles and Alice had finished; and though she +shook her spoon in the cup, feigning to continue, and he snipped +crumbs in his plate, I felt constrained to end my repast. He rose +then, and pushing back folding-doors, we entered a large room, leaving +Alice at the table. Windows extending to the floor opening on the +piazza, but notwithstanding the stream of light over the carpet, I +thought it somber, and out of keeping with the cottage exterior. The +walls were covered with dark red velvet paper, the furniture was +dark, the mantel and table tops were black marble, and the vases +and candelabra were bronze. He directed mother's attention to the +portraits of his children, explaining them, while I went to a table +between the windows to examine the green and white sprays of +some delicate flower I had never before seen. Its fragrance was +intoxicating. I lifted the heavy vase which contained it; it was taken +from me gently by Charles, and replaced. + +"It will hardly bear touching," he said. "By to-morrow these little +white bells will be dead." + +I looked up at him. "What a contrast!" I said. + +"Where?" + +"Here, in this room, and in you." + +"And between you and me?" + +His face was serene, dark, and delicate, but to look at it made me +shiver. Mother came toward us, pleading fatigue as an excuse for +retiring, and Cousin Charles called Cousin Alice, who went with us to +our room. In the morning, she said, we should see her three children. +She never left them, she was so afraid of their being ill, also +telling mother that she would do all in her power to make my stay in +Rosville pleasant and profitable. As a mother, she could appreciate +her anxiety and sadness in leaving me. Mother thanked her warmly, and +was sure that I should be happy; but I had an inward misgiving that I +should not have enough to eat. + +"I hear Edward," said Alice. "Good-night." + +Presently a girl, the same who had taken our bonnets, came in with +a pitcher of warm water and a plate of soda biscuit. She directed us +where to find the apparel she had nicely smoothed and folded; took off +the handsome counterpane, and the pillows trimmed with lace, putting +others of a plainer make in their places; shook down the window +curtains; asked us if we would have anything more, and quietly +disappeared. I offered mother the warm water, and appropriated the +biscuits. There were six. I ate every one, undressing meanwhile, and +surveying the apartment. + +"Cassy, Mrs. Morgeson is an excellent housekeeper." + +"Yes," I said huskily, for the dry biscuit choked me. + +"What would Temperance and Hepsey say to this?" + +"I think they would grumble, and admire. Look at this," showing her +the tassels of the inner window curtains done up in little bags. "And +the glass is pinned up with nice yellow paper; and here is a damask +napkin fastened to the wall behind the washstand. And everything +stands on a mat. I wonder if this is to be my room?" + +"It is probably the chamber for visitors. Why, these are beautiful +pillow-cases, too," she exclaimed, as she put her head on the pillow. +"Come to bed; don't read." + +I had taken up a red morocco-bound book, which was lying alone on the +bureau. It was Byron, and turning over the leaves till I came to +Don Juan, I read it through, and began Childe Harold, but the candle +expired. I struck out my hands through the palpable darkness, to find +the bed without disturbing mother, whose soul was calmly threading +the labyrinth of sleep. I finished Childe Harold early in the morning, +though, and went down to breakfast, longing to be a wreck! + +The three children were in the breakfast-room, which was not the one +we had taken tea in, but a small apartment, with a door opening +into the garden. They were beautifully dressed, and their mother was +tending and watching them. The oldest was eight years, the youngest +three months. Cousin Alice gave us descriptions of their tastes and +habits, dwelling with emphasis on those of the baby. I drew from her +conversation the opinion that she had a tendency to the rearing of +children. I was glad when Cousin Charles came in, looking at his +watch. "Send off the babies, Alice, and ring the bell for breakfast." + +She sent out the two youngest, put little Edward in his chair, and +breakfast began. + +"Mrs. Morgeson," said Charles, "the horses will be ready to take you +round Rosville. We will call on Dr. Price, for you to see the kind +of master Cassandra will have. I have already spoken to him about +receiving a new pupil." + +"Oh, I am homesick at the idea of school and a master," I said. + +Mother tried in vain to look hard-hearted, and to persuade that it was +good for me, but she lost her appetite, with the thought of losing me, +which the mention of Dr. Price brought home. The breakfast was as well +adapted to a delicate taste as the preceding supper. The ham was most +savory, but cut in such thin slices that it curled; and the biscuits +were as white and feathery as snowflakes. I think also that the boiled +eggs were smaller than any I had seen. Cousin Alice gave unremitting +attention to Edward, who ate as little as the rest. + +"Mother," I said afterward, "I am afraid I am an animal. Did you +notice how little the Morgesons ate?" + +"I noticed how elegant their table appointments were, and I shall buy +new china in Boston to-morrow. I wish Hepsey would not load our table +as she does." + +"Hepsey is a good woman, mother; do give my love to her. Now that +I think of it, she was always making up some nice dish; tell her I +remember it, will you?" + +When Cousin Charles put us into the carriage, and hoisted little +Edward on the front seat, mother noticed that two men held the horses, +and that they were not the same he had driven the night before. She +said she was afraid to go, they looked ungovernable; but he reassured +her, and one of the men averring that Mr. Morgeson could drive +anything, she repressed her fears, and we drove out of the yard +behind a pair of horses that stood on their hind legs as often as that +position was compatible with the necessity they were under of getting +on, for they evidently understood that they were guided by a firm +hand. Edward was delighted with their behavior, and for the first time +I saw his father smile on him. + +"These are fine brutes," he said, not taking his eyes from them; "but +they are not equal to my mare, Nell. Alice is afraid of her; but I +hope that you, Cassandra, will ride with me sometimes when I drive +her." + +"Oh!" exclaimed mother, grasping my arm. + +"You would, would you?" he said, taking out the whip, as the horses +recoiled from a man who lay by the roadside, leaping so high that the +harness seemed rattling from their backs. He struck them, and +said, "Go on now, go on, devils." There was no further trouble. He +encouraged mother not to be afraid, looking keenly at me. I looked +back at him. + +"How much worse is the mare, cousin Charles?" + +"You shall see." + +After driving round the town we stopped at the Academy. Morning +prayers were over, and the scholars, some sixty boys and girls, were +coming downstairs from the hall, to go into the rooms, each side of a +great door. Dr. Price was behind them. He stopped when he saw us, +an introduction took place, and he inquired for Dr. Snell, as an old +college friend. Locke Morgeson sounded familiarly, he said; a member +of his mother's family named Somers had married a gentleman of that +name. He remembered it from an old ivory miniature which his mother +had shown him, telling him it was the likeness of her cousin Rachel's +husband. I replied we knew that grandfather had married a Rachel +Somers. Cousin Charles was surprised and a little vexed that the +doctor had never told him, when he must have known that he had been +anxiously looking up the Morgeson pedigree; but the doctor declared +he had not thought of it before, and that only the name of Locke had +recalled it to his mind. He then proposed our going to Miss Prior, the +lady who had charge of the girls' department, and we followed him to +her school-room. + +I was at once interested and impressed by the appearance of my teacher +that was to be. She was a dignified, kind-looking woman, who asked me +a few questions in such a pleasant, direct manner that I frankly told +her I was eighteen years old, very ignorant, and averse from learning; +but I did not speak loud enough for anybody beside herself to hear. + +"Now," said mother, when we came away, "think how much greater your +advantages are than mine have ever been. How miserable was my youth! +It is too late for me to make any attempt at cultivation. I have +no wish that way. Yet now I feel sometimes as if I were leaving the +confines of my old life to go I know not whither, to do I know not +what." + +But her countenance fell when she heard that Dr. Price had been a +Unitarian minister, and that there was no Congregational church in +Rosville. + +She went to Boston that Friday afternoon, anxious to get safely home +with Veronica. We parted with many a kiss and shake of the hand and +last words. I cried when I went up to my room, for I found a present +there--a beautiful workbox, and in it was a small Bible with my name +and hers written on the fly-leaf in large print-like, but tremulous +letters. I composed my feelings by putting it away carefully and +unpacking my trunk. + + + + + + +CHAPTER XV. + + +Rosville was a county town. The courts were held there, and its +society was adorned with several lawyers of note who had law students, +which fact was to the lawyers' daughters the most agreeable feature +of their fathers' profession. It had a weekly market day and an +annual cattle show. I saw a turnout of whips and wagons about the +hitching-posts round the green of a Tuesday the year through, and +going to and from school met men with a bovine smell. Caucuses were +prevalent, and occasionally a State Convention was held, when Rosville +paid honor to some political hero of the day with banners and brass +bands. It was a favorite spot for the rustication of naughty boys from +Harvard or Yale. Dr. Price had one or two at present who boarded in +his house so as to be immediately under his purblind eyes, and who +took Greek and Latin at the Academy. + +Social feuds raged in the Academy coteries between the collegians +and the natives on account of the superior success of the former in +flirtation. The latter were not consoled by their experience that no +flirtation lasted beyond the period of rustication. Dr. Price usually +had several young men fitting for college also, which fact added more +piquancy to the provincial society. In the summer riding parties were +fashionable, and in the winter county balls and cotillion parties; +a professor came down from Boston at this season to set up a dancing +school, which was always well attended. + +The secular concerns of life engaged the greatest share of the +interests of its inhabitants; and although there existed social and +professional dissensions, there was little sectarian spirit among them +and no religious zeal. The rich and fashionable were Unitarians. +The society owned a tumble-down church; a mild preacher stood in its +pulpit and prayed and preached, sideways and slouchy. This degree of +religious vitality accorded with the habits of its generations. Surrey +and Barmouth would have howled over the Total Depravity of Rosville. +There was no probationary air about it. Human Nature was the +infallible theme there. At first I missed the vibration of the moral +sword which poised in our atmosphere. When I felt an emotion without +seeing the shadow of its edge turning toward me, I discovered my +conscience, which hitherto had only been described to me. + +There were churches in the town beside the Unitarian. The +Universalists had a bran-new one, and there was still another +frequented by the sedimentary part of the population--Methodists. + +I toned down perfectly within three months. Soon after my arrival at +his house I became afraid of Cousin Charles. Not that he ever said +anything to justify fear of him--he was more silent at home than +elsewhere; but he was imperious, fastidious, and sarcastic with me by +a look, a gesture, an inflection of his voice. My perception of any +defect in myself was instantaneous with his discovery of it. I fell +into the habit of guessing each day whether I was to offend or please +him, and then into that of intending to please. An intangible, silent, +magnetic feeling existed between us, changing and developing according +to its own mysterious law, remaining intact in spite of the contests +between us of resistance and defiance. But my feeling died or +slumbered when I was beyond the limits of his personal influence. When +in his presence I was so pervaded by it that whether I went contrary +to the dictates of his will or not I moved as if under a pivot; when +away my natural elasticity prevailed, and I held the same relation to +others that I should have held if I had not known him. This continued +till the secret was divined, and then his influence was better +remembered. + +I discovered that there was little love between him and Alice. I never +heard from either an expression denoting that each felt an interest +in the other's individual life; neither was there any of that conjugal +freemasonry which bores one so to witness. But Alice was not unhappy. +Her ideas of love ended with marriage; what came afterward--children, +housekeeping, and the claims of society--sufficed her needs. If she +had any surplus of feeling it was expended upon her children, who had +much from her already, for she was devoted and indulgent to them. +In their management she allowed no interference, on this point only +thwarting her husband. In one respect she and Charles harmonized; both +were worldly, and in all the material of living there was sympathy. +Their relation was no unhappiness to him; he thought, I dare say, +if he thought at all, that it was a natural one. The men of his +acquaintance called him a lucky man, for Alice was handsome, +kind-hearted, intelligent, and popular. + +Whether Cousin Alice would have found it difficult to fulfill +the promise she made mother regarding me, if I had been a plain, +unnoticeable girl, I cannot say, or whether her anxiety that I should +make an agreeable impression would have continued beyond a few days. +She looked after my dress and my acquaintances. When she found that +I was sought by the young people of her set and the Academy, she was +gratified, and opened her house for them, giving little parties and +large ones, which were pleasant to everybody except Cousin Charles, +who detested company--"it made him lie so." But he was very well +satisfied that people should like to visit and praise his house and +its belongings, if Alice would take the trouble of it upon herself. I +made calls with her Wednesday afternoons, and went to church with +her Sunday mornings. At home I saw little of her. She was almost +exclusively occupied with the children--their ailments or their +pleasures--and staid in her own room, or the nursery. + +When in the house I never occupied one spot long, but wandered in the +garden, which had a row of elms, or haunted the kitchen and stables, +to watch black Phoebe, the cook, or the men as they cleaned the horses +or carriages. My own room was in a wing of the cottage, with a window +overlooking the entrance into the yard and the carriage drive; this +was its sole view, except the wall of a house on the other side of a +high fence. I heard Charles when he drove home at night, or away in +the morning; knew when Nell was in a bad humor by the tone of his +voice, which I heard whether my window was open or shut. It was +a pretty room, with a set of maple furniture, and amber and white +wallpaper, and amber and white chintz curtains and coverings. It +suited the color of my hair, Alice declared, and was becoming to my +complexion. + +"Yes," said Charles, looking at my hair with an expression that +made me put my hand up to my head as if to hide it; I knew it was +carelessly dressed. + +I made a study that day of the girls' heads at school, and from that +time improved in my style of wearing it, and I brushed it with zeal +every day afterward. Alice had my room kept so neatly for me that it +soon came to be a reproach, and I was finally taught by her example +how to adjust chairs, books, and mats in straight lines, to fold +articles without making odd corners and wrinkles; at last I improved +so much that I could find what I was seeking in a drawer, without +harrowing it with my fingers, and began to see beauty in order. Alice +had a talent for housekeeping, and her talent was fostered by the +exacting, systematic taste of her husband. He examined many matters +which are usually left to women, and he applied his business talent to +the art of living, succeeding in it as he did in everything else. + +Alice told me that Charles had been poor; that his father was never on +good terms with him. She fancied they were too much alike; so he had +turned him off to shift for himself, when quite young. When she met +him, he was the agent of a manufacturing company, in the town where +her parents lived, and even then, in his style of living, he surpassed +the young men of her acquaintance. The year before they were married +his father died, and as Charles was his only child, he left his farm +to him, and ten thousand dollars--all he had. The executors of the +will were obliged to advertise for him, not having any clue to his +place of residence. He sold the farm as soon as it was put in his +hands, took the ten thousand dollars, and came back to be married. +A year after, he went to Rosville, and built a cotton factory, three +miles from town, and the cottage, and then brought her and Edward, who +was a few months old, to live in it. He had since enlarged the works, +employed more operatives, and was making a great deal of money. +Morgeson's Mills, she believed, were known all over the country. +Charles was his own agent, as well as sole owner. There were no mills +beside his in the neighborhood; to that fact she ascribed the reason +of his having no difficulties in Rosville, and no enmities; for she +knew he had no wish to make friends. The Rosville people, having no +business in common with him, had no right to meddle, and could find +but small excuse for comment. They spent, she said, five or six +thousand a year; most of it went in horses, she was convinced, and +she believed his flowers cost him a great deal too. "You must know, +Cassandra, that his heart is with his horses and his flowers. He is +more interested in them than he is in his children." + +She looked vexed when she said this; but I took hold of the edge +of her finely embroidered cape, and asked her how much it cost. She +laughed, and said, "Fifty dollars; but you see how many lapels it has. +I have still a handsomer one that was seventy-five." + +"Are they a part of the six thousand a year, Alice?" + +"Of course; but Charles wishes me to dress, and never stints me in +money; and, after all, I like for him to spend his money in his own +way. It vexes me sometimes, he buys such wild brutes, and endangers +his life with them. He rides miles and miles every year; and it +relieves the tedium of his journeys to have horses he must watch, I +suppose." + +Nobody in Rosville lived at so fast a rate as the Morgesons. The +oldest families there were not the richest--the Ryders, in particular. +Judge Ryder had four unmarried daughters; they were the only girls +in our set who never invited us to visit them. They could not help +saying, with a fork of the neck, "Who are the Morgesons?" But all the +others welcomed Cousin Alice, and were friendly with me. She was too +pretty and kind-hearted not to be liked, if she was rich; and Cousin +Charles was respected, because he made no acquaintance beyond bows, +and "How-de-do's." It was rather a stirring thing to have such a +citizen, especially when he met with an accident, and he broke many +carriages in the course of time; and now and then there was a row at +the mills, which made talk. His being considered a hard man did not +detract from the interest he inspired. + +My advent in Rosville might be considered a fortunate one; appearances +indicated it; I am sure I thought so, and was very well satisfied with +my position. I conformed to the ways of the family with ease, even in +the matter of small breakfasts and light suppers. I found that I was +more elastic than before, and more susceptible to sudden impressions; +I was conscious of the ebb and flow of blood through my heart, felt +it when it eddied up into my face, and touched my brain with its +flame-colored wave. I loved life again. The stuff of which each day +was woven was covered with an arabesque which suited my fancy. I +missed nothing that the present unrolled for me, but looked neither +to the past nor to the future. In truth there was little that was +elevated in me. Could I have perceived it if there had been? Whichever +way the circumstances of my life vacillated, I was not yet reached to +the quick; whether spiritual or material influences made sinuous the +current of being, it still flowed toward an undiscovered ocean. + +Half the girls at the Academy, like myself, came from distant towns. +Some had been there three years. They were all younger than myself. +There never had been a boarding-house attached to the school, and it +was not considered a derogatory thing for the best families to receive +these girls as boarders. We were therefore on the same footing, in a +social sense. I was also on good terms with Miss Prior. She was a cold +and kindly woman, faithful as a teacher, gifted with an insight into +the capacity of a pupil. She gave me a course of History first, and +after that Physical Philosophy; but never recommended me to Moral +Science. When I had been with her a few months, she proposed that I +should study the common branches; my standing in the school was such +that I went down into the primary classes without shame, and I must +say that I was the dullest scholar in them. We also had a drawing +master and a music-teacher. The latter was an amiable woman, with +theatrical manners. She was a Mrs. Lane; but no Mr. Lane had ever been +seen in Rosville. We girls supposed he had deserted her, which was +the fact, as she told me afterward. She cried whenever she sang a +sentimental song, but never gave up to her tears, singing on with +blinded eyes and quavering voice. I laughed at her dresses which had +been handsome, with much frayed trimming about them, the hooks and +eyes loosened and the seams strained, but liked her, and although +I did not take lessons, saw her every day when she came up to the +Academy. She asked me once if I had any voice. I answered her by +singing one of our Surrey hymns, "_Once on the raging seas he rode_." +She grew pale, and said, "Don't for heaven's sake sing that! I can +see my old mother, as she looked when she sang that hymn of a stormy +night, when father was out to sea. Both are dead now, and where am I?" + +She turned round on the music stool, and banged out the accompaniment +of "_O pilot, 'tis a fearful night_," and sang it with great energy. +After her feelings were composed, she begged me to allow her to +teach me to sing. "You can at least learn the simple chords of +song accompaniments, and I think you have a voice that can be made +effective." + +I promised to try, and as I had taken lessons before, in three months +I could play and sing "_Should those fond hopes e'er forsake thee_," +tolerably well. But Mrs. Lane persisted in affirming that I had +a dramatic talent, and as she supposed that I never should be an +actress, I must bring it out in singing; so I persevered, and, thanks +to her, improved so much that people said, when I was mentioned, "She +sings." + +The Moral Sciences went to Dr. Price, and he had a class of girls +in Latin; but my only opportunity of going before him was at morning +prayers and Wednesday afternoons, when we assembled in the hall to +hear orations in Latin, or translations, and "pieces" spoken by the +boys; and at the quarterly reviews, when he marched us backward and +forward through the books we had conned, like the sharp old gentleman +he was, notwithstanding his purblind eyes. + + + + + + +CHAPTER XVI. + + +I heard from home regularly; father, however, was my only +correspondent. He stipulated that I should write him every other +Saturday, if not more than a line; but I did more than that at first, +writing up the events of the fortnight, interspersing my opinions of +the actors engaged therein, and dwindling by degrees down to the mere +acknowledgment of his letter. He read without comment, but now and +then he asked me questions which puzzled me to answer. + +"Do you like Mr. Morgeson?" he asked once. + +"He is very attentive," I wrote back. "But so is Cousin Alice,--she is +fond of me." + +"You do not like Morgeson?" again. + +"Are there no agreeable young men," he asked another time, "with Dr. +Price?" + +"Only boys," I wrote--"cubs of my own age." + +Among the first letters I received was one with the news of the death +of my grandfather, John Morgeson. He had left ten thousand dollars +for Arthur, the sum to be withdrawn from the house of Locke Morgeson +& Co., and invested elsewhere, for the interest to accumulate, and +be added to the principal, till he should be of age. The rest of +his property he gave to the Foreign Missionary Society. "Now," wrote +father, "it will come your turn next, to stand in the gap, when your +mother and I fall back from the forlorn hope--life." This merry and +unaccustomed view of things did not suggest to my mind the change +he intimated; I could not dwell on such an idea, so steadfast +a home-principle were father and mother. It was different with +grandfathers and grandmothers, of course; they died, since it was +not particularly necessary for them to live after their children were +married. + +It was early June when I went to Rosville; it was now October. There +was nothing more for me to discover there. My relations at home and +at school were established, and it was probable that the next year's +plans were all settled. + +"It is the twentieth," said my friend, Helen Perkins, as we lingered +in the Academy yard, after school hours. "The trees have thinned so +we can see up and down the streets. Isn't that Mr. Morgeson who +is tearing round the corner of Gold Street? Do you think he is +strange-looking? I do. His hair, and eyes, and complexion are exactly +the same hue; what color is it? A pale brown, or a greenish gray?" + +"Is he driving this way?" + +"Yes; the fore-legs of his horse have nearly arrived." + +I moved on in advance of Helen, toward the gate; he beckoned when he +saw me, and presently reined Nell close to us. "You can decide now +what color he is," I whispered to her. + +"Will you ride home?" he asked. "And shall I take you down to +Bancroft's, Miss Helen?" + +She would have declined, but I took her arm, pushed her into the +chaise, and then sprang in after her; she seized the hand-loop, in +view of an upset. + +"You are afraid of my horse, Miss Helen," he said, without having +looked at her. + +"I am afraid of your driving," she answered, leaning back and looking +behind him at me. She shook her head and put her finger on her eyelid +to make me understand that she did not like the color of his eyes. + +"Cassandra is afraid of neither," he said. + +"Why should I be?" I replied coldly. + +We were soon at the Bancrofts', where Helen lived, which was a mile +from the Academy, and half a mile from our house. When we were going +home, he asked: + +"Is she your intimate friend?" + +"The most in school." + +"Is there the usual nonsense about her?" + +"What do you mean by nonsense?" + +"When a girl talks about her lover or proposes one to her friend." + +"I think she is not gifted that way." + +"Then I like her." + +"Why should she not talk about lovers, though? The next time I see her +I will bring up the subject." + +"You shall think and talk of your lessons, and nothing more, I charge +you. Go on, Nell," he said, in a loud voice, turning into the yard +and grazing one of the gate-posts, so that we struck together. I was +vexed, thinking it was done purposely, and brushed my shoulder where +he came in contact, as if dust had fallen on me, and jumped out +without looking at him, and ran into the house. + +"Are you losing your skill in driving, Charles?" Alice asked, when we +were at tea, "or is Nell too much for you? I saw you crash against the +gate-post." + +"Did you? My hand was not steady, and we made a lurch." + +"Was there a fight at the mills last night? Jesse said so." + +"Jesse must mind his business." + +"He told Phoebe about it." + +"I knocked one of the clerks over and sprained my wrist." + +I met his eye then. "It was your right hand?" I asked. + +"It was my right hand," in a deferential tone, and with a slight bow +in my direction. + +"Was it Parker?" she asked. + +"Yes, he is a puppy; but don't talk about it." + +Nothing more was said, even by Edward, who observed his father with +childish gravity, I meditated on the injustice I had done him about +the gate-post. After tea he busied himself in the garden among the +flowers which were still remaining. I lingered in the parlor or walked +the piazza with an undefined desire of speaking to him before I should +go to my room. After he had finished his garden work he went to the +stable; I heard the horses stepping about the floor as they were +taken out for his inspection. The lamps were lighted before he came in +again; Alice was upstairs as usual. When I heard him coming, I opened +my book, and seated myself in a corner of a sofa; he walked to the +window without noticing me, and drummed on the piano. + +"Does your wrist pain you, Charles?" still reading. + +"A trifle," adjusting his wristband. + +"Do you often knock men down in your employ?" + +"When they deserve it." + +"It is a generous and manly sort of pastime." + +"I am a generous man and very strong; do you know that, you little +fool? Here, will you take this flower? There will be no more this +year." I took it from his hand; it was a pink, faintly odorous +blossom. + +"I love these fragile flowers best," he continued--"where I have to +protect them from my own touch, even." He relapsed into forgetfulness +for a moment, and then began to study his memorandum book. + +"A note from the mills, sir," said Jesse, "by one of the hands." + +"Tell him to wait." + +He read it, and threw it over to me. It was from Parker, who informed +Mr. Morgeson that he was going by the morning's train to Boston, +thinking it was time for him to leave his employ; that, though the +fault was his own in the difficulty of the day before, a Yankee could +not stand a knock-down. It was too damned aristocratic for an employer +to have that privilege; our institutions did not permit it. He thanked +Mr. Morgeson for his liberality; he couldn't thank him for being +a good fellow. "And would he oblige him by sending per bearer the +arrears of salary?" + +"Parker is in love with a factory girl. He quarreled with one of the +hands because he was jealous of him, and would have been whipped by +the man and his friends; to spare him that, I knocked him down. Do you +feel better now, Cassy?" + +"Better? How does it concern me?" + +He laughed. + +"Put Black Jake in the wagon," he called to Jesse. + +Alice heard him and came downstairs; we went out on the _piazza_, to +see him off. "Why do you go?" she asked, in an uneasy tone. + +"I must. Wont you go too?" + +She refused; but whispered to me, asking if I were afraid? + +"Of what?" + +"Men quarreling." + +"Cassandra, will you go?" he asked. "If not, I am off. Jump in behind, +Sam, will you?" + +"Go," said Alice; and she ran in for a shawl, which she wrapped round +me. + +"Alice," said Charles, "you are a silly woman." + +"As you have always said," she answered, laughing. "Ward the blows +from him, Cassandra." + +"It's a pretty dark night for a ride," remarked Sam. + +"I have rode in darker ones." + +"I dessay," replied Sam. + +"Cover your hand with my handkerchief," I said; "the wind is cutting." + +"Do you wish it?" + +"No, I do not wish it; it was a humanitary idea merely." + +He refused to have it covered. + +The air had a moldy taint, and the wind blew the dead leaves around +us. As we rode through the darkness I counted the glimmering lights +which flashed across our way till we got out on the high-road where +they grew scarce, and the wind whistled loud about our faces. He laid +his hand on my shawl. "It is too light; you will take cold." + +"No." + +We reached the mills, and pulled up by the corner of a building, where +a light shone through a window. + +"This is my office. You must go in--it is too chilly for you to wait +in the wagon. Hold Jake, Sam, till I come back." + +I followed him. In the farthest corner of the room where we had +seen the light, behind the desk, sat Mr. Parker, with his light hair +rumpled, and a pen behind his ear. + +I stopped by the door, while Charles went to the desk and stood before +him to intercept my view, but he could not help my hearing what was +said, though he spoke low. + +"Did you give something to Sam, Parker, for bringing me your note at +such a late hour?" + +"Certainly," in a loud voice. + +"He must be fifty, at least." + +"I should say so," rather lower. + +"Well, here is your money; you had better stay. I shall be devilish +sorry for your father, who is my friend; you know he will be +disappointed if you leave; depend upon it he will guess at the girl. +Of course you would like to have me say I was in fault about giving +you a blow--as I was. Stay. You will get over the affair. We all do. +Is she handsome?" + +"Beautiful," in a meek but enthusiastic tone. + +"That goes, like the flowers; but they come every year again." + +"Yes?" + +"Yes, I say." + +"No; I'll stay and see." + +Charles turned away. + +"Good-evening, Mr. Parker," I said, stepping forward. I had met him at +several parties at Rosville, but never at our house. + +"Excuse me, Miss Morgeson; I did not know you. I hope you are well." + +"Come," said Charles, with his hand on the latch. + +"Are you going to Mrs. Bancroft's whist party on Wednesday night, Mr. +Parker?" + +"Yes; Miss Perkins was kind enough to invite me." + +"Cassandra, come." And Charles opened the door. I fumbled for the +flower at my belt. "It's nice to have flowers so late; don't you think +so?" inhaling the fragrance of my crushed specimens; "if they would +but last. Will you have it?" stretching it toward him. He was about +to take it, with a blush, when Charles struck it out of my hand and +stepped on it. + +"Are you ready now?" he said, in a quick voice. + +I declared it was nothing, when I found I was too ill to rise the next +morning. At the end of three days, as I still felt a disinclination to +get up, Alice sent for her physician. I told him I was sleepy and felt +dull pains. He requested me to sit up in bed, and rapped my shoulders +and chest with his knuckles, in a forgetful way. + +"Nothing serious," he said; "but, like many women, you will continue +to do something to keep in continual pain. If Nature does not endow +your constitution with suffering, you will make up the loss by some +fatal trifling, which will bring it. I dare say, now, that after this, +you never will be quite well." + +"I will take care of my health." + +He looked into my face attentively. + +"You wont--you can't. Did you ever notice your temperament?" + +"No, never; what is it?" + +"How old are you?" + +"Eighteen, and four months." + +"Is it possible? How backward you are! You are quite interesting." + +"When may I get up?" + +"Next week; don't drink coffee. Remember to live in the day. Avoid +stirring about in the night, as you would avoid Satan. Sleep, sleep +then, and you'll make that beauty of yours last longer." + +"Am I a beauty? No living creature ever said so before." + +"Adipose beauty." + +"Fat?" + +"No; not that exactly. Good-day." + +He came again, and asked me questions concerning my father and mother; +what my grandparents died of; and whether any of my family were +strumous. He struck me as being very odd. + +My school friends were attentive, but I only admitted Helen Perkins to +see me. Her liking for me opened my heart still more toward her. She +was my first intimate friend--and my last. Though younger than I, she +was more experienced, and had already passed through scenes I knew +nothing of, which had sobered her judgment, and given her feelings a +practical tinge. She was noted for having the highest spirits of any +girl in school--another result of her experiences. She never allowed +them to appear fluctuating; she was, therefore, an aid to me, whose +moods varied. + +After my illness came a sense of change. I had lost that careless +security in my strength which I had always possessed, and was troubled +with vague doubts, that made me feel I needed help from without. + +I did not see Charles while I was ill, for he was absent most of the +time. I knew when he was at home by the silence which pervaded the +premises. When he was not there, Alice spread the children in all +directions, and the servants gave tongue. + +He was not at home the day I went downstairs, and I missed him, +continually asking myself, "Why do I?" As I sat with Alice in the +garden-room, I said, "Alice." She looked up from her sewing. "I am +thinking of Charles." + +"Yes. He will be glad to see you again." + +"Is he really related to me?" + +"He told you so, did he not? And his name certainly is Morgeson." + +"But we are wholly unlike, are we not?" + +"Wholly; but why do you ask?" + +"He influences me so strongly." + +"Influences you?" she echoed. + +"Yes"; and, with an effort, "I believe I influence him." + +"You are very handsome," she said, with a little sharpness. "So are +flowers," I said to myself. + +"It is not that, Alice," I answered peevishly; "you know better." + +"You are peculiar, then; it may be he likes you for being so. He is +odd, you know; but his oddity never troubles me." And she resumed her +sewing with a placid face. + +"Veronica is odd, also," was my thought; "but oddity there runs in +a different direction." Her image appeared to me, pale, delicate, +unyielding. I seemed to wash like a weed at her base. + +"You should see my sister, Alice." + +"Charles spoke of her; he says she plays beautifully. If you feel +strong next week, we will go to Boston, and make our winter purchases. +By the way, I hope you are not nervous. To go back to Charles, I +have noticed how little you say to him. You know he never talks. The +influence you speak of--it does not make you dislike him?" + +"No; I meant to say--my choice of words must be poor--that it was +possible I might be thinking too much of him; he is your husband, +you know, though I do not think he is particularly interesting, or +pleasing." + +She laughed, as if highly amused, and said: "Well, about our dresses. +You need a ball dress, so do I; for we shall have balls this winter, +and if the children are well, we will go. I think, too, that you had +better get a gray cloth pelisse, with a fur trimming. We dress so much +at church." + +"Perhaps," I said. "And how will a gray hat with feathers look? I must +first write father, and ask for more money." + +"Of course; but he allows you all you want." + +"He is not so very rich; we do not live as handsomely as you do." + +It was tea-time when we had finished our confab, and Alice sent me to +bed soon after. I was comfortably drowsy when I heard Charles driving +into the stable. "There he is," I thought, with a light heart, for I +felt better since I had spoken to Alice of him. Her matter-of-fact air +had blown away the cobwebs that had gathered across my fancy. + +I saw him at the breakfast-table the next morning. He was noting +something in his memorandum book, which excused him from offering me +his hand; but he spoke kindly, said he was glad to see me, hoped I was +well, and could find a breakfast that I liked. + +"For some reason or other, I do not eat so much as I did in Surrey." + +Alice laughed, and I blushed. + +"What do you think, Charles?" she said, "Cassandra seems worried by +the influence, as she calls it, you have upon each other." + +"Does she?" + +He raised his strange, intense eyes to mine; a blinding, intelligent +light flowed from them which I could not defy, nor resist, a light +which filled my veins with a torrent of fire. + +"You think Cassandra is not like you," he continued with a curious +intonation. + +"I told her that your oddities never troubled me." + +"That is right." + +"To-day," I muttered, "Alice, I shall go back to school." + +"You must ride," she answered. + +"Jesse will drive you up," said Charles, rising. Alice called him +back, to tell him her plan of the Boston visit. + +"Certainly; go by all means," he said, and went on his way. + +I made my application to father, telling him I had nothing to wear. He +answered with haste, begging me to clothe myself at once. + + + + + + +CHAPTER XVII. + + +It was November when we returned from Boston. One morning when the +frost sparkled on the dead leaves, which still dropped on the walks, +Helen Perkins and I were taking a stroll down Silver Street, behind +the Academy, when we saw Dr. White coming down the street in his +sulky, rocking from side to side like a cradle. He stopped when he +came up to us. + +"Do ye sit up late of evenings, Miss Morgeson?" + +"No, Doctor; only once a week or so." + +"You are a case." And he meditatively pulled his shaggy whiskers +with a loose buckskin glove. "There's a ripple coming under your eyes +already; what did I tell you? Let me see, did you say you were like +father or mother?" + +"I look like my father. By the way, Doctor, I am studying my +temperament. You will make an infidel of me by your inquiries." + +Helen laughed, and staring at him, called him a bear, and told him he +ought to live in a hospital, where he would have plenty of sick women +to tease. + +"I should find few like you there." + +He chirruped to his horse, but checked it again, put out his head and +called, "Keep your feet warm, wont you? And read Shakespeare." + +Helen said that Dr. White had been crossed in love, and long after had +married a deformed woman--for science's sake, perhaps. His talent was +well known out of Rosville; but he was unambitious and eccentric. + +"He is interested in you, Cass, that I see. Are you quite well? What +about the change you spoke of?" + +"Dr. White has theories; he has attached one to me. Nature has +adjusted us nicely, he thinks, with fine strings; if we laugh too +much, or cry too long, a knot slips somewhere, which 'all the king's +men' can't take up again. Perhaps he judges women by his deformed +wife. Men do judge that way, I suppose, and then pride themselves +on their experience, commencing their speeches about us, with 'you +women.' I'll answer your question, though,--there's a blight creeping +over me, or a mildew." + +"Is there a worm i' the bud?" + +"There may be one at the root; my top is green and flourishing, isn't +it?" + +"You expect to be in a state of beatitude always. What is a mote of +dust in another's eye, in yours is a cataract. You are mad at your +blindness, and fight the air because you can't see." + +"I feel that I see very little, especially when I understand the +clearness of your vision. Your good sense is monstrous." + +"It will come right somehow, with you; when twenty years are wasted, +maybe," she answered sadly. "There's the first bell! I haven't a word +yet of my rhetoric lesson," opening her book and chanting, "'Man, +thou pendulum betwixt a smile and tear.' Are you going to Professor +Simpson's class?" shutting it again. "I know the new dance"; and +she began to execute it on the walk. The door of a house opposite +us opened, and a tall youth came out, hat in hand. Without evincing +surprise, he advanced toward Helen, gravely dancing the same step; +they finished the figure with unmoved countenances. "Come now," I +said, taking her arm. He then made a series of bows to us, retreating +to the house, with his face toward us, till he reached the door and +closed it. He was tall and stout, with red hair, and piercing black +eyes, and looked about twenty-three. "Who can that be, Helen?" + +"A stranger; probably some young man come to Dr. Price, or a law +student. He is new here, at all events. His is not an obscure face; if +it had been seen, we should have known it." + +"We shall meet him, then." + +And we did, the very next day, which was Wednesday, in the hall, where +we went to hear the boys declaim. I saw him, sitting by himself in +a chair, instead of being with the classes. He was in a brown study, +unaware that he was observed; both hands were in his pockets, and his +legs were stretched out till his pantaloons had receded up his boots, +whose soles he knocked together, oblivious of the noise they made. In +spite of his red hair, I thought him handsome, with his Roman nose and +firm, clefted chin. Helen and I were opposite him at the lower part +of the hall, but he did not see us, till the first boy mounted the +platform, and began to spout one of Cicero's orations; then he looked +up, and a smile spread over his face. He withdrew his hands from his +pockets, updrew his legs, and surveyed the long row of girls opposite, +beginning at the head of the hall. As his eyes reached us, a flash of +recognition shot across; he raised his hand as if to salute us, and +I noticed that it was remarkably handsome, small and white, and +ornamented with an old-fashioned ring. It was our habit, after the +exercises were over, to gather round Dr. Price, to exchange a few +words with him. And this occasion was no exception, for Dr. Price, +with his double spectacles, and his silk handkerchief in his hand, +was answering our questions, when feeling a touch, he stopped, turned +hastily, and saw the stranger. + +"Will you be so good as to introduce me to the two young ladies near +you? We have met before, but I do not know their names." + +"Ah," said the Doctor, taking off his spectacles and wiping them +leisurely; then raising his voice, said, "Miss Cassandra Morgeson and +Miss Helen Perkins, Mr. Ben Somers, of Belem, requests me to present +him to you. I add the information that he is, although a senior, +suspended from Harvard College, for participating in a disgraceful +fight. It is at your option to notice him." + +"If he would be kind enough," said Mr. Somers, moving toward us, "to +say that I won it." + +"With such hands?" I asked. + +"Oh, Somers," interposed the Doctor, "have you much knowledge of the +Bellevue Pickersgills' pedigree?" + +"Certainly; my grandpa, Desmond Pickersgill, although he came to this +country as a cabin boy, was brother to an English earl. This is our +coat of arms," showing the ring he wore. + +"That is a great fact," answered the Doctor. + +"This lad," addressing me, "belongs to the family I spoke of to you, a +member of which married one of your name." + +"Is it possible? I never heard much of my father's family." + +"No," said the Doctor dryly; "Somers has no coat of arms. I expected, +when I asked you, to hear that the Pickergills' history was at your +fingers' ends." + +"Only above the second joint of the third finger of my left hand." + +I thought Dr. Price was embarrassing. + +"Is your family from Troy?" Mr. Somers asked me, in a low tone. + +"Do you dislike my name? Is that of Veronica a better one? It is my +sister's, and we were named by our great-grandfather, who married a +Somers, a hundred years ago." + +Miss Black, my Barmouth teacher, came into my mind, for I had said the +same thing to her in my first interview; but I was recalled from my +wandering by Mr. Somers asking, "Are you looking for your sister? Far +be it from me to disparage any act of your great-grandfather's, but +I prefer the name of Veronica, and fancy that the person to whom +the name belongs has a narrow face, with eyes near together, and a +quantity of light hair, which falls straight; that she has long hands; +is fond of Gothic architecture, and has a will of her own." + +"But never dances," said Helen. + +There was a whist party at somebody's house every Wednesday evening. +Alice had selected the present for one, and had invited more than the +usual number. I asked Mr. Somers to come. + +"Dress coat?" he inquired. + +"Oh, no." + +"Is Rosville highly starched?" + +"Oh, no." + +"I'll be sure to go into society, then, as long as I can go limp." + +He bowed, and, retiring with Dr. Price, walked through the green with +him, perusing the ground. + +I wore a dark blue silk for the party, with a cinnamon-colored satin +stripe through it; a dress that Alice supervised. She fastened a pair +of pearl ear-rings in my ears, and told me that I never looked better. +It was the first time since grandfather's death that I had worn any +dress except a black one. My short sleeves were purled velvet, and +a lace tucker was drawn with a blue ribbon across the corsage. As +I adjusted my dress, a triumphant sense of beauty possessed me; +Cleopatra could not have been more convinced of her charms than I was +of mine. "It is a pleasant thing," I thought, "that a woman's mind may +come and go by the gate Beautiful." + +I went down before Alice, who stayed with the children till she heard +the first ring at the door. + +"Where is Charles?" I asked, after we had greeted the Bancrofts. + +"He will come in time to play, for he likes whist; do you?" + +"No." + +We did not speak again, but I noticed how gay and agreeable she was +through the evening. + +Ben Somers came early, suffering from a fit of nonchalance, to the +disgust of several young men, standard beaux, who regarded him with an +impertinence which delighted him. + +"Here comes," he said, "'a daughter of the gods, divinely tall, and +most divinely fair.'" Meaning me, which deepened their disgust. + +"Come to the piano," I begged. Helen was there, but his eyes did not +rest upon her, but upon Charles, whom I saw for the first time that +evening. I introduced them. + +"Cassandra," said Charles, "let us make up a game in the East Room. +Miss Helen, will you join? Mr. Somers, will you take a hand?" + +"Certainly. Miss Morgeson, will you be my partner?" + +"Will you play with me then, Miss Helen?" asked Charles. + +"If you desire it," she answered, rather ungraciously. + +We took our seats in the East Room, which opened from the parlor, at a +little table by the chimney. The astral lamp from the center table in +the parlor shone into our room, intercepting any view toward us. I sat +by the window, the curtain