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+ "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-transitional.dtd">
+<html>
+<head>
+<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=UTF-8" />
+<title>The Project Gutenberg eBook of Bylow Hill, by George Washington Cable</title>
+<style type="text/css">
+/*<![CDATA[*/
+ <!--
+ body { margin-left: 5%; margin-right: 5%; }
+ p { text-indent: 1em;
+ margin-top: .75em;
+ font-size: 100%;
+ text-align: justify;
+ margin-bottom: .75em; }
+ h1,h2,h3,h4,h5,h6 { text-align: center; }
+ hr { width: 50%; }
+ hr.full { width: 100%; }
+ .foot { margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%; text-align: justify; text-indent: -3em; font-size: 85%; }
+ .poem { margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%; margin-bottom: 1em; text-align: left; }
+ .poem .stanza { margin: 1em 0em 1em 0em; }
+ .poem p { margin: 0; padding-left: 3em; text-indent: -3em; }
+ .poem p.i2 { margin-left: 1.5em; }
+ .quote { margin-left: 6%; margin-right: 6%; text-indent: 0em; font-size: 90%; }
+ .toc { margin-left: 15%; font-size: 80%; margin-bottom: 0em;}
+ .ad { text-align: center; font-size: 75%; line-height: .5em; text-indent: 0em;}
+ .figure {padding: 1em; margin: 0; text-align: center; font-size: 0.8em; margin: auto; width: 70%;}
+ .figure img {border: none;}
+
+ center { padding: 0.8em;}
+ a:link {color:blue;
+ text-decoration:none}
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+ text-decoration:none}
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+ text-decoration:none}
+ a:hover {color:red}
+ pre {font-size: 8pt;}
+/*]]>*/
+ // -->
+</style>
+</head>
+<body>
+<div>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 14575 ***</div>
+<h1>The Project Gutenberg eBook, Bylow Hill, by George Washington Cable,
+Illustrated by F. C. Yohn</h1>
+<hr class="full" />
+<div style="height: 1em;"><br /></div>
+
+<div style="width: 50%; margin: auto; border: solid 1px;">
+<p style="text-align: center;"> By GEORGE W. CABLE </p>
+
+<p class="ad"> Bylow Hill. Illustrated in color by F.C. Yohn. $1.25. </p>
+<p class="ad"> The Cavalier. Illustrated by H.C. Christy. $1.50. </p>
+<p class="ad"> John March, Southerner. $1.50. </p>
+<p class="ad"> Bonaventure. $1.50. </p>
+<p class="ad"> Dr. Sevier. $1.50. </p>
+<p class="ad"> The Grandissimes. $1.50. </p>
+<p class="ad"> Old Creole Days. $1.50. </p>
+<p class="ad"> Strong Hearts. $1.25. </p>
+<p class="ad"> Strange True Stories of Louisiana. Illustrated. $1.25. </p>
+<p class="ad"> The Creoles of Louisiana. Illustrated. $2.50. </p>
+<p class="ad"> The Silent South. With Portrait. $1.00. </p>
+<p class="ad"> The Negro Question. 75 cents. </p>
+</div>
+
+
+<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+<a name="image-0001"><!--IMG--></a>
+
+<div class="figure">
+<a href="images/illust-01.jpg">
+<img src="images/illust-01.jpg" width="70%"
+alt="'Father,' laughed the daughter, 'isn't this rather youngish?'" /></a><br />
+<b>"Father," laughed the daughter, "isn't this rather youngish?"</b>
+</div>
+
+<hr />
+
+<a name="h2H_4_0001" id="h2H_4_0001"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+<h1>
+ <i>BYLOW HILL</i>
+</h1>
+<center>
+ <i>By</i>
+</center>
+<h2>
+<i>GEORGE W. CABLE</i>
+</h2>
+<h4>
+<i>WITH ILLUSTRATIONS</i>
+</h4>
+<h3>
+<i>By F.C. YOHN</i>
+</h3>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<h6>Charles Scribner's Sons<br />
+New York</h6>
+
+<h4>MCMII</h4>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p><p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<a name="h2H_4_0002" id="h2H_4_0002"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+<h2>