of which was drawn apart, and the shutters +unclosed. A few yellow leaves stuck against the panes, unstirred by +the melancholy wind, which sighed through the crevices. Charles was at +my right hand, by the mantel; the light from a candelabra illuminated +him and Mr. Somers, while Helen and I were in shadow. Mr. Somers dealt +the cards, and we began the game. + +"We shall beat you," he said to Charles. + +"Not unless Cassandra has improved," he replied. + +I promised to do my best, but soon grew weary, and we were beaten. To +my surprise Mr. Somers was vexed. His imperturbable manner vanished; +he sat erect, his eyes sparkled, and he told me I must play better. We +began another game, which he was confident of winning. I kept my eyes +on the cards, and there was silence till Mr. Somers exclaimed, "Don't +trump now, Mr. Morgeson." + +I watched the table for his card to fall, but as it did not, looked +at him for the reason. He had forgotten us, and was lost in +contemplation, with his eyes fixed upon me. The recognition of +some impulse had mastered him. I must prevent Helen and Mr. Somers +perceiving this! I shuffled the cards noisily, rustled my dress, +looked right and left for my handkerchief to break the spell. + +"How the wind moans!" said Helen. I understood her tone; she +understood him, as I did. + +"I _like_ Rosville, Miss Perkins," cried Mr. Somers. + +"Do you?" said Charles, clicking down his card, as though his turn had +just come. "I must trump this in spite of you." + +"I am tired of playing," I said. + +"We are beaten, Miss Perkins," said Mr. Somers, rising. "Bring it +here," to a servant going by with a tray and glasses. He drank +a goblet of wine, before he offered us any. "Now give us music!" +offering his arm to Helen, and taking her away. Charles and I remained +at the table. "By the way," he said abruptly, "I have forgotten to +give you a letter from your father--here it is." I stretched my hand +across the table, he retained it. I rose from my chair and stood +beside him. + +"Cassandra," he said at last, growing ashy pale, "is there any other +world than this we are in now?" + +I raised my eyes, and saw my own pale face in the glass over the +mantel above his head. + +"What do you see?" he asked, starting up. + +I pointed to the glass. + +"I begin to think," I said, "there is another world, one peopled +with creatures like those we see there. What are they--base, false, +cowardly?" + +"Cowardly," he muttered, "will you make me crush you? Can we lie to +each other? Look!" + +He turned me from the glass. + +At that moment Helen struck a crashing blow on the piano keys. + +"Charles, give me--give me the letter." + +He looked vaguely round the floor, it was crumpled in his hand. A side +door shut, and I stood alone. Pinching my cheeks and wiping my lips to +force the color back, I returned to the parlor. Mr. Somers came to me +with a glass of wine. It was full, and some spilled on my dress; he +made no offer to wipe it off. After that, he devoted himself to Alice; +talked lightly with her, observing her closely. I made the tour of the +party, overlooked the whist players, chatted with the talkers, finally +taking a seat, where Helen joined me. + +"Now I am going," she said. + +"Why don't they all go?" + +"Look at Mr. Somers playing the agreeable to Mrs. Morgeson. What kind +of a woman is she, Cass?" + +"Go and learn for yourself." + +"I fear I have not the gift for divining people that you have." + +"Do you hear the wind moan now, Helen?" + +She turned crimson, and said: "Let us go to the window; I think it +rains." + +We stood within the curtains, and listened to its pattering on the +floor of the piazza, and trickling down the glass like tears. + +"Helen, if one could weep as quietly as this rain falls, and keep the +face as unwrinkled as the glass, it would be pretty to weep." + +"Is it hard for you to cry?" + +"I can't remember; it is so long since." + +My ear caught the sound of a step on the piazza. + +"Who is that?" she asked. + +"It is a man." + +"Morgeson?" + +"Morgeson." + +"Cassandra?" + +"Cassandra." + +"I can cry," and Helen covered her face. + +"Cry away, then. Give me a fierce shower of tears, with thunder and +lightning between, if you like. Don't sop, and soak, and drizzle." + +The step came close to the window; it was not in harmony with the rain +and darkness, but with the hot beating of my heart. + +"We are breaking up," called Mr. Somers. "Mr. Bancroft's carriage is +ready, I am bid to say. It is inky outside." + +"Yes," said Helen, "I am quite ready." + +"There are a dozen chaises in the yard; Mr. Morgeson is there, and +lanterns. He is at home among horses, I believe." + +"Do you like horses?" I asked. + +"Not in the least." + +Somebody called Helen. + +"Good-night, Cass." + +"Good-night; keep out of the rain." + +"Good-night, Miss Morgeson," said Mr. Somers, when she had gone. +"Good-night and good-morning. My acquaintance with you has begun; it +will never end. You thought me a boy; I am just your age." + +"'Never,' is a long word, Boy Somers." + +"It is." + +It rained all night; I wearied of its monotonous fall; if I slept it +turned into a voice which was pent up in a letter which I could not +open. + + + + + + +CHAPTER XVIII. + + +Alice was unusually gay the next morning. She praised Mr. Somers, and +could not imagine what had been the cause of his being expelled from +the college. + +"Don't you like him, Cassandra? His family are unexceptionable." + +"So is he, I believe, except in his fists. But how did you learn that +his family were unexceptionable?" + +"Charles inquired in Boston, and heard that his mother was one of the +greatest heiresses in Belem." + +"Did you enjoy last night, Alice?" + +"Yes, I am fond of whist parties. You noticed that Charles has not a +remarkable talent that way. Did he speak to Mr. Somers at all, while +you played? I was too busy to come in. By the by, I must go now, and +see if the parlor is in order." + +I followed her with my bonnet in hand, for it was school time. +She looked about, then went up to the mantel, and taking out the +candle-ends from the candelabra, looked in the glass, and said, "I am +a fright this morning." + +"Am I?" I asked over her shoulder, for I was nearly a head taller. + +"No; you are too young to look jaded in the morning. Your eyes are as +clear as a child's; and how blue they are." + +"Mild and babyish-like, are they not? almost green with innocence. But +Charles has devilish eyes, don't you think so?" + +She turned with her mouth open in astonishment, and her hand full of +candle-ends. "Cassandra Morgeson, are you mad?" + +"Good-by," Alice. + +I only saw Mr. Somers at prayers during the following fortnight. But +in that short time he made many acquaintances. Helen told me that he +had decided to study law with Judge Ryder, and that he had asked her +how long I expected to stay in Rosville. Nothing eccentric had been +discovered in his behavior; but she was convinced that he would +astonish us before long. The first Wednesday after our party, I was +absent from the elocutionary exercise; but the second came round, and +I took my place as usual beside Helen. + +"This will be Mr. Somers's first and last appearance on our stage," +she whispered; "some whim prompts him to come to-day." + +He delighted Dr. Price by translating from the Agamemnon of Æschylus. + +"Re-enter Clytemnestra." + +"_Men! Citizens! ye Elders of Argos present here._" + +"Who was Agamemnon?" I whispered. + +"He gave Cassandra her last ride." + +"Did he upset her?" + +"Study Greek and you will know," she replied, frowning at him as he +stepped from the platform. + +We went to walk in Silver Street after school, and he joined us. + +"Do you read Greek?" he asked her. + +"My father is a Greek Professor, and he made me study it when I was a +little girl." + +"The name of Cassandra inspired me to rub up my knowledge of the +tragedies." + +Helen and he had a Homeric talk, while I silently walked by them, +thinking that Cassandra would have suited Veronica, and that no name +suited me. From some reason I did not discover, Helen began to loiter, +pretending that she wanted to have a look at the clouds. But when I +looked back her head was bent to the ground. Mr. Somers offered to +carry my books. + +"Carry Helen's; she is smaller than I am." + +"Confound Helen!" + +"And the books, too, if you like. Helen," I called, "why do you +loiter? It is time for dinner. We must go home." + +"I am quite ready for my dinner," she replied. "Wont you come to our +house this afternoon and take tea with me?" + +"Oh, Miss Perkins, do invite me also," he begged. "I want to bring +Tennyson to you." + +"Is he related to Agamemnon?" I asked. + +"I'll ask Mrs. Bancroft if I may invite you," said Helen, "if you are +sure that you would like a stupid, family tea." + +"I am positive that I should. Tennyson, though an eminent Grecian, is +not related to the person you spoke of." + +We parted at the foot of Silver Street, with the expectation of +meeting before night. Helen sent me word not to fail, as she had sent +for Mr. Somers, and that Mrs. Bancroft was already preparing tea. +Alice drove down there with me, to call on Mrs. Bancroft. The two +ladies compared children, and by the time Alice was ready to go, Mr. +Somers arrived. She staid a few moments more to chat with him, and +when she went at last, told me Charles would come for me on his way +from the mills. + +My eyes wandered in the direction of Mr. Somers. His said: "No; go +home with _me_." + +"Very well, Alice, whatever is convenient," I answered quietly. + +Mrs. Bancroft was a motherly woman, and Mr. Bancroft was a fatherly +man. Five children sat round the tea-table, distinguished by the +Bancroft nose. Helen and I were seated each side of Mr. Somers. The +table reminded me of our table at Surrey, it was so covered with vast +viands; but the dishes were alike, and handsome. I wondered whether +mother had bought the new china in Boston, and, buttering my second +hot biscuit, I thought of Veronica; then, of the sea. How did it look? +Hark! Its voice was in my ear! Could I climb the housetop? Might I not +see the mist which hung over our low-lying sea by Surrey? + +"Will you take quince or apple jelly, Miss Morgeson?" asked Mrs. +Bancroft. + +"Apple, if you please." + +"Do you write that sister of yours often?" asked Mr. Somers, as he +passed me the apple jelly. + +"I never write her." + +"Will you tell me something of Surrey?" + +"Mr. Somers, shall I give you a cup-custard?" + +"No, thank you, mam." + +"Surrey is lonely, evangelical, primitive." + +"Belem is dreary too; most of it goes to Boston, or to India." + +"Does it smell of sandal wood? And has everybody tea-caddies? _Vide_ +Indian stories." + +"We have a crate of queer things from Calcutta." + +"Are you going to study law with Judge Ryder?" Mr. Bancroft inquired. + +"I think so." + +Then Helen pushed back her chair; and Mrs. Bancroft stood in her place +long enough for us to reach the parlor door. + +"And I must go to the office," Mr. Bancroft said, so we had the parlor +to ourselves; but Mr. Somers did not read from Tennyson--for he had +forgotten to bring the book. + +"Now for a compact," he said. "I must be called Ben Somers by you; and +may I call you Cassandra, and Helen?" + +"Yes," we answered. + +"Let us be confidential." + +And we were. I was drawn into speaking of my life at home; my remarks, +made without premeditation, proved that I possessed ideas and feelings +hitherto unknown. I felt no shyness before him, and, although I saw +his interest in me, no agitation. Helen was also moved to tell us +that she was engaged. She rolled up her sleeve to show us a bracelet, +printed in ink on her arm, with the initials, "L.N." Those of her +cousin, she said; he was a sailor, and some time, she supposed, they +would marry. + +"How could you consent to have your arm so defaced?" I asked. + +Her eyes flashed as she replied that she had not looked upon the mark +in that light before. + +"We may all be tattooed," said Mr. Somers. + +"I am," I thought. + +He told us in his turn that he should be rich. "There are five of us. +My mother's fortune cuts up rather; but it wont be divided till the +youngest is twenty-one. I assure you we are impatient." + +"Some one of your family happened to marry a Morgeson," I here +remarked. + +"I wrote father about that; he must know the circumstance, though he +never has a chance to expatiate on _his_ side of the house. Poor man! +he has the gout, and passes his time in experiments with temperature +and diet. Will you ever visit Belem? I shall certainly go to Surrey." + +Mrs. Bancroft interrupted us, and soon after Mr. Bancroft arrived, +redolent of smoke. Ten o'clock came, and nobody for me. At half-past +ten I put on my shawl to walk home, when Charles drove up to the gate. + +"Say," said Ben Somers, in a low voice, "that you will walk with me." + +"I am not too late, Cassandra?" called Charles, coming up the steps, +bowing to all. "I am glad you are ready; Nell is impatient." + +"My dear," asked Mrs. Bancroft, "how dare you trust to the mercy of +such vicious beasts as Mr. Morgeson loves to drive?" + +"Come," he said, touching my arm. + +"Wont you walk?" said Mr. Somers aloud. + +"Walk?" echoed Charles. "No." + +"I followed him. Nell had already bitten off a paling; and as he +untied her he boxed her ears. She did not jump, for she knew the hand +that struck her. We rushed swiftly away through the long shadows of +the moonlight. + +"Charles, what did Ben Somers do at Harvard?" + +"He was in a night-fight, and he sometimes got drunk; it is a family +habit." + +"Pray, why did you inquire about him?" + +"From the interest I feel in him." + +"You like him, then?" + +"I detest him; do you too?" + +"I like him." + +He bent down and looked into my face. + +"You are telling me a lie." + +I made no reply. + +"I should beg your pardon, but I will not. I am going away to-morrow. +Give me your hand, and say farewell." + +"Farewell then. Is Alice up? I see a light moving in her chamber." + +"If you do, she is not waiting for me." + +"I have been making coffee for you," she said, as soon as we entered, +"in my French biggin. I have packed your valise too, Charles, and have +ordered your breakfast. Cassy, we will breakfast after he has gone." + +"I have to sit up to write, Alice. See that the horses are exercised. +Ask Parker to drive them. The men will be here to-morrow to enlarge +the conservatory." + +"Yes." + +"I shall get a better stock while I am away." + +I sipped my coffee; Alice yawned fearfully, with her hand on the +coffee-pot, ready to pour again. "Why, Charles," she exclaimed, "there +is no cream in your coffee." + +"No, there isn't," looking into his cup; "nor sugar." + +She threw a lump at him, which he caught, laughing one of his abrupt +laughs. + +"How extraordinarily affectionate," I thought, but somehow it pleased +me. + +"Why do you tempt me, Alice?" I said. "Doctor White says I must not +drink coffee." + +"Tempted!" Charles exclaimed. "Cassandra is never tempted. What she +does, she does because she will. Don't worry yourself, Alice, about +her." + +"Because I will," I repeated. + +A nervous foreboding possessed me, the moment I entered my room. Was +it the coffee? Twice in the night I lighted my candle, looked at the +little French clock on the mantel, and under the bed. At last I fell +asleep, but starting violently from its oblivious dark, to become +aware that the darkness of the room was sentient. A breath passed over +my face; but I caught no sound, though I held my breath to listen for +one. I moved my hands before me then, but they came in contact with +nothing. My forebodings passed away, and I slept till Alice sent for +me. I sat up in bed philosophizing, and examining the position of +the chairs, the tops of the tables and the door. No change had taken +place. But my eyes happened to fall on my handkerchief, which had +dropped by the bedside. I picked it up; there was a dusty footprint +upon it. The bell rang, and, throwing it under the bed, I dressed and +ran down. Alice was taking breakfast, tired of waiting. She said the +baby had cried till after midnight, and that Charles never came to bed +at all. + +"Do eat this hot toast; it has just come in." + +"I shall stay at home to-day, Alice, I feel chilly; is it cold?" + +"You must have a fire in your room." + +"Let me have one to day; I should like to sit there." + +She gave orders for the fire, and went herself to see that it burned. +Soon I was sitting before it, my feet on a stool, and a poker in my +hand with which I smashed the smoky lumps of coal which smoldered in +the grate. + +I stayed there all day, looking out of the window when I heard the +horses tramp in the stable or a step on the piazza. It was a dull +November day; the atmosphere was glutinous with a pale mist, which +made the leaves stick together in bunches, helplessly cumbering the +ground. The boughs dropped silent tears over them, under the gray, +pitiless sky. I read Byron, which was the only book in the house, +I believe; for neither Charles nor Alice read anything except the +newspapers. I looked over my small stores also, and my papers, which +consisted of father's letters. As I was sorting them the thought +struck me of writing to Veronica, and I arranged my portfolio, pulled +the table nearer the fire, and began, "Dear Veronica." After writing +this a few times I gave it up, cut off the "Dear Veronicas," and made +lamplighters of the paper. + +Ben Somers called at noon, to inquire the reason of my absence from +school, and left a book for me. It was the poems he had spoken of. +I lighted on "Fatima," read it and copied it. In the afternoon Alice +came up with the baby. + +"Let me braid your hair," she said, "in a different fashion." + +I assented; the baby was bestowed on a rug, and a chair was put before +the glass, that I might witness the operation. + +"What magnificent hair!" she said, as she unrolled it. "It is a yard +long." + +"It is a regular mane, isn't it?" + +She began combing it; the baby crawled under the bed, and coming out +with the handkerchief in its hand, crept up to her, trying to make her +take it. She had combed my hair over my face, but I saw it. + +"Do I hurt you, Cass?" + +"No, do I ever hurt you, Alice?" And I divided the long bands over my +eyes, and looked up at her. + +"Were any of your family ever cracked? I have long suspected you of a +disposition that way." + +"The child is choking itself with that handkerchief." + +She took it, and, tossing it on the bed, gave Byron to the child to +play with, and went on with the hair-dressing. + +"There, now," she said, "is not this a masterpiece of barber's craft? +Look at the back of your head, and then come down." + +"Yes, I will, for I feel better." + +When I returned to my room again it was like meeting a confidential +friend. + +A few days after, father came to Rosville. I invited Ben Somers and +Helen to spend with us the only evening he stayed. After they were +gone, we sat in my room and talked over many matters. His spirits were +not as buoyant as usual, and I felt an undefinable anxiety which I did +not mention. When he said that mother was more abstracted than +ever, he sighed. I asked him how many years he thought I must waste; +eighteen had already gone for nothing. + +"You must go in the way ordained, waste or no waste. I have tried to +make your life differ from mine at the same age, for you are like me, +and I wanted to see the result." + +"We shall see." + +"Veronica has been let alone--is master of herself, except when in a +rage. She is an extraordinary girl; independent of kith and kin, and +everything else. I assure you, Miss Cassy, she is very good." + +"Does she ever ask for me?" + +"I never heard her mention your name but once. She asked one day what +your teachers were. You do not love each other, I suppose. What hatred +there is between near relations! Bitter, bitter," he said calmly, as +if he thought of some object incapable of the hatred he spoke of. + +"That's Grandfather John Morgeson you think of. I do not hate +Veronica. I think I love her; at least she interests me." + +"The same creeping in the blood of us all, Cassy. I did not like my +father; but thank God I behaved decently toward him. It must be late." + +As he kissed me, and we stood face to face, I recognized my likeness +to him. "He has had experiences that I shall never know," I thought. +"Why should I tell him mine?" But an overpowering impulse seized me +to speak to him of Charles. "Father," and I put my hands on his +shoulders. He set his candle back on the table. + +"You look hungry-eyed, eager. What is it? Are you well?" + +"No." + +"You are faded a little. Your face has lost its firmness." + +My impulse died a sudden death. I buried it with a swallow. + +"Do you think so?" + +"You are all alike. Let me tell you something; don't get sick. If you +are, hide it as much as possible. Men do not like sick women." + +"I'll end this fading business as soon as possible. It _is_ late. +Good-night, dad." + +I examined my face as soon as he closed the door. There _was_ a +change. Not the change from health to disease, but an expression +lurking there--a reflection of some unrevealed secret. + +The next morning was passed with Alice and the children. He was +pleased with her prettiness and sprightliness, and his gentle manner +and disposition pleased her. She asked him to let me spend another +year in Rosville; but he said that I must return to Surrey, and that +he never would allow me to leave home again. + +"She will marry." + +"Not early." + +"Never, I believe," I said. + +"It will be as well." + +"Yes," she replied; "if you leave her a fortune, or teach her some +trade, that will give her some importance in the world." + +Her wisdom astonished me. + +He was sorry, he said, that Morgeson was not at home. When he +mentioned him I looked out of the window, and saw Ben Somers coming +into the yard. As he entered, Alice gave him a meaning look, which was +not lost upon me, and which induced him to observe Ben closely. + +"The train is nearly due, Mr. Morgeson; shall I walk to the station +with you?" + +"Certainly; come, Cassy." + +On the way he touched me, making a sign toward Ben. I shook my head, +which appeared satisfactory. The rest of the time was consumed in the +discussion of the relationship, which ended in an invitation, as I +expected, to Surrey. + +"The governor is not worried, is he?" asked Ben, on our way back. + +"No more than I am." + +"What a pity Morgeson was not at home!" + +"Why a pity?" + +"I should like to see them together, they are such antipodal men. Does +your father know him well?" + +"Does any one know him well?" + +"Yes, I know him. I do not like him. He is a savage, living by his +instincts, with one element of civilization--he loves Beauty--beauty +like yours." He turned pale when he said this, but went on. "He has +never seen a woman like you; who has? Forgive me, but I watch you +both." + +"I have perceived it." + +"I suppose so, and it makes you more willful." + +"You said you were but a boy." + +"Yes, but I have had one or two manly wickednesses. I have done with +them, I hope." + +"So that you have leisure to pry into those of others." + +"You do not forgive me." + +"I like you; but what can I do?" + +"Keep up your sophistry to the last." + + + + + + +CHAPTER XIX. + + +Alice and I were preparing for the first ball, when Charles came home, +having been absent several weeks. The conservatory was finished, and +looked well, jutting from the garden-room, which we used often, since +the weather had been cold. The flowers and plants it was filled with +were more fragrant and beautiful than rare. I never saw him look so +genial as when he inspected it with us. Alice was in good-humor, also, +for he had brought her a set of jewels. + +"Is it not her birthday," he said, when he gave her the jewel case, +"or something, that I can give Cassandra this?" taking a little box +from his pocket. + +"Oh yes," said Alice; "show it to us." + +"Will you have it?" he asked me. + +I held out my hand, and he put on my third finger a diamond ring, +which was like a star. + +"How well it looks on your long hand!" said Alice. + +"What unsuspected tastes I find I have!" I answered. "I am +passionately fond of rings; this delights me." + +His swarthy face flushed with pleasure at my words; but, according to +his wont, he said nothing. + +A few days after his return, a man came into the yard, leading a +powerful horse chafing in his halter, which he took to the +stable. Charles asked me to look at a new purchase he had made in +Pennsylvania. The strange man was lounging about the stalls when we +went in, inspecting the horses with a knowing air. + +"I declare, sir," said Jesse, "I am afeared to tackle this ere animal; +he's a reglar brute, and no mistake." + +"He'll be tame enough; he is but four years old." + +"He's never been in a carriage," said the man. + +"Lead him out, will you?" + +The man obeyed. The horse was a fine creature, black, and thick-maned; +but the whites of his eyes were not clear; they were streaked with +red, and he attempted continually to turn his nostrils inside out. +Altogether, I thought him diabolical. + +"What's the matter with his eyes?" Charles asked. + +"I think, sir," the man replied, "as how they got inflamed like, in +the boat coming from New York. It's nothing perticalar, I believe." + +Alice declared it was too bad, when she heard there was another horse +in the stable. She would not look at him, and said she would never +ride with Charles when he drove him. + +I had been taking lessons of Professor Simpson, and was ready for +the ball. All the girls from the Academy were going in white, except +Helen, who was to wear pink silk. It was to be a military ball, and +strangers were expected. Ben Somers, and our Rosville beaux, were +of course to be there, all in uniform, except Ben, who preferred the +dress of a gentleman, he said,--silk stockings, pumps, and a white +cravat. + +We were dressed by nine o'clock, Alice in black velvet, with a wreath +of flowers in her black hair--I in a light blue velvet bodice, and +white silk skirt. We were waiting for the ball hack to come for us, as +that was the custom, for no one owned a close coach in Rosville, when +Charles brought in some splendid scarlet flowers which he gave to +Alice. + +"Where are Cassandra's?" + +"She does not care for flowers; besides, she would throw them away on +her first partner." + +He put us in the coach, and went back. I was glad he did not come with +us, and gave myself up to the excitement of my first ball. Alice was +surrounded by her acquaintances at once, and I was asked to dance a +quadrille by Mr. Parker, whose gloves were much too large, and whose +white trowsers were much too long. + +"I kept the flowers you gave me," he said in a breathless way. + +"Oh yes, I remember; mustn't we forward now?" + +"Mr. Morgeson's very fond of flowers." + +"So he is. How de do, Miss Ryder." + +Miss Ryder, my vis-à-vis, bowed, looking scornfully at my partner, who +was only a clerk, while hers was a law student. I immediately turned +to Mr. Parker with affable smiles, and went into a kind of dumb-show +of conversation, which made him warm and uncomfortable. Mrs. Judge +Ryder sailed by on Ben Somers's arm. + +"Put your shoulders down," she whispered to her daughter, who had +poked one very much out of her dress. "My love," she spoke aloud, "you +mustn't dance _every_ set." + +"No, ma," and she passed on, Ben giving a faint cough, for my benefit. +We could not find Alice after the dance was over. A brass band +alternated with the quadrille band, and it played so loudly that we +had to talk at the top of our voices to be heard. Mine soon gave out, +and I begged Mr. Parker to bring Helen, for I had not yet seen her. +She was with Dr. White, who had dropped in to see the miserable +spectacle. The air, he said, shaking his finger at me, was already +miasmal; it would be infernal by midnight Christians ought not to be +there. "Go home early, Miss. Your mother never went to a ball, I'll +warrant." + +"We are wiser than our mothers." + +"And wickeder; you will send for me to-morrow." + +"Your Valenciennes lace excruciates the Ryders," said Helen. "I was +standing near Mrs. Judge Ryder and the girls just now. 'Did you ever +see such an upstart?' And, 'What an extravagant dress she has on--it +is ridiculous,' Josephine Ryder said. When Ben Somers heard this +attack on you, he told them that your lace was an heirloom. Here he +is." Mr. Parker took her away, and Ben Somers went in pursuit of a +seat. The quadrille was over, I was engaged for the next, and he had +not come back. I saw nothing of him till the country dance before +supper. He was at the foot of the long line, opposite a pretty girl +in blue, looking very solemn and stately. I took off the glove from my +hand which wore the new diamond, and held it up, expecting him to look +my way soon. Its flash caught his eyes, as they roamed up and down, +and, as I expected, he left his place and came up behind me. + +"Where did you get that ring?" wiping his face with his handkerchief. + +"Ask Alice." + +"You are politic." + +"Handsome, isn't it?" + +"And valuable; it cost as much as the new horse." + +"Have you made a memorandum of it?" + +"Destiny has brilliant spokes in her wheel, hasn't she?" + +"Is that from the Greek tragedies?" + +"To your places, gentlemen," the floor-manager called, and the band +struck up the Fisher's Hornpipe. At supper, I saw Ben Somers, still +with the pretty girl in blue; but he came to my chair and asked me if +I did not think she was a pretty toy for a man to play with. + +"How much wine have you drunk? Enough to do justice to the family +annals?" + +"Really, you have been well informed. No, I have _not_ drunk enough +for that; but Mrs. Ryder has sent her virgins home with me. I am +afraid their lamps are upset again. I drink nothing after to-night. +You shall not ask again, 'How much?'" + +My fire was out when I reached home. My head was burning and aching. +I was too tired to untwist my hair, and I pulled and dragged at my +dress, which seemed to have a hundred fastenings. Creeping into bed, +I perceived the odor of flowers, and looking at my table discovered a +bunch of white roses. + +"Roses are nonsense, and life is nonsense," I thought. + +When I opened my eyes, Alice was standing by the bed, with a glass of +roses in her hand. + +"Charles put these roses here, hey?" + +"I suppose so; throw them out of the window, and me too; my head is +splitting." + +"To make amends for not giving you any last night," she went on; "he +is quite childish." + +"Can't you unbraid my hair, it hurts my head so?" + +She felt my hands. I was in a fever, she said, and ran down for +Charles. "Cass is sick, in spite of your white roses." + +"The devil take the roses. Can't you get up, Cassandra?" + +"Not now. Go away, will you?" + +He left the room abruptly. Alice loosened my hair, bound my head, and +poured cologne-water over me, lamenting all the while that she had not +brought me home; and then went down for some tea, presently returning +to say that Charles had been for Dr. White, who said he would not +come. But he was there shortly afterward. By night I was well again. + +Dr. Price gave us a lecture on late hours that week, requesting us, if +we had any interest in our education, or expected him to have any, to +abstain from balls. + +Ben Somers disappeared; no one knew where he had gone. The Ryders were +in consternation, for he was an intimate of the family, since he +had gone into Judge Ryder's office, six weeks before. He returned, +however, with a new overcoat trimmed with fur, the same as that with +which my new cloak was trimmed. A great snowstorm began the day of his +return, and blocked us indoors for several days, and we had permanent +sleighing afterward. + +In January it was proposed that we should go to the Swan Tavern, ten +miles out of Rosville. + +I had made good resolutions since the ball, and declined going to the +second, which came off three weeks afterward. The truth was, I did not +enjoy the first; but I preferred to give my decision a virtuous tinge. +I also determined to leave the Academy when the spring came, for I +felt no longer a schoolgirl. But for Helen, I could not have remained +as I did. She stayed for pastime now, she confessed, it was so dull at +home; her father was wrapped in his studies, and she had a stepmother. +I resolved again that I would study more, and was translating, in view +of this resolve, "Corinne," with Miss Prior, and singing sedulously +with Mrs. Lane, and had begun a course of reading with Dr. Price. + +I refused two invitations to join the sleighing party, and on the +night it was to be had prepared to pass the evening in my own room +with Oswald and Corinne. Before the fire, with lighted candles, I +heard a ringing of bells in the yard and a stamping of feet on the +piazza. Alice sent up for me. I found Ben Somers with her, who begged +me to take a seat in his sleigh. Helen was there, and Amelia Bancroft. +Alice applauded me for refusing him; but when he whispered in my ear +that he had been to Surrey I changed my mind. She assisted me with +cheerful alacrity to put on a merino dress, its color was purple;--a +color I hate now, and never wear--and wrapped me warmly. Charles +appeared before we started. "Are you really going?" he asked, in a +tone of displeasure. + +"She is really going," Ben answered for me. "Mr. and Mrs. Bancroft are +going," Helen said. "Why not drive out with Mrs. Morgeson?" + +"The night is splendid," Ben remarked. + +"Wont you come?" I asked. + +"If Alice wishes it. Will you go?" he asked her. + +"Would you?" she inquired of all, and all replied, "Yes." + +We started in advance. Helen and Amelia were packed on the back seat, +in a buffalo robe, while Ben and I sat in the shelter of the driver's +box, wrapped in another. It was moonlight, and as we passed the +sleighs of the rest of the party, exchanging greetings, we grew very +merry. Ben, voluble and airy, enlivened us by his high spirits. + +We were drinking mulled wine round the long pine dinner-table of the +Swan, when Charles and Alice arrived. There were about thirty in the +room, which was lighted by tallow candles. When he entered, it seemed +as if the candles suddenly required snuffing, and we ceased to laugh. +All spoke to him with respect, but with an inflection of the voice +which denoted that he was not one of us. As he carelessly passed round +the table all made a movement as he approached, scraping their chairs +on the bare floor, moving their glass of mulled wine, or altering the +position of their arms or legs. An indescribable appreciation of the +impression which he made upon others filled my heart. His isolation +from the sympathy of every person there gave me a pain and a pity, and +for the first time I felt a pang of tenderness, and a throe of pride +for him. But Alice, upon whom he never made any impression, saw +nothing of this; her gayety soon removed the stiffness and silence he +created. The party grew noisy again, except Ben, who had not broken +the silence into which he fell as soon as he saw Charles. The mulled +wine stood before him untouched. I moved to the corner of the table +to allow room for the chair which Charles was turning toward me. Ben +ordered more wine, and sent a glass full to him. Taking it from +the boy who brought it, I gave it to him. "Drink," I said. My voice +sounded strangely. Barely tasting it, he set the glass down, and +leaning his arm on the table, turned his face to me, shielding it with +his hand from the gaze of those about us. I pushed away a candle that +flared in our faces. + +"You never drink wine?" + +"No, Cassandra." + +"How was the ride down?" + +"Delightful." + +"What about the new horse?" + +"He is an awful brute." + +"When shall we have a ride with him?" + +"When you please." + +The boy came in to say would we please go to the parlor; our room was +wanted for supper. An immediate rush, with loud laughing, took place, +for the parlor fire; but Charles and I did not move. I was busy +remaking the bow of my purple silk cravat. + +"'I drink the cup of a costly death,'" Ben hummed, as he sauntered +along by us, hands in his pockets--the last in the room, except us +two. + +"Indeed, Somers; perhaps you would like this too." And Charles offered +him his glass of wine. + +Ben took it, and with his thumb and finger snapped it off at the stem, +tipping the wine over Charles's hand. + +I saw it staining his wristband, like blood. He did not stir, but a +slight smile traveled swiftly over his face. + +"I know Veronica," said Ben, looking at me. "Has this man seen _her_?" + +His voice crushed me. What a barrier his expression of contempt made +between her and me! + +Withal, I felt a humiliating sense of defeat. + +Charles read me. + +As he folded his wristband under his sleeve, carefully and slowly, his +slender fingers did not tremble with the desire that possessed him, +which I saw in his terrible eyes as plainly as if he had spoken, "I +would kill him." + +They looked at my hands, for I was wringing them, and a groan burst +from me. + +"Somers," said Charles, rising and touching his shoulder, "behave like +a man, and let us alone; I love this girl." + +His pale face changed, his eyes softened, and mine filled with tears. + +"Cassandra," urged Ben, in a gentle voice, "come with me; come away." + +"Fool," I answered; "leave _me_ alone, and go." + +He hesitated, moved toward the door, and again urged me to come. + +"Go! go!" stamping my foot, and the door closed without a sound. + +For a moment we stood, transfixed in an isolation which separated us +from all the world beside. + +"Now Charles, we"--a convulsive sob choked me, a strange taste filled +my mouth, I put my handkerchief to my lips and wiped away streaks of +blood. I showed it to him. + +"It is nothing, by God!" snatching the handkerchief. "Take mine--oh, +my dear--" + +I tried to laugh, and muttered the imperative fact of joining the +rest. + +"Be quiet, Cassandra." + +He opened the window, took a handful of snow from the sill and put it +to my mouth. It revived me. + +"Do you hear, Charles? Never say those frightful words again. Never, +never." + +"Never, if it must be so." + +He touched my hand; I opened it; his closed over mine. + +"Go, now," he said, and springing to the window, threw it up, and +jumped out. The boy came in with a tablecloth on his arm, and behind +him Ben. + +"Glass broken, sir." + +"Put it in the bill." + +He offered me his arm, which I was glad to take. + +"Where is Charles?" Alice asked, when we went in. + +"He has just left us," Ben answered; "looking after his horses, +probably." + +"Of course," she replied. "You look blue, Cass. Here, take my chair by +the fire; we are going to dance a Virginia reel." + +I accepted her offer, and was thankful that the dance would take them +away. I wanted to be alone forever. Helen glided behind my chair, and +laid her hand on my shoulder; I shook it off. + +"What is the matter, Cass?" + +"I am going away from Char--school." + +"We are all going; but not to-night." + +"I am going to-night." + +"So you shall, dear; but wait till after supper." + +"Do you think, Helen, that I shall ever have consumption?" fumbling +for my handkerchief, forgetting in whose possession it was. Charles +came in at that instant, and I remembered that he had it. + +"What on earth has happened to you? Oh!" she exclaimed, as I looked at +her. "You were out there with Morgeson and Ben Somers," she whispered; +"something has occurred; what is it?" + +"You shall never know; never--never--never." + +"Cassandra, that man is a devil." + +"I like devils." + +"The same blood rages in both of you." + +"It's mulled wine,--thick and stupid." + +"Nonsense." + +"Will there be tea, at supper?" + +"You shall have some." + +"Ask Ben to order it." + +"Heaven forgive us all, Cassandra!" + +"Remember the tea." + +Charles stood near his wife; wherever she moved afterwards he moved. +I saw it, and felt that it was the shadow of something which would +follow. + +At last the time came for us to return. Helen had plied me with tea, +and was otherwise watchful, but scarcely spoke. + +"It is an age," I said, "since I left Rosville." + +She raised her eyebrows merely, and asked me if I would have more tea. + +"In my room," I thought, "I shall find myself again." And as I opened +my door, it welcomed me with so friendly and silent an aspect, that I +betrayed my grief, and it covered my misery as with a cloak. + + + + + + +CHAPTER XX. + + +Helen was called home by the illness of her father and did not return +to Rosville. She would write me, she said; but it was many weeks +before I received a letter. Ben Somers about this time took a fit of +industry, and made a plan for what he called a well-regulated life, +averring that he should always abide by it. Every hour had its duty, +which must be fulfilled. He weighed his bread and meat, ate so many +ounces a day, and slept watch and watch, as he nautically termed it. +I guessed that the meaning of his plan was to withdraw from the +self-chosen post of censor. His only alienation was an occasional +disappearance for a few days. I never asked him where he went, and had +never spoken to him concerning his mysterious remark about having +been in Surrey. Neither had I heard anything of his being there from +father. Once he told me that his father had explained the marriage of +old Locke Morgeson; but that it was not clear to him that we were at +all related. + +In consequence of his rigorous life, I saw little of him. Though +urged by Alice, he did not come to our house, and we rarely met him +elsewhere. People called him eccentric, but as he was of a rich family +he could afford to be, and they felt no slight by his neglect. + +There was a change everywhere. The greatest change of all was in +Charles. From the night of the sleigh-ride his manner toward me was +totally altered. As far as I could discern, the change was a confirmed +one. The days grew monotonous, but my mind avenged itself by night in +dreams, which renewed our old relation in all its mysterious vitality. +So strong were their impressions that each morning I expected to +receive some token from him which would prove that they were not +lies. As my expectation grew cold and faint, the sense of a double +hallucination tormented me--the past and the present. + +The winter was over. I passed it like the rest of Rosville, going out +when Alice went, staying at home when she stayed. It was all one what +I did, for my aspect was one of content. + +Alice alone was unchanged; her spirits and pursuits were always the +same. Judging by herself, if she judged at all, she perceived no +change in us. Her theory regarding Charles was too firm to be shaken, +and all his oddity was a matter of course. As long as I ate, and +drank, and slept as usual, I too must be the same. He was not at home +much. Business, kept him at the mills, where he often slept, or out of +town. But the home machinery was still under his controlling hand. Not +a leaf dropped in the conservatory that he did not see; not a meal +was served whose slightest detail was not according to his desire. The +horses were exercised, the servants managed, the children kept within +bounds; nothing in the formula of our daily life was ever dropped, and +yet I scarcely ever saw him! When we met, I shared his attentions. He +gave me flowers; noticed my dress; spoke of the affairs of the day; +but all in so public and matter-of-fact a way that I thought I must be +the victim of a vicious sentimentality, or that he had amused himself +with me. Either way, the sooner I cured myself of my vice the better. +But my dreams continued. + +"I miss something in your letters," father complained. "What is it? +Would you like to come home? Your mother is failing in health--she may +need you, though she says not." + +I wrote him that I should come home. + +"Are you prepared," he asked in return, "to remain at home for the +future? Have you laid the foundation of anything by which you can +abide contented, and employed? Veronica has been spending two months +in New York, with the family of one of my business friends. All that +she brings back serves to embellish her quiet life, not to change it. +Will it be so with you?" + +I wrote back, "No; but I am coming." + +He wrote again of changes in Surrey. Dr. Snell had gone, library and +all, and a new minister, red hot from Andover, had taken his place. An +ugly new church was building. His best ship, the _Locke Morgeson_, +was at the bottom of the Indian Ocean, he had just heard. Her loss +bothered him, but his letters were kinder than ever. + +I consulted with Alice about leaving the Academy. She approved +my plan, but begged me not to leave her. I said nothing of my +determination to that effect, feeling a strange disinclination toward +owning it, though I persisted in repeating it to myself. I applied +diligently to my reading, emulating Ben Somers in the regularity of +my habits, and took long walks daily--a mode of exercise I had adopted +since I had ceased my rides with Charles. The pale blue sky of spring +over me, and the pale green grass under me, were charming perhaps; +but there was the same monotony in them, as in other things. I did not +frequent our old promenade, Silver Street, but pushed my walks +into the outskirts of Rosville, by farms bordered with woods. My +schoolmates, who were familiar with all the pleasant spots of the +neighborhood, met me in groups. "Are you really taking walks like the +rest of us?" they asked. "Only alone," I answered. + +I bade farewell at last to Miss Prior. We parted with all friendliness +and respect; from the fact, possibly, that we parted ignorant of each +other. It was the most rational relation that I had ever held with any +one. We parted without emotion or regret, and I started on my usual +walk. + +As I was returning I met Ben Somers. When he saw me he threw his cap +into the air, with the information that he had done with his plans, +and had ordered an indigestible supper, in honor of his resolve. As +people had truly remarked, he could afford to be eccentric. He was +tired of it; he had money enough to do without law. "Not as much as +your cousin Morgeson, who can do without the Gospel, too." + +This was the first time that he had referred to Charles since that +memorable night. Trifling as his words were, they broke into the +foundations of my stagnant will, and set the tide flowing once more. + +"You went to Surrey." + +"I was there a few hours. Your father was not at home. He asked me +there, you remember. I introduced myself, therefore, and was politely +received by your mother, who sent for Veronica. She came in with an +occupied air, her hands full of what I thought were herbs; but they +were grasses, which she had been re-arranging, she said. + +"'You know my sister?' she asked, coming close, and looking at me with +the most singular eyes that were ever on earth." He stopped a moment. +"Not like yours, in the least," he continued. "'Cassandra is very +handsome now, is she?' + +"'Why, Veronica,' said your mother, 'you astonish Mr. Somers.' + +"'You are not astonished,' she said with vehemence, 'you are +embarrassed.' + +"'Upon my soul I am,' I replied, feeling at ease as soon as I had said +so. + +"'Tell me, what has Cassandra been taught? Is Rosville suited to her? +We are not.' + +"'Veronica!' said your mother again. + +"'Mother," and she shook the grasses, and made a little snow fall +round her; 'what shall I say then? I am sure he knows Cassandra. What +did you come here for?' turning to me again. + +"'To see you,' I answered foolishly. + +"'And has Cassandra spoken of me?' Her pale face grew paler, and an +indescribable expression passed over it. 'I do not often speak of +her.' + +"'She does not of you,' I was obliged to answer. And then I said I +must go. But your mother made me dine with them. When I came away +Veronica offered me her hand, but she sent no message to you. She has +never been out of my mind a moment since." + +"You remember the particulars of the interview very well." + +"Why not?" + +"Would she bear your supervision?" + +"Forgive me, Cassandra. Have I not been making a hermit of myself, +eating bread and meat by the ounce, for an expiation?" + +"How did it look there? Oh, tell me!" + +"You strange girl, have you a soul then? It is a grand place, where +it has not been meddled with. I hired a man to drive me as far as any +paths went, into those curving horns of land, on each side of Surrey +to the south. The country is crazy with barrenness, and the sea mocks +it with its terrible beauty." + +"You will visit us, won't you?" + +"Certainly; I intend to go there." + +"Do you know that I left school to-day?" + +"It is time." + +I hurried into the house, for I did not wish to hear any questions +from him concerning my future. Charlotte, who was rolling up an +umbrella in the hall, said it was tea-time, adding that Mr. Morgeson +had come, and that he was in the dining-room. I went upstairs to leave +my bonnet. As I pulled off my glove the ring on my finger twisted +round. I took it off, for the first time since Charles had given it +to me. A sense of haste came upon me; my hands trembled. I brushed +my hair with the back of the brush, shook it out, and wound it into +a loose mass, thrust in my comb and went down. Charlotte was putting +candles on the tea table. Edward was on his father's knee; Alice was +waiting by the tray. + +"Here--is--Cassandra," said Charles, mentioning the fact as if he +merely wished to attract the child's attention. + +"Here--is--Cassandra," I repeated, imitating his tone. He started. +Some devil broke loose in him, and looking through his eyes an +instant, disappeared, like a maniac who looks through the bars of his +cell, and dodges from the eye of his keeper. Jesse brought me a letter +while we were at the table. It was from Helen. I broke its seal to see +how long it was, and put it aside. + +"I am free, Alice. I have left the Academy, and am going to set up for +an independent woman." + +"What?" said Charles; "you did not tell me. Did you know it, Alice?" + +"Yes; we can't expect her to be at school all her days." + +"Cassandra," he said suddenly, "will you give me the salt?" + +He looked for the ring on the hand which I stretched toward him. + +He not only missed that, but he observed the disregard of his wishes +in the way I had arranged my hair. I shook it looser from the comb and +pushed it from my face. An expression of unspeakable passion, pride, +and anguish came into his eyes; his mouth trembled; he caught up a +glass of water to hide his face, and drank slowly from it. + +"Are you going away again soon?" Alice asked him presently. + +"No." + +"To keep Cassandra, I intend to ask Mrs. Morgeson to come again. Will +you write Mr. Morgeson to urge it?" + +"Yes." + +"I shall ask them to give up Cass altogether to us." + +"You like her so much, do you, Alice?" + +His voice sounded far off and faint. + +Again I refrained from speaking my resolution of going home. I would +give up thinking of it even! I felt again the tension of the chain +between us. That night I ceased to dream of him. + +"My letter is from Helen, Alice," I said. + +"When did you see Somers?" Charles asked. + +"To-day. I have an idea he will not remain here long." + +"He is an amusing young man," Alice remarked. + +"Very," said Charles. + +Helen's letter was long and full of questions. What had I done? How +had I been? She gave an account of her life at home. She was her +father's nurse, and seldom left him. It was a dreary sort of business, +but she was not melancholy. In truth, she felt better pleased with +herself than she had been in Rosville. She could not help thinking +that a chronic invalid would be a good thing for me. How was Ben +Somers? How much longer should I stay in Rosville? It would know us no +more forever when we left, and both of us would leave it at the same +time. Would I visit her ever? They lived in a big house with a red +front door. On the left was a lane with tall poplars dying on each +side of it, up which the cows passed every night. At the back of it +was a huge barn round which martins and pigeons flew the year through. +It was dull but respectable and refined, and no one knew that she was +tattooed on the arm. + +I treasured this letter and all she wrote me. It was my first +school-girl correspondence and my last. + +Relations of Alice came from a distance to pay her a visit. There was +a father, a mother, a son about twenty-one, and two girls who were +younger. Alice wished that they had stayed at home; but she was polite +and endeavored to make their visit agreeable. The son, called by his +family "Bill," informed Charles that he was a judge of horseflesh, and +would like to give his nags a try, having a high-flyer himself at +home that the old gentleman would not hear of his bringing along. His +actions denoted an admiration of me. He looked over the book I was +reading or rummaged my workbox, trying on my thimble with an air of +tenderness, and peeping into my needlebook. He told Alice that he +thought I was a whole team and a horse to let, but he felt rather +balky when he came near me, I had such a smartish eye. + +"What am I to do, marm?" asked Jesse one morning when Charles was +away. "That ere young man wants to ride the new horse, and it is jist +the one he mus'n't ride." + +"I will speak to Cousin Bill myself," she said. + +"He seems a sperrited young feller, and if he wants to break his neck +it's most a pity he shouldn't." + +"I think," she said when Jesse had retired, "that Charles must be +saving up that beast to kill himself with. He will not pull a chaise +yet." + +"Has Charles tried him?" + +"In the lane in an open wagon. He has a whim of having him broken to +drive without blinders, bare of harness; he has been away so of late +that he has not accomplished it." + +Bill entered while we were talking, and Alice told him he must not +attempt to use the horse, but proposed he should take her pair and +drive out with me. I shook my head in vain; she was bent on mischief. +He was mollified by the proposal, and I was obliged to get ready. On +starting he placed his cap on one side, held his whip upright, telling +me that it was not up to the mark in length, and doubled his knuckles +over the reins. He was a good Jehu, but I could not induce him to +observe anything along the road. + +"Where's Mr. Morgeson's mills?" + +We turned in their direction. + +"He is a man of property, ain't he?" + +"I think so." + +"He has prime horses anyhow. That stallion of his would bring a +first-rate price if he wanted to sell. Do you play the piano?" + +"A little." + +"And sing?" + +"Yes." + +"I have not heard you. Will you sing '_A place in thy memory, +dearest,'_ some time for me?" + +"Certainly." + +"Are you fond of flowers and the like?" + +"Very fond of them." + +"So am I; our tastes agree. Here we are, hey?" + +Charles came out when he saw us coming over the bridge, and Bill +pulled up the horses scientifically, giving him a coachman's salute. +"You see I am quite a whip." + +"You are," said Charles. + +"What a cub!" he whispered me. "I think I'll give up my horses and +take to walking as you have." + +On the way home Bill held the reins in one hand and attempted to take +mine with the other, a proceeding which I checked, whereupon he was +exceedingly confused. The whip fell from his clutch over the dasher, +and in recovering it his hat fell off; shame kept him silent for the +rest of the ride. + +I begged Alice to propose no more rides with Cousin Bill. That night +he composed a letter which he sent me by Charlotte early the next +morning. + +"Why, Charlotte, what nonsense is this?" + +"I expect," she answered sympathizingly, "that it is an offer of his +hand and heart." + +"Don't mention it, Charlotte." + +"Never while I have breath." + +In an hour she told Phoebe, who told Alice, who told Charles, and +there it ended. It was an offer, as Charlotte predicted. My first! I +was crestfallen! I wrote a reply, waited till everybody had gone to +breakfast, and slipping into his room, pinned it to the pincushion. +In the evening he asked if I ever sang "_Should these fond hopes e'er +forsake thee."_ I gave him the "_Pirate's Serenade_" instead, which +his mother declared beautiful. I saw Alice and Charles laughing, +and could hardly help joining them, when I looked at Bill, in whose +countenance relief and grief were mingled. + +It was a satisfaction to us when they went away. Their visit was +shortened, I suspected, by the representations Bill made to his +mother. She said, "Good-by," with coldness; but he shook hands with +me, and said it was all right he supposed. + +The day they went I had a letter from father which informed me that +mother would not come to Rosville. He reminded me that I had been +in Rosville over a year. "I am going home soon," I said to myself, +putting away the letter. It was a summer day, bright and hot. Alice, +busy all day, complained of fatigue and went to bed soon after tea. +The windows were open and the house was perfumed with odors from +the garden. At twilight I went out and walked under the elms, whose +pendant boughs were motionless. I watched the stars as they came out +one by one above the pale green ring of the horizon and glittered in +the evening sky, which darkened slowly. I was coming up the gravel +walk when I heard a step at the upper end of it which arrested me. I +recognized it, and slipped behind a tree to wait till it should pass +by me; but it ceased, and I saw Charles pulling off a twig of the +tree, which brushed against his face. Presently he sprang round the +tree, caught me, and held me fast. + +"I am glad you are here, my darling. Do you smell the roses?" + +"Yes; let me go." + +"Not till you tell me one thing. Why do you stay in Rosville?" + +The baby gave a loud cry in Alice's chamber which resounded through +the garden. + +"Go and take care of your baby," I said roughly, "and not busy +yourself with me." + +"Cassandra," he said, with a menacing voice, "how dare you defy me? +How dare you tempt me?" + +I put my hand on his arm. "Charles, is love a matter of temperament?" + +"Are you mad? It is life--it is heaven--it is hell." + +"There is something in this soft, beautiful, odorous night that makes +one mad. Still I shall not say to you what you once said to me." + +"Ah! you do not forget those words--'_I love you_.'" + +Some one came down the lane which ran behind the garden whistling an +opera air. + +"There is your Providence," he said quietly, resting his hand against +the tree. + +I ran round to the front piazza, just as Ben Somers turned out of the +lane, and called him. + +"I have wandered all over Rosville since sunset," he said "and at last +struck upon that lane. To whom does it belong?" + +"It is ours, and the horses are exercised there." + + "'In such a night, + Troilus, methinks, mounted the Trojan walls, + And sighed his soul towards the Grecian tents, + Where Cressid lay that night.'" + + '"In such a night, + Stood Dido with a willow in her hand, + Upon the wild sea banks, and waved her love + To come again to Carthage.'" + +"Talk to me about Surrey, Cassandra." + +"Not a word." + +"Why did you call me?" + +"To see what mood you were in." + +"How disagreeable you are! What is the use of venturing one's mood +with you?" + + + + + + +CHAPTER XXI. + + +Alice called me to her chamber window one morning. "Look into the +lane. Charles and Jesse are there with that brute. He goes very well, +now that they have thrown the top of the chaise back; he quivered like +a jelly at first." + +"I must have a ride, Alice." + +"Charles," she called. "Breakfast is waiting." + +"What shall be his name, girls?" he asked. + +"Aspen," I suggested. + +"That will do," said Alice. + + +"Shall we ride soon?" I asked. + +"Will you?" he spoke quickly. "In a day or two, then." + +"Know what you undertake, Cass," said Alice. + +"She always does," he answered. + +"Let me go, papa," begged Edward. + +"By and by, my boy." + +"What a compliment, Cass! He does not object to venture you." + +He proposed Fairtown, six miles from Rosville, as he had business +there. The morning we were to go proved cloudy, and we waited till +afternoon, when Charles, declaring that it would not rain, ordered +Aspen to be harnessed. I went into Alice's room tying my bonnet; he +was there, leaning over the baby's crib, who lay in it crowing and +laughing at the snapping of his fingers. Alice was hemming white +muslin. + +"Take a shawl with you, Cass; I think it will rain, the air is so +heavy." + +"I guess not," said Charles, going to the window. "What a nuisance +that lane is, so near the garden! I'll have it plowed soon, and +enclosed." + +"For all those wild primroses you value so?" she asked. + +"I'll spare those." + +Charlotte came to tell us that the chaise was ready. + +"Good-bye, Alice," he said, passing her, and giving her work a toss up +to the ceiling. + +"Be careful." + +"Take care, sir," said Penn, after we were in the chaise, "and don't +give way to him; if you do, he'll punish you. May be he feels the +thunder in the air." + +We reached Fairtown without any indication of mischief from Aspen, +although he trotted along as if under protest. Charles was delighted, +and thought he would be very fast, by the time he was trained. It grew +murky and hot every moment, and when we reached Fairtown the air was +black and sultry with the coming storm. Charles left me at the little +hotel, and returned so late in the afternoon that we decided not to +wait for the shower. Two men led Aspen to the door. He pulled at his +bridle, and attempted to run backward, playing his old trick of trying +to turn his nostrils inside out, and drawing back his upper lip. + +"Something irritates him, Charles." + +"If you are afraid, you must not come with me. I can have you sent +home in a carriage from the tavern." + +"I shall go back with you." + +But I felt a vague alarm, and begged him to watch Aspen, and not talk. +Aspen went faster and faster, seeming to have lost his shyness, and my +fears subsided. We were within a couple of miles of Rosville, when a +splashing rain fell. + +"You must not be wet," said Charles. "I will put up the top. Aspen is +so steady now, it may not scare him." + +"No, no," I said; but he had it up already, and asked me to snap the +spring on my side. I had scarcely taken my arm inside the chaise when +Aspen stopped, turned his head, and looked at us with glazed eyes; +flakes of foam flew from his mouth over his mane. The flesh on his +back contracted and quivered. I thought he was frightened by the +chaise-top, and looked at Charles in terror. + +"He has some disorder," he cried. "Oh, Cassandra! My God!" + +He tried to spring at his head, but was too late, for the horse was +leaping madly. He fell back on his seat. + +"If he will keep the road," he muttered. + +I could not move my eyes from him. How pale he was! But he did +not speak again. The horse ran a few rods, leaped across a ditch, +clambered up a stone wall with his fore-feet, and fell backward! + +Dr. White was in my room, washing my face. There was a smell of +camphor about the bed. "You crawled out of a small hole, my child," he +said, as I opened my eyes. It was quite dark, but I saw people at +the door, and two or three at the foot of my bed, and I heard low, +constrained talking everywhere. + +"His iron feet made a dreadful noise on the stones, Doctor!" + +I shut my eyes again and dozed. Suddenly a great tumult came to my +heart. + +"Was he killed?" I cried, and tried to rise from the bed. "Let me go, +will you?" + +"He is dead," whispered Dr. White. + +I laughed loudly. + +"Be a good girl--be a good girl. Get out, all of you. Here, Miss +Prior." + +"You are crying, Doctor; my eyes feel dry." + +"Pooh, pooh, little one. Now I am going to set your arm; simple +fracture, that's all. The blow was tempered, but you are paralyzed by +the shock." + +"Miss Prior, is my face cut?" + +"Not badly, my dear." + +My arm was set, my face bandaged, some opium administered, and then +I was left alone with Miss Prior. I grew drowsy, but suffered so from +the illusion that I was falling out of bed that I could not sleep. + +It was near morning when I shook off my drowsiness and looked about; +Miss Prior was nodding in an arm-chair. I asked for drink, and when +she gave it to me, begged her to lie down on the sofa; she did not +need urging, and was soon asleep. + +"What room is he in?" I thought. "I must know where he is." + +I sat up in the bed, and pushed myself out by degrees, keeping my eyes +on Miss Prior; but she did not stir. I staggered when I got into the +passage, but the cool air from some open window revived me, and I +crept on, stopping at Alice's door to listen. I heard a child murmur +in its sleep. He could not be there. The doors of all the +chambers were locked, and I must go downstairs. I went into the +garden-room--the door was open, the scent of roses came in and made me +deadly sick; into the dining-room, and into the parlor--he was there, +lying on a table covered with a sheet. Alice sat on the floor, her +face hid in her hands, crying softly. I touched her. She started on +seeing me. "Go away, Cassy, for God's sake! How came you out of bed?" + +"Hush! Tell me!" And I went down on the floor beside her. "Was he dead +when they found us?" + +She nodded. + +"What was said? Did you hear?" + +"They said he must have made a violent effort to save you. The side +of the chaise was torn. The horse kicked him after you were thrust out +over the wheel. Or did you creep out?" + +I groaned. "Why did he thrust me out?" + +"What?" + +"Where is Aspen?" + +She pointed to the stable. "He had a fit. Penn says he has had one +before; but he thought him cured. He stood quiet in the ditch after he +had broken from the chaise." + +"Alice, did you love him?" + +"My husband!" + +A door near us opened, and Ben Somers and young Parker looked in. They +were the watchers. Parker went back when he saw me; but Ben came in. +He knelt down by me, put his arm around me, and said, "Poor girl!" +Alice raised her tear-stained face, looking at me curiously, when +he said this. She took hold of my streaming hair and pulled my head +round. "Did _you_ love him?" Ben rose quickly and went to the window. + +"Alice!" I whispered, "you may or you may not forgive me, but I was +strangely bound to him. And I must tell you that I hunger now for the +kiss he never gave me." + +"I see. Enough. Go back to your room. I must stay by him till all is +over." + +"I can't go back. Ben!" + +"What is it?" + +"Take me upstairs." + +Raising me in his arms, he whispered: "Leave him forever, body and +soul. I am not sorry he is dead." He called Charlotte on the way, and +with her he put me to back to bed. I asked him to let me see the dress +they had taken off. + +"That is enough," I said, "Charles broke my arm." + +It was torn through the shoulder, and the skirt had been twisted like +a rope. Ben made no reply, but bent over me and kissed me tenderly. +All this time Miss Prior had slept the sleep of the just; but he had +barely gone when she started up and said, "Did you call, my dear?" + +"No, it is day." + +"So it is; but you must sleep more." + +I could not obey, and kept awake so long that Dr. White said he +himself should go crazy unless I slept. + +"Presently, presently," I reiterated; "and am I going home?" + +At last my mind went astray; it journeyed into a dismal world, and +came back without an account of its adventures. While it was gone, +my friends were summoned to witness a contest, where the odds were +in favor of death. But I recovered. Whether it was youth, a good +constitution, or the skill of Dr. White, no one could decide. It was a +faint, feeble, fluttering return at first. The faces round me, mobile +with life, wearied me. I was indifferent to existence, and was more +than once in danger of lapsing into the void I had escaped. + +When I first tottered downstairs, he had been buried more than three +weeks. It was a bright morning; the windows of the parlor, where +Charlotte led me, were open. Little Edward was playing round the table +upon which I had seen his father stretched, dead. I measured it with +my eye, remembering how tall he looked. I would have retreated, when +I saw that Alice had visitors, but it was too late. They rose, and +offered congratulations. I was angry that there was no change in the +house. The rooms should have been dismantled, reflecting disorder and +death, by their perpetual darkness and disorder. It was not so. No +dust had been allowed to gather on the furniture, no wrinkles or +stains. No mist on the mirrors, no dimness anywhere. Alice was +elegantly dressed, in the deepest mourning. I examined her with a +cynical eye; her bombazine was trimmed with crape, and the edge of her +collar was beautifully crimped. A mourning brooch fastened it, and +she wore jet ear-rings. She looked handsome, composed, and contented, +holding a black-edged handkerchief. Charlotte had placed my chair +opposite a glass; I caught sight of my elongated visage in it. How +dull I looked! My hair was faded and rough; my eyes were a pale, +lusterless blue. The visitors departed, while I still contemplated my +rueful aspect, and Alice and I were alone. + +"I want some broth, Alice. I am hungry." + +"How many bowls have you had this morning?" + +"Only two." + +"You must wait an hour for the third; it is not twelve o'clock." + +We were silent. The flies buzzed in and out of the windows; a great +bee flew in, tumbled against the panes, loudly hummed, and after a +while got out again. Alice yawned, and I pulled the threads out of the +border of my handkerchief. + +"The hour is up; I will get your broth." + +"Bring me a great deal." + +She came back with a thin, impoverished liquid. + +"There is no chicken in it," I said tearfully. + +"I took it out." + +"How could you?" And I wept. + +She smiled. "You are very weak, but shall have a bit." She went for +it, returning with an infinitesimal portion of chicken. + +"What a young creature it must have been, Alice!" + +She laughed, promising me more, by and by. + +"Now you must lie down. Take my arm and come to the sofa. + +"Not here; let us go into another room." + +"Come, then." + +"Don't leave me," I begged, after she had arranged me comfortably. She +sat down by me with a fan. + +"What happened while I was ill?" + +She fanned rapidly for an instant, taking thought what to say. + +"I shot Aspen, a few days after." + +"With your own hand?" + +"Yes." + +"Good." + +"Penn protested, said I interfered with Providence. Jesse added, also, +that what had happened was ordained, and no mistake, and then I sent +them both away." + +"And I am going at last, Alice; father will be here again in a few +days." + +"You did not recognize Veronica, when they came." + +"Was she here?" + +"Yes, and went the same day. What great tears rolled down her +unmovable face, when she stood by your bed! She would not stay; the +atmosphere distressed her so, she went back to Boston to wait for your +father. I could neither prevail on her to eat, drink, or rest." + +"What will you do, Alice?" + +"Take care of the children, and manage the mills." + +"Manage the mills?" + +"I can. No wonder you look astonished," she said, with a sigh. "I am +changed. When perhaps I should feel that I have done with life, I am +eager to begin it. I have lamented over myself lately." + +"How is Ben?" + +"He has been here often. How strange it was that to him alone Veronica +gave her hand when they met! Indeed, she gave him both her hands." + +"And he?" + +"Took them, bowing over them, till I thought he wasn't coming up +again. I do not call people eccentric any more," she said, faintly +blushing. "I look for a reason in every action. Tell me fairly, have +you had a contempt for me--for my want of perception? I understand you +now, to the bone and marrow, I assure you." + +"Then you understand more than I do. But you will remember that once +or twice I attempted to express my doubts to you?" + +"Yes, yes, with a candor which misled me. But you are talking too +much." + +"Give me more broth, then." + + + + + + +CHAPTER XXII. + + +I was soon well enough to go home. Father came for me, bringing Aunt +Merce. There was no alteration in her, except that she had taken to +wearing a false front, which had a claret tinge when the light struck +it, and a black lace cap. She walked the room in speechless distress +when she saw me, and could not refrain from taking an immense pinch of +snuff in my presence. + +"Didn't you bring any flag-root, Aunt Merce?" + +"Oh Lord, Cassandra, won't anything upon earth change you?" + +And then we both laughed, and felt comfortable together. Her knitting +mania had given way to one she called transferring. She brought a +little basket filled with rags, worn-out embroideries, collars, cuffs, +and edges of handkerchiefs, from which she cut the needle-work, to sew +again on new muslin. She looked at embroidery with an eye merely to +its capacity for being transferred. Alice proved a treasure to her, +by giving her heaps of fine work. She and Aunt Merce were pleased with +each other, and when we were ready to come away, Alice begged her to +visit her every year. I made no farewell visits--my ill health was +sufficient excuse; but my schoolmates came to bid me good-bye, and +brought presents of needlebooks, and pincushions, which I returned by +giving away yards of ribbon, silver fruit-knives, and Mrs. Hemans's +poems, which poetess had lately given my imagination an apostrophizing +direction. Miss Prior came also, with a copy of "Young's Night +Thoughts," bound in speckled leather This hilarious and refreshing +poem remained at the bottom of my trunk, till Temperance fished it +out, to read on Sundays, in her own room, where she usually passed her +hours of solitude in hemming dish-towels, or making articles called +"Takers." Dr. Price came, too, and even the haughty four Ryders. Alice +was gratified with my popularity. But I felt cold at heart, doubtful +of myself, drifting to nothingness in thought and purpose. None saw my +doubts or felt my coldness. + +I shook hands with all, exchanged hopes and wishes, and repeated the +last words which people say on departure. Alice and I neither kissed +nor shook hands. There was that between us which kept us apart. +A hard, stern face was still in our recollection. We remembered a +certain figure, whose steps had ceased about the house, whose voice +was hushed, but who was potent yet. + +"We shall not forget each other," she said. + +And so I took my way out of Rosville. Ben Somers went with us to +Boston, and stayed at the Bromfield. In the morning he disappeared, +and when he returned had an emerald ring, which he begged me to wear, +and tried to put it on my finger, where he had seen the diamond. I put +it back in its box, thanking him, and saying it must be stored with +the farewell needlebooks and pincushions. + +"Shall we have some last words now?" + +Aunt Merce slipped out, with an affectation of not having heard him. +We laughed, and Ben was glad that I could laugh. + +"How do you feel?" + +"Rather weak still." + +"I do not mean so, but in your mind; how are you?" + +"I have no mind." + +"Must I give up trying to understand you, Cassandra?" + +"Yes, do. You'll visit Alice? You can divine her intentions. She is a +good woman." + +"She will be, when she knows how." + +"What o'clock is it?" + +"Incorrigible! Near ten." + +"Here is father, and we must start." + +The carriage was ready; where was Aunt Merce? + +"Locke," she said, when she came in, "I have got a bottle of port for +Cassandra, some essence of peppermint, and sandwiches; do you think +that will do?" + +"We can purchase supplies along the road, if yours give out. Come, we +are ready. Mr. Somers, we shall see you at Surrey? Take care, Cassy. +Now we are off." + +"I shall leave Rosville," were Ben's last words. + +"What a fine, handsome young man he is! He is a gentleman," said Aunt +Merce. + +"Of course, Aunt Merce." + +"Why of course? I should think from the way you speak that you had +only seen young gentlemen of his stamp. Have you forgotten Surrey?" + +Father and she laughed. They could laugh very easily, for they were +overjoyed to have me going home with them. Mother would be glad, they +said. I felt it, though I did not say so. + +How soundly I slept that night at the inn on the road! A little after +sunset, on the third day, for we traveled slowly, we reached the woods +which bordered Surrey, and soon came in sight of the sea encircling it +like a crescent moon. It was as if I saw the sea for the first time. +A vague sense of its power surprised me; it seemed to express my +melancholy. As we approached the house, the orchard, and I saw +Veronica's window, other feelings moved me. Not because I saw familiar +objects, nor because I was going home--it was the relation in which +_I_ stood to them, that I felt. We drove through the gate, and saw +a handsome little boy astride a window-sill, with two pipes in his +mouth, "Papa!" he shrieked, threw his pipes down, and dropped on the +ground, to run after us. + +"Hasn't Arthur grown?" Aunt Merce asked. "He is almost seven." + +"Almost seven? Where have the years gone?" + +I looked about. I had been away so long, the house looked diminished. +Mother was in the door, crying when she put her arms round me; she +could not speak. I know now there should have been no higher beatitude +than to live in the presence of an unselfish, unasking, vital love. I +only said, "Oh, mother, how gray your hair is! Are you glad to see me? +I have grown old too!" + +We went in by the kitchen, where the men were, and a young girl with a +bulging forehead. Hepsey looked out from the buttery door, and put +her apron to her eyes, without making any further demonstration of +welcome. Temperance was mixing dough. She made an effort to giggle, +but failed; and as she could not cover her face with her doughy hands, +was obliged to let the tears run their natural course. Recovering +herself in a moment, she exclaimed: + +"Heavenly Powers, how you're altered! I shouldn't have known you. Your +hair and skin are as dry as chips; they didn't wash you with Castile +soap, I'll bet." + +"How you do talk, Temperance," Hepsey quavered. + +The girl with the bulging forehead laughed a shrill laugh. + +"Why, Fanny!" said mother. + +The hall door opened. "Here _she_ is," muttered this Fanny. + +"Veronica!" + +"Cassandra!" + +We grasped hands, and stared mutely at each other. I felt a +contraction in the region of my heart, as if a cord of steel were +binding it. She, at least, was glad that I was alive! + +"They look something alike now," Hepsey remarked. + +"Not at all," said Veronica, dropping my hand, and retreating. + +"Why, Arthur dear, come here!" + +He clambered into my lap. + +"Were you killed, my dear sister?" + +"Not quite, little boy." + +"Well; do you know that I am a veteran officer, and smoke my pipe, +lots?" + +"You must rest, Cassy," said mother. "Don't go upstairs, though, till +you have had your supper. Hurry it up, Temperance." + +"It will be on the table in less than no time, Miss Morgeson," she +answered, "provided Miss Fanny is agreeable about taking in the +teapot." + +I had a comfortable sense of property, when I took possession of my +own room. It was better, after all, to live with a father and mother, +who would adopt my ideas. Even the sea might be mine. I asked father +the next morning, at breakfast, how far out at sea his property +extended. + +"I trust, Cassandra, you will now stay at home," said mother; "I am +tired of table duty; you must pour the coffee and tea, for I wish to +sit beside your father." + +"You and Aunt Merce have settled down into a venerable condition. You +wear caps, too! What a stage forward!" + +"The cap is not ugly, like Aunt Merce's; I made it," Veronica called, +sipping from a great glass. + +"Gothic pattern, isn't it?" father asked, "with a tower, and a bridge +at the back of the neck?" + +"This hash is Fanny's work, mother," said Verry. + +"So I perceive." + +"Hepsey is not at the table," I said. + +"It is her idea not to come, since I have taken Fanny. Did you notice +her? She prefers to have her wait." + +"Who is Fanny?" + +"Her father is old Ichabod Bowles, who lives on the Neck. Last winter +her mother sent for me, and begged me to take her. I could not refuse, +for she was dying of consumption; so I promised. The poor woman died, +in the bitterest weather, and a few days after Ichabod brought Fanny +here, and told me he had done with womankind forever. Fanny was sulky +and silent for a long time. I thought she never would get warm. If +obliged to leave the fire, she sat against the wall, with her face hid +in her arms. Veronica has made some impression on her; but she is not +a good girl." + +"She will be, mother. I am better than I was." + +"Never; her disposition is hateful. She is angry with those who are +better off than herself. I have not seen a spark of gratitude in her." + +"I never thought of gratitude," said Verry, "it is true; but why must +people be grateful?" + +"We might expect little from Fanny, perhaps; she saw her mother die in +want, her father stern, almost cruel to them, and soured by poverty. +Fanny never had what she liked to eat or wear, till she came here, +or even saw anything that pleased her; and the contrast makes her +bitter." + +"She is proud, too," said Aunt Merce. "I hear her boasting of what she +would have had if she had stayed at home." + +"She is a child, you know," said Verry. + +"A year younger than you are." + +"Where is the universal boy?" + +"Abolished," father answered. "Arthur is growing into that estate." + +"Papa, don't forget that I am a veteran officer." + +"Here, you rascal, come and get this nice egg." + +He slipped down, went to his father, who took him on his knee. + +"What shall I do first? the garden, orchard, village, or what?" I +asked. + +"Gardens?" said Verry. "Have they been a part of your education?" + +"I like flowers." + +"Have you seen my plants?" Aunt Merce inquired. + +"I will look at them. How different this is from Rosville?" + +Then a pang cut me to the soul. The past whirled up, to disappear, +leaving me stunned and helpless. Veronica's eye was upon me. I forced +myself to observe her. The difference between us was plainer than +ever. I was in my twentieth year, she was barely sixteen; handsome, +and as peculiar-looking as when a child. Her straight hair was a vivid +chestnut color. Her large eyes were near together; and, as Ben Somers +said, the most singular eyes that were ever upon earth. They tormented +me. There was nothing willful in them; on the contrary, when she +was willful, she had no power over them; the strange cast was then +perceptible. Neither were they imperious nor magnetic; they were +_baffling_. She pushed her chair from the table, and stood by me +quiet. Tall and slender, she stooped slightly, as if she were not +strong enough to stand upright. Her dress was a buff-colored cambric, +trimmed with knots of ribbon of the same color, dotted with green +crosses. It harmonized with her colorless, fixedly pale complexion. +I counted the bows of ribbon on her dress, and would have counted the +crosses, if she had not interrupted me with, "What do you think of +me?" + +"Do you ever blush, Verry?" + +"I grow paler, you know, when I blush." + +"What do you think of me?" + +"As wide-eyed as ever, and your eyebrows as black. Who ever saw light, +ripply hair with such eyebrows? I see wrinkles, too." + +"Where?" + +"Round your eyes, like an opening umbrella." + +We dispersed as our talk ended, in the old fashion. I followed +Aunt Merce to the flower-stand, which stood in its old place on the +landing. + +"I have a poor lot of roses," she said, "but some splendid cactuses." + +"I do not love roses." + +"Is it possible? But Verry does not care so much for them, either. +Lilies are her favorites; she has a variety. Look at this Arab lily; +it is like a tongue of fire." + +"Where does she keep her flowers?" + +"In wire baskets, in her room. But I must go to make Arthur some +gingerbread. He likes mine the best, and I like to please him." + +"I dare say you spoil him." + +"Just as you were spoiled." + +"Not in Barmouth, Aunt Merce." + +"No, not in Barmouth, Cassy." + +I went from room to room, seeing little to interest me. My zeal oozed +away for exploration, and when I entered my chamber I could have said, +"This spot is the summary of my wants, for it contains me." I must +be my own society, and as my society was not agreeable, the more +circumscribed it was, the better I could endure it. What a dreary +prospect! The past was vital, the present dead! Life in Surrey must be +dull. How could I forget or enjoy? I put the curtains down, and told +Temperance, who was wandering about, not to call me to dinner. I +determined, if possible, to surpass my dullness by indulgence. But +underneath it all I could not deny that there was a specter, whose +aimless movements kept me from stagnating. I determined to drag it up +and face it. + +"Come," I called, "and stand before me; we will reason together." + +It uncovered, and asked: + +"Do you feel remorse and repentance?" + +"Neither!" + +"Why suffer then?" + +"I do not know why." + +"You confess ignorance. Can you confess that you are selfish, +self-seeking--devilish?" + +"Are you my devil?" + +No answer. + +"Am I cowardly, or a liar?" + +It laughed, a faint, sarcastic laugh. + +"At all events," I continued, "are not my actions better than my +thoughts?" + +"Which makes the sinner, and which the saint?" + +"Can I decide?" + +"Why not?" + +"My teachers and myself are so far apart! I have found a counterpart; +but, specter, you were born of the union." + +My head was buried in my arms; but I heard a voice at my elbow--a +shrill, scornful voice it was. "Are you coming down to tea, then?" + +Looking up, I saw Fanny. "Tea-time so soon?" + +"Yes, it is. You think nothing of time; have nothing to do, I +suppose." + +And she clasped her hands over her apron--hands so small and thin that +they looked like those of an old woman. Her hair was light and scanty, +her complexion sallow, and her eyes a palish gray; but her features +were delicate and pretty. She seemed to understand my thoughts. + +"You think I am stunted, don't you?" + +"You are not large to my eye." + +"Suppose you had been fed mostly on Indian meal, with a herring or a +piece of salted pork for a relish, and clams or tautog for a luxury, +as I have been, would you be as tall and as grand-looking as you are +now? And would you be covering up your face, making believe worry?" + +"May be not. You may tell mother that I am coming." + +"I shall not say 'Miss Morgeson,' but 'Cassandra.' 'Cassandra +Morgeson,' if I like." + +"Call me what you please, only tone down that voice of yours; it is +sharper than the east wind." + +I heard her beating a tattoo on Veronica's door next. She had been +taught to be ceremonious with her, at least. No reply was made, and +she came to my door again. "I expect Miss Veronica has gone to see +poor folks; it is a way _she_ has," and spitefully closed it. + +After tea mother came up to inquire the reason of my seclusion. My +excuse of fatigue she readily accepted, for she thought I still looked +ill. I had changed so much, she said, it made her heart ache to look +at me. When I could speak of the accident at Rosville, would I tell +her all? And would I describe my life there; what friends I had made; +would they visit me? She hoped so. And Mr. Somers, who made them so +hurried a visit, would he come? She liked him. While she talked, she +kept a pitying but resolute eye upon me. + +"Dear mother, I never can tell you all, as you wish. It is hard +enough for me to bear my thoughts, without the additional one that my +feelings are understood and speculated upon. If I should tell you, the +barrier between me and self-control would give way. You will see Alice +Morgeson, and if she chooses she can tell you what my life was in her +house. She knows it well." + +"Cassandra, what does your bitter face and voice mean?" + +"I mean, mother, all your woman's heart might guess, if you were not +so pure, so single-hearted." + +"No, no, no." + +"Yes." + +"Then I understand the riddle you have been, one to bring a curse." + +"There is nothing to curse, mother; our experiences are not foretold +by law. We may be righteous by rule, we do not sin that way. There was +no beginning, no end, to mine." + +"Should women curse themselves, then, for giving birth to daughters?" + +"Wait, mother; what is bad this year may be good the next. You blame +yourself, because you believe your ignorance has brought me into +danger. Wait, mother." + +"You are beyond me; everything is beyond." + +"I will be a good girl. Kiss me, mother. I have been unworthy of you. +When have I ever done anything for you? If you hadn't been my mother, +I dare say we might have helped each other, my friendship and sympathy +have sustained you. As it is, I have behaved as all young animals +behave to their mothers. One thing you may be sure of. The doubt +you feel is needless. You must neither pray nor weep over me. Have I +agitated you?" + +"My heart _will_ flutter too much, anyway. Oh, Cassy, Cassy, why +are you such a girl? Why will you be so awfully headstrong?" But she +hugged and kissed me. As I felt the irregular beating of her heart, +a pain smote me. What if she should not live long? Was I not a wicked +fool to lacerate myself with an intangible trouble--the reflex of +selfish emotions? + + + + + + +CHAPTER XXIII. + + +Veronica's room was like no other place. I was in a new atmosphere +there. A green carpet covered the floor, and the windows had light +blue silk curtains. + +"Green and blue together, Veronica?" + +"Why not? The sky is blue, and the carpet of the earth is green." + +"If you intend to represent the heavens and the earth here, it is very +well." + +The paper on the wall was ash-colored, with penciled lines. She had +cloudy days probably. A large-eyed Saint Cecilia, with white roses in +her hair, was pasted on the wall. This frameless picture had a curious +effect. Veronica, in some mysterious way, had contrived to dispose +of the white margin of the picture, and the saint looked out from the +soft ashy tint of the wallpaper. Opposite was an exquisite engraving, +which was framed with dark red velvet. At the end of an avenue of +old trees, gnarled and twisted into each other, a man stood. One hand +grasped the stalk of a ragged vine, which ran over the tree near him; +the other hung helpless by his side, as if the wrist was broken. His +eyes were fixed on some object behind the trees, where nothing was +visible but a portion of the wall of a house. His expression of +concentrated fury--his attitude of waiting--testified that he would +surely accomplish his intention. + +"What a picture!" + +"The foliage attracted me, and I bought it; but when I unpacked it, +the man seemed to come out for the first time. Will you take it?" + +"No; I mean to give my room a somnolent aspect. The man is too +terribly sleepless." + +A table stood near the window, methodically covered with labelled +blank-books, a morocco portfolio, and a Wedgewood inkstand and vase. +In an arch, which she had manufactured from the space under the garret +stairs, stood her bed. At its foot, against the wall, a bunch of +crimson autumn leaves was fastened, and a bough, black and bare, with +an empty nest on it. + +"Where is the feminine portion of your furnishing?" + +"Look in the closet." + +I opened a door. What had formerly been appropriated by mother to +blankets and comfortables, she had turned into a magazine of toilet +articles. There were drawers and boxes for everything which pertained +to a wardrobe, arranged with beautiful skill and neatness. She +directed my attention to her books, on hanging shelves, within reach +of the bed. Beneath them was a small stand, with a wax candle in a +silver candlestick. + +"You read o' nights?" + +"Yes; and the wax candle is my pet weakness." + +"Have you put away Gray, and Pope, and Thomson?" + +"The Arabian Nights and the Bible are still there. Mother thought you +would like to refurnish your room. It is the same as when we moved, +you know." + +"Did she? I will have it done. Good-by." + +"Good-by." + +She was at the window now, and had opened a pane. + +"What's that you are doing?" + +"Looking through my wicket." + +I went back again to understand the wicket. It had been made, she +said, so that she might have fresh air in all weathers, without +raising the windows. In the night she could look out without danger of +taking cold. We looked over the autumn fields; the crows were flying +seaward over the stubble, or settling in the branches of an old fir, +standing alone, midway between the woods and the orchard. The ground +before us, rising so gradually, and shortening the horizon, reminded +me of my childish notion that we were near the North Pole, and that +if we could get behind the low rim of sky we should be in the Arctic +Zone. + +"The Northern Lights have not deserted us, Veronica?" + +"No; they beckon me over there, in winter." + +"Do you never tire of this limited, monotonous view--of a few uneven +fields, squared by grim stone walls?" + +"That is not all. See those eternal travelers, the clouds, that hurry +up from some mysterious region to go over your way, where I never +look. If the landscape were wider, I could never learn it. And the +orchard--have you noticed that? There are bird and butterfly lives +in it, every year. Why, morning and night are wonderful from these +windows. But I must say the charm vanishes if I go from them. Surrey +is not lovely." She closed the wicket, and sat down by the table. My +dullness vanished with her. There might be something to interest me +beneath the calm surface of our family life after all. + +"Veronica, do you think mother is changed? I think so." + +"She is always the same to me. But I have had fears respecting her +health." + +Outside the door I met Temperance, with a clothes-basket. + +"Oh ho!" she said, "you are going the rounds. Verry's room beats all +possessed, don't it? It is cleaned spick and span every three months. +She calls it inaugurating the seasons. She is as queer as Dick's +hatband. Have you any fine things to do up?" + +Her question put me in mind of my trunks, and I hastened to them, with +the determination of putting my room to rights. The call to dinner +interrupted me before I had begun, and the call to supper came before +anything in the way of improvement had been accomplished. My mind +was chaotic by bed-time. The picture of Veronica, reading by her wax +candle, or looking through the wicket, collected and happy in her +orderly perfection, came into my mind, and with it an admiration which +never ceased, though I had no sympathy with her. We seemed as far +apart as when we were children. + +I was eager for employment, promising to perform many tasks, but the +attempt killed my purpose and interest. My will was nerveless, when I +contemplated Time, which stretched before me--a vague, limitless sea; +and I only kept Endeavor in view, near enough to be tormented. + +One day father asked me to go to Milford, and I then asked him for +money to spend for the adornment of my room. + +"Be prudent," he replied. "I am not so rich as people think me. +Although the _Locke Morgeson_ was insured, she was a loss. But you +need not speak of this to your mother. I never worry her with my +business cares. As for Veronica, she has not the least idea of the +value of money, or care for what it represents." + +When we went into the shops, I found him disposed to be more +extravagant than I was. I bought a blue and white carpet; a piece +of blue and white flowered chintz; two stuffed chairs, covered with +hair-cloth (father remonstrated against these), and a long mirror to +go between the windows, astonishing him with my vanity. What I wanted +besides I could construct myself, with the help of the cabinet maker +in Surrey. + +In one of the shops I heard a familiar voice, which gave me a thrill +of anger. I turned and saw Charlotte Alden, of Barmouth, the girl who +had given me the fall on the tilt. She could not control an expression +of surprise at the sight of the well-dressed woman before her. It was +my dress that astonished her. Where could _I_ have obtained style? + +"Miss Alden, how do you do? Pray tell me whether you have collected +any correct legends respecting my mother's early history. And do you +tilt off little girls nowadays?" + +She made no reply, and I left her standing where she was when I began +speaking. When we got out of town, my anger cooled, and I grew ashamed +of my spitefulness, and by way of penance I related the affair to +father. He laughed at what I said to her, and told me that he had long +known her family. Charlotte's uncle had paid his addresses to mother. +There might have been an engagement; whether there was or not, the +influence of his family had broken the acquaintance. This explained +what Charlotte said to me in Miss Black's school about mother's being +in love. + +"You might have been angry with the girl, but you should not have felt +hurt at the fact implied. Are you so young still as to believe that +only those who love marry? or that those who marry have never loved, +except each other?" + +"I have thought of these things; but I am afraid that Love, like +Theology, if examined, makes one skeptical." + +We jogged along in silence for a mile or two. + +"Whether every man's children overpower him, I wonder? I am positively +afraid of you and Veronica." + +"What do you mean?" + +"I am always unprepared for the demonstrations of character you and +she make. My traditional estimate, which comes from thoughtfulness, or +the putting off of responsibility, or God knows what, I find will not +answer. I have been on my guard against that which everyday life might +present--a lie, a theft, or a meanness; but of the undercurrent, which +really bears you on, I have known nothing." + +"If you happen to dive below the surface, and find the roots of our +actions which are fixed beneath its tide--what then? Must you lament +over us?" + +"No, no; but this is vague talk." + +Was he dissatisfied with me? What could he expect? We all went our +separate ways, it is true; was it that? Perhaps he felt alone. I +studied his face; it was not so cheerful as I remembered it once, but +still open, honest, and wholesome. I promised myself to observe his +tastes and consult them. It might be that his self-love had never been +encouraged. But I failed in that design, as in all others. + +"Much of my time is consumed in passing between Milford and Surrey, +you perceive." + +"I will go with you often." + +According to habit, on arriving, I went into the kitchen. It was dusk +there, and still. Temperance was by the fire, attending to something +which was cooking. + +"What is there for supper, Temperance? I am hungry." + +"I spose you are," she answered crossly. "You'll see when it's on the +table." + +She took a coal of fire with the tongs, and blew it fiercely, to +light a lamp by. When it was alight, she set it on the chimney-shelf, +revealing thereby a man at the back of the room, balancing his chair +on two legs against the wail; his feet were on its highest round, and +he twirled his thumbs. + +"Hum," he said, when he saw me observing him; "this is the oldest +darter, is it?" + +"Yes," Temperance bawled. + +"She is a good solid gal; but I can't recollect her christened name." + +"It is Cassandra." + +"Why, 'taint Scriptur'." + +"Why don't you go and take off your things?" Temperance asked, +abruptly. + +"I'll leave them here; the fire is agreeable." + +"There is a better fire in the keeping-room." + +"How are you, Mr. Handy?" father inquired, coming in. + +"I should be well, if my grinders didn't trouble me; they play the +mischief o'nights. Have you heard from the _Adamant_, Mr. Morgeson? +I should like to get my poor boy's chist. The Lord ha' mercy on him, +whose bones are in the caverns of the deep." + +"Now, Abram, do shut up. Tea is ready, Mr. Morgeson. I'll bring in the +ham directly," said Temperance. + +There was no news from the _Adamant_. I lingered in the hope of +discovering why Mr. Handy irritated Temperance. He was a man of sixty, +with a round head, and a large, tender wart on one cheek; the two +tusks under his upper lip suggested a walrus. Though he was no beauty, +he looked thoroughly respectable, in garments whose primal colors +had disappeared, and blue woolen stockings gartered to a miracle of +tightness. + +"Temperance," he said, "my quinces have done fust rate this year. I +haint pulled 'em yet; but I've counted them over and over agin. But my +pig wont weigh nothin' like what I calkerlated on. Sarved me right. I +needn't have bought him out of a drove; if Charity had been alive, I +shouldn't ha' done it. A man can't--I say, Tempy--a man _can't_ git +along while here below, without a woman." + +She gave my arm a severe pinch as she passed with the ham, and I +thought it best to follow her. Mother looked at her with a smile, and +said: "Deal gently with Brother Abram, Temperance." + +"Brother