+ <i>CONTENTS</i>
+</h2>
+
+<p class="toc"><a href="#h2H_4_0003">
+<i>ILLUSTRATIONS</i>
+</a></p>
+<p class="toc"><a href="#h2H_4_0005">
+I. RUTH AND GODFREY
+</a></p>
+<p class="toc"><a href="#h2H_4_0006">
+II. ISABEL
+</a></p>
+<p class="toc"><a href="#h2H_4_0007">
+III. ARTHUR AND LEONARD
+</a></p>
+<p class="toc"><a href="#h2H_4_0008">
+IV. AND BRING DOWN THE REMAINDER
+</a></p>
+<p class="toc"><a href="#h2H_4_0009">
+V. SKY AND POOL
+</a></p>
+<p class="toc"><a href="#h2H_4_0010">
+VI. IN THE PUBLIC EYE
+</a></p>
+<p class="toc"><a href="#h2H_4_0011">
+VII. THE HOUR STRIKES
+</a></p>
+<p class="toc"><a href="#h2H_4_0012">
+VIII. GIVE YOU FIVE MINUTES
+</a></p>
+<p class="toc"><a href="#h2H_4_0013">
+IX. THE YOUNG YEAR SMILES
+</a></p>
+<p class="toc"><a href="#h2H_4_0014">
+X. THE STORM REGATHERS
+</a></p>
+<p class="toc"><a href="#h2H_4_0015">
+XI. HAS IT COME TO THIS?
+</a></p>
+<p class="toc"><a href="#h2H_4_0016">
+XII. THE LANTERN QUENCHED
+</a></p>
+<p class="toc"><a href="#h2H_4_0017">
+XIII. BABY
+</a></p>
+<p class="toc"><a href="#h2H_4_0018">
+XIV. THE TALKATIVE LEONARD
+</a></p>
+<p class="toc"><a href="#h2H_4_0019">
+XV. THE THIN ICE BREAKS
+</a></p>
+<p class="toc"><a href="#h2H_4_0020">
+XVI. MUST GIVE YOU UP
+</a></p>
+<p class="toc"><a href="#h2H_4_0021">
+XVII. SLEEP, OF A SORT
+</a></p>
+<p class="toc"><a href="#h2H_4_0022">
+XVIII. MISSING
+</a></p>
+<p class="toc"><a href="#h2H_4_0023">
+XIX. A DOUBLE STILL HUNT
+</a></p>
+<p class="toc"><a href="#h2H_4_0024">
+XX. A DOUBLE RETURN
+</a></p>
+<p class="toc"><a href="#h2H_4_0025">
+XXI. EVENING RED
+</a></p>
+<p class="toc"><a href="#h2H_4_0026">
+XXII. MORNING GRAY
+</a></p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<hr />
+
+
+<a name="h2H_4_0003" id="h2H_4_0003"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+<h2>
+ <i>ILLUSTRATIONS</i>
+</h2>
+
+<p class="toc"><a href="#image-0001">"Father," laughed the daughter, "isn't this rather youngish?"</a> <i>Frontispiece</i></p>
+<p class="toc"><a href="#image-0002">Indeed it was clear that to go away would be unfair.</a></p>
+<p class="toc"><a href="#image-0003">"Arthur Winslow, I give you five minutes."</a></p>
+<p class="toc"><a href="#image-0004">"But to know every day and hour that I'm watched."</a></p>
+<p class="toc"><a href="#image-0005">"I am waiting busily for her slayer."</a></p>
+<p class="toc"><a href="#image-0006">"Arthur! Arthur! can't you speak?"</a></p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p><p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+<h1>
+ BYLOW HILL
+</h1>
+
+<a name="h2H_4_0005" id="h2H_4_0005"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+<h2>
+ I
+</h2>
+<h3>
+ RUTH AND GODFREY
+</h3>
+<p>
+The old street, keeping its New England Sabbath afternoon so decently
+under its majestic elms, was as goodly an example of its sort as the
+late seventies of the century just gone could show. It lay along a
+north-and-south ridge, between a number of aged and unsmiling cottages,
+fronting on cinder sidewalks, and alternating irregularly with about as
+many larger homesteads that sat back in their well-shaded gardens with
+kindlier dignity and not so grim a self-assertion. Behind, on the west,
+these gardens dropped swiftly out of sight to a hidden brook, from the
+farther shore of which rose the great wooded hill whose shelter from the
+bitter northwest had invited the old Puritan founders to choose the spot
+for their farming village of one street, with a Byington and a Winslow