be fiddlesticked!" she said tartly. "Miss Morgeson, _do_ you +want some quinces?" + +"Certainly." + +"We'll make hard marmalade this year, then. You shall have the quinces +to-morrow." And she retired with a softened face. I was told that +Abram Handy was a widower anxious to take Temperance for a second +helpmeet, and that she could not decide whether to accept or refuse +him. She had confessed to mother that she was on the fence, and didn't +know which way to jump. He was a poor, witless thing, she knew; but +he was as good a man as ever breathed, and stood as good a chance +of being saved as the wisest church-member that ever lived! Mother +thought her inclined to be mistress of an establishment over which she +might have sole control. Abram owned a house, a garden, and kept pigs, +hens, and a cow; these were his themes of conversation. Mother could +not help thinking he was influenced by Temperance's fortune. She was +worth two thousand dollars, at least. The care of her wood-lot, +the cutting, selling, or burning the wood on it, would be a supreme +happiness to Abram, who loved property next to the kingdom of heaven. +The tragedy of the old man's life was the loss of his only son, who +had been killed by a whale a year since. The _Adamant_, the ship he +sailed in, had not returned, and it was a consoling hope with Abram +that his boy's chist might come back. + +"We heard of poor Charming Handy's death the tenth of September, about +three months after Abram began his visits to Temperance," Veronica +said. + +"Was his name Charming?" I asked. + +"His mother named him," Abram said, "with a name that she had picked +out of Novel's works, which she was forever and 'tarnally reading." + +"What day of the month is it, Verry?" + +"Third of October." + +"What happened a year ago to-day?" + +"Arthur fell off the roof of the wood-house." + +"Verry," he cried, "you needn't tell my sister of that; now she knows +about my scar. You tell everything; she does not. You have scars," he +whispered to me; "they look red sometimes. May I put my finger on your +cheek?" + +I took his hand, and rubbed his fingers over the cuts; they were not +deep, but they would never go away. + +"I wish mine were as nice; it is only a little hole under my hair. +Soldiers ought to have long scars, made with great big swords, and I +am a soldier, ain't I, Cassy?" + +"Have I heard you sing, Cassy?" asked father. "Come, let us have some +music." + +"'And the cares which infest the day,'" added Verry. + +I had scarcely been in the parlor since my return, though the fact had +not been noticed. Our tacit compact was that we should be ignorant of +each other's movements. I ran up to my room for some music, and, not +having a lamp, stumbled over my shawl and bonnet and various bundles +which somebody had deposited on the floor. I went down by the back +way, to the kitchen; Fanny was there alone, standing before the fire, +and whistling a sharp air. + +"Did you carry my bonnet and shawl upstairs?" + +"I did." + +"Will you be good enough to take this music to the parlor for me?" + +She turned and put her hands behind her. "Who was your waiter last +year?" + +"I had one," putting the leaves under her arm; they fluttered to the +floor, one by one. + +"You must pick them up, or we shall spend the night here, and father +is waiting for me." + +"Is he?" and she began to take them up. + +"I am quite sure, Fanny, that I could punish you awfully. I am sick to +try." + +She moved toward the door slowly. "Don't tell him," she said, stopping +before it. + +"I'll tell nobody, but I am angry. Let us arrive." + +She marched to the piano, laid the music on it, and marched out. + +"By the way, Fanny," I whispered, "the bonnet and shawl are yours, if +you need them." + +"I guess I do," she whispered back. + +When I returned to my room, I found it in order and the bundles +removed. + +One day some Surrey friends called. They told me I had changed very +much, and I inferred from their tone they did not consider the change +one for the better. + +"How much Veronica has improved," they continued, "do not you think +so?" + +"You know," she interrupted, "that Cassandra has been dangerously ill, +and has barely recovered." + +Yes, they had heard of the accident, everybody had; Mr. Morgeson must +be a loss to his family, a man in the prime of life, too. + +"The prime of life," Veronica repeated. + +She was asked to play, and immediately went to the piano. Strange +girl; her music was so filled with a wild lament that I again fathomed +my desires and my despair. Her eyes wandered toward me, burning with +the fires of her creative power, not with the feelings which stung +me to the quick. Her face was calm, white, and fixed. She stopped and +touched her eyelids, as if she were weeping, but there were no tears +in her eyes. They were in mine, welling painfully beneath the lids. I +turned over the music books to hide them. + +"That is a singular piece," said one. "Now, Cassandra, will you favor +us? We expect to find you highly accomplished." + +"I sang myself out before you came in." + +In the bustle of their going, Veronica stooped over my hand and kissed +it, unseen. It was more like a sigh upon it than a kiss, but it swept +through me, tingling the scars on my face, as if the flesh had become +alive again. + +"Take tea with us soon, do. We do not see you in the street or at +church. It must be dull for you after coming from a boarding-school. +Still, Surrey has its advantages." And the doors closed on them. + +"Still, Surrey has its advantages," Veronica repeated. + +"Yes, the air is sleepy; I am going to bed." + +I made resolutions before I slept that night, which I kept, for I +said, "Let the dead bury its dead." + + + + + + +CHAPTER XXIV. + + +Helen's letters followed me. She had heard from Rosville all that had +happened, but did not expatiate on it. Her letters were full of minute +details respecting her affairs. It was her way of diverting me from +the thoughts which she believed troubled me. "L.N." was expected soon. +Since his last letter, she had caught herself more than once making +inventories of what she would like to have in the way of a wardrobe +for a particular occasion, which he had hinted at. + +I heard nothing from Alice, and was content that it should be so. Our +acquaintance would be resumed in good time, I had no doubt. Neither +did I hear from Ben Somers. He very likely was investing in another +plan. Of its result I should also hear. + +My chief occupation was to drive with father. The wharves of Milford, +the doors of its banks and shipping offices, became familiar. I +witnessed bargains and contracts, and listened to talk of shipwrecks, +mutinies, insurance cases, perjuries, failures, ruin, and rascalities. +His private opinions, and those who sought him, were kept in the +background; the sole relation between them was--Traffic. Personality +was forgotten in the absorbed attention which was given to business. +They appeared to me, though, as if pursuing something beyond Gain, +which should narcotize or stimulate them to forget that man's life was +a vain going to and fro. + +Mother reproached father for allowing me to adopt the habits of a man. +He thought it a wholesome change; besides, it would not last. While +I was his companion there were moments when he left his ledger for +another book. + +"You never call yourself a gambler, do you, Locke?" mother asked. +"Strange, too, that you think of Cassy in your business life instead +of me." + +"Mary, could I break your settled habits. Cassy is afloat yet. I can +guide her hither and yon. Moreover, with her, I dream of youth." + +"Is youth so happy?" we both asked. + +"We think so, when we see it in others." + +"Not all of us," she said. "You think Cassandra has no ways of her +own! She can make us change ours; do you know that?" + +"May be." + +A habit grew upon me of consulting the sea as soon as I rose in the +morning. Its aspect decided how my day would be spent. I watched it, +studying its changes, seeking to understand its effect, ever attracted +by an awful materiality and its easy power to drown me. By the shore +at night the vague tumultuous sphere, swayed by an influence mightier +than itself, gave voice, which drew my soul to utter speech for +speech. I went there by day unobserved, except by our people, for I +never walked toward the village. Mother descried me, as she would a +distant sail, or Aunt Merce, who had a vacant habit of looking from +all the windows a moment at a time, as if she were forever expecting +the arrival of somebody who never came. Arthur, too, saw me, as he +played among the rocks, waded, caught crabs and little fish, like all +boys whose hereditary associations are amphibious. But Veronica never +came to the windows on that side of the house, unless a ship was +arriving from a long voyage. Then her interest was in the ship alone, +to see whether her colors were half-mast, or if she were battered and +torn, recalling to mind those who had died or married since the ship +sailed from port; for she knew the names of all who ever left Surrey, +and their family relations. + +Weeks passed before I had completed the furnishing of my room; I +had been to Helen's wedding, and had returned, and it was still in +progress. The ground was covered with snow. The sea was dark and rough +under the frequent north wind, sometimes gray and silent in an icy +atmosphere; sometimes blue and shining beneath the pale winter sun. +The day when the room was ready, Fanny made a wood fire, which burned +merrily, and encouraged the new chairs, tables, carpet, and curtains +into a friendly assimilation; they met and danced on the round tops +of the brass dogs. It already seemed to me that I was like the room. +Unlike Veronica, I had nothing odd, nothing suggestive. My curtains +were blue chintz, and the sofa and chairs were covered with the +same; the ascetic aspect of my two hair-cloth arm-chairs was entirely +concealed. The walls were painted amber color, and varnished. There +were no pictures but the shining shadows. A row of shelves covered +with blue damask was on one side, and my tall mirror on the other. The +doors were likewise covered with blue damask, nailed round with brass +nails. When I had nothing else to do I counted the nails. The wooden +mantel shelf, originally painted in imitation of black marble, I +covered with damask, and fringed it. I sent Fanny down for mother and +Aunt Merce. They declared, at once, they were stifled; too many things +in the room; too warm; too dark; the fringe on the mantel would catch +fire and burn me up; too much trouble to take care of it. What was +under the carpet that made it so soft and the steps so noiseless? How +nice it was! Temperance, who had been my aid, arrived at this juncture +and croaked. + +"Did you ever see such a stived-up hole, Mis Morgeson?" + +"I like it now," she answered, "it is so comfortable. How lovely this +blue is!" + +"It's a pity she wont keep the blinds shut. The curtains will fade to +rags in no time; the sun pours on 'em." + +"How could I watch the sea then?" I asked. + +"Good Lord! it's a mystery to me how you can bother over that salt +water." + +"And the smell of the sea-weed," added Aunt Merce. + +"And its thousand dreary cries," said mother. + +"Do you like my covered doors?" I inquired. + +"I vow," Temperance exclaimed, "the nails are put in crooked! And I +stood over Dexter the whole time. He said it was damned nonsense, and +that you must be awfully spoiled to want such a thing. 'You get your +pay, Dexter,' says I, 'for what you do, don't you?' 'I guess I do,' +says he, and then he winked. 'None of your gab,' says I. I do believe +that man is a cheat and a rascal, I vow I do. But they are all so." + +"In my young days," Aunt Merce remarked, "young girls were not allowed +to have fires in their chambers." + +"In our young days, Mercy," mother replied, "_we_ were not allowed to +have much of anything." + +"Fires are not wholesome to sleep by," Temperance added. + +"Miss Veronica never has a fire," piped Fanny, who had remained, +occasionally making a stir with the tongs. + +"But she ought to have!" Temperance exclaimed vehemently. "I do +wonder, Mis Morgeson, that you do not insist upon it, though it's none +of my business." + +Father was conducted upstairs, after supper. The fire was freshly +made; the shaded lamp on the table before the sofa and the easy-chair +pleased him. He came often afterward, and stayed so long, sometimes, +that I fell asleep, and found him there, when I woke, still smoking +and watching the fire. + +Veronica looked in at bed-time. "I recognize you here," she said as +she passed. But she came back in a few moments in a wrapper, with a +comb in her hand, and stood on the hearth combing her hair, which was +longer than a mermaid's. The fire was grateful to her, and I believe +that she was surprised at the fact. + +"Why not have a fire in your room, Verry?" + +"A fire would put me out. One belongs in this room, though. It is the +only reality here." + +"What if I should say you provoke me, perverse girl?" + +"What if you should?" + +She gathered up her hair and shook it round her face, with the same +elfish look she wore when she pulled it over her eyes as a child. It +made me feel how much older I was. + +"I do not say so, and I will not." + +"I wish you would; I should like to hear something natural from you." + +Fanny, coming in with an armful of wood, heard her. Instead of putting +it on the fire, she laid it on the hearth, and, sitting upon it with +an expression of enjoyment, looked at both of us with an expectant +air. + +"You love mischief, Fanny," I said. + +"Is it mischief for me to look at sisters that don't love each other?" +and, laughing shrilly, she pulled a stick from under her, and threw it +on the fire. + +Veronica's eyes shot more sparks than the disturbed coals, for Fanny's +speech enraged her. Giving her head a toss, which swept her hair +behind her shoulders, she darted at Fanny, and picked her up from the +wood, with as much ease as if it had been her handkerchief, instead of +a girl nearly as heavy as herself. I started up. + +"Sit still," she said to me, in her low, inflexible voice, holding +Fanny against the wall. "I must attend to this little demon. Do you +dare to think," addressing Fanny with a gentle vehemence, "that what +you have just said, is true of _me_? Are you, with your small, starved +spirit, equal to any judgment against _her?_ I admire her; you do, +too. I _love_ her, and I love you, you pitiful, ignorant brat." + +Her strength gave way, and she let her go. + +"All declarations in my behalf are made to third persons," I thought. + +"I do believe, Miss Veronica," said Fanny, who did not express any +astonishment or resentment at the treatment she had received, "that +you are going to be sick; I feel so in my bones." + +"Never mind your bones. Twist up my hair, and think, while you do it, +how to get rid of your diabolical curiosity." + +"I have had nothing to do all my life," she answered, carefully +knotting Verry's hair, "but to be curious. I never found out much, +though, till lately"; and she cast her eyes in my direction. + +"Put her out, Cassandra," said Verry, "if you like to touch her." + +"I'll sweep the hearth, if you please, first," Fanny answered. "I am a +good drudge, you know. Good-night, ladies." + +I followed Veronica, wishing to know if her room was uncomfortable. +She had made slight changes since my visit to her. The flowers had +been moved, the stand where the candle stood was covered with crimson +cloth. The dead bough and the autumn leaves were gone; but instead +there was a branch of waving grasses, green and fresh, and on the +table was a white flower, in a vase. + +"It is freezing here, but it looks like summer. Is it design?" + +"Yes; I can't sit here much; still, I can read in bed, and write, +especially under my new quilt, which you have not seen." + +It was composed of red, black, and blue bits of silk, and beautifully +quilted. Hepsey and Temperance had made it for her. + +"How about the wicket, these winter nights?" + +"I drag the quilt off, and wrap it round me when I want to look out." + +We heard a bump on the floor, and Temperance appeared with warm bricks +wrapped in flannel. + +"You know that I will not have those things," Verry said. + +"Dear me, how contrary you are! And you have not eaten a thing +to-day." + +"Carry them out." + +Her voice was so unyielding, but always so gentle! Temperance was +obliged to deposit the bricks outside the door, which she did with a +bang. + +"I should think you might sleep in Cassandra's room; her bed is big +enough for three." + +No answer was made to this proposition, but Verry said, + +"You may undress me, if you like, and stay till you are convinced I +shall not freeze." + +"I've staid till I am in an ager. I might as well finish the night +here, I spose." + +She called me after midnight, for she had not left Verry, who had been +attacked with one of her mysterious disorders. + +"You can do nothing for her; but I am scared out, when she faints so +dreadful; I don't like to be alone." + +Veronica could not speak, but she shook her head at me to go away. +Her will seemed to be concentrated against losing consciousness; it +slipped from her occasionally, and she made a rotary motion with +her arms, which I attempted to stop, but her features contracted so +terribly, I let her alone. + +"Mustn't touch her," said Temperance, whose efforts to relieve her +were confined to replacing the coverings of the bed, and drawing her +nightgown over her bosom, which she often threw off again. Her breath +scarcely stirred her breast. I thought more than once she did not +breathe at all. Its delicate, virgin beauty touched me with a holy +pity. We sat by her bed in silence a long time, and although it was +freezing cold, did not suffer. Suddenly she turned her head and +closed her eyes. Temperance softly pulled up the clothes over her and +whispered: "It is over for this time; but Lord, how awful it is! I +hoped she was cured of these spells." + +In a few minutes she asked, "What time is it?" + +"It must be about eleven," Temperance replied; but it was nearly four. +She dozed again, but, opening her eyes presently, made a motion toward +the window. + +"There's no help for it," muttered Temperance, "she must go." + +I understood her, and put my arm under Verry's neck to raise her. +Temperance wrapped the quilt round her, and we carried her to the +window. Temperance pushed open the pane; an icy wind blew against us. + +"It is the winter that kills little Verry," she said, in a childlike +voice. "God's breath is cold over the world, and my life goes. But the +spring is coming; it will come back." + +I looked at Temperance, whose face was so corrugated with the desire +for crying and the effort to keep from it, that for the life of me, +I could not help smiling. As soon as I smiled I laughed, and then +Temperance gave way to crying and laughing together. Veronica stared, +and realized the circumstances in a second. She walked back to the +bed, laughing faintly, too. "Go to bed, do. You have been here a long +time, have you?" + +I left Temperance tucking the clothes about her, kissing her, and +calling her "deary and her best child." + +I could not go to bed at once, for Fanny was on my hearth before the +fire, which she had rekindled, watching the boiling of something. + +"She has come to, hasn't she?" stirring the contents of the kettle. "I +knew it was going to be so with her, she was so mad with me. She is +like the Old Harry before she has a turn, and like an angel after. +I am fond of people who have their ups and downs. I have seen her so +before. She asked me to keep the doors locked once; they are locked +now. But I couldn't keep _you_ out. The doctor said she must have warm +drinks as soon as she was better. This is gruel." + +"If it is done, away with you. Calamity improves you, don't it? You +seem in excellent spirits." + +"First-rate; I can be somebody then." + + + + + + +CHAPTER XXV. + + +Before spring there were three public events in Surrey. A lighthouse +was built on Gloster Point, below our house. At night there was a +bridge of red, tremulous light between my window and its tower, which +seemed to shorten the distance. A town-clock had been placed in the +belfry of the new church in the western part of the village. Veronica +could see the tips of its gilded hands from the top of her window, and +hear it strike through the night, whether the wind was fair to bring +the sound or not. She liked to hear the hours cry that they had gone. +Soon after the clock was up, she recollected that Mrs. Crossman's +dog had ceased to bark at night, as was his wont, and sent her a note +inquiring about it, for she thought there was something poetical in +connection with nocturnal noises, which she hoped Mrs. Crossman felt +also. Fanny conveyed the note, and read it likewise, as Mrs. Crossman +declared her inability to read writing with her new spectacles, which +a peddler had cheated her with lately. She laughed at it, and sent +word to Veronica that she was the curiousest young woman for her age +that she had ever heard of; that the dog slept in the house of nights, +for he was blind and deaf now; but that Crossman should get a new dog +with a loud bark, if the dear child wanted it. + +A new dog soon came, so fierce that Abram told Temperance that people +were afraid to pass Crossman's. She guessed it wasn't the dog the +people were afraid of, but of their evil consciences, which pricked +them when they remembered Dr. Snell. + +The third event was Mr. Thrasher's revival. It began in February, and +before it was over, I heard the April frogs croaking in the marshy +field behind the church. We went to all the meetings, except Veronica, +who continued her custom of going only on Sunday afternoons. Mr. +Thrasher endeavored to proselyte me, but he never conversed with her. +His manner changed when he was at our house; if she appeared, the man +tore away the mask of the minister. She called him a Bible-banger, +that he made the dust fly from the pulpit cushions too much to suit +her; besides, he denounced sinners with vituperation, larding his +piety with a grim wit which was distasteful. He was resentful toward +me, especially after he had seen her. It was needful, he said, from my +influence in Surrey, that I should become an example, and asked me +if I did not think my escape from sudden death in Rosville was an +indication from Providence that I was reserved for some especial work? + +Surrey was never so evangelical as under his ministration, and it +remained so until he was called to a larger field of usefulness, and +offered a higher salary to till it. We settled into a milder theocracy +after he left us. Mr. Park renewed his zeal, about this time, resuming +his discussions; but mother paid little attention to what he said. +There were days now when she was confined to her room. Sometimes I +found her softly praying. Once when I went there she was crying aloud, +in a bitter voice, with her hands over her head. She was her old +self when she recovered, except that she was indifferent to practical +details. She sought amusement, indeed, liked to have me with her to +make her laugh, and Aunt Merce was always near to pet her as of old, +and so we forgot those attacks. + +Abram Handy, inspired with religious fervor during the revival, was +also inspired with the twin passion--love--to visit Temperance, and +begged her, with so much eloquence, to marry him before his cow should +calve, that she consented, and he was happy. He spent the Sunday +evenings with her, coming after conference meeting, hymn-book in hand. +She was angry and ashamed, if I happened to see them sitting in +the same chair, and singing, in a quavering voice, "Greenland's Icy +Mountains," and continued morose for a week, in consequence. + +"What will Veronica do without me?" she said. "I vow I wish Abram +Handy would keep himself out of my way; who wants him?" + +"She will visit you, and so shall I." + +"Certain true, will you, really?" + +"If you will promise to return our visits, and leave Abram at home, +for a week now and then." + +"Done. I can mend your things and look after Mis Morgeson. Your mother +is not the woman she was, and you and Veronica haven't a mite of +faculty. What you are all coming to is more than I can fathom." + +"Who will fill your place?" + +"I don't want to brag, but you wont find a soul in Surrey to come here +and live as I have lived. You will have to take a Paddy; the Paddies +are spreading, the old housekeeping race is going. Hepsey and I are +the last of the Mohicans, and Hepsey is failing." + +She was right, we never found her equal, and when she went, in May, +a Celtic dynasty came in. We missed her sadly. Verry refused to be +comforted. Symptoms of disorganization appeared everywhere. + +In the summer Helen visited Surrey. Her enlivening gayety was the +means of our uniting about her. She was never tired of Veronica's +playing, nor of our society; so we must stay where she and the +piano were. We trimmed the parlor with flowers every day. Veronica +transferred some of her favorite books to the round table, and +privately sent for a set of flower vases. When they came, she said we +must have a new carpet to match them, and although mother protested +against it, she was loud in her admiration when she saw the +handsome white Brussels, thickly covered with crimson roses. Helen's +introduction proved an astonishing incentive; we set a new value on +ourselves. I never saw so much of Veronica as at that time; her health +improved with her temper. She threw us into fits of laughter with her +whimsical talk, never laughing herself, but enjoying the effect she +produced. To please her, Helen changed her style of dress, and bought +a dress at Milford, which Veronica selected and made. The trying on +of this dress was the means of her discovering the letters on Helen's +arm, which never ceased to be a source of interest. She asked to see +them every day afterward, and touched them with her fingers, as if +they had some occult power. + +"You think her strange, do you not?" I asked Helen. + +"She has genius, but will be a child always." + +"You are mistaken; she was always mature." + +"She stopped in the process of maturity long ago. It is her genius +which takes her on. You advance by experience." + +"I shall learn nothing more." + +"Of course you have suffered immensely, and endured that which +isolates you from the rest of us." + +"You are as wise as ever." + +"Well, I am married, you know, and shall grow no wiser. Marriage puts +an end to the wisdom of women; they need it no longer." + +"You are nineteen years old?" + +"What is the use of talking to you? Besides, if we keep on we may tell +secrets that had better not be revealed. We might not like each +other so well; friendship is apt to dull if there is no ground for +speculation left. Let us keep the bloom on the fruit, even if we know +there is a worm at the core." + +I owed it to her that I never had any confidante. My proclivities were +for speaking what I felt; but her strong common-sense influenced me +greatly against it; her teaching was the more easy to me, as she never +invaded my sentiments. + +Her visit was the occasion of our exchanging civilities with our +acquaintances, which we neglected when alone. Tea parties were always +fashionable in Surrey. Veronica went with us to one, given by our +cousin, Susan Morgeson. She had taken tea out but twice, since she +was grown, she told us, then it was with her friend Lois Randall, a +seamstress. To this girl she read the contents of her blank-books, +and Lois in her turn confided to Veronica her own compositions. Essays +were her forte. We met her at Susan Morgeson's, and, as I never saw +her without her having on some article given her by Veronica, this +occasion was no exception. She wore an exquisitely embroidered purple +silk apron, over a dull blue dress. I saw Verry's grimace when her +eyes fell on it, and could not help saying, "I hope Lois's essays are +better than her taste in dress." + +"She is an idiot in colors; but she admires what I wear so much that +she fancies the same must become her." + +"As they become you?" + +"I make a study of dress--an anomaly must. It may be wicked, but what +can I do? I love to look well." + +The dress she wore then was an India stuff, of linen, with a +cream-colored ground, and a vivid yellow silk thread woven in stripes +through it; each stripe had a cinnamon-colored edge. There were no +ornaments about her, except a band of violet-colored ribbon round her +head. When tea was brought in, she asked me in a whisper whether it +was tea or coffee in the cup which was given her. + +"Why, Cass," said Helen, "are you making a wonderment because she +does not know? It is strange that you have not known that she drinks +neither." + +"What does she drink?" + +"Is it eccentric to drink milk?" Verry asked, swallowing the tea with +an accustomed air. "I think this must be coffee, it stings my mouth +so." + +"It is green tea," said Helen; "don't drink it, Verry." + +"Green tea," she said, in a dreamy voice. "We drank green tea ten +years ago, in our old house; and I did not know it! Cassandra, do +you remember that I drank four cups once, when mother had company? I +laughed all night, and Temperance cried." + +She contributed her share toward entertaining, and invariably received +the most attention. My indifference was called pride, and her reserve +was called dignity, and dignity was more popular than pride. + +Before Helen went, Ben wrote me that he was going to India. It was a +favorite journey with the Belemites. By the time the letter reached +me he should be gone. Would I bear him in remembrance? He would not +forget me, and promised me an Indian idol. In eighteen months he +expected to be at home again; sooner, perhaps. P.S. Would I give +his true regards to my sister? N.B. The property might be divided +according to his grandfather's will, before his return, and he wanted +to be out of the way for sundry reasons, which he hoped to tell me +some day. I read the letter to Helen and Veronica. Helen laughed, and +said "Unstable as water"; but Veronica looked displeased; she closed +her eyes as if to recall him to mind, and asked Helen abruptly if she +did not like him. + +"Yes; but I doubt him. With all his strength of character he has a +capacity for failure." + +"I consider him a relation," I said. + +"_I_ do not own him," said Veronica. + +"At all events, he is not an affectionate one," Helen remarked. "You +have not heard from him in a year." + +"But I knew that I should hear," I said. + +"We shall _see_ him," said Veronica, "again." + +I was dull after I received his letter. My youth grew dim; somehow +I felt a self-pity. I found no chance to embalm those phases of +sensation which belonged to my period, and I grew careless; Helen's +influence went with her. The observances so vital to Veronica, so +charming in her, I became utterly neglectful of. For all this a mad +longing sometimes seized me to depart into a new world, which should +contain no element of the old, least of all a reminiscence of what my +experience had made me. + + + + + + +CHAPTER XXVI. + + +Alice Morgeson sent for Aunt Merce, asking her to fulfill the promise +she had made when she was in Rosville. + +With misgivings she went, stayed a month, and returned with Alice. I +felt a throe of pain when we met, which she must have seen, for she +turned pale, and the hand she had extended toward me fell by her side; +overcoming the impulse, she offered it again, but I did not take it. I +had no evidence to prove that she came to Surrey on my account; but I +was sure that such was the fact, as I was sure that there was a bond +between us, which she did not choose to break, nor to acknowledge. She +appeared as if expecting some explanation or revelation from me; but +I gave her none, though I liked her better than ever. She was +business-like and observant. Her tendencies, never romantic, were less +selfish; it was no longer society, dress, housekeeping, which absorbed +her, but a larger interest in the world which gave her a desire +to associate with men and women, independent of caste. None of her +children were with her; had it been three years earlier, she would not +have left home without them. Her hair was a little gray, and a wrinkle +or two had gathered about her mouth; but there was no other change. +I was not sorry to have her go, for she paid me a close and quiet +observation. At the moment of departure, she said in an undertone: +"What has become of that candor of which you were so proud?" "I am +more candid than ever," I answered, "for I am silent." + +"I understand you better, now that I have seen you _en famille."_ + +"What do you think now?" + +"I don't think I know; the Puritans have much to answer for in +your mother--" Turning to her she said, "My children, too, are so +different." + +Mother gave her a sad smile, as Fanny announced the carriage, and they +drove away. + +"No more visitors this year," said Veronica, yawning. + +"No agreeable ones, I fancy," I answered. + +"All the relations have had their turn for this year," remarked Aunt +Merce. But she was mistaken; an old lady came soon after this to spend +the winter. She lived but four miles from Surrey, but brought with her +all her clothes, and a large green parrot, which her son had brought +from foreign parts. Her name was Joy Morgeson; the fact of her being +cousin to father's grandmother entitled her to a raid upon us at any +season, and to call us "cousins." She felt, she said, that she must +come and attend the meetings regular, for her time upon earth was +short. But Joy was a hearty woman still, and, pious as she was, +delighted in rough and scandalous stories, the telling of which gave +her severe fits of repentance. She quilted elaborate petticoats for +us, knit stockings for Arthur, and was useful. Mr. and Mrs. Elisha +Peckham surprised us next. They arrived from "up country" and stayed +two weeks. I did not clearly understand why they came before they +went; but as they enjoyed their visit, it was of little consequence +whether I did or not. + +Midwinter passed, and we still had company. There was much to do, but +it was done without system. Mother or Aunt Merce detailed from their +ordinary duties as keeper of the visitors, Fanny was for the first +time able to make herself of importance in the family tableaux, +and assumed cares no one had thought of giving her. She left the +town-school, telling mother that learning would be of no use to her. +The rights of a human being merely was what she wanted; she should +fight for them; that was what paupers must do. Mother allowed her +to do as she pleased. Her duties commenced with calling us up to +breakfast _en masse_, and for once the experiment was successful, +for we all met at the table. The dining-room was in complete order, a +thing that had never happened early before; the rest of us missed the +straggling breakfast which consumed so much time. + +"Whose doing is this?" asked father, looking round the table. + +"It is Fanny's," I answered, rattling the cups. "All the coffee to be +poured out at once, don't agitate me." + +Fanny, bearing buckwheat cakes, looked proud and modest, as people do +who appreciate their own virtues. + +"Why, Fanny," said the father, "you have done wonders; you are more +original than Cassy or Verry." + +Her green eyes glowed; her aspect was so feline that I expected her +hair to rise. + +"Father's praise pleases you more than ours," Verry said. + +"You never gave me any," she answered, marching out. + +Father looked up at Verry, annoyed, but said nothing. We paid no +attention to Fanny's call afterward; but she continued her labors, +which proved acceptable to him. Temperance told me, when she was with +us for a week, that his overcoats, hats, umbrellas, and whips never +had such care as Fanny gave them. He omitted from this time to ask us +if we knew where his belongings were, but went to Fanny; and I noticed +that he required much attendance. + +Temperance, who had arrived in the thick of the company, as she termed +it, was sorry to go back to Abram. He _was_ a good man, she said; but +it was a dreadful thing for a woman to lose her liberty, especially +when liberty brought so much idle time. "Why, girls, I have quilted +and darned up every rag in the house. He _will_ do half the housework +himself; he is an everlasting Betty." She was cheerful, however, and +helped Hepsey, as well as the rest of us. + +The guests did not encroach on my time, but it was a relief to have +them gone and the house our own once more. + +I went to Milford again, almost daily, to feast my eyes on the bleak, +flat, gray landscape. The desolation of winter sustains our frail +hopes. Nature is kindest then; she does not taunt us with fruition. +It is the luxury of summer which tantalizes--her long, brilliant, +blossoming days, her dewy, radiant nights. + +Entering the house one March evening, when it was unusually still, +I had reached the front hall, when masculine tones struck my ears. I +opened the parlor door softly, and saw Ben Somers in an easy-chair, +basking before a glowing fire, his luminous face set toward Veronica, +who was near him, holding a small screen between her and the fire. +"She is always ready," I thought, contemplating her as I would a +picture. Her ruby-colored merino dress absorbed the light; she was +a mass of deep red, except her face and hair, above which her silver +crescent comb shone. Her slender feet were tapping the rug. She wore +boots the color of her dress; Ben was looking at them. Mother was +there, and in the background Aunt Merce and Fanny figured. I pushed +the door wide; as the stream of cold air reached them, they looked +toward it, and cried--"Cassandra!" Ben started up with extended hands. + +"I went as far as Cape Horn only, but I bought you the idol and lots +of things I promised from a passing ship. I have been home a week, and +I am _here_. Are you glad? Can I stay?" + +"Yes, yes," chorused the company, and I was too busy trying to get +off my gloves to speak. Father came in, and welcomed him with warmth. +Fanny ran out for a lamp; when she brought it, Veronica changed the +position of her screen, and held it close to her face. + +"Did you have a cold ride, Locke?" asked mother, gazing into the +fire with that expression of satisfaction we have when somebody beside +ourselves has been exposed to hardships. It is the same principle +entertained by those who depend upon and enjoy seeing criminals hung. + +Meanwhile my bonnet-strings got in a knot, which Fanny saw, and +was about to apply scissors, when Aunt Merce, unable to bear the +sacrifice, interfered and untied them, all present so interested in +the operation that conversation was suspended. Presently Aunt Merce +was called out, and was shortly followed by mother and Fanny. Ben +stood before me; his eyes, darting sharp rays, pierced me through; +they rested on the thread-like scars which marked my cheek, and which +were more visible from the effect of cold. + +"Tattooed still," I said in a low voice, pointing to them. + +"I see"--a sorrowful look crossed his face; he took my hand and kissed +it. Veronica, who had dropped the screen, met my glance toward her +with one perfectly impassive. As they watched me, I saw myself as they +did. A tall girl in gray, whose deep, controlled voice vibrated in +their ears, like the far-off sounds we hear at night from woods or the +sea, whose face was ineffaceably marked, whose air impressed with a +sense of mystery. I think both would have annihilated my personality +if possible, for the sake of comprehending me, for both loved me in +their way. + +"What are you reading, father?" asked Veronica suddenly. + +"To-day's letters, and I must be off for Boston; would you like to +go?" + +"My sister Adelaide has sent for you, Cassandra, to visit us," said +Ben, "and will you go too, Veronica?" + +"Thanks, I must decline. If Cass should go--and she will--I may go to +Boston." + +He looked at her curiously. "It would not be pleasant for you to +attempt Belem. I hate it, but I feel a fate-impelling power in regard +to Cassandra; I want her there." + +"May I go then?" I asked. + +"Certainly," father replied. + +"Please come out to supper," called Fanny. "We have something +particular for you, Mr. Morgeson." + +We saw mother at the table, a book in her hand. She was finishing a +chapter in "The Hour and the Man." Aunt Merce stood eyeing the dishes +with the aspect of a judge. As father took his seat, near Veronica, +Fanny, according to habit, stood behind it. With the most _degagé_ +air, Ben suffered nothing to escape him, and I never forgot the +picture of that moment. + +We talked of Helen's visit--a subject that could be commented +on freely. Veronica told Ben Helen's opinion of him; he reddened +slightly, and said that such a sage could not be contradicted. When +father remarked that the opinions of women were whimsical, Fanny gave +an audible sniff, which made Ben smile. + +Soon after tea I met Veronica in the hall, with a note in her hand. +She stopped and hesitatingly said that she was going to send for +Temperance; she wanted her while Mr. Somers stayed. + +"Your forethought astonishes me." + +"She is a comfort always to me." + +"Do you stand in especial need of a comforter?" + +She looked puzzled, laughed, and left me. + +Temperance arrived that evening, in time to administer a scolding to +Fanny. + +"That girl needs looking after," she said. "She is as sharp as a +needle. She met me in the yard and told me that a man fit for a +nobleman had come on a visit. 'It may be for Cass,' says she, 'and it +may not be. I have my doubts.' Did you ever?" concluded Temperance, +counting the knives. "There's one missing. By jingo! it has been +thrown to the pigs, I'll bet." + +When Ben made a show of going, we asked him to stay longer. He said +"Yes," so cordially, that we laughed. But it hurt me to see that he +had forgotten all about my going to Belem. "I like Surrey so much," +he said, "and you all, I have a fancy that I am in the Hebrides, +in Magnus Troil's dwelling; it is so wild here, so _naïve_. The +unadulterated taste of sea-spray is most beautiful." + +"We will have Cass for Norna," said Verry; "but, by the way, it is you +that must be of the fitful head; have you forgotten that she is going +to Belem soon?" + +"I shall remember Belem in good time; no fear of my forgetting that +ace--ancient spot. At least I may wait till your father goes to +Boston, and we can make a party. You will be ready, Cassandra? I wrote +Adelaide yesterday that you were coming, and mother will expect you." + +It often stormed during his visit. We had driving rains, and a gale +from the southeast, oceanward, which made our sea dark and miry, even +after the storm had ceased and patches of blue sky were visible. + +Our rendezvous was in the parlor, which, from the way in which Ben +knocked about the furniture, cushions, and books, assumed an air which +somehow subdued Veronica's love for order; she played for him, or they +read together, and sometimes talked; he taught her chess, and then +they quarreled. One day--a long one to me,--they were so much absorbed +in each other, I did not seek them till dusk. + +"Come and sing to me," called Ben. + +"So you remember that I do sing?" + +"Sing; there is a spell in this weird twilight; sing, or I go out on +the rocks to break it." + +He dropped the window curtains and sat by me at the piano, and I sang: + + "I feel the breath of the summer night, + Aromatic fire; + The trees, the vines, the flowers are astir + With tender desire. + + "If I were alone, I could not sing, + Praises to thee; + O night! unveil the beautiful soul + That awaiteth me!" + +"A foolish song," said Veronica, pulling her hair across her face. +No reply. She glided to the flower-basket, broke a rosebud from its +stalk, and mutely offered it to him. Whether he took it, I know not; +but he rose up from beside me, like a dark cloud, and my eyes followed +him. + +"Come Veronica," he whispered, "give me yourself. I love you, +Veronica." + +He sank down before her; she clasped her hands round his head, and +kissed his hair. + +"I know it," she said, in a clear voice. + +I shut the door softly, thinking of the Wandering Jew, went upstairs, +humming a little air between my teeth, and came down again into the +dining-room, which was in a blaze of light. + +"What preserves are these, Temperance?" I asked, going to the table. +"Some of Abram's quinces?" + +"Best you ever tasted, since you were born." + +"Call Mr. Somers, Fanny," said mother. "Is Verry in the parlor, too?" + +"I'll call them," I said; "I have left my handkerchief there." + +"Is anything else of yours there?" said Fanny, close to my ear. + +Ben had pushed back the curtain, and was staring into the darkness; +Veronica was walking to and fro on the rug. + +"Haven't I a great musical talent?" I inquired. + +"Am I happy?" she asked, coming toward me. + +Ben turned to speak, but Veronica put her hand over his mouth, and +said: + +"Why should I be 'hushed,' my darling?" + +"Come to supper, and be sensible," I urged. + +The light revealed a new expression in Verry's face--an unsettled, +dispossessed look; her brows were knitted, yet she smiled over and +over again, while she seemed hardly aware that she was eating like an +ordinary mortal. The imp Fanny tried experiments with her, by offering +the same dishes repeatedly, till her plate was piled high with food +she did not taste. + +The next day was clear, and mild with spring. Ben and I started for a +walk on the shore. We were half-way to the lighthouse before he asked +why it was that Veronica would not come with us. + +"She never walks by the shore; she detests the sea." + +"Is it so? I did not know that." + +"Do you mind that you know few of her tastes or habits? I speak of +this as a general truth." + +"I am a spectacle to you, I suppose. But this sea charms me; I shall +live by it, and build a house with all the windows and doors toward +it." + +"Not if you mean to have Verry in it." + +"I do mean to have her in it. She shall like it. Are you willing to +have me for a brother? Will you go to Belem, and help break the ice? +_She_ could never go," and he began to skip pebbles in the water. + +"I will take you for a brother gladly. You are a fool--not for loving +her, but all men are fools when in love, they are so besotted with +themselves. But I am afraid of one fault in you." + +"Yes," he answered hurriedly, "don't I know? On my honor, I have +tried; why not leave me to God? Didn't you leave yourself that way +once?" + +"Oh, you are cruel." + +"Pardon me, dear Cass. I _must_ do well now, surely. Will you believe +in me? Oh, do you not know the strength, the power, that comes to us +in the stress of passion and duty?" + +"This is from _you_, Ben." + +"Never mind; I knew I wanted to marry her, when I saw her. I love her +passionately," and he threw a pebble in the water farther than he had +yet; "but she is so pure, so delicate, that when I approach her, in +spite of my besottedness, my love grows lambent. That's not like me, +you know," with great vehemence. "Will she never understand me?" + +His face darkened, and he looked so strangely intent into my eyes that +I was obliged to turn away; he disturbed me. + +"Veronica probably will not understand you, but you must manage for +yourself. As you have discerned, she and I are far apart. She is pure, +noble, beautiful, and peculiar. I will have no voice between you." + +"You must, you do. We shall hear it if you do not speak. You have a +great power, tall enchantress." + +"Certainly. What a powerful life is mine!" + +"You come to these shores often. Are you not different beside them? +This colorless picture before us--these vague spaces of sea and +land--the motion of the one--the stillness of the other--have you no +sense that you have a powerful spirit?" + +"Is it power? It is pain." + +"Your gold has not been refined then." + +"Yes, I confess I have a sense of power; but it is not a spiritual +sense." + +"Let us go back," he said abruptly. + +We mused by our footprints in the wet sand, as we passed them. We were +told when we reached home that Veronica had gone on some expedition +with Fanny. She did not return till time for supper, looking elfish, +and behaving whimsically, as if she had received instructions +accordingly. I fancied that the expression Ben regarded her with might +be the Bellevue Pickersgill expression, it was so different from any +I had seen. There was a haughty curiosity in his face; as she passed +near him, he looked into her eyes, and saw the strange cast which made +their sight so far off. + +"Veronica, where are you?" he asked. + +The tone of his voice attracted mother's regards; an intelligent +glance was exchanged, and then her eyes sought mine. "It is not as you +thought, mamma," I telegraphed. But Verry, not bringing her eyes back +into the world, merely said, "I am here, am I not?" and went to shut +herself up in her room. I found her there, looking through the wicket. + +"The buds are beginning to swell," she said. "I should hear small +voices breaking out from the earth. I grow happy every day now." + +"Because the earth will be green again?" I asked, in a coaxing voice. + +She shut the wicket, and, looking in my face, said, "I will go down +immediately." For some reason the tears came into my eyes, which she, +taking up the candle, saw. "I am going to play," she said hurriedly, +"come." She ran down before me, but turning, by the foot of the +stairs, she pointed to the parlor door, and said, "Is he my husband?" + +"Answer for yourself. Go in, in God's name." + +Ben was chatting with father over the fire; he stretched out his hand +to her, with so firm and assured an air, and looked so noble, that I +felt a pang of admiration for him. She laid her hand in his a moment, +passed on to the piano, and began to play divinely, drawing him to +her side. Father peeled and twisted his cigar, as he contemplated them +with a thoughtful countenance. + + + + + + +CHAPTER XXVII. + + +When we went to Boston we went to a new hotel, as Ben had advised, +deserting the old Bromfield for the Tremont. It was dusk when we +arrived, and tea was served immediately, in a large room full of +somber mahogany furniture. Its atmosphere oppressed Veronica, who ate +her supper in silence. + +"Charles Dickens is here, sir," said the waiter, who knew Ben. "Two +models of the Curiosity Shop have just gone upstairs, sir. His room is +right over here, sir." + +Veronica looked adoringly at the ceiling. + +"Then," said Ben, "our hunters are up from Belem. Anybody in from +Belem, John?" + +"Oh yes, sir, every day." + +"I'll look them up," he said to us; but he returned soon, and begged +us not to look at Dickens, if we had a chance. + +Veronica, with a sigh, gave him up, and lost a chance of being +immortalized with that perpetual and imperturbable beefsteak, covered +with "the blackest of all possible pepper," which was daily served to +him. + +Father being out in pursuit of a cigar, Ben asked Veronica what she +would do while he was in Belem. + +"Walk round this lion-clawed table." + +"I shall be gone from you." + +"Alas!" + +"Are we to part this way?" + +"Father," she cried, as he entered with a theater bill, "had I better +marry this friend of Cassy's?" + +"Have you the courage? Do you know each other?" + +"Having known Cassandra so long, sir," began Ben, but was interrupted +by Veronica's exclaiming, "We do not know each other at all. What is +the use of making _that_ futile attempt? I am over eighteen, and do +you know me, father?" + +"If I do not, it is because you have no shadow." + +"Shall I, then?" giving Ben a delicious smile. "I promise." + +"I promise, too, Veronica," heaven dawning in his eyes. + +"We will see about it," said father. "Now who will go to the theater?" + +We declined, but Ben signified his willingness to accompany him. + +We took the first morning train, so that father could return before +evening, and ran through in the course of an hour the wooden suburbs +of Belem, bordered by an ancient marsh, from which the sea had long +retired. Taking a cab, we turned into Norfolk Street, at the head of +which, Ben said, a mile distant, was his father's house. It was not +a cheerful street, and when we stopped before an immense square, +three-storied house, it looked still more gloomy! There was a gate on +one side, with white wooden urns on the posts, that shut off a paved +courtway. On each side of the street were houses of the same pattern, +with the same gates. Down the paved court of the opposite house a +coach pulled by two fat horses clattered, and as the coach turned we +saw two old ladies inside, highly dressed, bowing and smiling at Ben. + +"The Miss Hiticutts--hundred thousand apiece." + +"Hundred thousand apiece," I echoed in an anguish of admiration, which +made my father laugh and Ben scowl. A servant in a linen jacket opened +the door. "Is it yourself, Mr. Ben?" + +"Open the parlor door, Murph. Where's my mother and my sister?" + +"Miss Somers is taking her exercise, sir, and Mrs. Somers is with +the owld gentleman"; opening the door, with the performance of taking +father's hat. + +"Sit down, Cassandra. I'll look up somebody." + +It was a bewildering matter where to go; the room, vast and dark, was +a complete litter of tables and sofas. The tables were loaded with +lamps, books, and knick-knacks of every description; the sofas were +strewn with English and French magazines, novels, and papers. I went +to the window, while father perched on the music stool. + +My attention was diverted to a large dog in the court, chained to +a post near a pump, where a man was giving water to a handsome bay +horse, at the same time keeping his eye on an individual who stood on +a stone block, dressed in a loose velvet coat, a white felt hat, +and slippers down at the heel. He had a coach whip in his hand--the +handsomest hand I ever saw, which he snapped at the dog, who growled +with rage. I heard Ben's voice in remonstrance; then a lazy laugh from +velvet coat, who gave the dog a cut which made him bound. Ben, untying +him, was overwhelmed with caresses. "Down, you fool! Off, Rash!" +he said. "Look there," pointing to the window where I stood. The +gentleman with the coach whip looked at me also. The likeness to +Ben turned my suspicion into certainty that they were brothers. His +disposition, I thought, must be lovely, judging from the episode with +"Rash." I turned away, almost running against a lady, who extended her +fingers toward me with a quick little laugh, and said: + +"How de do? Where's Ben, to introduce us properly?" + +"Here, mother," he said behind her, followed by the dog. "You were +expecting Cassandra, my old chum; and Mr. Morgeson has come to leave +her with us." + +"Certainly. Rash, go out, dear. Mr. Morgeson, I am sorry to say," she +spoke with more politeness, "that Mr. Somers is confined to his room +with gout. May I take you up?" + +"I have a short time to stay," looking at his watch and rising. "Do +you consider the old school friendship between your son and Cassandra +a sufficient reason for leaving her with you? To say nothing of the +faint relationship which, we suppose, exists." + +"Of course, very happy; Adelaide expects her," she said vaguely. I saw +at once that she had never heard a word of our being relations. Ben +had managed nicely in the affair of my invitation to Belem. But I +desired to remain, in spite of Mrs. Somers's reception. + +Mr. Somers was bolstered up in bed, in a flowered dressing gown, with +a bottle of colchicum and a pile of Congressional reports on a stand +beside him. His urbanity was extreme; it was evident that the gout was +not allowed to interfere with his deportment, though the joints of +his hands were twisted and knotty. He expatiated upon Ben's long +ungratified wish for a visit from me, and thanked father for complying +with it. He mentioned the memento of the miniature, and gave every +particular of Locke Morgeson's early marriage, explaining the exact +shade of consanguinity--a faint one. I glanced at Mrs. Somers, who +sat remote, in the act of inspecting me, with an eye askance, which I +afterward found was her mode of looking at those whom she doubted +or disliked; it changed its expression, as it met mine, into one of +haughty wonder, that said there could be no tie of blood between us. +She irritated and embarrassed me. I tried to think of something +to say, and uttered a few words, which were uncommonly trivial and +awkward. Mr. Somers touched on politics. The door opened, and Ben's +brother entered, with downcast eyes. Advancing to the footboard of the +bed, he leaned his chin on its edge, looked at his father, and in a +remarkably clear, ringing voice, said: + +"The check." + +Mr. Somers coughed behind his hand. "To-morrow will do, Desmond." + +"To-day will do." + +"Desmond," said Ben in a low voice, "you do not see Mr. Morgeson and +Miss Morgeson. My brother, Cassandra." + +"Beg pardon, good-morning"; and he pulled off his hat with an air of +grace which became him, though it was very indifferent. Mrs. Somers in +a soft voice said: "Ring, Des, dear, will you?" He warned her with +a satirical smile, and gave such a pull at the bell-rope that it came +down. Her florid face flushed a deeper red, but he had gone. Father +looked at his watch, and got up with alacrity. + +"You are to dine with us, at least, Mr. Morgeson." + +"I must return to Boston on account of my daughter, who is there +alone." + +"Have you been remiss, Ben," said his father affectionately, "in not +bringing her also?" + +"She would not come, of course, father." + +A tall, black-haired girl of twenty-five rushed in. + +"Why, Ben," she said, "you were not expected. And this is Miss +Morgeson," shaking hands with me. "You will spend a month, won't +you?" She put her chin in her hand, and scanned me with a cool +deliberateness. "Pa, do you think she is like Caroline Bingham?" + +"Yes, so she is; but fairer. She is a great belle," nodding to me. + +"Do you _really_ think she looks like her, Somers?" said Mrs. Somers, +in a tone of denial. + +"Certainly, but handsomer," Adelaide replied for him, without looking +at her mother. + +"Would you like to go to your room?" she asked. "What a pretty dress +this is!" taking hold of the sleeve, her chin in her hand still. "We +will have some walks; Belem is nice for walking. Pa, how do you feel +now?" + +She allowed me to go downstairs with father, without following, and +sent Murphy in with wine and biscuit. I put my arms round his neck and +kissed him, for I had a lonesome feeling, which I could not define at +the last moment. + +"You will not stay long," he said; "there is something oppressive in +this atmosphere." + +"Something artificial, is it? It must be the blood of the Bellevue +Pickersgills that thickens the air." + +"Now," said Ben, with father's hat in his hand, "the time is up." + +Adelaide was at the door to take courteous leave of him, and Mrs. +Somers bowed from the top of the stairs, revealing a pair of large +ankles, whose base rested in a pair of shabby, pudgy slippers. +Adelaide then took me to my room, telling me not to change my dress, +but to come down soon, for dinner was ready. Hearing a bell, I hurried +down to the parlor which we were in before, and waited for directions +respecting the dinner. Adelaide came presently. "We are dining; come +and sit next me," offering her arm. Mrs. Somers, Desmond, and a girl +of fifteen were at the table. The latter had just come from school, +I concluded, as a satchel of books hung at her chair. Murphy was +removing the soup, and I derived the impression that I had been +forgotten. While taking mine, they vaguely stared about till Murphy +brought in the roast mutton, except Adelaide, who rubbed her teeth +with a dry crust, making a feint of eating it. Desmond kept the +decanter, occasionally swallowing a glassful. + +"What wine is that, Murphy?" Mrs. Somers asked. He hesitatingly +answered, "I think it is the Juno, mum." + +"You stole the key from pa's room, Des," said the girl. He shook the +carving-knife at her, at which gesture she said "Pooh!" and applied +herself to the roast mutton with avidity. They all ate largely, +especially the girl, whose wide mouth was filled with splendid teeth. +Mrs. Somers made a motion with her glass for Murphy to bring her the +wine, and pouring a teaspoonful, held it to her mouth, as if she were +practicing drinking healths. Her hands were beautiful, too; they all +had handsome hands, whose movements were graceful and expressive. When +Ben arrived, Murphy set the dishes before him, and Adelaide began to +talk in a lively, brilliant way. He did not ask for wine, but I saw +him look toward it and Desmond. The decanter was empty. After the +dessert, Mrs. Somers arose and we followed; but she soon left us, and +we went to the parlor. The girl, taking a seat beside me, said: "My +name is Ann Somers. I am never introduced; Adder, my sister, is in +the way, you know. I dare say Ben never spoke of me to you. I am never +spoken of, am never noticed. I have never had new dresses; yet pa is +my friend, the dear soul." + +Adelaide looked upon her with the same superb indifference with which +she regarded her mother and Desmond. + +"Would you like to go to your room?" she asked again. "You are too +tired to take a walk, perhaps?" + +"Lord!" said Ann, "do let her do as she likes. Adder, don't be too +disagreeable." + +I picked up my bonnet, which she took from me, and put on the top of +her head as we went upstairs. + +"Murph must bring up your trunk," said Ann, opening the closet. "But +there is no space to hang anything; the great Mogul's wardrobe stops +the way." + +My chamber was stately in size and appointments. The afternoon sun +shone in, where a shutter was open, behind the dull red curtains, +and illuminated the portrait of a nimble old lady in a scarlet cloak, +which hung near the gigantic curtained bed, over a vast chair, covered +with faded green damask. + +"Grandmother Pickersgill," said Ann, who saw me observing the picture. +Adelaide contemplated it also. "It was painted by Copley," she said, +"Lord Lyndhurst afterwards. Grandfather entertained him, and he went +to one of grandmother's parties; he complimented her on her beauty. +But you see that she has not a handsome hand. Ours is the Pickersgill +hand," and she spread her fingers like a fan. "She was a regular old +screw," continued Ann, "and used to have mother's underclothes tucked +to last for ever; she was a beast to servants, too." + +My trunk was brought in, which I unlocked and unpacked, while Adelaide +opened a drawer in a great bureau. + +"Oh, you know it is full of Marm's fineries," said Ann, in a +confidential tone; "I'll ring for Hannah." Adelaide busied herself in +throwing the contents of the drawers on the floor. "There's her ball +dresses," commented Ann, as a pink satin, trimmed with magnificent +lace, tumbled out. "Old Carew brought the lace over for her." + +"Bring a basket, Hannah, and take these away somewhere, to some other +closet of Mrs. Somers's." + +"That gold fringe, do you remember, Adder? She looked like an elephant +with his howdah on when she wore it." + +Her impertinence inspired Adelaide, who joined her in a flow of +vituperative wit at the expense of their mother and other relatives, +incidentally brought in. Instead of being aghast, I enjoyed it, and +was feverish with a desire to be as brilliant, for my vocabulary was +deficient and my sense of inferiority was active during the whole +of my visit in Belem. I blushed often, smiled foolishly, and was +afflicted with a general apprehension in regard to _gaucherie_. + +I changed my traveling dress, as they were not inclined to leave me, +with anxiety, for I was weak enough to wish to make an impression +with my elegant bearing and appointments. Being so anatomized, I was +oppressed with an indefinite discouragement. Their stealthy, sharp, +selfish scrutiny brought out my failures. My dress seemed ill-made; my +hair unbecomingly dressed; my best collar and ribbon, which I put on, +were nothing to the lace I had just seen falling on the floor. When we +descended it was twilight. Ann said she must study, and left us by the +parlor fire. Adelaide lighted a candle, and took a novel, which she +read reclining on a sofa. Reclining on sofas, I discovered, was a +family trait, though they were all in a state of the most robust +health, with the exception of Mr. Somers. I walked up and down the +rooms. "They were fine once," said Ben, who appeared from a dark +corner, "but faded now. Mother never changes anything if she can +help it. She is a terrible aristocrat," he continued, in a low voice, +"fixed in the ideas imbedded in the Belem institutions, which only +move backward. We laugh, though, at everybody's claims but our own. +You despised me for mentioning the Hiticutts' income; it was the +atmosphere." + +"It amuses me to be here." + +"Of course; but stir up Adelaide, she is genuine; has fine sense, and +half despises her life; but she knows no other, and is proud." + +"Let's go and find tea," she said, yawning, dropping her book. "Why +don't that lazy Murph light the lamp? I wish pa was down to regulate +affairs." No one was at the tea-table but Mrs. Somers. + +"Ben is very polite, don't you think so?" she said with her peculiar +laugh, which made my flesh creep, as he pulled up a chair for me. Her +voice made me dizzy, but I smiled. Ben was not the same in Belem, +I saw at once, and no longer wondered at its influence, or at the +vacillating nature of his plans and pursuits. Mrs. Somers gave me +some tea from a spider-shaped silver tea-pot, which was related to a +spider-shaped cream-jug and a spider-shaped sugar-dish. The polished +surface of the mahogany table reflected a pair of tall silver +candlesticks, and the plates, being of warped blue and white Chinese +ware, joggled and clattered when we touched them. The tea was +delicious; I said so, but Mrs. Somers deigned no answer. We were +regaled with spread bread and butter and baked apples. Adelaide ate +six. + +"We do not have your Surrey suppers," Ben remarked. + +"How should you know?" his mother asked. Ben's eyes looked violent +and he bit his lips. Adelaide commenced speaking before her mother had +finished her question, as if she only needed the spur of her voice to +be lively and agreeable, _per contra_. + +"Hepburn must ask us to tea. Her jam and her gossip are wonderful. +Aunt Tucker might ask us too, with housekeeper Beck's permission. I +like tea fights with the old Hindoos. They like us too, Ben; we are +the children of Hindoos also--superior to the rest of the world. There +will be a party or two for this young person." + +"Parties be hanged!" he said. "Then we must have a rout here, and I +hate 'em." + +"But we owe an entertainment," said Mrs. Somers. "I have been thinking +of giving one as soon as Mr. Somers gets out." + +"I have no such idea," said Adelaide, with her back toward her mother. +"We shall have no party until some one has been given to our young +friend, Ben." + +Ben and I visited his father, who asked questions relative to the +temperature, the water, and the dietetic qualities of Surrey. He was +affable, but there was no nearness in his affability. He skated on +the ice of appearances, and that was his vocation in his family. He +fulfilled it well, but it was a strain sometimes. His family broke the +ice now and then, which must have made him plunge into the depths +of reality. I learned to respect his courage, bad as his cause was. +Marrying Bellevue Pickersgill for her money, he married his master, +and was endowed only with the privilege of settling her taxes. Simon +Pickersgill, her father, tied up the main part of his money for his +grandchildren. It was to be divided among them when the youngest son +should arrive at the age of twenty-one--an event which took place, I +supposed, while Ben was on his way to India. Desmond and an older son, +who resided anywhere except at home, made havoc with the income. As +the principal prospectively was theirs, or nearly the whole of it, why +should they not dispose of that? + +At last Mr. Somers looked at his watch, a gentle reminder that it was +time for us to withdraw. Adelaide was still in the parlor, lying on +her favorite sofa contemplating the ceiling. I asked permission to +retire, which she granted without removing her regards. In spite of my +sound sleep that night, I was started from it by the wail of a young +child. The strangeness of the chamber, and the continued crying, +which I could not locate, kept me awake at intervals till dawn peeped +through the curtains. + + + + + + +CHAPTER XXVIII. + + +A few days after my arrival, some friends dined with Mrs. Somers. The +daughters of a senator, as Ann informed me, and an ex-governor, or I +should not have known this fact, for I was not introduced. The dinner +was elaborate, and Desmond did the honors. With the walnuts one of the +ladies asked for the baby. + +Mrs. Somers made a sign to Desmond, who pulled the bell-rope--mildly +this time. An elderly woman instantly appeared with a child a few +months old, puny and anxious-looking. Mrs. Somers took it from her, +and placed it on the table; it tottered and nodded to the chirrups of +the guests. Ben, from the opposite side of the table, addressed me by +a look, which enlightened me. His voyage to India was useless, as the +property would stand for twenty-one years more, lacking some months, +unless Providence interposed. Adelaide was oblivious of the child, +but Desmond thumped his glass on the mahogany to attract it, for its +energies were absorbed in swallowing its fists and fretfully crying. +When Murphy announced coffee in the parlor, the nurse took it away; +and after coffee and sponge cake were served the visitors drove off. +That afternoon some friends of Adelaide called, to whom she introduced +me as "cousin." She gave graphic descriptions of them, after their +departure. One had achieved greatness by spending her winters in +Washington, and contracting a friendship with John C. Calhoun. Another +was an artist who had painted an ideal head of her ancestor, Sir +Roger de Roger, not he who had arrived some years ago as a weaver from +Glasgow, but the one who had remained on the family estate. A third +reviewed books and collected autographs. + +The next afternoon one of the Miss Hiticutts from across the way came, +in a splendid camel's-hair shawl and a shabby dress. "How _is_ Mr. +Somers?" she asked. "He is such a martyr." + +Here Mrs. Somers entered. "My dear Bellevue, you are worn out with +your devotion to him; when have you taken the air?" She did not wait +for a reply, but addressed Adelaide with, "This is your young friend, +and where is my favorite, Mr. Ben, and little Miss Ann? Have you +anything new? I went down to Harris yesterday to tell her she must +sweep away her old trash of a circulating library, and begin with the +New Regime of Novels, which threatens to overwhelm us." + +Adelaide talked slowly at first, and then soared into a region where +I had never seen a woman--an intellectual one. Miss Hiticutt followed +her, and I experienced a new pleasure. Mrs. Somers was silent, but +listened with respect to Miss Hiticutt, for she was of the real Belem +azure in blood as well as in brain; besides, she was rich, and would +never marry. It was a Pickersgill hallucination to be attentive to +people who had legacies in their power. Mrs. Somers had a bequested +fortune already in hair rings and silver ware. While appearing to +listen to Adelaide, her eyes wandered over me with speculation askant +in them. Adelaide was so full of _esprit_ that I was again smitten +with my inferiority, and from this time I felt a respect for her, +which never declined, although she married an Englishman, who, too +choleric to live in America, took her to Florence, where they settled +with their own towels and silver, and are likely to remain, for her +heart is too narrow to comprise any further interest in Belem. + +Miss Hiticutt chatted herself out, giving us an invitation to tea, for +any day, including Ben and Miss Ann, who had not been visible since +breakfast. + +April rains kept us indoors for several days. Ann refused to go to +school. She must have a holiday; besides, pa needed her; she alone +could take care of him, after all. Her mother said that she must go. + +"Who can make me, mum?" + +Desmond ordered the coach for her. When it was ready he put her in it, +seated himself beside her, with provoking nonchalance, and carried her +to school. Murphy, with his velvet-banded hat, left her satchel at the +door, with a ceremonious air, which made Ann slap his cheek and call +him an old grimalkin. But she was obliged to walk home in the rain, +after waiting an hour for him to come back. + +Mr. Somers hobbled about his room, with the help of his cane, and said +that he should be out soon, and requested Adelaide to put in order +some book-shelves that were in the third story, for he wanted to +read without confusion. We went there together, and sorted some odd +volumes; piles of Unitarian sermons, bound magazines, political works, +and a heap of histories. Ben found a seat on a bunch of books, pleased +to see us together. + +"This is a horrid hole," he said. "I have not been up in this floor +for ages. How do the shelves look?" + +A hiccough near us caused us to look toward the door. + +"It is only Des, in his usual afternoon trim," said Ben. + +She nodded, as he pushed open the door, thrusting in his head. "What +the hell are you doing here? This region is sacred to Chaos and old +Night," striking the panels, first one and then the other, with the +tassels of his dressing-gown. No one answered him. Adelaide counted a +row of books, and Ben whistled. + +"Damn you, Ben," he said, in a languid voice: "you never seem bored. +Curse you all. I hate ye, especially that she-Calmuck yonder--that +Siberian-steppe-natured, malachite-hearted girl, our sister." + +"Oh come away, Mr. Desmond. What are the poor things doing that you +should harry them?" and the woman who had brought in the baby the day +of the dinner laid her hands on him and pulled him away. + +"Sarah will never give him up," said Ben. + +"She swears there is good in him. I think he is a wretch," turning +over the leaves of a book with her beautiful hand, such a hand as I +had just seen beating the door--such a hand as clasped its fellow in +Ben's hair. Adelaide was not embarrassed at my presence. She neither +sought nor avoided my look. But Ben said, "You are thinking." + +"Is she?" And Adelaide raised her eyes. + +"You are all so much alike," I said. + +"You are right," she answered seriously. "Our grandfather--" + +"Confound him!" broke in Ben. "I wish he had never been born. Are +you proud, Addie, of being like the Pickersgills? But I know you are. +Remember that the part of us which is Pickersgill hates its like. I am +off; I am going to walk." + +Adelaide coolly said, after he had gone, that he was very visionary, +predicting changes that could not be, and determined to bring them +about. + +"Why did he bring me here?" I asked, as if I were asking in a dream. + +"Ben's hospitality is genuine. He is like pa. Besides, you are related +to us--on the Somers side, and are the first visitor we ever saw, +outside of mother's connection. Do you not know, too, that Ben's +friendship is very sincere--very strong?" + +"I begin to comprehend the Pickersgills," I remarked as if in a dream. +"How words with any meaning glance off, when addressed to them. How +impossible it is to return the impression they give. How incapable +they are of appreciating what they cannot appropriate to the use of +their idiosyncrasies." + +She gazed at me, as if she heard an abstract subject discussed, with a +slight interest in her black eyes. + +"Are they vicious to the death?" I went on with this dream. "It is +not fair--their overpowering personality--it is not fair to others. It +overpowers me, though I know it is _all_ fallacious." + +"I am ignorant of Ethical Philosophy." + +"Miss Somers," said Murphy, knocking, "if Major Millard is below?" + +"I am coming." + +She smiled when she looked at me again. I stared at her with a +singular feeling. Had I touched her, or had I made a fool of myself? + +"There is some nice gingerbread in the closet. Sha'n't I get you a +piece?" + +I fell out of my dream. + +"Major Millard is an old beau. Come down and captivate him. He likes +fair women." + +Declining the gingerbread, I accepted the Major. He was an old +gentleman, in a good deal of highly starched linen, amusing himself +by teazing Ann, who liked it, and paid him in impertinence. Adelaide +played chess with him. Desmond sauntered in about nine, threw himself +into a chair behind the sofa where I sat, and swung his arm over the +back. The chessboard was put aside, and a gossipy conversation was +started, which included Mrs. Somers, who was on a sofa across the +room, but he did not join in it. I watched Mrs. Somers, as her fingers +moved with her Berlin knitting, feeling more composed and settled as +to my identity, in spite of my late outburst, than I had felt at +any moment since my arrival in Belem. They were laughing at a funny +description, which Ann was giving of a meeting she had witnessed +between Miss Hiticutt and Mr. Pearsall, a gentleman lately arrived +from China, after a twenty years' residence, with several lacs of +rupees. Her delineation of Miss Hiticutt, who attempted to appear as +she had twenty years before, was excellent. Ben, who was rolling and +unrolling his mother's yarn, laughed till the tears ran, but Major +Millard looked uneasy, as if he expected to be served _à-la_-Hiticutt +by the satirical Ann after his departure. Before the laughter +subsided, I heard a low voice at my ear, and felt a slight touch from +the tip of a finger on my cheek. + +"How came those scars?" + +I brushed my cheek with my handkerchief, and answered, "I got them in +battle." + +He left his chair, and walked slowly through the room into the dark +front parlor. Major Millard took leave, and was followed by Mrs. +Somers and Ann, neither of whom returned. As Ben stretched himself +on his sofa with an air of relief, Desmond emerged from the dark and +stood behind him, leaning against a column, with his hands in his coat +pockets and his eyes searchingly fixed upon me. Ben, turning his head +in my direction, sprang up so suddenly that I started; but Desmond's +eyes did not move till Ben confronted him; then he gave him a haughty +smile, and begged him to take his repose again. + +I went to the piano and ran my fingers over the keys. + +"Do you play? Can you sing?" asked Adelaide, rousing herself. + +"Yes." + +"Do sing. I never talk music; but I like it." + +"Some old song," said Ben. + +Singing + + "Drink to me only with thine eyes, + And I will pledge with mine," + +I became conscious that Desmond was near me. With a perfectly pure +voice he joined in the song: + + "The thirst that from the soul doth rise, + Doth ask a drink divine." + +As the tones of his voice floated through the room, I was where I saw +the white sea-birds flashing between the blue deeps of our summer +sea and sky, and the dark rocks that rose and dipped in the murmuring +waves. + + + + + + +CHAPTER XXIX. + + +One pleasant afternoon Adelaide and I started on a walk. We must go +through the crooked length of Norfolk Street, till we reached the +outskirts of Belem, and its low fields not yet green; that was the +fashionable promenade, she said. After the two o'clock dinner, Belem +walked. All her acquaintances seemed to be in the street, so many bows +were given and returned with ceremony. Nothing familiar was attempted, +nothing beyond the courtliness of an artificial smile. + +Returning, we met Desmond with a lady, and a series of bows took +place. Desmond held his hat in his hand till we had passed; his +expression varied so much from what it was when I saw him last, at the +breakfast table, he being in a desperate humor then, that it served me +for mental comment for some minutes. + +"That is Miss Brewster," said Adelaide. "She is an heiress, and +fancies Desmond's attentions: she will not marry him, though." + +"Is every woman in Belem an heiress?" + +"Those we talk about are, and every man is a fortune-hunter. Money +marries money; those who have none do not marry. Those who wait hope. +But the great fortunes of Belem are divided; the race of millionaires +is decaying." + +"Is that Ann yonder?" + +"I think so, from that bent bonnet." + +It proved to be Ann, who went by us with the universal bow and +grimace, sacrificing to the public spirit with her fine manners. She +turned soon, however, and overtook us, proposing to make a detour +to Drummond Street, where an intimate family friend, "Old Hepburn," +lived, so that the prospect of our going to tea with her might be made +probable by her catching a passing glimpse of us; at this time +she must be at the window with her Voltaire, or her Rousseau. The +proposition was accepted, and we soon came near the house, which +stood behind a row of large trees, and looked very dismal, with +three-fourths of its windows barred with board shutters. + +"Walk slow," Ann entreated. "I see her blinking at us. She has not +shed her satin pelisse yet." + +Before we got beyond it a dirty little girl came out of the gate, in +a pair of huge shoes and a canvas apron, which covered her, to call us +back. Mrs. Hepburn had seen us, and wished us to come in, wanting to +know who Miss Adelaide had with her, and to talk with her. She ran +back, reappearing again at the door, out of breath, and minus a shoe. +As we entered a small parlor, an old lady in a black dress, with +a deep cape, held out her withered hand, without rising from her +straight-backed arm-chair, smiling at us, but shaking her head +furiously at the small girl, who lingered in the door. + +"Mari, Mari," she called, but no Mari came, and the small girl took +our shawls, for Mrs. Hepburn said we must stay, now that she had +inveigled us inside her doors. Ann mimicked her at her back, but to +her face behaved servilely. The name of Morgeson belonged to the early +historical time of New England, Mrs. Hepburn informed me. I never +knew it; but bowed, as if not ignorant. Old Mari must be consulted +respecting the sweetmeats, and she went after her. + +"What an old mouser it is!" said Ann. "What unexpected ways she has! +She scours Belem in her velvet shoes, to find out everybody's history. +Don't you smell buttered toast?" + +"Your father is getting the best of the gout," said Mrs. Hepburn, +returning. "How is Desmond? He may be the wickedest of you all, but +I like him the best. I shall not throw away praise of him on you, +Adelaide." And she looked at me. + +"He bows well," I said. + +"He resembles his mother, who was a great beauty. Mr. Somers was +handsome, too. I was at a ball at Governor Flam's thirty years ago. +Your mother was barely fifteen, then, Adelaide; she was just married, +and opened the ball." + +She examined me all the while, with a pair of small, round eyes, from +which the color had faded, but which were capable of reading me. + +Tea was served by candlelight, on a small table. Mrs. Hepburn kept +her eyes on everything, talking volubly, and pulled the small, girl's +ears, or pushed her by the shoulder, with faith that we were not +observing her. The toast was well buttered, the sweetmeats were +delicious, and the cake was heavenly, as Ann said. Mrs. Hepburn ate +little, but told us a great deal about marriages in prospect and +incomes which waxed or waned in consequence. When tea was over, she +said to the small girl who removed the tea things, "On your life taste +not of the cake or the sweetmeats; and bring me two sticks of wood, +you huzzy." She arranged the sticks on a decaying fire, inside a high +brass fender, pulled up a stand near the hearth, lighted two candles, +and placed on it a pack of cards. + +"Some one may come, so that we can play." + +Meantime she dozed upright, walking, talking, and dozing again, like a +crafty old parrot. + +"She has a great deal of money saved," Ann whispered behind a book. +"She is over seventy. Oh, she is opening her puss eyes!" + +Adelaide mused, after her fashion, on the slippery hair-cloth sofa, +looking at the dim fire, and I surveyed the room. Its aspect attracted +me, though it was precise and stiff. An ugly Turkey carpet covered +the floor; a sideboard was against the wall, with a pair of silver +pitchers on it, and two tall vases, filled with artificial flowers, +under glass shades. Old portraits hung over it. Upon one I fixed my +attention. + +"That is the portrait of Count Rumford," Mrs. Hepburn said. + +"Can't we see the letters?" begged Ann. "And wont you show us your +trinkets? It is three or four years since we looked them over." + +"Yes," she answered, good-humoredly; "ring the bell." + +An old woman answered it, to whom Mrs. Hepburn said, in a friendly +voice, "The box in my desk." Adelaide and Ann said, "How do you +do, Mari?" When she brought the box, Mrs. Hepburn unlocked it, and +produced some yellow letters, which we looked over, picking out here +and there bits of Parisian gossip, many, many years old. They were +directed to Cavendish Hepburn, by his friend, the original of the +portrait. But the letters were soon laid aside, and we examined +the contents of the box. Old brooches, miniatures painted on +ivory, silhouettes, hair rings, necklaces, ear-rings, chains, and +finger-rings. + +"Did you wear this?" asked Ann with a longing voice, slipping an +immense sapphire ring on her forefinger. + +"In Mr. Hepburn's day," she answered, taking up a small case, which +she unfastened and gave me. It contained a peculiar pair of ear-rings, +and a brooch of aqua-marina stones, in a setting perforated like a +net. + +"They suit you. Will you accept such an old-fashioned ornament? Put +the rings in; here Ann, fasten them." + +Ann glared at her in astonishment, and then at me, for the reason +which had prompted so unexpected a gift. + +"Is it possible that I am to have them? Why do you give them to me? +They are beautiful," I replied. + +"They came from Europe long ago," she said. "And they happen to suit +you." + + 'Sabrina fair, + Under the glassy, cool, translucent wave, + In twisted braids of lilies knitting + The loose train of thy amber-dropping hair.'" + +"Those lines make me forgive Paradise Lost," said Adelaide. + +"They are very long, these ear-rings," Ann remarked. + +I put the brooch in the knot of ribbon I wore; Mrs. Hepburn joggled +the white satin bows of her cap in approbation. + +The knocker resounded. "There is our partner," she cried. + +"It must be late, ma'am," said Adelaide; "and I suspect it is some one +for us. You know we never venture on impromptu visits, except to you, +and our people know where to send." + +"Late or not, you shall stay for a game," she said, as Ben came in, +hat in hand, declaring he had been scouting for us since dark. Mrs. +Hepburn snuffed the candles, and rang the bell. The small girl, with +a perturbed air, like one hurried out of a nap, brought in a waiter, +which she placed on the sideboard. + +"Get to bed," Mrs. Hepburn loudly whispered, looking over the waiter, +and taking from it a silver porringer, she put it inside the fender, +and then shuffled the cards. + +"Now, Ann, you may sit beside me and learn." + +"If it is whist, mum, I know it. I played every afternoon at Hampton +last summer, and we spoiled a nice polished table, we scratched it so +with our nails, picking up the cards." + +"Young people do too much, nowadays." + +I was in the shadow of the sideboard; Ben stood against it. + +"When have you played whist, Cassandra?" he asked in a low voice. "Do +you remember?" + +"Is my name Cassandra?" + +"Have you forgotten that, too?" + +"I remember the rain." + +"It is not October, yet." + +"And the yellow leaves do not stick to the panes. Would you like to +see Helen?" + +"Come, play with me, Ben," called Mrs. Hepburn. + +"Ann, try your skill," I entreated, "and let me off." + +"She can try," Mrs. Hepburn said sharply. "Don't you like games? I +should have said you were by nature a bold gamester." She dealt the +cards rapidly, and was soon absorbed in the game, though she quarreled +with Ann occasionally, and knocked over the candlestick once. Adelaide +played heroically, and was praised, though I knew she hated play. + +Two hours passed before we were released. The fire went out, the +candles burnt low, and whatever the contents of the silver porringer, +they had long been cold. When Mrs. Hepburn saw us determined to go, +she sent us to the sideboard for some refreshment. "My caudle is +cold," taking off the cover of the porringer. "Why, Mari, what is +this?" she said, as the woman made a noiseless entrance with a bowl of +hot caudle. + +"I knew how it would be," she answered, putting it into the hands of +her mistress. + +"I am a desperate old rake, you mean, Mari. There, take your virtue +off, you appall me." + +She poured the caudle into small silver tumblers, and gave them to us. +"The Bequest of a Friend" was engraved on them. Her fingers were like +ice, and her head shook with fatigue; but her voice was sprightly and +her smile bright. Ann ate a good deal of sponge cake, and omitted the +caudle, but I drank mine to the memory of the donor of the cup. + +"You know that sherry, Ben," and Mrs. Hepburn nodded him toward a +decanter. He put his hand on it, and took it away. "None to-night," +he said. Mari came with our shawls, and we hastened away, hearing her +shoot the bolt of the door behind us. Ben drew my arm in his, and the +girls walked rapidly before us. It was a white, hazy night, and the +moon was wallowing in clouds. + +"Let us walk off the flavor of Hep's cards," said Adelaide, "and go to +Wolf's Point." + +"Do you wish to go?" he asked me. + +"Yes." + +Ann skipped. A nocturnal excursion suited her exactly. + +"You are not to have the toothache to-morrow, or pretend to be lame," +said Adelaide. + +"Not another hiss, Adder. _En avant!_" + +We passed down Norfolk Street, now dark and silent, and reached our +house. A light was burning in a room in the third story, and a +window was open. Desmond sat by it, his arms folded across his chest, +smoking, and contemplating some object beyond our view. Ann derisively +apostrophized him, under her breath, while Ben unlocked the court gate +and went in after Rash, who came out quietly, and we proceeded. In +looking behind me, I stumbled. + +"What's the matter?" he asked. "Are you afraid?" + +"Yes." + +"Of what?" + +"The Prince of Darkness." + +"The devil lives a little behind us." + +"In you, too, then?" + +"In Rash. Look at him; he is bigger than Faust's dog, jumps higher, +and is blacker. You can't hear the least sound from him as he gambols +with his familiar." + +We left the last regular street on that side of the city, and entered +a road, bordered by trees and bushes, which hid the country from us. +We crept through a gap in it, crossed two or three spongy fields, +and ascended a hill, reaching an abrupt edge of the rocks, over whose +earthy crest we walked. Below it I saw a strip of the sea, hemmed in +on all sides, for the light was too vague for me to see its narrow +outlet. It looked milky, misty, and uncertain; the predominant shores +stifled its voice, if it ever had one. Adelaide and Ann crouched +over the edge of the rock, reciting, in a chanting tone, from a poem +beginning: + + "The river of thy thoughts must keep + its solemn course too still and deep + For idle eyes to see." + +Their false intonation of voice and the wordy spirit of the poem +convinced me that poetry with them was an artificial taste. I turned +away. The dark earth and the rolling sky were better. Ben followed. + +"I hope Veronica's letter will come to-morrow," he said with a groan. + +"Veronica! Why Veronica?" + +"Don't torment me." + +"She writes letters seldom." + +"I have written her." + +"She has never written me." + +"It might be the means of revealing you to each other to do so." + +"Ben, your native air is deleterious." + +"You laugh. I feel what you say. I do not attempt to play the +missionary at home, for my field is not here." + +"You were wise not to bring Veronica, I see already." + +"She would see what I hate myself for." + +"One may venture farther with a friend than a lover." + +"I thought that _you_ might understand the results of my associations. +Curse them all! Come, girls, we must go back." + + + + + + +CHAPTER XXX. + + +I took a cold that night. Belem was damp always, but its midnight damp +was worse than any other. Mrs. Somers sent me medicine. Adelaide asked +me, with an air of contemplation, what made me sick, and felt her own +pulse. Ann criticised my nightgown ruffles, and accused me of wearing +imitation lace; but nursing was her forte, and she stayed by me, +annoying me by a frequent beating up of my pillow, and the bringing +in of bowls of strange mixtures for me to swallow, which she persuaded +the cook to make and her father to taste. + +Before I left my room, Mrs. Somers came to see me. + +"You are about well, I hear," she said, in a cold voice. + +I felt as if I had been shamming sickness. + +"I thought you were in remarkable health, your frame is so large." + +Adelaide was there, and answered for me. "You _are_ delicate. It must +be because you do not take care of yourself." + +"Wolf's Point to be avoided, perhaps!" + +"I have walked to Wolf's Point for fifteen years, night and day, many +times." + +"Mr. Munster's man left this note for you," her mother said, handing +it to her. + +She read an invitation from Miss Munster, a cousin, to a small party. + +"You will not be able to go," Mrs. Somers remarked to me. + +"You will go," Adelaide said; "it is an attention to you altogether." + +She never replied to her mother, never asked her any questions, so +that talking between them was a one-sided affair. + +"Let us go out shopping, Adelaide; I want some lace to wear," I +begged. + +Mrs. Somers looked into her drawers, out of which Adelaide had thrust +her finery, and found mine, but said nothing. + +"We are going to a party, Ann. Thanks to your messes and your +nursing," as I passed her in the hall. + +"Where is your evening dress?" + +"Pinned in a napkin--like my talent." + +"Old Cousin Munster, the pirate, who made his money in the opium +trade, has good things in his house. I suppose," with a coquettish +air, "that you will see Ned Munster; he _would_ walk to the door with +me to-day. He wishes me out, I know." + +We consumed that evening in talking of dress. Adelaide showed me her +camel's-hair scarfs which Desmond had brought, and her dresses. Ann +tried them all on, walking up and down, and standing tiptoe before the +glass, while I trimmed a handkerchief with the lace I had purchased. I +unfolded my dress after they were gone, with a dubious mind. It was +a heavy white silk, with a blue satin stripe. It might be too +old-fashioned, for it belonged to mother, who would never wear it. +The sleeves were puffed with bands of blue velvet, and the waist was +covered with a berthé of the same. It must do, however, for I had no +other. + +We were to go at nine. Adelaide came to my room dressed, and with +her hair arranged exactly like mine. She looked well, in spite of her +Mongolic face. + +"Pa wants to see us in his room; he has gone to bed." + +"Wait a moment," I begged. I took my hair down, unbraided it, brushed +it out of curl as much as I could, twisted it into a loose mass, +through which I stuck pins enough to hold it, bound a narrow fillet of +red velvet round my head, and ran after her. + +"That is much better," she said; "you are entirely changed." Desmond +was there, in his usual careless dress, hanging over the footboard of +the bed, and Ann was huddled on the outside. Mrs. Somers was reading. + +"Pa," said Ann, "just think of Old Hepburn's giving her a pair of +lovely ear-rings." + +"Did she? Where are they?" asked Mrs. Somers. + +"I am not surprised," said Mr. Somers. "Mrs. Hepburn knows where to +bestow. Why not wear them?" + +"I'll get them," said Ann. + +Mr. Somers continued his compliments. He thought there was a pleasing +contrast between Adelaide and myself, referred to Diana, mentioned +that my hair was remarkably thick, and proceeded with a dissertation +on the growth and decay of the hair, when she returned with the +ear-rings. + +"It is too dark here," she said. + +Desmond, who had remained silent, took the candle, which Mrs. Somers +was reading by, and held it for Ann, close to my face. The operation +was over, but the candle was not taken away till Mrs. Somers asked for +it sharply. + +"I dare say," murmured Mr. Somers, who was growing drowsy, "that Mrs. +Hepburn wore them some night, when she went to John Munster's, forty +years ago, and now you wear them to the son's. How things come round!" + +The Munsters' man opened the door for us. + +The rooms were full. "Very glad," said Mr., Mrs., and Miss Munster, +and amid a loud buzz we fell back into obscurity. Adelaide joined +a group, who were talking at the top of their voices, with most +hilarious countenances. + +"They pretend to have a Murillo here, let us go and find it," said +Ben. + +It was in a small room. While we looked at a dark-haired, handsome +woman, standing on brown clouds, with hands so fat that every finger +stood apart, Miss Munster brought up a young gentleman with the +Munster cast of countenance. + +"My brother begs an introduction, Miss Morgeson." + +Ben retired, and Mr. Munster began to talk volubly, with wandering +eyes, repeating words he was in danger of forgetting. No remarks were +required from me. At the proper moment he asked me to make the tour +of the rooms, and offered his arm. As we were crossing the hall, I saw +Desmond, hat in hand, and in faultless evening dress, bowing to Miss +Munster. + +"Your Cousin Desmond, and mine, is a fine-looking man, is he not? Let +us speak to him." + +I drew back. "I'll not interrupt his _devoir_." + +He bowed submissively. + +"My cousin Desmond," I thought; "let me examine this beauty." He was +handsomer than Ben, his complexion darker, and his hair black. There +was a flush across his cheek-bones, as if he had once blushed, and the +blush had settled. The color of his eyes I could not determine. As if +to resolve my doubt, he came toward us; they were a deep violet, +and the lids were fringed with long black lashes. I speculated on +something animal in those eyes. He stood beside me, and twisted his +heavy mustache. + +"What a pretty boudoir this is," I said, backing into a little room +behind us. + +"Ned," he said abruptly, "you must resign Miss Morgeson; I am here to +see her." + +"Of course," Ned answered; "I relinquish." + +Before a word was spoken between us, Mrs. Munster touched Desmond +on the shoulder, and told him that he must come with her, to be +introduced to Count Montholon. + +"Bring him here, please." + +"Tyrant," she answered playfully, "the Count shall come." + +He brought a chair. "Take this; you are pale. You have been ill." +Bringing another, he seated himself before me and fanned himself with +his hat. + +Mrs. Munster came back with the Count, an elderly man, and Desmond +rose to meet him, keeping his hand on the back of his chair. They +spoke French. The freedom of their conversation precluded the idea +of my understanding it. The Count made a remark about me. Desmond +replied, glancing at me, and both pulled their mustaches. The Count +was called away soon, and Desmond resumed his chair. + +"I understood you," I said. + +"The deuce you did." + +He placed his hat over a vase of flowers, which tipping over, he +leisurely righted, and bending toward me, said: + +"It was in battle." + +"Yes." + +"And women like you, pure, with no vice of blood, sometimes are +tempted, struggle, and suffer." + +His words, still more his voice, made we wince. + +"Even drawn battles bring their scars," I replied. + +"Convince me beyond all doubt that a woman can reason with her +impulses, or even fathom them, and I will be in your debt." + +"Maybe--but Ben is coming." + +He looked at me strangely. + +"You must find this very dull, Cassandra," said Ben, joining us. + +"_Cassandra_," said Desmond, "are you bored?" + +The accent with which he spoke my name set my pulses striking like a +clock. I got up mechanically, as Ben directed. + +"They are going to supper. There's game. Des. Munster told me to take +the northeast corner of the table." + +"I shall take the southwest, then," he replied, nodding to a tall +gentleman who passed with Adelaide. When we left him, he was observing +a carved oak chair, in occult sympathy probably with the grain of +the wood. Nature strikes us with _her_ phenomena at times when other +resources are not at hand. + +We were compelled to wait at the door of the supper-room, the jam was +so great. + +"What fairy story do you like best?" asked Ben + +"I know which you like." + +"Well?" + +"Bluebeard. You have an affinity with Sister Ann in the tower." + +"Do you think I see nothing 'but the sun which makes a dust and the +grass which looks green?' I believe you like Bluebeard, too." + +That was a great joke, at which we both laughed. + +When I saw Desmond again, he was surrounded by men, the French Count +among them, drinking champagne. He held a bottle, and was talking +fast. The others were laughing. His listless, morose expression had +disappeared; in the place of a brutal-tempered, selfish, bored man, I +saw a brilliant, jovial gentleman. Which was the real man? + +"Finish your jelly," said Ben. + +"I prefer looking at your brother." + +"Leave my brother alone." + +"You see nothing but 'the sun which makes a dust, and the grass which +looks green.'" + +Miss Munster hoped I was cared for. How gay Desmond was! she had not +seen such a look in his face in a long time. And how strongly he was +marked with the family traits. + +"How am I marked, May?" asked Ben. + +"Oh, we know worse eccentrics than you are. What are you up to now? +You are not as frank as Desmond." + +He laughed as he looked at me, and then Adelaide called to us that it +was time to leave. + +We were among the last; the carriage was waiting. We made our bows to +Mrs. Munster, who complained of not having seen more of us. "You are +a favorite of Mrs. Hepburn's, Miss Morgeson, I am told. She is a +remarkable woman, has great powers." I mentioned my one interview with +her. Guests were going upstairs with smiles, and coming down without, +released from their company manners. We rode home in silence, except +that Adelaide yawned fearfully, and then we toiled up the long stairs, +separating with a tired, "good-night." + +I extinguished my candle by dropping my shawl upon it, and groped in +vain for matches over the tops of table and shelf. + +"To bed in the dark, then," I said, pulling off my gloves and the +band, from my head, for I felt a tightness in it, and pulled out +the hairpins. But a desire to look in the glass overcame me. I felt +unacquainted with myself, and must see what my aspect indicated just +then. + +I crept downstairs, to the dining-room, passed my hands over the +sideboard, the mantel shelf, and took the round of the dinner-table, +but found nothing to light my candle with. + +"The fire may not be out in the parlor," I thought; "it can be lighted +there." I ran against the hatstand in the hall, knocking a cane down, +which fell with a loud noise. The parlor door was ajar; the fire was +not out, and Desmond was before it, watching its decay. + +"What is it?" he asked. + +"The candle," I stammered, confused with the necessity of staying to +have it lighted, and the propriety of retreating in the dark. + +"Shall I light it?" + +I stepped a little further inside the door and gave it to him. He +grew warm with thrusting it between the bars of the grate, and I grew +chilly. Shivering, and with chattering teeth, I made out to say, "A +piece of paper would do it." Raising his head hastily, it came crash +against the edge of the marble shelf. Involuntarily I shut the door, +and leaned against it, to wait for the effect of the blow; but feeling +a pressure against the outside, I yielded to it, and moved aside. Mrs. +Somers entered, with a candle flaring in one hand, and holding with +the other her dressing-gown across her bosom. + +"What are you doing here?" she asked harshly, but in a whisper, her +eyes blazing like a panther's. + +"Doing?" I replied; "stay and see." + +She swept along, and I followed, bringing up close to Desmond, who had +his hand round his head, and was very pale, either from the effect +of the blow or some other cause. Even the flush across his cheeks had +faded. She looked at him sharply; he moved his hands from his head, +and met her eyes. "I am not drunk, you see," he said in a low voice. +She made an insulting gesture toward me, which meant, "Is this an +adventure of yours?" + +The blaze in her eyes kindled a more furious one in his; he stepped +forward with a threatening motion. + +Anger raged through me--like a fierce rain that strikes flat a violent +sea. I laid my hand on her arm, which she snapped at like a wolf, but +I spoke calmly: + +"You tender, true-hearted creature, full of womanly impulses, allow me +to light my candle by yours!" + +I picked it from the hearth, lighted it, and held it close to her +face, laughing, though I never felt less merry. But I had restrained +him. + +He took the candle away gently. + +"Leave the room," he said to her. + +She beckoned me to go. + +"No, you shall go." + +They made a simultaneous movement with their hands, he to insist, she +to deprecate, and I again observed how exactly alike they were. + +"_Desmond_," I implored, "pray allow me to go." + +A deep flush suffused his face. He bowed, threw wide the door, and +followed me to the foot of the stairs. I reached my hand for the +candle, for he retained both. + +"You, pardon first." + +"For what?" + +"For much? oh--for much." + +What story my face told, I could not have told him. He kissed my hand +and turned away. + +At the top of the stairs I looked down. He was there with upturned +face, watching me. Whether he went back to confer with his mother, +I never knew; if he did, the expression which he wore then must have +troubled her. I went to bed, wondering over the mischief that a candle +could do. After I had extinguished it, its wick glowed in the dark +like a one-eyed demon. + + + + + + +CHAPTER XXXI. + + +Another week passed. Ben had received a letter from Veronica, +informing him that letter-writing was a kind of composition she was +not fond of. He must come to her, and then there would be no need for +writing. Her letter exasperated him. His tenacious mind, lying in wait +to close upon hers, was irritated by her simple, candid behavior. I +could give him no consolation, nor did I care to. It suited me that +his feelings for her weakened his penetration in regard to me. + +When he roused at the expression which he saw Desmond fix upon me the +night that Major Millard was there, I expected a rehearsal from him of +watchfulness and suspicion; but no symptom appeared. I was glad, for +I was in love with Desmond. I had known it from the night of Miss +Munster's party. The morning after I woke to know my soul had built +itself a lordly pleasure-house; its dome and towers were firm and +finished, glowing in the light that "never was on land or sea." How +elate I grew in this atmosphere! The face of Nemesis was veiled even. +No eye saw the pure, pale nimbus ringed above it. I did not see +_him_, except as an apparition, for suddenly he had become the most +unobtrusive member of the family, silent and absent. Immunity from +espionage was the immutable family rule. Mrs. Somers, under the +direction of that spirit which isolated me from all exterior +influences, for a little time had shut down the lid of her evil +feelings, and was quiet; watching me, perhaps, but not annoying. Mr. +Somers was engaged with the subject of ventilation. Ann, to convince +herself that she had a musical talent, practiced of afternoons till +she was turned out by Adelaide, who had a fit of reading abstruse +works, sometimes seeking me with fingers thrust between their leaves +to hold abstract conversations, which, though I took small part in +them, were of service. + +That portion of the world of emotions which I was mapping out she +was profoundly indifferent to. My experiences to her would have been +debasing. As she would not come to me, I went to her, and gained +something. + +Ben, always a favorite with his father, pursued him, rode with him, +and made visits of pleasure or business, with a latent object which +kept him on the alert. + +I had been in Belem three weeks; in a week more I decided to return +home. My indignation against Mrs. Somers, from our midnight interview, +had not suggested that I should shorten my visit. On the contrary, it +had freed me from any regard or fear of her opinion. I had discovered +her limits. + +It was Saturday afternoon. Reflecting that I had but a few days more +for Belem, and summing up the events of my visit and the people I had +met, their fashions and differences, I unrolled a tolerable panorama, +with patches in it of vivid color, and laid it away in my memory, to +be unrolled again at some future time. Then a faint shadow dropped +across my mind like a curtain, the first that clouded my royal palace, +my mental paradise! + +I sighed. Joyless, vacant, barren hours prefigured themselves to me, +drifting through my brain, till their vacant shapes crowded it into +darkness. I must do something! I would go out; a walk would be good +for me. Moreover, wishing to purchase a parting gift for Adelaide and +Ann, I would go alone. Wandering from shop to shop in Norfolk Street, +without finding the articles I desired, I turned into a street which +crossed it, and found the right shop. Seeing Drummond Street on an old +gable-end house, a desire to exchange with some one a language which +differed from my thoughts prompted me to look up Mrs. Hepburn. I soon +came to her house, and knocked at the door, which Mari opened. The +current was already changed, as I followed her into a room different +from the one where I had seen Mrs. Hepburn. It was dull of aspect, +long and narrow, with one large window opening on the old-fashioned +garden, and from which I saw a discolored marble Flora. Mrs. Hepburn +was by the window, in her high chair. She held out her hand and +thanked me for coming to see an old woman. Motioning her head toward a +dark corner, she said, "There is a young man who likes occasionally to +visit an old woman also." + +The young man, twenty-nine years old, was Desmond. He crossed the +room and offered me his hand. We had not spoken since we parted at +the stairs that memorable night. He hastily brought chairs, and placed +them near Mrs. Hepburn, who seized her spectacles, which were on a +silk workbag beside her, scanned us through them, and exclaimed, "Ah +ha! what is this?" + +"Is it something in me, ma'am?" said Desmond, putting his head before +my face so that it was hid from her. + +"Something in both of you; thief! thief!" + +She rubbed her frail hand against my sleeve, muttering, "See now, +so!--the same characteristics." + +"I spoke of the difference of the rooms; the one we were in reminded +me of a lizard! The walls were faint gray, and every piece of +furniture was covered with plain yellow chintz, while the carpet was +a pale green. She replied that she always moved from her winter parlor +to this summer room on the twenty-second day of April, which had +fallen the day before, for she liked to watch the coming out of the +shrubs in the garden, which were as old as herself. The chestnut had +leaved seventy times and more; and the crippled plum, whose fruit was +so wormy to eat, was dying with age. As for the elms at the bottom of +the garden, for all she knew they were a thousand years old. + +"The elms are a thousand years old," I repeated and repeated to +myself, while she glided from topic to topic with Desmond, whose +conversation indicated that he was as cultivated as any ordinary +gentleman, when the Pickersgill element was not apparent. The form of +the garden-goddess faded, the sun had gone below the garden wall. The +garden grew dusk, and the elms began to nod their tops at me. I became +silent, listening to the fall of the plummet, which dropped again +and again from the topmost height of that lordly domain, over which +shadows had come. Were they sounding its foundations? + +My eyes roved the garden, seeking the nucleus of an emotion which +beset me now--not they, but my senses, formed it--in a garden miles +away, where nodded a row of elms, under which _Charles Morgeson_ +stood. + +"_I am glad you're here, my darling, do you smell the roses?_" + +"Are you going?" I heard Mrs. Hepburn say in a far-off voice. I was +standing by the door. + +"Yes, madam; the summer parlor does not delay the sunset." + +"Come again. When do you leave Belem?" + +"In few days." + +Desmond made a grimace, and went to the window. + +"Who returns with you," she continued, "Ben? He likes piloting." + +"I hope he will; I came here to please him." + +"Pooh! You came here because Mr. Somers had a crotchet." + +"Well; I was permitted somehow to come." + +"It was perfectly right. A woman like you need not question whether a +thing is convenable." + +Desmond turned from the window, and bestowed upon her a benign smile, +which she returned with a satisfied nod. + +This implied flattery tinkled pleasantly on my ears, allaying a doubt +which I suffered from. Did I realize how much the prestige of those +Belem saints influenced me, or how proud I was with the conviction of +affiliation with those who were plainly marked with Caste? + +"Walk with me," he demanded, as we were going down the steps. + +We passed out of Drummond Street into a wide open common. Rosy clouds +floated across the zenith, and a warm, balmy wind was blowing. I +thought of Veronica, calm and happy, as the spring always made her, +and the thought was a finishing blow to the variety of moods I had +passed through. The helm of my will was broken. + +"There is a good view from Moss Hill yonder," he said. "Shall we go +up?" + +I bowed, declining his arm, and trudged beside him. From its summit +Belem was only half in sight. Its old, crooked streets sloped and +disappeared from view; Wolf's Point was at the right of us, and its +thread of sea. I began talking of our walk, and was giving an extended +description of it, when he abruptly asked why I came to Belem. + +"I know," he said, "that you would not have come, had there been any +sentiment between you and Ben." + +"Thanks for your implication. But I must have made the visit, you +know, or how could I learn that I should not have made it?" + +"You regret coming?" + +"Veronica will give me no thanks." + +"Who is she?" + +"My sister, whom Ben loves." + +"Ben love a sister of yours? My God--how? when first? where? And how +came you to meet him?" + +"That chapter of accidents need not be recounted. Can you help him?" + +"What can I do?" he said roughly. "There is little love between us. +You know what a devil's household ours is; but he is one of us--he is +afraid." + +"Of what?" + +"Of mother--of our antecedents--of himself." + +"I could not expect you to speak well of him." + +"Of course not. Your sister has no fortune?" + +"She has not. Men whose merchandise is ships are apt to die bankrupt." + +"Your father is a merchant?" + +"Even at that, the greatest of the name. + +"We are all tied up, you know. Ben's allowance is smaller than mine. +He is easy about money; therefore he is pa's favorite." + +"Why do you not help yourselves?" + +"Do you think so? You have not known us long. Have you influenced Ben +to help himself?" + +I marched down the hill without reply. Repassing Mrs. Hepburn's, he +said, "My grandfather was an earl's son." + +"Mrs. Hepburn likes you for that. My grandfather was a tailor; I +should have told her so, when she gave me the aqua marina jewels." + +"Had you the courage?" + +"I forgot both the fact and the courage." + +I hurried along, for it grew dark, and presently saw Ben on the steps +of the house. + +"Have you been walking?" he asked. + +"It looks so. Yes, with me," answered Desmond. "Wont you give me +thanks for attention to your friend?" + +"It must have been a whim of Cassandra's." + +"Break her of whims, if you can--" + +"I _will_." + +We went into the parlor together. + +"Where do you think I have been?" Ben asked. + +"Where?" + +"For the doctor. The _baby_ is sick"; and he looked hard at Desmond. + +"I hope it will live for years and years," I said. + +"I know what you are at, Ben," said Desmond. "I have wished the brat +dead; but upon my soul, I have a stronger wish than that--I have +_forgotten_ it." + +There was no falseness in his voice; he spoke the truth. + +"Forgive me, Des." + +"No matter about that," he answered, sauntering off. + +I felt happier; that spark of humanity warmed me. I might not have +another. "I would," I said, "that the last day, the last moments of my +visit had come. You will see me henceforth in Surrey. I will live and +die there." + +"To-night," Ben said, "I am going to tell pa." + +"That is best." + +"Horrible atmosphere!" + +"It would kill Verry." + +"You thrive in it," he said, with a spice of irritation in his voice. + +"Thrive!" + +Adelaide and Ann proved gracious over my gift. They were talking of +the doctor's visit. Ann said the child was teething, for she had +felt its gums; nothing else was the matter. There need be no +_apprehension_. She should say so to Desmond and Ben, and would post a +letter to her brother in unknown parts. + +"Miss Hiticutt has sent for us to come over to tea," Adelaide informed +me. The black silk I wore would do, for we must go at once. + +The quiet, formal evening was a pleasant relief, although I was +troubled with a desire to inform Mrs. Somers of Ben's engagement, for +the sake of exasperating her. We came home too early for bed, Adelaide +said; beside, she had music-hunger. I must sing. Mrs. Somers was by +the fire, darning fine napkins, winking over her task, maintaining +in her aspect the determination to avert any danger of a midnight +interview with Desmond. That gentleman was at present sleeping on a +sofa. I seated myself before the piano, wondering whether he slept +from wine, ennui, or to while away the time till I should come. I +touched the keys softly, waiting for an interpreting voice, and half +unconsciously sang the lines of Schiller: + + "I hear the sound of music, and the halls + Are full of light. Who are the revelers?" + +Desmond made an inarticulate noise and sprang up, as if in answer to a +call. A moment after he stepped quietly over the back of the sofa +and stood bending over me. I looked up. His eyes were clear, his face +alive with intuition. Though Adelaide was close by, she was oblivious; +her eyes were cast upward and her fingers lay languid in her lap. Ann, +more lively, introduced a note here and there into my song to her own +satisfaction. Mrs. Somers I could not see; but I stopped and, giving +the music stool a turn, faced her. She met me with her pale, opaque +stare, and began to swing her foot over her knee; her slipper, already +down at her heel, fell off. I picked it up in spite of her negative +movement and hung it on the foot again. + +"I shall speak with you presently," she whispered, glancing at +Desmond. + +He heard her and his face flashed with the instinct of sport, which +made me ashamed of any desire for a struggle with her. + +"Good-night," I said abruptly, turning away. + +"We are all sleepy except this exemplary housewife with her napkins," +cried Ann. "We will leave her." + +"Cassandra," said Adelaide, when we were on the stairs, "how well you +look!" + +Ann, elevating her candle, remarked my eyes shone like a cat's. + +"Hiticutt's tea was too strong," added Adelaide; "it dilates the +pupils. I am sorry you are going away," and she kissed me; this favor +would have moved me at any other time, but now I rejoiced to see her +depart and leave me alone. I sat down by the toilet table and was +arranging some bottles, when Mrs. Somers rustled in. Out of breath, +she began haughtily: + +"What do you mean?" + +A lethargic feeling crept over me; my thoughts wandered; I never spoke +nor stirred till she pulled my sleeve violently. + +"If you touch me it will rouse me. Did a child of yours ever inflict a +blow upon you?" + +She turned purple with rage, looming up before my vision like a peony. + +"When are you going home?" + +I counted aloud, "Sunday--Monday," and stopped at Wednesday. "Ben is +going back with me." + +"_He_ may go." + +"And not Desmond?" + +"Do you know Desmond?" + +"Not entirely." + +"He has played with such toys as you are, and broken them." + +"Alas, he is hereditarily cruel! Could _I_ expect not to be broken?" + +She caught up a glass goblet as if to throw it, but only grasped it so +tight that it shivered. "There goes one of the Pickersgill treasures, +I am sure," I thought. + +"I am already scarred, you see. I have been 'nurtured in +convulsions.'" + +The action seemed to loosen her speech; but she had to nerve herself +to say what she intended; for some reason or other, she could not +remain as angry as she wished. What she said I will not repeat. + +"Madam, I have no plans. If I have a Purpose, it is formless yet. If +God saves us what can you do?" + +She made a gesture of contempt. + +"You have no soul to thank me for what may be my work," and I opened +the door. + +Ben stood on the threshhold. + +"In God's name, what is this?" + +I pointed to his mother. She looked uneasy, and stepping forward put +her hand on his arm; but he shook her off. + +"You may call me a fool, Cassandra, for bringing you here," he said in +a bitter voice, "besides calling me cruel for subjecting you to these +ordeals. I knew how it would be with mother. What is it, madam?" he +asked imperiously, looking so much like her that I shuddered. + +"It is not you she is after," she hotly exclaimed. + +"No, I should think not." And he led her out swiftly. + +I heard Mrs. Somers say at breakfast, as I went in, "We are to lose +Miss Cassandra on Wednesday." I looked at Desmond, who was munching +toast abstractedly. He made a motion for me to take the chair beside +him, which I obeyed. Ben saw this movement, and an expression of pain +passed over his face. At that instant I remembered that Desmond's +being seen in the evening and in the morning was a rare occurrence. +Mr. Somers took up the remark of Mrs. Somers where she had left it, +and expatiated on it till breakfast was over, so courteously and so +ramblingly that I was convinced the affair Ben had at heart had been +revealed. He invited me to go to church, and he spent the whole of the +evening in the parlor; and although Desmond hovered near me all day +and all the evening, we had no opportunity of speaking to each other. + + + + + + +CHAPTER XXXII. + + +On Tuesday morning Adelaide sent out invitations to a farewell +entertainment, as she called it, for Tuesday evening. Mrs. Somers, +affecting great interest in it, engaged my services in wiping the +dust from glass and china; "too valuable," she said, "for servants to +handle." We spent a part of the morning in the dining-room and pantry. +Ann was with us. If she went out, Mrs. Somers was silent; when present +she chatted. While we were busy Desmond came in, in riding trousers +and whip in hand. + +"What nonsense!" he said, touching my hand with the whiplash. "Will +you ride with me after dinner?" + +"I must have the horses at three o'clock," said his mother, "to go to +Mrs. Flint's funeral. She was a family friend, you know." The funeral +could not be postponed, even for Desmond; but he grew ill-humored at +once, swore at Murphy, who was packing a waiter at the sideboard, for +rattling the plates; called Ann a minx, because she laughed at him; +and bit a cigar to pieces because he could not light it. Rash had +followed him, his nose against his velveteens, in entreaty to go with +him; I was pleased at this sign of amity between them. At a harder +push than common he looked down and kicked him away. + +"Noble creature," I said, "try your whip on him. Rash, go to your +master," and I opened the door. Two smaller dogs, Desmond's property, +made a rush to come in; but I shut them out, whereat they whined so +loudly that Mrs. Somers was provoked to attack him for bringing his +dogs in the house. An altercation took place, and was ended by Desmond +declaring that he was on his way after a bitch terrier, to bring it +home. He went out, giving me a look from the door, which I answered +with a smile that made him stamp all the way through the hall. Mrs. +Somers's feelings as she heard him peeped out at me. Groaning in +spirit, I finished my last saucer and betook myself to my room and +read, till summoned by Mrs. Somers to a consultation respecting the +furniture coverings. Desmond came home, but spoke to no one, hovering +in my vicinity as on the day before. + +In the afternoon Adelaide and I went in the carriage to make calls +upon those we did not expect to see in the evening. She wrote P.P.C. +on my cards and laughed at the idea of paying farewell visits to +strangers. The last one was made to Mrs. Hepburn. A soft melancholy +crept over me when I entered the room where I had met Desmond last. We +should probably not see each other alone again. Mrs. Somers's policy +to that effect would be a success, for I should make no opposition to +it. Not a word of my feelings could I speak to Mrs. Hepburn--Adelaide +was there--provided I had the impulse; and Mrs. Hepburn would be the +last to forgive me should I make the conventional mistake of a scene +or an aside. This old lady had taught me something. I went to the +window, curious to know whether any nerve of association would vibrate +again. Nothing stirred me; the machinery which had agitated and +controlled me was effete. + +Mrs. Hepburn said, as we were taking leave: + +"If you come to Belem next year, and I am above the sod, I invite you +to pass a month with me. But let it be in the summer. I ride then, and +should like you for a companion." + +She might have seen irresolution in me, for she added quickly, "You +need not promise--let time decide," and shook my hands kindly. + +"Hep, is smitten with you, in her selfish way," Adelaide remarked, as +we rode from the door. She ordered the coachman to drive home by the +"Leslie House," which she wanted me to see. A great aunt had lived +and died there, leaving the house--one of the oldest in Belem--to her +brother Ned. + +"Who is he like?" + +"Desmond; but worse. There's only a year's difference in their ages. +They were educated together, kept in the nursery till they were great +boys and tyrants, and then sent abroad. They were in Amiens three +years." + +"There are Desmond and Ben; they are walking in the street we are +passing." + +She looked out. + +"They are quarreling, I dare say. Ben is a prig, and preaches to Des." + +While we were in the house, and Adelaide talked with the old servant +of her aunt, my thoughts were occupied with Desmond. What had they +quarreled on? Desmond was pale, and laughed; but Ben was red, and +looked angry. + +"Why do you look at me so fixedly?" Adelaide asked, when we were in +the carriage again. + +It was on my tongue to say, "Because I am beset." I did not, however; +instead I asked her if she never noticed what a rigid look people wore +in their best bonnets, and holding a card-case? She said, "Yes," and +shook out her handkerchief, as if to correct her own rigidity. + +After an early tea she compelled me to sing, and we delayed dressing +till Mrs. Somers bloomed in, with purple satin and feather head-dress. + +"Now we must go," she said, "and get ready." + +"What shall you wear?" Mrs. Somers asked, advising a certain ugly, +claret-colored silk. + +"Be sure not," said Adelaide on the stairs. "That dress makes your +hair too yellow." + +I heard loud laughing in the third story, and heavy steps, while I +was in my room; and when I went down, I saw two gentlemen in evening +dress, standing by Desmond, at the piano, and singing, "_Fill, fill +the sparkling brimmer_." They were, as Ann informed me, college +friends of Des, who had arrived for a few days' visit, she supposed; +disagreeable persons, of course. They were often in Belem to ride, +fish, or play billiards. "Pa hates them," she said in conclusion. Mr. +Somers entering at this moment, in his _diplomatique_ style, his gouty +white hands shaded with wristbands, and his throat tied with a white +cravat, appeared to contradict her assertion, he was so affable in his +salutations to the young men. Desmond turned from the piano when he +heard his father's voice, and caught sight of me. He started toward +me; but his attention was claimed by one of the gentlemen, who had +been giving me a prolonged stare, and he dropped back on his seat, +with an indifferent air, answering some question relating to myself. +He looked as when I first saw him--flushed, haughty, and bored. His +hair and dress were disordered, his boots splashed with mud; and it +was evident that he did not intend to appear at the party. + +Adelaide called me to remain by her; but I slipped away when I thought +no more would arrive, and sought a retired corner, to which Mr. Somers +brought Desmond's friends, introducing them as the sons of his college +chums, and leaving them, one lolling against the mantel, the other +over the back of a chair. They were muzzy with drink, and seemed to +grow warm, as I looked from one to the other, with an attentive air. + +"You are visiting in Belem," said one. + +"That is true," I replied. + +"It is too confoundedly aristocratic for me; it knocks Beacon Street +into nothingness." + +"Where is Beacon Street?" + +"Don't you know _that_? Nor the Mall?" + +"No." + +Our conversation was interrupted by Ben, whom I had not seen since the +day before. He had been out of town, transacting some business for +his father. We looked at each other without speaking, but divined each +other's thoughts. "You _are_ as true and noble as I think you are, +Cassy. I must have it so. You _shall not_ thwart me." "Faithful +and good Ben,--do you pass a sufficiently strict examination upon +yourself? Are you not disposed to carry through your own ideas without +considering _me_?" Whatever our internal comments were, we smiled upon +each other with the sincerity of friendship, and I detected Mr. Digby +in the act of elevating his eyebrows at Mr. Devereaux, who signified +his opinion by telegraphing back: "It is all over with them." + +"Hey, Somers," said the first; "what are you doing nowadays?" + +"Pretty much the same work that I always have on hand." + +"Do you mean to stick to Belem?" + +"No." + +"I thought so. But what has come over Des. lately? He is spoony." + +"He is going backward, may be, to some course he omitted in his career +with you fellows. We must run the same round somehow, you know." + +"He'll not find much reason for it, when he arrives," Mr. Devereaux +said. + +Miss Munster joined us, with the intention of breaking up our +conclave, and soon moved away, with Mr. Digby and Devereaux in her +train. + +"I have changed my mind," said Ben, "about going home with you." + +"Are your plans growing complicated again?" + +"Can you go to Surrey alone?" + +"Why not, pray?" + +"I have an idea of going to Switzerland to spend the summer. Will +Veronica be ready in the autumn?" + +"How can I answer? Shall you not take leave of her?" + +"Perhaps. Yes,--I must," he said excitedly; "but to-morrow we will +talk more about it. I shall go to Boston with you; pa is going too. +How well you look to-night, Cassy! What sort of dress is this?" taking +up a fold of it. "Is it cotton-silk, or silk-cotton? It is soft and +light. How delicate you are, with your gold hair and morning-glory +eyes!" + +"How poetical! My dress is new, and was made by Adelaide's +dressmaker." + +"Mother beckons me. What a headdress that is of hers!" + +"What beckons you to go to Switzerland?" I mused. + +I listened for Desmond's voice, which would have sounded like a silver +bell, in the loud, coarse buzz which pervaded the rooms. All the women +were talking shrill, and the men answering in falsetto. He was +not among them, and I moved to and fro unnoticed, for the tide of +entertainment had set in, and I could withdraw, if I chose. I took a +chair near an open door, commanded a view into a small room, on the +other side of the hall, opened only on occasions like these; there +was no one in it. Perceiving that my shoelace was untied, I stooped to +refasten it, and when I looked in the room again saw Desmond standing +under the chandelier, his hands in his pockets, his eyes on the floor, +his hair disordered and falling over his forehead; its blackness was +intense against the relief of the crimson wall-paper. Was it that +which had unaccountably changed his appearance? + +He raised his head, looked across the hall, and saw me. + +"Come here," he signaled. I rose like an automaton, and cast an +involuntary glance about me; the guests were filing through the +drawing-room, into the room where refreshments were laid. When the +last had gone, I left the friendly protection of the niche by the +fire-place, and stood so near him that I saw his nostrils quiver! Then +there came into his face an expression of pain, which softened it. I +had wished him to please me; _now_ I wished to please him. It seemed +that he had no intention of speaking, and that he had called me to +him to witness a struggle which I must find a key to hereafter, in the +depths of my own heart. I watched him in silence, and it passed. As +he pushed the door to with his foot, the movement caused something +to swing and glitter against his breast--a ring on his watch-ribbon +smaller than I could wear, a woman's ruby ring. The small, feminine +imp, who abides with those who have beams in their eyes, and helps +them to extract motes from the eyes of others, inspired me. I pointed +to the ring. Dropping his eyes, he said: "I loved her shamefully, and +she loved me shamefully. When shall I take it off--cursed sign?" And +he snapped it with his thumb and finger. + +I grew rigid with virtue. + +"You may not conjure up any tragic ideas on the subject. She is no +outcast. She is here to-night; if there was ruin, it was mutual." + +"And your other faults?" + +"Ah!" he said, with a terrible accent, "we shall see." + +There was a tap on the door; it was Ben's. I fell back a step, and +he came in. "Will you bring Cassandra to the supper-room?" he said, +turning pale. + +"No." + +"Come with me, then; you must." And he put my arm in his. + +"Hail, and farewell, Cassandra!" said Desmond, standing before the +door. "Give me your hand." + +I gave him both my hands. He kissed one, and then the other, and +moved to let us pass out. But Ben did not go; he fumbled for his +handkerchief to wipe his forehead, on which stood beads of sweat. + +"_Allons,_ Ben," I said. + +"Go on, go on," said Desmond, holding the door wide open. + +A painful curiosity made me anxious to discover the owner of the ruby +ring! The friendly but narrow-minded imp I have spoken of composed +speeches, with which I might assail her, should she be found. I looked +in vain at every women present; there was not a sorrowful or guilty +face among them. Another feeling took the place of my curiosity. I +forgot the woman I was seeking, to remember the love I bore Desmond. I +was mad for the sight of him--mad to touch his hand once more. I could +have put the asp on my breast to suck me to sleep, as Cleopatra did; +but _Cæsar_ was in the way. He stayed by me till the lights were +turned down. + +Digby and Devereaux were commenting on Desmond's disappearance, and +Mrs. Somers was politely yawning, waiting their call for candles. + +"If you are to accompany me, Ben," I said, "now is the time." And +he slipped out. He preserved a determined silence. I shook him, and +said--"_Veronica_." He put his hand over my mouth with an indignant +look, which was lost upon me, for I whispered in his ear; "Do you know +now that I _love_ Desmond?" + +"Will you bring him into our Paradise?" + +"Where?" + +"Our home, in Surrey." + +"Wont an angel with a flaming sword make it piquant?" + +"If you marry Desmond Somers," he said austerely, "you will contradict +three lives,--yours, mine, and Veronica's. What beast was it that +suggested this horrible discord? Have you so much passion that you +cannot discern the future you offer yourself?" + +"Imperator, you have an agreeable way of putting things. But they are +coming through the hall. Good-night." + + + + + + +CHAPTER XXXIII. + + +At eleven o'clock the next day I was ready for departure. All stood by +the open hall door, criticising Murphy's strapping of my trunks on a +hack. Messrs. Digby and Devereaux, in black satin scarfs, hung over +the step railings; Mrs. Somers, Adelaide, and Ann were within the +door. Mr. Somers and Ben were already on the walk, waiting for me; so +I went through the ceremony of bidding good-by--a ceremony performed +with so much cheerfulness on all sides that it was an occasion for +well-bred merriment, and I made my exit as I should have made it in a +genteel comedy, but with a bitter feeling of mortification, because of +their artificial, willful imperturbability I was forced to oppose them +with manners copied after their own. + +I looked from the carriage window for a last view of my room. The +chambermaid was already there, and had thrown open the shutters, to +let in daylight upon the scene of the most royal dreams I had ever +had. The ghost of my individuality would lurk there no longer than +the chairs I had placed, the books I had left, the shreds of paper or +flowers I had scattered, could be moved or swept away. + +All the way to Boston the transition to my old condition oppressed me. +I felt a dreary disgust at the necessity of resuming relations which +had no connection with the sentiment that bound me to Belem. After we +were settled at the Tremont, while watching a sad waiter engaged +in the ceremonial of folding napkins like fans, I discovered an +intermediate tone of mind, which gave my thoughts a picturesque tinge. +My romance, its regrets, and its pleasures, should be set in the frame +of the wild sea and shores of Surrey. I invested our isolated house +with the dignity of a stage, where the drama, which my thoughts must +continually represent, could go on without interruption, and remain a +secret I should have no temptation to reveal. Until after the tedious +dinner, a complete rainbow of dreams spanned the arc of my brain. Mr. +Somers dispersed it by asking Ben to go out on some errand. That it +was a pretext, I knew by Ben's expression; therefore, when he had gone +I turned to Mr. Somers an attentive face. First, he circumlocuted; +second, he skirmished. I still waited for what he wished to say, +without giving him any aid. He was sure, he said at last, that my +visit in his family had convinced me that his children could not vary +the destiny imposed upon them by their antecedents, without bringing +upon _others_ lamentable consequences. "Cunning pa," I commented +internally. Had I not seen the misery of unequal marriages? + +"As in a glass, darkly." + +Doubtless, he went on, I had comprehended the erratic tendency in +_Ben's_ character, good and honorable as he was, but impressive and +visionary. Did I think so? + +"Quite the contrary. Have you never perceived the method of his +visions in an unvarying opposition to those antecedents you boast of?" + +"Well, _well_, well?" + +"Money, Family, Influence,--are a ding-dong bell which you must weary +of, Mr. Somers--sometimes." + +"Ben has disappointed me; I must confess that." + +"My sister is eccentric. Provided she marries him, the family +programme will be changed. You must lop him from the family tree." + +He took up a paper, bowed to me with an unvexed air, and read a column +or so. + +"It may be absurd," and he looked over his spectacle tops, as if +he had found the remark in his paper, "for parents to oppose the +marriages their children choose to make, and I beg you to understand +that I may _oppose_, not _resist_ Ben. You know very well," and he +dropped the paper in a burst of irritation and candor, "that the devil +will be to pay with Mrs. Somers, who has a right of dictation in the +affair. She does not suspect it. I must say that Ben is mistaking +himself again. I mean, I think so." + +I looked upon him with a more friendly countenance. The one rude word +he had spoken had a wonderful effect, after the surprise of it was +over. Real eyes appeared in his face, and a truthful accent pervaded +his voice. I think he was beginning to think that he might confide his +perplexities to me on other subjects, when Ben returned. As it was, +a friendly feeling had been established between us. He said in a +confidential tone to Ben, as if we were partners in some guilty +secret, "You must mention it to your mother; indeed you must." + +"You have been speaking with Cassandra, in reference to her sister," +he answered indifferently. Mr. Somers was chilled in his attempt at a +mutual confidence. + +"Can you raise money, if Desmond should marry?" asked Ben. "Enough for +both of us?" + +"Desmond? he will never marry." + +"It is certainly possible." + +"You know how I am clogged." + +I rang for some ice-water, and when the waiter brought it, said that +it was time to retire. + +"Now," said Mr. Somers, "I shall give you just such a breakfast as +will enable you to travel well--a beefsteak, and old bread made into +toast. Don't drink that ice-water; take some wine." + +I set the glass of ice-water down, and declined the wine. Ben elevated +his eyebrows, and asked: + +"What time shall I get up, sir?" + +"I will call you; so you may sleep untroubled." + +He opened the door, and bade me an affectionate good night. + +"The coach is ready," a waiter announced, as we finished our +breakfast. "We are ready," said Mr. Somers. "I have ordered a packet +of sandwiches for you--_beef_, not ham sandwiches--and here is a flask +of wine mixed with water." + +I thanked him, and tied my bonnet. + +"Here is a note, also," opening his pocketbook and extracting it, "for +your father. It contains our apologies for not accompanying you, and +one or two allusions," making an attempt to wink at Ben, which failed, +his eyes being unused to such an undignified style of humor. + +He excused himself from going to the station on account of the morning +air, and Ben and I proceeded. In the passage, the waiter met us with a +paper box. "For you, Miss. A florist's boy just left it." I opened it +in the coach, and seeing flowers, was about to take them out to show +Ben, when I caught sight of the ribbon which tied them--a piece of one +of my collar knots I had not missed. Of course the flowers came from +Desmond, and half the ribbon was in his possession; the ends were +jagged, as if it had been divided with a knife. Instead of taking out +the flowers, I showed him the box. + +"What a curious bouquet," he said. + +In the cars he put into my hand a jewel box, and a thick letter for +Verry, kissed me, and was out of sight. + +"No vestige but these flowers," uncovering them again. "In my room at +Surrey I will take you out," and I shut the box. The clanking of the +car wheels revolved through my head in rhythm, excluding thought for +miles. Then I looked out at the flying sky--it was almost May. The +day was mild and fair; in the hollows, the young grass spread over the +earth like a smooth cloth; over the hills and unsheltered fields, the +old grass lay like coarse mats. A few birds roved the air in anxiety, +for the time of love was at hand, and their nests were not finished. +By twelve I arrived at the town where the railroad branched in a +direction opposite the road to Surrey, and where a stage was waiting +for its complement of passengers from the cars. I was the only lady +"aboard," as one of the passengers intelligently remarked, when we +started. They were desirable companions, for they were gruff to +each other and silent to me. We rode several miles in a state +of unadjustment, and then yielded to the sedative qualities of a +stagecoach. I lunched on my sandwiches, thanking Mr. Somers for his +forethought, though I should have preferred them of ham, instead of +beef. When I took a sip from my flask, two men looked surprised, and +spat vehemently out of the windows. I offered it to them. They +refused it, saying they had had what was needful at the Depot Saloon, +conducted on the strictest temperance principles. + +"Those principles are cruel, provided travelers ever have colic, or an +aversion to Depot tea and coffee," I said. + +There was silence for the space of fifteen minutes, then one of them +turned and said: "You have a good head, marm." + +"Too good?" + +"Forgetful, may be." + +I bowed, not wishing to prolong the conversation. + +"Your circulation is too rapid," he continued. + +The man on the seat with him now turned round, and, examining me, +informed me that electricity would be first-rate for me. + +"Shoo!" he replied, "it's a humbug." + +I was forgotten in the discussion which followed, and which lasted +till our arrival at a village, where one of them resided. He left, +telling us he was a "natral bone-setter." One by one the passengers +left the stage, and for the last five miles I was alone. I beguiled +the time by elaborating a multitude of trivial opinions, suggested by +objects I saw along the roadside, till the old and new church spires +of Surrey came in sight, and the curving lines at either end of the +ascending shores. We reached the point in the north road, where the +ground began its descent to the sea, and I hung from the window, to +see all the village roofs humble before it. The streets and dwellings +looked as insignificant as those of a toy village. I perceived no +movement in it, heard no hum of life. At a cross-road, which would +take the stage into the village without its passing our house, a whim +possessed me. I would surprise them at home, and go in at the back +door, while they were expecting to hear the stage. The driver let me +out, and I stood in the road till he was out of sight. + +A breeze blew round me, penetrating, but silent; the fields, and the +distant houses which dotted them, were asleep in the pale sunshine, +undisturbed by it. The crows cawed, and flew over the eastern woods. +I walked slowly. The road was deserted. Mrs. Grossman's house was +the only one I must pass; its shutters were closed, and the yard was +empty. As I drew near home a violent haste grew upon me, yet my feet +seemed to impede my progress. They were like lead; I impelled myself +along, as in a dream. Under the protection of our orchard wall I +turned my merino mantle, which was lined with an indefinite color, +spread my veil over my bonnet, and bent my shoulders, and passed down +the carriage-drive, by the dining-room windows, into the stable-yard. +The rays of sunset struck the lantern-panes in the light-house, and +gave the atmosphere a yellow stain. The pigeons were skimming up and +down the roof of the wood-house, and cooing round the horses that were +in the yard. A boy was driving cows into the shed, whistling a lively +air; he suspended it when he saw me, but I shook my finger at him, and +ran in. Slipping into the side hall, I dropped my bonnet and shawl, +and listened at the door for the familiar voices. Mother must be +there, as was her wont, and Aunt Merce. All of them, perhaps, for +I had seen nobody on my way. There was no talking within. The last +sunset ray struck on my hand its yellow shade, through the fan-light, +and faded before I opened the door. I was arrested on the threshold by +a silence which rushed upon me, clutching me in a suffocating embrace. +Mother was in her chair by the fire, which was out, for the brands +were black, and one had fallen close to her feet. A white flannel +shawl covered her shoulders; her chin rested on her breast. "She +is ill, and has dropped asleep," I thought, thrusting my hands out, +through this terrible silence, to break her slumber, and looked at the +clock; it was near seven. A door slammed, somewhere upstairs, so loud +it made me jump; but she did not wake. I went toward her, confused, +and stumbling against the table, which was between us, but reached her +at last. Oh, I knew it! She was dead! People must die, even in their +chairs, alone! What difference did it make, how? An empty cup was in +her lap, bottom up; I set it carefully on the mantel shelf above her +head. Her handkerchief was crumpled in her nerveless hand; I drew it +away and thrust it into my bosom. My gloves tightened my hands as I +tried to pull them off, and was tugging at them, when a door opened, +and Veronica came in. + +"She is dead," I said. "I can't get them off." + +"It is false"; and she staggered backward, with her hand on her heart, +till she fell against the wall. I do not know how long we remained +so, but I became aware of a great confusion--cries, and exclamations; +people were running in and out. Fanny rolled on the floor in +hysterics. + +"Get up," I said. "I can't move; help me. Where did Verry go?" + +She got up, and pulled me along. I saw father raise mother in his +arms. The dreadful sight of her swaying arms and drooping head made me +lose my breath; but Veronica forced me to endurance by clinging to me, +and dragging me out of the room and upstairs. She turned the key of +the glass-door at the head of the passage, not letting go of me. I +took her by the arms, placed her in a chair, and closing my window +curtains, sat down beside her in the dark. + +"Where will they carry her?" she asked, shuddering, and putting her +fingers in her ears. "How the water splashes on the beach! Is the tide +coming in?" + +She was appalled by the physical horror of death, and asked me +incessant questions. + +"Let us keep her away from the grave," she said. + +I could not answer, or hear her at last, for sleep overpowered me. I +struggled against it in vain. It seemed the greatest good; let death +and judgment come, I must sleep. I threw myself on my bed, and the +touch of the pillow sealed my eyes. I started from a dream about +something that happened when I was a little child. "Veronica, are you +here?" + +"Mother is dead," she answered. + +A mighty anguish filled my breast. Mother!--her goodness and beauty, +her pure heart, her simplicity--I felt them all. I pitied her dead, +because she would never know how I valued her. Veronica shed no tears, +but sighed heavily. _Duty_ sounded through her sighs. "Verry, +shall _I_ take care of you? I think I can." She shook her head; but +presently she stretched her hands in search of my face, kissed it, and +answered, "Perhaps." + +"You must go to your own room and rest." + +"Can you keep everybody from me?" + +"I will try." + +Opening her window, she looked out over the earth wistfully, and at +the sky, thickly strewn with stars, which revealed her face. We heard +somebody coming up the back stairs. + +"Temperance," said Verry. + +"Are you in the dark, girls?" she asked, wringing her hands, when she +had put down her lamp. "What an awful Providence!" She looked with a +painful anxiety at Veronica. + +"It is all Providence, Temperance, whether we are alive or dead," I +said. "Let us let Providence alone." + +"What did I ever leave her for? She wasn't fit to take care of +herself. Why, Cassandra Morgeson, you haven't got off all your things +yet. And what's this sticking out of your bosom?" + +"It is her handkerchief." I kissed it, and now Verry began to weep +over it, begging me for it. I gave it up to her. + +"It will kill your father." + +I had not thought of him. + +"It's most nine o'clock. Sofrony Beals is here; she lays out +beautifully." + +"No, no; don't let anybody touch her!" shrieked Verry. + +"No, they shan't. Come into the kitchen; you must have something to +eat." + +I was faint from the want of food, and when Temperance prepared us +something I ate heartily. Veronica drank a little milk, but would +taste nothing. Aunt Merce, who had been out to tea, Temperance said, +came into the kitchen. + +"My poor girl, I have not seen you," embracing me, half blind with +crying, "How pale you are! How sunken! Keep up as well as you can. +I little thought that the worthless one of us two would be left to +suffer. Go to your father, as soon as possible." + +"Drink this tea right down, Mercy," said Temperance, holding a cup +before her. "There isn't much to eat in the house. Of all times in the +world to be without good victuals! What could Hepsey have meant?" + +"Poor old soul," Aunt Merce replied, "she is quite broken. Fanny had +to help her upstairs." + +The kitchen door opened, and Temperance's husband, Abram, came in. + +"Good Lord!" she said in an irate voice, "have you come, too? Did you +think I couldn't get home to get your breakfast?" + +She hung the kettle on the fire again, muttering too low for him to +hear: "Some folks could be spared better than other folks." + +Abram shoved back his hat. "'The Lord gives and the Lord takes away,' +but she is a dreadful loss to the poor. There's my poor boy, whose +clothes--" + +"Ain't he the beatum of all the men that ever you see?" broke in +Temperance, taking to him a large piece of pie, which he took with a +short laugh, and sat down to eat. I could not help exchanging a look +with Aunt Merce; we both laughed. Veronica, lost in revery, paid no +attention to anything about her. I saw that Temperance suffered; she +was perplexed and irritated. + +"Let Abram stay, if he likes," I whispered to her; "and be sure to +stay yourself, for you are needed." + +She brightened with an expression of gratitude. "He is a nuisance," +she whispered back; "but as I made a fool of myself, I must be +punished according to my folly. I'll stay, you may depend. I'll do +_everything_ for you. I vow I am mad, that I ever went away." + +"Have the neighbors gone?" I asked. + +"There's a couple or so round, and will be, you know. I'll take Verry +to bed, and sleep on the floor by her. You go to your father." + +He was in their bedroom, on the bed. She was lying on a frame of wood, +covered with canvas, a kind of bed which went from house to house in +Surrey, on occasions of sickness or death. + +"Our last night together has passed," he said in a tremulous voice, +while scanty tears fell from his seared eyes. "The space between then +and now--when her arm was round me, when she slept beside me, when I +woke from a bad dream, and she talked gently close to my face, till +I slept again--is so narrow that I recall it with a sense of +reality which agonizes me; it is so immeasurable when I see her +there--_there_, that I am crushed." + +If I had had any thought of speaking to him, it was gone. And I must +go too. Were the hands folded across her breast, where I, also, had +slept? Were the blue eyes closed that had watched me there? I should +never see. A shroud covered her from all eyes but his now. Till I +closed the door upon him, I looked my last farewell. An elderly woman +met me as I was going upstairs, and offered me a small packet; it was +her hair. "It was very long," she said. I tried in vain to thank her. +"I will place it in a drawer for you," she said kindly. + + + + + + +CHAPTER XXXIV. + + +The house was thronged till after the funeral. We sat in state, to be +condoled with and waited upon. Not a jot of the customary rites +was abated, though I am sure the performers thereof had small +encouragement. Veronica alone would see no one; her room was the only +one not invaded; for the neighbors took the house into their hands, +assisted by that part of the Morgesons who were too distantly related +to consider themselves as mourners to be shut up with us. It was put +under rigorous funeral law, and inspected from garret to cellar. They +supervised all the arrangements, if there were any that they did not +make, received the guests who came from a distance, and aided their +departure. Every child in Surrey was allowed to come in, to look at +the dead, with the idle curiosity of childhood. Veronica knew nothing +of this. Her course was taken for granted; mine was imposed upon me. +I remonstrated with Temperance, but she replied that it was all well +meant, and always done. I endured the same annoyances over and over +again, from relays of people. Bed-time especially was their occasion. +I was not allowed to undress alone. I must have drinks, either to +compose or stimulate; I must have something read to me; I must be +watched when I slept, or I must be kept awake to give advice or be +told items of news. All the while, like a chorus, they reiterated the +character, the peculiarities, the virtues of the mother I had lost, +who could never be replaced--who was in a better world. However, I +was, in a measure, kept from myself during this interval. The matter +is often subservient to the manner. Arthur's feelings were played upon +also. He wept often, confiding to me his grief and his plans for the +future. "If people would die at the age of seventy-five, things would +go well," he said, "for everybody must expect to die then; the Bible +says so." He informed me also that he expected to be an architect, and +that mother liked it. He had an idea, which he had imparted to her, of +an arch; it must be made of black marble, with gold veins, and ought +to stand in Egypt, with the word "_Pandemonium_" on it. The kitchen +was the focus of interest to him, for meals were prepared at all hours +for comers and goers. Temperance told me that the mild and indifferent +mourners were fond of good victuals, and she thought their hearts were +lighter than their stomachs when they went away. She presided there +and wrangled with Fanny, who seemed to have lost her capacity for +doing anything steadily, except, as Temperance said, where father was +concerned. "It's a pity she isn't his dog; she might keep at his +feet then. I found her crying awfully yesterday, because he looked so +grief-struck." + +Aunt Merce was engaged with a dressmaker, and with the orders for +bonnets and veils. She discussed the subject of the mourning with the +Morgesons. I acquiesced in all her arrangements, for she derived a +simple comfort from these external tokens. Veronica refused to wear +the bonnet and veil and the required bombazine. Bombazine made her +flesh crawl. Why should she wear it? Mother hated it, too, for she had +never worn out the garments made for Grand'ther Warren. + +"She's a bigger child than ever," Temperance remarked, "and must have +her way." + +"Do you think the border on my cap is too deep?" asked Aunt Merce, +coming into my room dressed for the funeral. + +"No." + +"The cap came from Miss Nye in Milford; she says they wear them so. I +could have made it myself for half the price. Shall you be ready +soon? I am going to put on my bonnet. The yard is full of carriages +already." + +Somebody handed me gloves; my bonnet was tied, a handkerchief given +to me, and the door opened. In the passage I heard a knocking from +Veronica's room, and crossed to learn what she wanted. + +"Is this like her?" she asked, showing me a drawing. + +"How could you have done this?" + +"Because I have tried. _Is_ it like?" + +"Yes, the idea." + +But what a picture she had attempted to make! Mother's shadowy face +serenely looked from a high, small window, set in clouds, like those +which gather over the sun when it "draws water." It was closely +pressed to the glass, and she was regarding dark, indefinite creatures +below it, which Veronica either could not or would not shape. + +"Keep it; but don't work on it any more." And I put it away. She was +wan and languid, but collected. + +"I see you are ready. Somebody must bury the dead. Go. Will the house +be empty?" + +"Yes." + +"Good; I can walk through it once more." + +"The dead must be buried, that is certain; but why should it be +certain that _I_ must be the one to do it?" + +"You think I can go through with it, then?" + +"I have set your behavior down to your will." + +"You may be right. Perhaps mother was always right about me too; she +was against me." + +She looked at me with a timidity and apprehension that made my heart +bleed. "I think we might kiss each other _now_," she said. + +I opened my arms, holding her against my breast so tightly that she +drew back, but kissed my cheek gently, and took from her pocket a +flaçon of salts, which she fastened to my belt by its little chain, +and said again, "Go," but recalling me, said, "One thing more; I will +never lose temper with you again." + +The landing-stair was full of people. I locked the door, and took out +the key; the stairs were crowded. All made way for me with a silent +respect. Aunt Merce, when she saw me, put her hand on an empty chair, +beside father, who sat by the coffin. Those passages in the Bible +which contain the beautifully poetic images relating to the going of +man to his long home were read, and to my ear they seemed to fall on +the coffin in dull strife with its inmate, who mutely contradicted +them. A discourse followed, which was calculated to harrow the +feelings to the utmost. Arthur began to cry so nervously, that some +considerate friend took him out, and Aunt Merce wept so violently that +she grew faint, and caught hold of me. I gave her the flaçon of salts, +which revived her; but I felt as father looked--stern, and anxious to +escape the unprofitable trial. + +As the coffin was taken out to the hearse, my heart twisted and +palpitated, as if a command had been laid upon it to follow, and not +leave her. But I was imprisoned in the cage of Life--the Keeper would +not let me go; her he had let loose. + +We were still obliged to sit an intolerable while, till all present +had passed before her for the last time. When the hearse moved down +the street, father, Arthur, and I were called, and assisted in our own +chaise, as if we were helpless; the reins were put in father's hands, +and the horse was led behind the hearse. At last the word was given, +and the long procession began to move through the street, which was +deserted. A cat ran out of a house, and scampered across the way; +Arthur laughed, and father jumped nervously at the sound of his laugh. + +The graveyard was a mile outside the village--a sandy plain where a +few stunted pines transplanted from the woods near it struggled to +keep alive. As we turned from the street into the lane which led +to it, and rode up a little hill where the sand was so deep that it +muffled the wheels and feet of the horses, the whole round of the gray +sky was visible. It hung low over us. I wished it to drop and blot out +the vague nothings under it. We left the carriage at the palings and +walked up the narrow path, among the mounds, where every stone was +marked "Morgeson." Some so old that they were stained with blotches +of yellow moss, slanting backward and forward, in protest against the +folly of indicating what was no longer beneath them. The mounds were +covered with mats of scanty, tangled grass, with here and there a rank +spot of green. I was tracing the shape of one of those green patches +when I felt father's arm tremble. I shut my eyes, but could not close +my ears to the sound of the spadeful of sand which fell on the coffin. + +It was over. We must leave her to the creatures Veronica had seen. I +looked upward, to discern the shadowy reflection behind the gray haze +of cloud, where she might have paused a moment on her eternal journey +to the eternal world of souls. + +It was the custom, and father took his hat off to thank his friends +for their sympathy and attention. His lips moved, but no words were +audible. + +The procession moved down the path again. Arthur's hand was in mine; +he stamped his feet firmly on the sand, as if to break the oppressive +silence which no one seemed disposed to disturb. The same ceremonies +were performed in starting us homeward, by the same person, who let +go the reins, and lifted his hat as we passed, as the final token of +attention and respect. + +The windows were open; a wind was blowing through the house, the +furniture was set in order, the doors were thrown back, but not a soul +was there when we went in. The duties of friendship and tradition had +been fulfilled; the neighbors had gone home to their avocations. For +the public, the tragedy was over; all speculation on the degree of +our grief, or our indifference, was settled. We could take off our +mourning garments and our mourning countenance, now that we were +alone; or we could give way to that anguish we are afraid and ashamed +to show, except before the One above human emotion. + + + + + + +CHAPTER XXXV. + + +Temperance stayed to the house-cleaning. It was lucky, she could not +help saying, as house-cleaning must always be after a funeral, that +it should have happened at the regular cleaning-time. She went back +to her own house as soon as it was over. Father drove to Milford as +usual; Arthur resumed his school, and Aunt Merce, who had at first +busied herself in looking over her wardrobe, and selecting from it +what she thought could be dyed, folded it away. She passed hours in +mother's room, from which father had fled, crying over her Bible, +looking in her boxes and drawers to feed her sorrow with the sight of +the familiar things, alternating those periods with her old occupation +of looking out of the windows. In regard to myself, and Veronica, she +evinced a distress at the responsibility which, she feared, must +rest upon her. Veronica, dark and silent, played such heart-piercing +strains that father could not bear to hear her; so when she played, +for he dared not ask her to desist, he went away. To me she had +scarcely spoken since the funeral. She wore the same dress each +day--one of black silk--and a small black mantle, pinned across her +bosom. Soon the doors began to open and shut after their old fashion, +and people came and went as of old on errands of begging or borrowing. + +At the table we felt a sense of haste; instead of lingering, as was +our wont, we separated soon, with an indifferent air, as if we were +called by business, not sent away by sorrow. But if our eyes fell on a +certain chair, empty against the wall, a cutting pang was felt, +which was not at all concealed; for there were sudden breaks in our +commonplace talk, which diverged into wandering channels, betraying +the tension of feeling. + +Many weeks passed, through which I endured an aching, aimless +melancholy. My thoughts continually drifted through the vacuum in +our atmosphere, and returned to impress me with a disbelief in the +enjoyment, or necessity of keeping myself employed with the keys of an +instrument, which, let me strike ever so cunningly, it was certain I +could never obtain mastery over. + +One day I went to walk by the shore, for the first time since my +return. When I set my foot on the ground, the intolerable light of the +brilliant day blazed through me; I was luminously dark, for it blinded +me. Picking my way over the beach, left bare by the tide, with my eyes +fixed downward till I could see, I reached the point between our +house and the lighthouse and turned toward the sea, inhaling its cool +freshness. I climbed out to a flat, low rock, on the point; it was dry +in the sun, and the weeds hanging from its sides were black and crisp; +I put my woolen shawl on it, and stretched myself along its edge. +Little pools meshed from the sea by the numberless rocks round me +engrossed my attention. How white and pellucid was the shallow near +me--no shadow but the shadow of my face bending over it--nothing to +ripple its surface, but my imperceptible breath! By and by a bunch of +knotted wrack floated in from the outside and lodged in a crevice; a +minute creature with fringed feet darted from it and swam across +it. After the knotted wrack came the fragment of a green and silky +substance, delicate enough to have been the remnant of a web, woven +in the palace of Circe. "There must be a current," I thought, "which +sends them here." And I watched the inlet for other waifs; but nothing +more came. Eye-like bubbles rose from among the fronds of the knotted +wrack, and, sailing on uncertain voyages, broke one by one and were +wrecked to nothingness. The last vanished; the pool showed me the +motionless shadow of my face again, on which I pondered, till I +suddenly became aware of a slow, internal oscillation, which increased +till I felt in a strange tumult. I put my hand in the pool and +troubled its surface. + +"Hail, Cassandra! Hail!" + +I sprang up the highest rock on the point, and looked seaward, to +catch a glimpse of the flying Spirit who had touched me. My soul was +brought in poise and quickened with the beauty before me! The wide, +shimmering plain of sea--its aerial blue, stretching beyond the +limits of my vision in one direction, upbearing transverse, cloud-like +islands in another, varied and shadowed by shore and sky--mingled its +essence with mine. + +The wind was coming; under the far horizon the mass of waters begun to +undulate. Dark, spear-like clouds rose above it and menaced the east. +The speedy wind tossed and teased the sea nearer and nearer, till I +was surrounded by a gulf of milky green foam. As the tide rolled in +I retreated, stepping back from rock to rock, round which the waves +curled and hissed, baffled in their attempt to climb over me. I +stopped on the verge of the tide-mark; the sea was seeking me and I +must wait. It gave tongue as its lips touched my feet, roaring in the +caves, falling on the level beaches with a mad, boundless joy! + +"Have then at life!" my senses cried. "We will possess its longing +silence, rifle its waiting beauty. We will rise up in its light +and warmth, and cry, 'Come, for we wait.' Its roar, its beauty, its +madness--we will have--_all_." I turned and walked swiftly homeward, +treading the ridges of white sand, the black drifts of sea-weed, as if +they had been a smooth floor. + +Aunt Merce was at the door. + +"Now," she said, "we are going to have the long May storm. The gulls +are flying round the lighthouse. How high the tide is! You must want +your dinner. I wish you _would_ see to Fanny; she is lording it over +us all." + +"Yes, yes, I will do it; you may depend on me. I will reign, and serve +also." + +"Oh, Cassandra, _can_ you give up _yourself?_" + +"I must, I suppose. Confound the spray; it is flying against the +windows." + +"Come in; your hair is wet, and your shawl is wringing. Now for a +cold." + +"I never shall have any more colds, Aunt Merce; never mean to have +anything to myself--entirely, you know." + +"You do me good, you dear girl; I love you"; and she began to cry. +"There's nothing but cold ham and boiled rice for your dinner." + +"What time is it?" + +"Near three." + +I opened the door of the dining-room; the table was laid, and I walked +round it, on a tour of inspection. + +"I thought you might as well have your dinner, all at once," said +Fanny, by the window, with her feet tucked up on the rounds of her +chair. "Here it is." + +"I perceive. Who arranged it?" + +"Me and Paddy Margaret." + +"How many tablecloths have we?" + +"Plenty. I thought as you didn't seem to care about any regular hour +for dinner, and made us all wait, _I_ needn't be particular; besides, +I am not the waiter, you know." + +She had set on the dishes used in the kitchen. I pulled off cloth and +all--the dishes crashed, of course--and sat down on the floor, picking +out the remains for my repast. + +"What will Mr. Morgeson say?" she asked, turning very red. + +"Shall you clear away this rubbish by the time he comes home?" + +"Why, I must, mustn't I?" + +"I hope so. Where's Veronica?" + +"She has been gone since twelve; Sam carried her to Temperance's +house." + +I continued my meal. Fanny brought a chair for me, which I did not +take. I scarcely tasted what I ate. A wall had risen up suddenly +before me, which divided me from my dreams; I was inside it, on a +prosaic domain I must henceforth be confined to. The unthought-of +result of mother's death--disorganization, began to show itself. The +individuality which had kept the weakness and faults of our family +life in abeyance must have been powerful; and I had never recognized +it! I attempted to analyze this influence, so strong, yet so +invisibly produced. I thought of her mildness, her dreamy habits, her +indifference, and her incapacity of comprehending natures unlike her +own. Would endowment of character explain it--that faculty which +we could not change, give, or take? Character was a mysterious and +indestructible fact, and a fact that I had had little respect for. +Upon what a false basis I had gone--a basis of extremes. I had seen +men as trees walking; that was my experience. + +"You'll choke yourself with that dry bread," exclaimed Fanny, really +concerned at my abstraction. + +"Where is my trunk? Did you unlock it?" + +"I took from it what you needed at the time: but it is not unpacked, +and it is in the upper hall closet." + +She was picking up the broken delf meekly. + +"Did you see a small bag I brought? And where's my satchel? Good +heavens! What has made me put off that letter so? For I have thought +of it, and yet I have kept it back." + +"It is safe, in your closet, Miss Cassandra; and the box is there." + +"Aunt Merce," I called, "will you have nothing to eat?" + +She laughed hysterically, when she saw what I had done. + +"Where is Hepsey, Aunt Merce?" + +"She goes to bed after dinner, you know, for an hour or two." + +"She must go from here." + +"Oh!" they both chorused, "what for?" + +"She is too old." + +"She _has_ money, and a good house," said Aunt Merce, "if she must go. +I wonder how Mary stood it so long." + +"Turn 'em off," said Fanny, "when they grow useless." + +Aunt Merce reddened, and looked hurt. + +"I shall keep _you_; look sharp now after your own disinterestedness." + +I wanted to go to my room, as I thought it time to arrange my trunks +and boxes; besides, I needed rest--the sad luxury of reaction. But +word was brought to the house that Arthur had disappeared, in company +with two boys notorious for mischief. His teacher was afraid they +might have put out to sea in a crazy sailboat. We were in a state of +alarm till dark, when father came home, bringing him, having found +him on the way to Milford. Veronica had not returned. It stormed +violently, and father was vexed because a horse must be sent through +the storm for her. At last I obtained the asylum of my room, in an +irritable frame of mind, convinced that such would be my condition +each day. Composure came with putting my drawers and shelves in order. +The box with Desmond's flowers I threw into the fire, without opening +it, ribbon and all, for I could not endure the sight of them. I +unfolded the dresses I had worn on the occasions of my meeting him; +even the collars and ribbons I had adorned myself with were conned +with jealous, greedy eyes; in looking at them all other remembrances +connected with my visit vanished. The handkerchief scented with +violets, which I found in the pocket of the dress I had worn when I +met him at Mrs. Hepburn's, made me childish. I was holding it when +Veronica entered, bringing with her an atmosphere of dampness. + +"Violet! I like it. There is not one blooming yet, Temperance says. +Why are they so late? There's only this pitiful snake-grass," holding +up a bunch of drooping, pale blossoms. + +"Oh, Verry, can you forgive me? I did not forget these, but I felt the +strangest disinclination to look them up." And I gave her the jewel +box and letter. + +She seized them, and opened the box first. + +"Child-Verry." + +"I never was a child, you know; but I am always trying to find my +childhood." + +She took a necklace from the box, composed of a single string of +small, beautiful pearls, from which hung an egg-shaped amethyst of +pure violet. She fastened the necklace round her throat. + +"It is as lucent as the moon," she said, looking down at the amethyst, +which shed a watery light; "I wish you had given it to me before." + +Breaking the seal of the letter, with a twist of her mouth at the +coat-of-arms impressed upon it, she shook out the closely written +pages, and saying, "There is a volume," began reading. "It is +very good," she observed at the end of the first page, "a regular +composition," and went on with an air of increasing interest. "How +does he look?" she asked, stopping again. + +"As if he longed to see you." + +Her eyes went in quest of him so far that I thought they must be +startled by a sudden vision. + +"How did you find his family?" + +"Not like him much." + +"I knew that; he would not have loved me so suddenly had I not been +wholly unlike any woman he had known." + +"His character is individual." + +"I should know that from his influence upon you." + +She looked at me wistfully, smoothed my hair with her cool hand, and +resumed the letter. + +"He thinks he will not come to Surrey with you; asks me to tell him my +wishes," she repeated rapidly, translating from the original. "What do +I think of our future? How shall we propose any change? Will Cassandra +describe her visit? Will she tell me that he thinks of going abroad?" + +She dropped the letter. "What pivot is he swinging on? What is he +uncertain about?" + +"There must be more to read." + +She turned another page. + +"If I go to Switzerland (I think of going on account of family +affairs), when shall I return? My family, of course, expected me to +marry in their pale; that is, my mother rather prefers to select a +wife for me than that I should do it. But, as you shall never come to +Belem, her plans or wishes need make no difference to us. If Cassandra +would be to us what she might, how things would clear! Don't you +think, my love, that there should be the greatest sympathy between +sisters?" + +I laughed. + +Verry said she did not like his letter much after all. He evidently +thought her incapable of understanding ordinary matters. It was well, +though; it made their love idyllic. + +"Let us speak of matters nearer home." + +"Let us go to my room; the storm is so loud this side of the house." + +"No; you must stay till the walls tremble. Have you seen, Verry, any +work for me to do here?" + +"Everything is changed. I have tried to be as steady as when mother +was here, but I cannot; I whirl with a vague idea of liberty. Did she +keep the family conscience? Now that she has gone I feel responsible +no more." + +"An idea of responsibility has come to me--what plain people call +Duty." + +"I do not feel it," she cried mournfully. "I must yield to you then. +You can be good.' + +"I must act so; but help me, Verry; I have contrary desires." + +"What do they find to feed on? What are they? Have you your evil +spirit?" + +"Yes; a devil named Temperament." + +"Now teach me, Cassandra." + +"Not I. Go, and write Ben. Make excuses for my negligence toward you +about his letter. Tell him to come. I shall write Alice and Helen this +evening. We have been shut off from the world by the gate of Death; +but we must come back." + +"One thing you may be sure of--though I shall be no help, I shall +never annoy you. I know that my instincts are fine only in a +self-centering direction; yours are different. I shall trust them. +Since you have spoken, I perceive the shadows you have raised and +must encounter. I retreat before them, admiring your discernment, and +placing confidence in your powers. You convince if you do not win +me. Who can guess how your every plan and hope of well-doing may be +thwarted? I need say no more?" + +"Nothing more." + +She left the room. There would be no antagonism between us; but there +would be pain--on one side. The distance which had kept us apart was +shortened, but not annihilated. What could I expect? The silent and +serene currents which flow from souls like Veronica's and Ben's, whose +genius is not of the heart, refuse to enter a nature so turbulent as +mine. But my destiny must be changed by such! It was taken for granted +that my own spirit should not rule me. And with what reward? Any, but +that of sympathy. But I muttered: + + "'I dimly see + My far-off doubtful purpose, as a mother + Conjectures of the features of her child + Ere it is born.'" + +The house trembled in the fury of the storm. The waves were hoarse +with their vain bawling, and the wind shrieked at every crevice of +chimney, door, and window. No answering excitement in me now! I had +grown older. + + + + + + +CHAPTER XXXVI. + + +A few days after, I went to Milford with father, to make some +purchases. I sought a way to speak to him about the future, intending +also to go on with various remarks; but it seemed difficult to begin. +Observing him, as he contemplated the road before us, grave and +abstracted, I recollected the difference between his age and mother's, +and wondered at my blindness, while I compared the old man of my +childhood, who existed for the express purpose of making money for the +support and pleasure of his family, and to accommodate all its whims, +with the man before me,--barely forty-eight, without a wrinkle in +his firm, ruddy face, and only an occasional white hair, in ambuscade +among his fair, curly locks. My exclusive right over him I felt +doubtful about. I gave my attention to the road also, and remarked +that I thought the season was late. + +"Yes. Why didn't Somers come home with you?" + +"I hardly know. The matter of the marriage was not settled, nor a plan +of spending a summer abroad." + +"Will it suit him to vegetate in Surrey? Veronica will not leave +home." + +"He has no ambition." + +"It is a curse to inherit money in this country. Mr. Somers writes +that Ben will have three thousand a year; but that the disposal, at +present, is not in his power." + +I explained as well as I could the Pickersgill property. + +"I see how it is. The children are waiting for the principal, and have +exacted the income; and their lives have been warped for this reason. +Ben has not begun life yet. But I like Somers exceedingly." + +"He is the best of them, his mother the worst." + +"Did you have a passage?" + +"She attempted." + +"I can give Veronica nothing beyond new clothes or furniture; whatever +she likes that way. To draw money from my business is impossible. My +business fluctuates like quicksilver, and it is enormously extended. +If they should have two thousand a year, it would be a princely +income; I should feel so now, if they had it clear of incumbrance." + +"Do you mean to say that your income does not amount to so much?" + +"My outgoes and incomes have for a long time been involved with each +other. I do not separate them. I have never lived extravagantly. My +luxury has been in doing too much." + +A cold feeling came over me. + +"By the way, Mr. Somers pays you compliments in his note. How old are +you? I forget." He surveyed me with a doubtful look. Are you thin, or +what is it?" + +"East wind, I guess. I am twenty-five." + +"And Veronica?" + +"Over twenty." + +"She must be married. I hope she will cut her practical eye-teeth +then, for Somers's sake." + +"He does not require a practically minded woman." + +"What do men require!" + +"They require the souls and bodies of women, without having the +trouble of knowing the difference between the one and other." + +"So bad as that? Whoa!" + +He stopped to pay toll, and the conversation stopped. + +On the way home, however, I found a place to begin my proposed talk, +and burst out with, "I think Hepsey should leave us." + +"What ails Hepsey?" + +"She is so old, and is such a poke." + +"You must tell her yourself to go. She has money enough to be +comfortable; I have some of it, as well as that of half the widows, +old maids, and sailors' wives in Surrey,' being better than the +Milford banks, they think." + +I felt another cold twinge. + +"What! are our servants your creditors?" + +"Servants--don't say that," he said harshly; "we do not have these +distinctions here." + +"It costs you more than two thousand a year." + +"How do you know?" + +"Think of the hired people--the horses, the cows, pigs, hens, garden, +fields--all costing more than they yield." + +"What has come over you? Did you ever think of money before? Tell me, +have you ever been in our cellar?" + +"Yes, to look at the kittens." + +"In the store-room?" + +"For apples and sweetmeats." + +"Look into these matters, if you like; they never troubled your +mother, at least I never knew that they did; but don't make your +reforms tiresome." + +What encouragement! + +In the yard we saw Fanny contemplating a brood of hens, which were +picking up corn before her. "Take Fanny for a coadjutor; she is +eighteen, and a bright girl." She sprang to the chaise, and caught the +reins, which he threw into her hands, unbuckled the girth, and, before +I was out of sight, was leading the horse to water. + +"We might economize in the way of a stable-boy," I said. + +"Pooh! you are not indulgent. Here," whistling to Fanny, "let Sam do +that." She pouted her lips at him, and he laughed. + +Aunt Merce gave me a letter the moment I entered. "It is in Alice's +hand; sit down and read it." + +She took her handkerchief and a bit of flagroot from her pocket, to be +ready for the sympathetic flow which she expected. But the letter was +short. She had seen, it said, the announcement of mother's death in a +newspaper at the time. She knew what a change it had made. We might +be sure that we should never find our old level, however happy and +forgetful we might grow. She bore us all in mind but sent no message, +except to Aunt Merce; she must come to Rosville before summer was +over. And could she assist me by taking Arthur for a while? Edward was +a quiet, companionable lad, and Arthur would be safe with him at home +and at school. + +"I wish you would go, Aunt Merce." + +"Yes, why not, Mercy?" asked father. "Would it be a good thing for +Arthur, Cassandra? You know what Surrey is for a boy." + +"I know what Rosville was for a girl," I thought. It was an excellent +plan for Arthur; but a feeling of repulsion at the idea of his going +kept me silent. + +"Is it a good idea?" he repeated. + +"Yes, yes, father; send him by all means." + +Aunt Merce sighed. "If he goes, I must go; I can be the receptacle +for his griefs and trials for a while at least, and be a little useful +that way. You know, Locke, I am but a poor creature." + +"I was not aware of that fact, and am astonished to hear you say so, +Mercy, when you know how far back I can remember. Mary shines all +along those years, and you with her." + +"Locke, you are the kindest man in the world." + +"He feels fifty years younger than she appears to him," I thought; but +I thanked him for his consideration for her. + +"Veronica has had a letter to-day from Mr. Somers. What did you buy in +Milford?" + +"Mr. Morgeson," Fanny called, "Bumpus, the horse-jockey, is in the +yard. He says Bill is spavined. I think he lies; he wants to trade." + +He went out with her. + +"Aunt Merce, let us be more together. What do you think of spending +our evenings in the parlor?" + +"Do you expect to break up our habits?" + +"I would if I could." + +"Try Veronica." + +"I have." + +"Will she give up solitude?" + +"Bring your knitting to the parlor and see." + +Veronica came in to tell me that Ben was coming in a week. + +"Glad of it." + +"Sends love to you." + +"Obliged." + +"Calls me 'poor girl'; speaks beautifully of his remembrance of +mother, and--" + +"What?" + +"Tells me to rely on your faithful soul; to trust in the reasonable +hope of our remaining together; to try to establish an equality of +tastes and habits between us. He tells me what I never knew,--that I +need you--that we need each other." + +"Is that all?" + +"There is more for _me_." + +I left her. Closing the door of my room gently, I thought: "Ben is a +good man; but for all that, I feel like blind Sampson just now. Could +I lay my hands on the pillars which supported the temple he has built, +I would wrench them from their foundation and surprise him by toppling +the roof on his head." + +His arrival was delayed for a few days. When he came Surrey looked its +best, for it was June; and though the winds were chilly, the grass was +grown and the orchard leaves were crowding off the blossoms. The woods +were vividly green. The fauns were playing there, and the sirens sang +under the sea. But I had other thoughts; the fauns and sirens were +not for me, perplexed as I was with household cares. Hepsey proposed +staying another year, but I was firm; and she went, begging Fanny to +go with her and be as a daughter. She declined; but the proposition +influenced her to be troublesome to me. She told me she was of age +now, and that no person had a right to control her. At present she was +useful where she was, and might remain. + +"Will you have wages?" I asked her. + +"That is Mr. Morgeson's business." + +My anger would have pleased her, so I concealed it. + +"Your ability, Fanny, is better than your disposition. Me,--you do +not suit at all; but it is certain that father depends on you for his +small comforts, and Veronica likes you. I wish you would stay." + +She placed her arms akimbo. + +"I should like to find you out, exactly. I can't. I never could find +out your mother; all the rest of you are as clear as daylight." And +she snapped her fingers as if 'the rest' were between them. + +"You lack faith." + +"You believe that this is a beautiful world, don't you? I hate it. I +should think _you_ had reason, too, for hating it. Pray what have you +got?" + +"An ungrateful imp that was bequeathed to me." + +She saw father in the garden beckoning me. "He wants you. I do _not_ +hate the world always," she added, with her eyes fixed on him. + +I was disposed to trouble the still waters of our domestic life with +theories. Our ways were too mechanical. The old-fashioned asceticism +which considered air, sleep, food, as mere necessities was stupid. But +I had no assistance; Veronica thought that her share of my plans must +consist of a diligent notice of all that I did, which she gave, and +then went to her own life, kept sacredly apart. Fanny laughed in her +sleeve and took another side--the practical, and shone in it, becoming +in fact the true manager and worker, while I played. Aunt Merce was +helpless. She neglected her former cares; and father was, what he +always had been at home,--heedless and indifferent. + +One morning we stood on the landing stair--Ben, Veronica, and +myself--looking from the window. A silver mist so thinly wrapped the +orchard that the wet, shining leaves thrust themselves through in +patches. Birds were singing beneath, feeling the warmth of the sun, +scarcely hid. The young leaves and blossoms steeping in the mist sent +up a delicious odor. + +"I like Surrey better and better," he said; "the atmosphere suits me." + +"Oh, I am glad," answered Verry. "I could never go away. It is not +beautiful, I know; in fact, it is meager when it comes to be talked +of; but there are suggestions here which occasionally stimulate me." + +"Verry, can you keep people away from me when I live here?" + +"I do not like that feeling in you." + +"I like fishermen." + +"And a boat?" + +"Yes, I'll have a boat." + +"I shall never go out with you." + +"Cass will. I shall cruise with her, and you, in your house, need not +see us depart. Eric the Red made excursions in this region. We will +skirt the shores, which are the same, nearly, as when he sailed from +them, with his Northmen; and the ancient barnacles will think, when +they see her fair hair, which she will let ripple around her stately +shoulders, that he has come back with his bride." + +Verry looked with delight at him and then at me. "Her long, yellow +hair and her stately shoulders," she repeated. + +"Will you go?" he asked. + +"Of course," I answered, going downstairs. I happened to look back +on the way. His arm was round Verry, but he was looking after me. He +withdrew it as our eyes met, and came down; but she remained, looking +from the window. We went into the parlor, and I shut the door. + +"Now then," I said. + +He took a note from his pocket and gave it to me. + +I broke its seal, and read: "Tell Ben, before you can reflect upon it, +that _I_ will go abroad, and then repent of it,--as I shall. Desmond." + +"'Tell Ben,'" I repeated aloud, "'that _I_ will go abroad. Desmond.'" + +"Do you guess, as he does, that my reason for going was that I might +be kept aloof from all sight and sound of you and him? In the result +toward which I saw _you_ drive I could have no part." + +"Stay; I know that he will go." + +"You do not know. Nor do you know what such a man is when--" checking +himself. + +"He is in love?" + +"If you choose to call it that." + +"I do." + +All there was to say should be said now; but I felt more agitated +than was my wont. These feelings, not according with my housewifely +condition, upset me. I looked at him; he began to walk about, taking +up a book, which he leaned his head over, and whose covers he bent +back till they cracked. + +"You would read me that way," I said. + +"It is rather your way of reading." + +"Can you remember that Desmond and I influence each other to act +alike? And that we comprehend each other without collision? I +love him, as a mature woman may love,--once, Ben, only once; the +fire-tipped arrows rarely pierce soul and sense, blood and brain." + +He made a gesture, expressive of contempt. + +"Men are different; he is different." + +"You have already spoken for me, and, I suppose, you will for him." + +"I venture to. Desmond is a violent, tyrannical, sensual man; his +perceptions are his pulses. That he is handsome, clever, resolute, and +sings well, I can admit; but no more." + +"We will not bandy his merits or his demerits between us. Let us +observe him. And now, tell me,--what am I?" + +"You have been my delight and misery ever since I knew you. I saw you +first, so impetuous, yet self-contained! Incapable of insincerity, +devoid of affection and courageously naturally beautiful. Then, to +my amazement, I saw that, unlike most women, you understood your +instincts; that you dared to define them, and were impious enough to +follow them. You debased my ideal, you confused me, also, for I could +never affirm that you were wrong; forcing me to consult abstractions, +they gave a verdict in your favor, which almost unsexed you in my +estimation. I must own that the man who is willing to marry you +has more courage than I have. Is it strange that when I found your +counterpart, Veronica, that I yielded? Her delicate, pure, ignorant +soul suggests to me eternal repose." + +"It is not necessary that you should fatigue your mind with +abstractions concerning her. It will be the literal you will hunger +for, dear Ben." + +"Damn it! the world has got a twist in it, and we all go round with +it, devilishly awry." + +I said no more. He had defined my limits, he would, as far as +possible, control me without pity or compassion, thinking, probably, +that I needed none; the powers he had always given me credit for must +be sufficing. I could not comprehend him. How was it that he and Verry +gave me such horrible pain? Was it exceptional? Could I claim nothing +from women? Had they thought me an anomaly?--while I thought it was +Veronica who was called peculiar and original? The end of it all must +be for me to assimilate with their happiness! + +"Well?" he said. + +"Thank you." + +Then Veronica came, swinging her bonnet. "The _Sagamore_ has arrived, +and I am going to stand on the wharf to count the sailors, and learn +if they have all come home. Will you go, Ben?" + +He complied, and I was left alone. + + + + + + +CHAPTER XXXVII. + + +When Ben left Surrey, I sent no message or letter by him, and he asked +for none. But at once I wrote to Desmond, and did not finish my letter +till after midnight. Intoxicated with the liberty my pen offered me, +I roamed over a wide field of paper. The next morning I burnt it. But +there was something to be said to him before his departure, and again +I wrote. I might have condensed still more. In this way-- + + VESTIGIA RETRORSUM. + + CHARLES MORGESON. + +When the answer came I reflected before I read it, that it might be +the last link of the chain between us. Not a bright one at the best, +nor garlanded with flowers, nor was it metal, silver, or gold. There +was rust on it, it was corroded, for it was forged out of his and my +substance. + +I read it: "I am yours, as I have been, since the night I asked you +'How came those scars?' Did you guess that I read your story? I go +from you with one idea; I love you, and I _must_ go. Brave woman! you +have shamed me to death almost." + +He sent me a watch. I was to wear it from the second of July. It was +small and plain, but there were a few words scratched inside the case +with the point of a knife, which I read every day. Veronica's eye fell +on it the first time I put it on. + +"What time is it?" + +"Near one." + +"I thought, from the look of it, that it might be near two." + +"Don't mar my ideal of you, Verry, by growing witty." + +She shrugged her shoulders. "I guess you found it washed ashore, among +the rocks; was it bruised?" + +"A man gave it to me." + +"A merman, who fills the sea-halls with a voice of power?" + +"May be." + +"Tut, Ben gave it to you. It is a kind of housekeepish present; did he +add scissors and needle-case?" + +"What if the merman should take me some day to the 'pale sea-groves +straight and high?'" + +"You must never, never go. You cannot leave me, Cass!" She grasped my +sleeve, and pulled me round. "How much was there for you to do in the +life before us, which you talked about?" + +"I remember. There is much, to be sure." + +Fanny's quick eye caught the glitter of the watch. The mystery teased +her, but she said nothing. + +Aunt Merce had gone to Rosville with Arthur. There was no visitor with +us; there had been none beside Ben since mother died. All seemed kept +at bay. I wrote to Helen to come and pass the summer, but her child +was too young for such a journey, she concluded. Ben had sailed for +Switzerland. The summer, whose biography like an insignificant life +must be written in a few words, was a long one to live through. It +happened to be a dry season, which was unfrequent on our coast. Days +rolled by without the variation of wind, rain, or hazy weather. The +sky was an opaque blue till noon, when solid white clouds rose in the +north, and sailed seaward, or barred the sunset, which turned them +crimson and black. The mown fields grew yellow under the stare of +the brassy sun, and the leaves cracked and curled for the want of +moisture. It was dull in the village, no ships were building, none +sailed, none arrived. But father was more absorbed than ever, more +away from home. He wrote often in the evening, and pored over ledgers +with his bookkeeper. Late at night I found him sorting and reading +papers. He forgot us. But Fanny, as he grew forgetful, improved as +housekeeper. Her energy was untiring; she waited so much on him that +I grew forgetful of him. Veronica was the same as before; her room +was pleasant with color and perfume, the same delicate pains with her +dress each day was taken. She looked as fair as a lily, as serene as +the lake on which it floats, except when Fanny tried her. With me she +never lost temper. But I saw little of her; she was as fixed in her +individual pursuits as ever. + +There were intervals now when all my grief for mother returned, and +I sat in my darkened chamber, recalling with a sad persistence her +gestures, her motions, the tones of her voice, through all the past +back to my first remembrance. The places she inhabited, her opinions +and her actions I commented on with a minuteness that allowed no +detail to escape. When my thoughts turned from her, it seemed as if +she were newly lost in the vast and wandering Universe of the Dead, +whence I had brought her. + +In September a letter came from Ben, which promised a return by the +last of October. With the ruffling autumnal breezes my stagnation +vanished, and I began my shore life again in a mood which made memory +like hope; but staying out too late one evening, I came home in a +chill. From the chill I went to a fever, which lasted some days. +Veronica came every day to see me, and groaned over my hair, which +fell off, but she could not stay long, the smell of medicine made her +ill, the dark room gave her an uneasiness; besides, she did not know +what she should say. I sent her away always. Fanny took care of me +till I was able to move about the room, then she absented herself most +of the time. One afternoon Veronica came to tell me that Margaret, the +Irish girl, was going; she supposed that Fanny was insufferable, and +that she could not stay. + +"I must be well by to-morrow," I said. + +The next day I went down stairs, and was greeted with the epithet of +"Scarecrow." + +"Do you feel pretty strong?" asked Fanny, with a peculiar accent, when +we happened to be alone. + +"What is the matter? Out with it!" + +"Something's going to turn up here; something ails Mr. Morgeson." + +I guess his ailment. + +"He is going to fail, he is smashed all to nothing. He knows what will +be said about him, yet he goes about with perfect calmness. But he +feels it. I tried him this morning, I gave him tea instead of coffee, +and he didn't know it!" + +"Margaret's gone?" + +"There must be rumors; for she asked him for her wages a day or two +ago. He paid her, and said she had better go." + +I examined my hands involuntarily. She tittered. + +"How easily you will wash the long-necked glasses and pitchers, with +your slim hand!" + +I dropped into a mental calculation, respecting the cost of an +entire change of wardrobe suitable to our reduced circumstances, and +speculated on a neat cottage-style of cookery. + +"I think I must go, too," she said with cunning eyes. + +"How can you bear to, when there will be so much trouble for you to +enjoy?" + +"How tired you look, Cass," said Veronica, slipping in quietly. "What +are you talking about? Has Fanny been tormenting you?" + +"Of course," she answered. "But if am not mistaken, you will be +tormented by others besides me." + +"Go out!" said Veronica. "Leave us, pale pest." + +"You may want me here yet." + +"What does she mean, Cass?" + +I hesitated. + +"Tell me," she said, in her imperative, gentle voice. "What is there +that I cannot know?" + +"Now she is what you call high-toned, isn't it?" inquired Fanny. + +Veronica threw her book at her. + +"The truth is, ladies, that your father, the principal man in Surrey, +is not worth a dollar. What do you think of it? And how will you come +off the high horse?" And Fanny drummed on the table energetically. + +"Did you really think of going, Fanny?" asked Veronica. "You will +stay, and do better than ever, for if you attempt to go, I shall bring +you back." + +This was the invitation she wanted, and was satisfied with. + +"I must give up flowers," said Veronica, "of course." + +"I wonder if we shall keep pigs this fall?" said Fanny. "Must we sit +in the free seats in the meeting-house? It will be fine for the boys +to drop paper balls on our heads from the gallery. I'd like to see +them do it, though," she concluded, as if she felt that such an insult +would infringe upon her rights. + + + + + + +CHAPTER XXXVIII. + + +It was true. Locke Morgeson had been insolvent for five years. All +this time he had thrown ballast out from every side in the shape +of various ventures, which he trusted would lighten the ship, that, +nevertheless, drove steadily on to ruin. Then he steered blindly, +straining his credit to the utmost; and then--the crash. His losses +were so extended and gradual that the public were not aware of his +condition till he announced it. There was a general exasperation +against him. The Morgeson family rose up with one accord to represent +the public mind, which drove Veronica wild. + +"Have you acted wrongly, father?" she asked. + +"I have confessed, Verry, will that suit you!" + +Our house was thronged for several days. "Pay us," cried the female +portion of his creditors. In vain father represented that he was still +young--that his business days were not over--that they must wait, for +paid they should be. "Pay us now, for we are women," they still cried. +Fanny opened the doors for these persons as wide as possible when they +came, and shut them with a bang when they went, astonishing them +with a satirical politeness, or confounding them with an impertinent +silence. The important creditors held meetings to agree what should +be done, and effected an arrangement by which his property was left +in his hands for three years, to arrange for the benefit of his +creditors. The arrangement proved that his integrity was not +suspected; but it was an ingenious punishment, that he should keep in +sight, improve, or change, for others, what had been his own. I was +glad when he decided to sell his real estate and personal property, +and trust to the ships alone, but would build no more. I begged him to +keep our house till Ben should return. He consented to wait; but I +did not tell Verry what I had done. All the houses he owned, lots, +carriages, horses, domestic stock, the fields lying round our +house--were sold. When he began to sell, the fury of retrenchment +seized him, and he laid out a life of self-denial for us three. +Arthur's ten thousand dollars were safe, who was therefore provided +for. He would bring wood and water for us; the rest we must do, with +Fanny's help. We could dine in the kitchen, and put our beds in one +room; by shutting up the house in part, we should have less labor +to perform. We attempted to carry out his ideas, but Veronica was so +dreadfully in Fanny's way and mine, that we were obliged to entreat +her to resume her old rôle. As for Fanny, she was happy--working +like a beaver day and night. Father was much at home, and took an +extraordinary interest in the small details that Fanny carried out. + +When Temperance heard of these arrangements, she came down with Abram +in their green and yellow wagon. Temperance drove the shaggy old white +horse, for Abram was intrusted with the care of a meal bag, in which +were fastened a cock and four hens. We should see, she said when she +let them out, whether we were to keep hens or not. Was Veronica to go +without new-laid eggs? Had he sold the cat, she sarcastically inquired +of father. + +"Who is going to do your washing, girls?" she asked, taking off her +bonnet. + +"We all do it." + +"Now I shall die a-laughing!" But she contradicted herself by crying +heartily. "One day in every week, I tell _you_, I am coming; and Fanny +and I can do the washing in a jiffy." + +"Sure," said Abram, "you can; the sass is in." + +"Sass or no sass, I'm coming." + +She made me laugh for the first time in a month. I was too tired +generally to be merry, with my endeavors to carry out father's wishes, +and keep up the old aspect of the house. When she left us we all felt +more cheerful. Aunt Merce wanted to come home, but Verry and I thought +she had better stay at Rosville. We could not deny it to ourselves, +that home was sadly altered, or that we were melancholy; and though +we never needed her more, we begged her not to come. Happily father's +zeal soon died away. A boy was hired, and as there was no out-of-doors +work for him to do, he relieved Fanny, who in her turn relieved +me. Finding time to look into myself, I perceived a change in my +estimation of father; a vague impression of weakness in him troubled +me. I also discovered that I had lost my atmosphere. My life was +coarse, hard, colorless! I lived in an insignificant country +village; I was poor. My theories had failed; my practice was like my +moods--variable. But I concluded that if _to-day_ would go on without +bestowing upon me sharp pains, depriving me of sleep, mutilating me +with an accident, or sending a disaster to those belonging to me, I +would be content. Arthur held out a hope, by writing me, that he meant +to support me handsomely. He wished me to send him some shirt studs; +and told me to keep the red horse. He had heard that I was very +handsome when I was in Rosville. A girl had asked him how I looked +now. When he told her I was handsomer than any woman Rosville could +boast of, she laughed. + +October had gone, and we had not heard from Ben. Veronica came to my +room of nights, and listened to wind and sea, as she never had before. +Sometimes she was there long after I had gone to bed, to look out of +the windows. If it was calm, she went away quietly; if the sea was +rough, she was sorrowful, but said nothing. The lethargic summer had +given way to a boisterous autumn of cold, gray weather, driving rains, +and hollow gales. At last he came--to Veronica first. He gave a deep +breath of delight when he stood again on the hearth-rug, before our +now unwonted parlor fire. The sight of his ruddy face, vigorous form, +and gay voice made me as merry as the attendants of a feast are when +they inhale the odor of the viands they carry, hear the gurgle of the +wine they pour, and echo the laughter of the guests. + +There was much to tell that astonished him, but he could not be +depressed; everything must be arranged to suit us. He would buy the +house, provided he could pay for it in instalments. Did I know that +his mother had docked his allowance as soon as she knew that he would +marry Verry? + +"How should I know it?" + +I had not heard then that Desmond's was doubled, when she heard his +intention of going to Spain. + +"How should I know that?" + +One thing I should learn, however--and that was, that Desmond had +begged his mother to make no change in the disposition of her income. +He had declined the extra allowance, and then accepted it, to offer +him--Ben. Was not that astonishing? + +"Did you take it?" + +"No; but pa did." + +All he could call his was fifteen hundred a year. Was that enough for +them to live on, and pay a little every year for the house? Could we +all live there together, just the same? Would we, he asked father, and +allow him to be an inmate? + +Father shook hands with him so violently that he winced; and Verry +crumpled up a handful of his tawny locks and kissed them, whereat he +said: "Are you grown a human woman?" + +About the wedding? He could only stay to appoint a time, for he must +post to Belem. It must be very soon. + +"In a year or two," said Verry. + +"Verry!" + +"In three weeks, then." + +"From to-day?" + +"No, that will be the date of the wreck of the _Locke Morgeson_; but +three weeks from to-morrow. Must we have anybody here, Ben?" + +"Helen, and Alice, Cassandra?" + +"Certainly." + +"I have no friends," said Verry. + +"What will you wear, Verry?" I asked. + +"Why, this dress," designating her old black silk. Her eyes filled +with tears, and went on a pilgrimage toward the unknown heaven where +our mother was. _She_ could only come to the wedding as a ghost. I +imagined her flitting through the empty spaces, from room to room, +scared and troubled by the pressure of mortal life around her. + +"I shall not wear white," Verry said hastily. + +The very day Ben went to Belem one of father's outstanding ships +arrived. She came into the harbor presenting the unusual sight of +trying oil on deck. Black and greasy from hull to spar, she was a +pleasant sight, for she was full of sperm oil. Little boys ran down to +the house to inform us of that fact before she was moored. "Wouldn't +Mr. Morgeson be all right now that his luck had changed?" they asked. + +At supper father said "By George!" several times, by that oath +resuming something of his old self. "Those women can now be paid," he +said. "If I could have held out till now, I could have gone on without +failing. This is the first good voyage the _Oswego_ ever made me; if +another ship, the _Adamant_, will come full while oil is high, I shall +arrange matters with my creditors before the three years are up. To +hold my own again--ah! I never will venture all upon the uncertain +field of the sea." + +The _Oswego's_ captain sent us a box of shells next day, and a small +Portuguese boy, named Manuel--a handsome, black-eyed, husky-voiced +fellow, in a red shirt, which was bound round his waist with a leather +belt, from which hung a sailor's sheath-knife. + +"He is volcanic," said Verry. + +"The Portuguese are all handsome," said Fanny, poking him, to see if +he would notice it. But he did not remove his eyes from Veronica. + +"He shall be your page, Verry." + +The next night a message came to us that Abram was dying. If we ever +meant to come, Temperance sent word, some of us might come now; but +she would rather have Mr. Morgeson. Fanny insisted upon going with him +to carry a lantern. Manuel offered her his knife, when he comprehended +that she was going through a dark road. + +"You are a perfect heathen. There's nothing to be afraid of, except +that Mr. Morgeson may walk into a ditch; will a knife keep us out of +that?" + +"Knife is good--it kills," he said, showing his white, vegetable-ivory +teeth. + +Verry and I sat up till they returned, at two in the morning. Abram +had died about midnight, distressed to the last with worldly cares. +"He asked," said father, "if I remembered his poor boy, whose chest +never came home, and wished to hear some one read a hymn; Temperance +broke down when I read it, while Fanny cried hysterically." + +"I was freezing cold," she answered haughtily. + +In the morning Verry and I started for Temperance's house; but she +waited on the doorstep till I had inquired whether we were wanted. I +called her in, for Temperance asked for her as soon as she saw me. + +"He was a good man, girls," she said with emphasis. + +"Indeed he was." + +"A little mean, I spose." + +I put in a demurrer; her face cleared instantly. + +"He thought a great deal of your folks." + +"And a great deal of you." + +"Oh, what a loss I have met with! He had just bought a first-rate +overcoat." + +"But Temperance," said Verry, with a lamentable candor, "you can come +back now." + +"Can't you wait for him to be put into the ground?" And she tried to +look shocked, but failed. + +A friend entered with a doleful face, and Temperance groaned slightly. + +"It is all done complete now, Mis Handy. He looks as easy as if he +slept, he was _so_ limber." + +"Yes, yes," answered Temperance, starting up, and hurrying us out +of the room, pinching me, with a significant look at Verry. She was +afraid that her feelings might be distressed. "The funeral will be day +after to-morrow. Don't come; your father will be all that must be here +of the family. I shall shut up the house and come straight to you. I +know that I am needed; but you mustn't say a word about pay--I can't +stand it, I have had too much affliction to be pestered about wages." + +Verry hugged her, and Temperance shed the honestest tears of the day +then, she was so gratified at Verry's fondness. Before Abram had been +buried a week, she was back again--a fixture, although she declared +that she had only come for a spell, as we might know by the size +of the bundle she had, showing us one, tied in a blue cotton +handkerchief. What should she stay from her own house for, when as +good a man as ever lived left it to her? We knew that she merely +comforted a tender conscience by praising the departed, for whom she +had small respect when living. We felt her brightening influence, but +Fanny sulked, feeling dethroned. + +Ben Pickersgill Somers and Veronica Morgeson were "published." +Contrary to the usual custom, Verry went to hear her own banns read +at the church. She must do all she could, she told me, to realize that +she was to be married; had I any thoughts about it, with which I might +aid her? She thought it strange that people should marry, and could +not decide whether it was the sublimest or the most inglorious act of +one's life. I begged her to think about what she should wear--the time +was passing. Father gave me so small a sum for the occasion, I had +little opportunity for the splendid; but I purchased what Veronica +wanted for a dress, and superintended the making of it--black lace +over lavender-colored silk. She said no more about it; but I observed +that she put in order all her possessions, as if she were going to +undertake a long and uncertain journey. Every box and drawer was +arranged. All her clothes were repaired, refolded, and laid away; +every article was refreshed by a turn or shake-up. She made her room a +miracle of cleanliness. What she called rubbish she destroyed--her old +papers, things with chipped edges, or those that were defaced by wear. +She went once to Milford in the time, and bought a purple Angola rug, +which she put before her arm-chair, and two small silver cups, with +covers; in one was a perfume which Ben liked, the other was empty. +Her favorite blank-books were laid on a shelf, and the table, with its +inkstand and portfolio, was pushed against the wall. The last ornament +which she added to her room was a beautifully woven mat of evergreens, +with which she concealed the picture of the avenue and the nameless +man. After it was done, she inhabited my room, appearing to feel at +home, and glad to have me with her. As the time drew near, she grew +silent, and did not play at all. Temperance watched her with anxiety. +"If ever she can have one of those nervous spells again she will have +one now," she said. "Don't let her dream. I am turning myself inside +out to keep up her appetite." + +"Do you ever feel worried about _me_, Tempy?" + +"Lord 'a marcy! you great, strong thing, why should I? May be you do +want a little praise. I never saw anybody get along as well as you do, +nowadays; you have altered very much; I never would have believed it." + +"What _was_ the trouble with me?" + +"_I_ always stuck up for you, gracious knows. Do you know what has +been said of you in Surrey?" + +"No." + +"Then I shan't tell you; if I were you, though, I shouldn't trouble +myself to be overpolite to the folks who have come and gone here, nigh +on to twenty years,--hang 'em!" + +A few days before the wedding Aunt Merce and Arthur came home. Arthur +was shy at first regarding the great change, but being agreeably +disappointed, grew lively. I perceived that Aunt Merce had aged since +mother's death; her manner was changed; the same objects no longer +possessed an interest. She looked at me penitentially. "I wish I +could say," she said, "what I used to say to you,--that you were +'possessed.' Now that there is no occasion for me to comprehend +people, I begin to. My education began wrong end foremost. I think +Mary's death has taught me something. Do you think of her? She was the +love of my life." + +"Women do keep stupid a long time; but I think they are capable of +growth, beyond the period when men cease to grow or change." + +"Oh, I don't know anything about men, you know." + +Temperance and I cleaned the house, opened every room, and made every +fire-place ready for a fire--a fire being the chief luxury which I +could command. Baking went on up to within a day of the wedding, under +Hepsey's supervision, who had been summoned as a helper; Fanny was +busy everywhere. + +"Mr. Morgeson," said Temperance, "the furniture is too darned shabby +for a wedding." + +"It is not mine, you must remember." + +"Plague take the creditors! they know as well as I that you turned +Surrey from a herring-weir into a whaling-port, and that the houses +they live in were built out of the wages you gave them. I am thankful +that most of them have water in their cellars." + + + + + + +CHAPTER XXXIX. + + +The day came. Alice Morgeson, and Helen with her baby, arrived the +night before; and Ben and Mr. Somers drove from Milford early in the +afternoon. Mr. Somers was affable and patronizing. When introduced to +Veronica, he betrayed astonishment. "She is not like you, Cassandra. +Are you in delicate health, my dear!" addressing her. + +"I have a peculiar constitution, I believe." He made excuses to her +for Mrs. Somers and his daughters to which she answered not a word. +He was in danger of being embarrassed, and I enticed him away from +her--not before she whispered gravely, "Why did _he_ come?" I went +over the house with him, he remarking on its situation, for sun and +shade, and protection from, or exposure to, the winds; and tasting +the water, pronounced it excellent. He thought I had a true idea of +hospitality; the fires everywhere proclaimed that. Temperance had the +air of a retainer; there was an atmosphere about our premises which +placed them at a distance from the present. Then Alice came to my +assistance and entertained him so well that I could leave him. + +We had invited a few friends and relations to witness the ceremony, at +eight o'clock. I had been consulted so often on various matters that +it was dark before I finished my tasks. The last was to arrange some +flowers I had ordered in Milford. I kept a bunch of them in reserve +for Verry's plate; for we were to have a supper, at father's request, +who thought it would be less tiresome to feed the guests than to talk +to them. Verry did not know this, though she had asked several times +why we were all so busy. + +It was near seven when I went upstairs to find her. Temperance had +sent Manuel and Fanny to the different rooms with tea, bread and +butter, and the message that it was all we were to have at present. +Ben had been extremely silent since his arrival, and disposed to +reading. I looked over his shoulder once, and saw that it was "Scott's +Life of Napoleon" he perused; and an hour after, being obliged to ask +him a question, saw him still at the same page. He was now dressing +probably. Helen and Alice were in their rooms. Mr. Somers was napping +on the parlor sofa; father was meditating at his old post in the +dining-room and smoking. It was a familiar picture; but there was +a rent in the canvas and a figure was missing--she who had been its +light! + +I found Verry sound asleep on the sofa in my room. + +A glass full of milk was on the floor beside her, and a plate with a +slice of bread. The lamp had been lighted by some one, and carefully +shaded from her face. She had been restless, I thought, for her hair +had fallen out of the comb and half covered her face, which was like +marble in its whiteness and repose. Her right arm was extended; I took +her hand, and her warm, humid fingers closed over mine. + +"Wake up, Verry; it is time to be married." + +She opened her eyes without stirring and fixed them upon me. "Do you +know any man who is like Ben? Or was it he whom I have just left in +the dark world of sleep?" + +"I know his brother, who is like him, but dark in complexion--and his +hair is black." + +"His hair is not black." + +I rushed out of the room, muttering some excuse, came back and +arranged her toilette; but she remained with her arm still extended, +and continued: + +"It was a strange place where we met; curious, dusty old trees grew +about it. He was cutting the back of one with a dagger, and the pieces +he carved out fell to the ground, as if they were elastic. He made me +pick them up, though I wished to listen to a man who was lying under +one of the trees, wrapped in a cloak, keeping time with _his_ dagger, +and singing a wild air. + +"'What do you see?' said the first. + +"'A letter on every piece,' I answered, and spelt Cassandra. 'Are you +Ben transformed?' I asked, for he had his features, his air, though +he was a swarthy, spare man, with black, curly hair, dashed with gray; +but he pricked my arm with his dagger, and said, 'Go on.' I picked up +the rest, and spelt 'Somers.' + +"'Cassandra Somers! now tell her,' he whispered, turning me gently +from him, with a hand precisely like Ben's." + +"No, it is handsomer," I muttered. + +"Before me was a space of sea. Before I crossed I wanted to hear that +wild music; but your voice broke my dream." + +She sat up and unbuttoned her sleeve. _As I live_, there was a red +mark on her arm above her elbow! + +I crushed my hands together and set my teeth, for I would have kissed +the mark and washed it with my tears. But Verry must not be agitated +now. She divined my feelings for the first time in her life. "I have +indeed been in a long sleep, as far _you_ are concerned; this means +something. My blindness is removed by a dream. Do you despise me?" Two +large, limpid tears dropped down her smooth cheeks without ruffling +the expression of her face. + +"I have prided myself upon my delicacy of feeling. You may have +remarked that I considered myself your superior?" + +"You are all wrong. I have no delicate feelings at all; they are as +coarse and fibrous as the husk of a cocoanut. Do for heaven's sake get +up and let me dress you." + +She burst into laughter. "Bring me some water, then." + +I brought her a bowl full, and stood near her with a towel; but +she splashed it over me, and dribbled her hands in it till I was in +despair. I took it away and wiped her face, which looked at me so +childly, so elfish, so willful, and so tenderly, that I took it +between my hands and kissed it. I pulled her up to a chair, for she +was growing willful every moment; but she must be humored. I combed +her hair, put on her shoes and stockings, and in short dressed her. +Father came up and begged me to hurry, as everybody had come. I sent +him for Ben, who came with a pale, happy face and shining eyes. She +looked at him seriously. "I like you best," she said. + +"It _is_ time you said that. Oh, Verry! how lovely you are!" + +"I feel so." + +"Come, come," urged father. + +"I do not want these gloves," she said, dropping them. + +Ben slipped on the third finger of her left hand a plain ring. She +kissed it, and he looked as if about to be translated. + +"Forever, Verry?" + +"Forever." + +"Wait a moment," I said, "I want a collar," giving a glance into the +glass. What a starved, thin, haggard face I saw, with its border of +pale hair! Whose were those wide, pitiful, robbed eyes? + +I hurried into the room in advance to show them their place in front +of a screen of plants. When they entered the company rose, and the +ceremony was performed. Veronica's dress was commented upon and not +approved of; being black, it was considered ominous. She looked like +a 'cloud with a silver lining.' I also made my comments. Temperance, +whose tearful eyes were fixed on her darling, was unconscious that she +had taken from her pocket, and was flourishing, a large red and yellow +silk handkerchief, while the cambric one she intended to use was +neatly folded in her left hand. She wore the famous plum-colored silk, +old style, which had come into a fortune in the way of wrinkles. A +large bow of black ribbon testified that she was in mourning. Hepsey +rubbed her thumb across her fingers with the vacant air of habit. I +glanced at Alice; she was looking intently at Fanny, whose eyes were +fixed upon father. A strange feeling of annoyance troubled me, but +the ceremony was over. Arthur congratulated himself on having a big +brother. Ben was so pale, and wore so exalted an expression, that he +agitated me almost beyond control. + +After the general shaking of hands, there came retorts for me. "When +shall we have occasion to congratulate you?" And, "You are almost at +the corner." And, "Your traveling from home seems only to have been an +advantage to Veronica." + +"I tell you, Cousin Sue," said Arthur, who overheard the last remark, +"that you don't know what they say of Cassandra in Rosville. She's the +biggest beauty they ever had, and had lots of beaus." + +A significant expression passed over Cousin Sue's face, which was +noticed by Alice Morgeson, who colored deeply. + +"Have you not forgotten?" I asked her. + +"It was of you I thought, not myself. I cannot tell you how utterly +the past has gone, or how insignificant the result has proved." + +"Alice," said father, "can you carve?" + +"Splendidly." + +"Come and sit at the foot of my table; Mr. Somers will take charge of +the smaller one." + +"With pleasure." + +"Slip out," whispered Fanny, "and look at the table; Temperance wants +you." + +"For the Lord's sake!" cried Temperance, "say whether things are +ship-shape." + +I was surprised at the taste she had displayed, and told her so. + +"For once I have tried to do my best," she said; "all for Verry. Call +'em in; the turkeys will be on in a whiffle." + +Tables were set in the hall, as well as in the dining-room. "They +must sit down," she continued, "so that they may eat their victuals +in peace." The supper was a relief to Veronica, and I blessed +father's forethought. Nobody was exactly merry, but there was a proper +cheerfulness. Temperance, Fanny, and Manuel were in attendance; the +latter spilled a good deal of coffee on the carpet in his enjoyment of +the scene; and when he saw Veronica take the flowers in her hand, he +exclaimed, "Santa Maria!" + +Everybody turned to look at him. + +"What are you doing here, Manuel?" asked Ben. + +"I wait on the señoritas," he answered. "Take plum-duff?" + +Everybody laughed. + +"Do you like widows?" whispered Fanny at the back of my chair. I made +a sign to her to attend to her business, but, as she suggested, looked +at Alice. At that moment she and father were drinking wine together. I +thought her handsomer than ever; she had expanded into a fair, smooth +middle age. + +The talking and clattering melted vaguely into my ears; I was a +lay-figure in the scene, and my soul wandered elsewhere. Mr. Somers +began to fidget gently, which father perceiving, rose from the table. +Soon after the guests departed. The remains of the feast vanished; the +fires burnt down, "winding sheets" wrapped the flame of the candles, +and suppressed gaping set in. + +The flowers, left to themselves, began to give out odors which +perfumed the rooms. I went about extinguishing the waning candles and +stifling the dying fires, finished my work, and was going upstairs +when I heard Veronica playing, and stopped to listen. It was not a +paean nor a lament that she played, but a fluctuating, vibratory air, +expressive of mutation. I hung over the stair-railing after she had +ceased, convinced that she had been playing for herself a farewell, +which freed me from my bond to her. Mr. Somers came along the hall +with a candle, and I waited to ask him if I could do anything for his +comfort. + +"My dear," he said with apprehension, "your sister is a genius, I +think." + +"In music--yes." + +"What a deplorable thing for a woman!" + +"A woman of genius is but a heavenly lunatic, or an anomaly sphered +between the sexes; do you agree?" + +He laughed, and pushed his spectacles up on his forehead. + +"My dear, I am astonished that Ben's choice fell as it did--" + +"Good-night, sir," I said so loudly that he almost dropped his candle, +and I retired to my room, taking a chair by the fire, with a sigh of +relief. After a while Ben and Veronica came up. + +"It is a cold night," I remarked. + +"I am in an enchanted palace," said Ben, "where there is no weather." + +"Cassy, will you take these pins out of my hair?" asked Verry, seating +herself in an easy-chair. "Ben, we will excuse you." + +"How good of you." He strode across the passage, went into her room, +and shut the door. + +"There, Verry, I have unbound your hair." + +"But I want to talk." + +I took her hand, and led her out. She stood before her door for a +moment silently, and then gave a little knock. No answer came. She +knocked again; the same silence as before. At last she was obliged to +open it herself, and enter without any bidding. + +"Which will rule?" I thought, as I slipped down the back stairs, and +listened at the kitchen door. I heard nothing. Finding an old cloak +in the entry, I wrapped myself in it and left the house. The moon was +out-riding black, scudding clouds, and the wind moaned round the sea, +which looked like a vast, wrinkled serpent in the moonlight. + +I walked to Gloster Point, and rested under the lee of the lighthouse, +but could not, when I made the attempt, see to read the inscription +inside my watch, by the light of the lantern. I must have fallen +asleep from fatigue, still holding it in my hand; for when I started +homeward, there was a pale reflection of light in the east, and the +sea was creeping quietly toward it with a murmuring morning song. + + + + + + +CHAPTER XL. + + +I looked across the bay from my window. "The snow is making 'Pawshee's +Land' white again, and I remain this year the same. No change, no +growth or development! The fulfillment of duty avails me nothing; and +self-discipline has passed the necessary point." + +I struck the sash with my closed hand, for I would now give my life a +new direction, and it was fettered. But I would be resolute, and break +the fetters; had I not endured a "mute case" long enough? Manuel, who +had been throwing snowballs against the house, stopped, and looked +toward the gate, and then ran toward it. A pair of tired, splashed +horses dashed down the drive. Manuel had the reins, and Ben was beside +him, reeling slightly on the seat of the wagon. I ran down to meet +him; he had been on a trip to Belem, where he never went except when +he wanted money. + +"I have some news for you," he said, putting his arm in mine, as he +jumped from the wagon. "Come in, and pull off my boots, Manuel." I +brought a chair for him, and waited till his boots were off. "Bring me +a glass of brandy." + +I stamped my foot. Verry entered with a book. "Ah, Verry, darling, +come here." + +"Why do you drink brandy? Have you over-driven the horses?" + +He drank the brandy. She nodded kindly to him, shut her book, and +slipped out, without approaching him. + +"That's _her_ way," he said, staring hard at me. "She always says in +the same unmoved voice, 'Why do you drink brandy?'" + +"And then--she will not come to kiss you." + +"The child is dead, for the first thing. (Cigar, Manuel.) Second, +I was possessed to come home by the way of Rosville. When did your +father go away, Cass?" + +I felt faint, and sat down. + +"Ah, we _all_ have a weakness; does yours overcome you?" + +"He went three days ago." + +"I saw him at Alice Morgeson's." + +"Arthur?" + +"He didn't go to see Arthur. He will marry Alice, and I must build my +house now." + +A devil ripped open my heart; its fragments flew all over me, blinding +and deafening me. + +"He will be home to-night." + +"Very well." + +"What shall you say, Cassy?" + +"Expose that little weakness to him." + +"When will you learn real life?" + +"Please ask him, when he comes, if he will see me in my room." + +I waited there. My cup was filled at last. My sin swam on the top. + +Father came in smoking, and taking a chair between his legs, sat +opposite me, and tapped softly the back of it with his fingers. "You +sent for me?" + +"I wanted to tell you that Charles Morgeson loved me from the first, +and you remember that I stayed by him to the last." + +"What more is there?" knocking over the chair, and seizing me; "tell +me." + +His eyes, that were bloodshot with anger, fastened on my mouth. "I +know, though, damn him! I know his cunning. Was Alice aware of this?" +And he pushed me backward. + +"All." + +An expression of pain and disappointment crossed his face; he ground +his teeth fiercely. + +"Don't marry her, father; you will kill me if you do!" + +"Must you alone have license?" + +He resumed his cigar, which he picked up from the floor. + +"It would seem that we have not known each other. What evasiveness +there is in our natures! Your mother was the soul of candor, yet I am +convinced I never knew her." + +"If you bring Alice here, I must go. We cannot live together." + +"I understand why she would not come here. She said that she must see +you first. She is in Milford." + +He knocked the ashes from his cigar, looked round the room, and then +at me, who wept bitterly. His face contracted with a spasm. + +"We were married two days ago." And turning from me quickly, he left +the room. + +I was never so near groveling on the face of the earth as then; let me +but fall, and I was sure that I never should rise. + +Ben knew it, but left it to me to tell Veronica. + +My grief broke all bounds, and we changed places; she tried to comfort +me, forgetting herself. + +"Let us go away to the world's end with Ben." But suddenly +recollecting that she liked Alice, she cried, "What shall I do?" + +What could she do, but offer an unreasoning opposition? Aunt Merce +cried herself sick, fond as she was of Alice, and Temperance declared +that if she hadn't married a widower herself, she would put in an oar. +Anyhow, she hadn't married a man with grown-up daughters. + +"What ails Fanny?" she asked me the next day. "She looks like a froze +pullet." + +"Where is she now?" + +"Making the beds." + +Temperance knew well what was the matter, but was too wise to +interfere. I found her, not bed-making, but in a spare room, staring +at the wall. She looked at me with dry eyes, bit her lips, and folded +her hands across her chest, after her old, defiant fashion. I did not +speak. + +"It is so," she said; "you need not tear me to pieces with your eyes, +I can confess it to _you_, for you are as I am. I love him!" And she +got up to shake her fist in my face. "My heart and brain and soul are +as good as hers, and _he_ knows it." + +I could not utter a word. + +"I know him as you never knew him, and have for years, since I was +that starved, poor-house brat your mother took. Don't trouble yourself +to make a speech about ingratitude. I know that your mother was good +and merciful, and that I should have worshiped her; but I never did. +Do you suppose I ever thought he was perfect, as the rest of you +thought? He is full of faults. I thought he was dependant on me. He +knows how I feel. Oh, what shall I do?" She threw up her arms, and +dropped on the floor in a hysteric fit. I locked the door, and picked +her up. "Come out of it, Fanny; I shall stay here till you do." + +By dint of shaking her, and opening the window, she began to come to. +After two or three fearful laughs and shudders, she opened her eyes. +She saw my compassion, and tears fell in torrents; I cried too. The +poor girl kissed my hands; a new soul came into her face. + +"Oh, Fanny, bear it as well as you can! You and I will be friends." + +"Forgive me! I was always bad; I am now. If that woman comes here, +I'll stab her with Manuel's knife." + +"Pooh! The knife is too rusty; it would give her the lockjaw. Besides, +she will never come. I know her. She is already more than half-way to +meet me; but I shall not perform my part of the journey, and she will +return." + +"You don't say so!" her ancient curiosity reviving. + +"Manuel keeps it sharp," she said presently, relapsing into jealousy. + +"You are a fool. Have you eaten anything to-day?" + +"I can't eat." + +"That's the matter with you--an empty stomach is the cause of most +distressing pangs." + +Ben urged me to go to Milford to meet Alice, and to ask her to come to +our house. But father said no more to me on the subject. Neither did +Veronica. In the afternoon they drove over to Milford, returning +at dusk. She refused to come with them, Ben said, and never would +probably. "You have thrown out your father terribly." + +"You notice it, do you?" + +"It is pretty evident." + +"What is your opinion?" + +He was about to condemn, when he recollected his own interference in +my life. "Ah! you have me. I think you are right, as far as the past +which relates to Alice is concerned. But if she chooses to forget, +why don't you? We do much that is contrary to our moral ideas, to make +people comfortable. Besides, if we do not lay our ghosts, our closets +will be overcrowded." + +"We may determine some things for ourselves, irrespective of +consequences." + +"Well, there is a mess of it." + +Fanny had watched for their return, counting on an access of misery, +for she believed that Alice would come also. It was what _she_ would +have done. Rage took possession of her when she saw father alone. +She planted herself before him, in my presence, in a contemptuous +attitude. He changed color, and then her mood changed. + +"What shall I do?" she asked piteously. + +I tried to get away before she made any further progress; but +he checked me, dreading the scene which he foreboded, without +comprehending. + +"Fanny," he said harshly, but with a confused face, "you mistake me." + +"Not I; it was your wife and children who mistook you." + +"What is it you would say?" + +"You have let me be your slave." + +"It is not true, I hope--what your behavior indicates?" + +I forgave him everything then. Fanny had made a mistake. He had only +behaved very selfishly toward her, without having any perception of +her--that was all! She was confounded, stared at him a moment, and +rushed out. That interview settled her; she was a different girl from +that day. + +"Father, you will go to Rosville, and be rich again. Can you buy this +house from Ben, for me? A very small income will suffice me and Fanny, +for you may be sure that I shall keep her. Temperance will live with +Verry; Ben will build, now that his share of his grandfather's estate +will come to him." + +"Very well," he said with a sigh, "I will bring it about." + +"It is useless for us to disguise the fact--I have lost you. You are +more dead to me than mother is." + +"You say so." + +It was the truth. I was the only one of the family who never went +to Rosville. Aunt Merce took up her abode with Alice, on account of +Arthur, whom she idolized. When father was married again, the Morgeson +family denounced him for it, and for leaving Surrey; but they accepted +his invitations to Rosville, and returned with glowing accounts of his +new house and his hospitality. + +By the next June, Ben's house was completed and they moved. Its site +was a knoll to the east of our house, which Veronica had chosen. Her +rooms were toward the orchard, and Ben's commanded a view of the sea. +He had not ventured to intrude, he told her, upon the Northern Lights, +and she must not bother him about his boat-house or his pier. They +were both delighted with the change, and kept house like children. +Temperance indulged their whims to the utmost, though she thought +Ben's new-fangled notions were silly; but they might keep him from +_something worse_. This something was a shadow which frightened me, +though I fought it off. I was weary of trouble, and shut my eyes as +long as possible. Whenever Ben went from home, and he often drove to +Milford, or to some of the towns near, he came back disordered with +drink. At the sight my hopes would sink. But they rose again, he was +so genial, so loving, so calmly contented afterward. As Verry never +spoke of it either to Temperance or me, I imagined she was not +troubled much. She could not feel as I felt, for she knew nothing of +the Bellevue Pickersgill family history. + +The day they moved was a happy one for me. I was at last left alone in +my own house, and I regained an absolute self-possession, and a sense +of occupation I had long been a stranger to. My ownership oppressed +me, almost, there was so much liberty to realize. + +I had an annoyance, soon after I came into sole possession. Father's +business was not yet settled, and he came to Surrey. He was paying his +debts in full, he told me, eking out what he lacked himself with the +property of Alice. He could not have used much of it, however, for the +vessels that were out at the time of the failure came home with good +cargoes. I fancied that he had more than one regret while settling his +affairs; that he missed the excitement and vicissitudes of a maritime +business. Nothing disagreeable arose between us, till I happened to +ask him what were the contents of a box which had arrived the day +before. + +"Something Alice sent you; shall we open it?" + +"I made no answer; but it was opened, and he took out a sea-green +and white velvet carpet, with a scarlet leaf on it, and a piece of +sea-green and white brocade for curtains. Had she sought the world +over, she could have found nothing to suit me so well. + +"She thought that Verry might have a fancy for some of the old +furniture, and that you would accept these in its place." + +"There's nothing here to match this splendor, and I cannot bear to +make a change. Verry must have them, for she took nothing from me." + +"Just as you please." + + + + + + +CHAPTER XLI. + + +"What a hot day!" said Fanny. "Every door and window is open. There is +not a breath of air." + +"It will be calm all day," I said. "We have two or three days like +this in a year. Give me another cup of coffee. Is it nine yet?" + +"Nearly. I ought to go to Hepsey's to-day. She wont be able to leave +her bed, the heat weakens her so." + +"Do go. How still it is! The shadows of the trees on the Neck reach +almost from shore to shore, and there's a fish-boat motionless." + +"The boat was there when I got up." + +"Everything is blue and yellow, or blue and white." + +"How your hair waves this morning! It is handsomer than ever." + +I went to the glass with my cup of coffee. "I look younger in the +summer." + +"What's the use of looking younger here?" she asked gruffly. "You +never see a man." + +"I see Ben coming with Verry, and Manuel behind." + +"Hillo!" cried Ben, pulling up his horses in front of the window. "We +are going on a picnic. Wont you go?" + +"How far?" + +"Fifteen or twenty miles." + +"Go on; I had rather imprison the splendid day here." + +"There's nothing for dinner," said Fanny. + +"The fish-boat may come in, in time." + +"Will three o'clock do for you? If so, I'll stay with Hepsey till +then." + +"Four will answer?" + +She cleared away my breakfast things and left me. I sat by the window +an hour, looking over the water, my thoughts drifting through a golden +haze, and then went up to my room and looked out again. If I turned my +eyes inside the walls, I was aware of the yearning, yawning empty void +within me, which I did not like. I sauntered into Verry's room, to see +if any clouds were coming up from the north. There were none. The sun +had transfixed the sky, and walked through its serene blue, "burning +without beams." Neither bird nor insect chirped; they were hid from +the radiant heat in tree and sod. I went back again to my own window. +The subtle beauty of these inorganic powers stirred me to mad regret +and frantic longing. I stretched out my arms to embrace the presence +which my senses evoked. + +It would be better to get a book, I concluded, and hunted up Barry +Cornwall's songs. With it I would go to the parlor, which was shaded. +I turned the leaves going down, and went in humming: + +"Mount on the dolphin Pleasure," and threw myself on the sofa +beside--_Desmond_! + +I dropped Barry Cornwall. + +"I have come," he said, in a voice deathly faint. + +"How old you have grown, Desmond!" + +"But I have taken such pains with my hands for you! You said they were +handsome; are they?" + +I kissed them. + +He was so spare, and brown, and his hair was quite gray! Even his +mustache looked silvery. + +"Two years to-day since I have worn the watch, Desmond." + +He took one exactly like it from his pocket, and showed me the +inscription inside. + +"And the ruby ring, on the guard?" + +"It is gone, you see; you must put one there now." + +"Forgive me." + +"Ah, Cassy! I couldn't come till now. You see what battles _I_ must +have had since I saw you. It took me so long to break my cursed +habits. I was afraid of myself, afraid to come; but I have tried +myself to the utmost, and hope I am worthy of you. Will you trust me?" + +"I am yours, as I always have been." + +"I have eaten an immense quantity of oil and garlic," he said with a +sigh. "But Spain is a good place to reform in. How is Ben?" + +I shook my head. + +"Don't tell me anything sad now. Poor fellow! God help him." + +Fanny was talking to some one on the walk; the fisherman probably, who +was bringing fish. + +"Do you want some dinner?" + +"I have had no breakfast." + +"I must see about something for you." + +"Not to leave me, Cassy." + +"Just for a few minutes." + +"No." + +"But I want to cry by myself, besides looking after the dinner." + +"Cry here then, with me. Come, Cassandra, my wife! My God, I shall die +with happiness." + +A mortal paleness overspread his face. + +"Desmond, Desmond, do you know how I love you? Feel my heart,--it has +throbbed with the weight of you since that night in Belem, when you +struck your head under the mantel." + +He was speechless. I murmured loving words to him, till he drew a deep +breath of life and strength. + +"These fish are small," said Fanny at the door. "Shall I take them!" + +"Certainly," said Desmond, "I'll pay for them." + +"It is Ben in black lead," said Fanny. + +We laughed. + +At dusk Ben and Veronica drove up. Desmond was seated in the window. +Ben fixed his eyes upon him, without stopping. + +We ran out, and called to him. + +"Old fellow," said Desmond, "willing or not, I have come." + +Ben's face was a study; so many emotions assailed him that my heart +was wrung with pity. + +"Give her to me," Desmond continued in a touching voice. "You are her +oldest friend, and have a right." + +"She was always yours," he answered. "To contend with her was folly." + +Veronica took hold of Ben's chin and raised his head to look into his +face. "What dreams have you had?" + +But he made no reply to her. We were all silent for a moment, then he +said, "Was I wrong, Des.?" + +"No, no." + +While, I was saying to myself, in behalf of Veronica, whose calm face +baffled me, "Enigma, Sphinx"; she turned to Desmond, holding out her +right arm, and said, "You are the man I saw in my dream." + +"And you are like the Virgin I made an offering to, only not quite so +bedizened." He took her extended hand and kissed it. + +Ben threw the reins with a sudden dash toward Manuel, who was standing +by, and jumped down. + +"Have tea with me," I asked, "and music, too. Verry, will you play for +Desmond?" + +She took his arm, and entered the house. + +"Friend," I said to Ben, who lingered by the door, "to contend with me +was not folly, unless it has kept you from contending with yourself. +Tell me--how is it with you?" + +"Cassandra, the jaws of hell are open. If you are satisfied with the +end, I must be." + + * * * * * + +After I was married, I went to Belem. But Mrs. Somers never forgave +me; and Mr. Somers liked Desmond no better than he had in former +times. Neither did Adelaide and Ann ever consider the marriage in any +light but that of a misalliance. Nor did they recognize any change +in him. It might be permanent, but it was no less an aberration which +they mistrusted. The ground plan of the Bellevue Pickersgill character +could not be altered. + +In a short time after we were married we went to Europe and stayed two +years. + +These last words I write in the summer time at our house in Surrey, +for Desmond likes to be here at this season, and I write in my old +chamber. Before its windows rolls the blue summer sea. Its beauty +wears a relentless aspect to me now; its eternal monotone expresses no +pity, no compassion. + +Veronica is lying on the floor watching her year-old baby. It smiles +continually, but never cries, never moves, except when it is moved. +Her face, thin and melancholy, is still calm and lovely. But her +eyes go no more in quest of something beyond. A wall of darkness lies +before her, which she will not penetrate. Aunt Merce sits near me with +her knitting. When I look at her I think how long it is since mother +went, and wonder whether death is not a welcome idea to those who +have died. Aunt Merce looks at Verry and the child with a sorrowful +countenance, exchanges a glance with me, shakes her head. If Verry +speaks to her, she answers cheerfully, and tries to conceal the grief +which she feels when she sees the mother and child together. + +Ben has been dead six months. Only Desmond and I were with him in his +last moments. When he sprang from his bed, staggered backwards, and +fell dead, we clung together with faint hearts, and mutely questioned +each other. + +"God is the Ruler," he said at last. "Otherwise let this mad world +crush us now." + + + +***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MORGESONS*** + + +******* This file should be named 12347-8.txt or 12347-8.zip ******* + + +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: +https://www.gutenberg.org/1/2/3/4/12347 + + +Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions +will be renamed. + +Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no +one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation +(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without +permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules, +set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to +copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to +protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. Project +Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you +charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission. 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