+for their first town officers. In front, eastward, the land declined
+gently for a half mile or so, covered, by modern prosperity, with a
+small, stanch town, and bordered by a pretty river winding among meadows
+of hay and grain. At the northern end, instead of this gentle decline,
+was a precipitous cliff side, close to whose brow a wooden bench, that
+ran half-way round a vast sidewalk tree, commanded a view of the valley
+embracing nearly three-quarters of the compass.
+</p>
+<p>
+In civilian's dress, and with only his sea-bronzed face and the polished
+air of a pivot gun to tell that he was of the navy, Lieutenant Godfrey
+Winslow was slowly crossing the rural way with Ruth Byington at his
+side. He had the look of, say, twenty-eight, and she was some four years
+his junior. From her father's front gate they were passing toward the
+large grove garden of the young man's own home, on the side next the
+hill and the sunset. On the front porch, where the two had just left
+him, sat the war-crippled father of the girl, taking pride in the
+placidity of the face she once or twice turned to him in profile,
+and in the buoyancy of her movements and pose.
+</p>
+<p>
+His fond, unspoken thought went after her, that she was hiding some care
+again,&mdash;her old, sweet trick, and her mother's before her.
+</p>
+<p>
+He looked on to Godfrey. "There's endurance," he thought again. "You
+ought to have taken him long ago, my good girl, if you want him at all."
+And here his reflections faded into the unworded belief that she would
+have done so but for his, her own father's, being in the way.
+</p>
+<p>
+The pair stopped and turned half about to enjoy the green-arched vista
+of the street, and Godfrey said, in a tone that left his companion no
+room to overlook its personal intent, "How often, in my long absences,
+I see this spot!"
+</p>
+<p>
+"You wouldn't dare confess you didn't," was her blithe reply.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Oh yes, I should. I've tried not to see it, many a time."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Why, Godfrey Winslow!" she laughed. "That was very wrong!"
+</p>
+<p>
+"It was very useless," said the wanderer, "for there was always the same
+one girl in the midst of the picture; and that's the sort a man can
+never shut out, you know. I don't try to shut it out any more, Ruth."
+</p>
+<p>
+The girl spoke more softly. "I wish I could know where Leonard is," she
+mused aloud.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Did you hear me, Ruth? I say I don't try any more, now."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Well, that's right! I wonder where that brother of mine is?"
+</p>
+<p>
+The baffled lover had to call up his patience. "Well, that's right,
+too," he laughed; "and I wonder where that brother of mine is? I wonder
+if they're together?"
+</p>
+<p>
+They moved on, but at the stately entrance of the Winslow garden they
+paused again. The girl gave her companion a look of distress, and the
+young man's brow darkened. "Say it," he said. "I see what it is."
+</p>
+<p>
+"You speak of Arthur"&mdash;she began.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Well?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"What did you make out of his sermon this morning?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Why, Ruth, I&mdash;What did you make out of it?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"I made out that the poor boy is very, very unhappy."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Did you? Well, he is; and in a certain way I'm to blame for it."
+</p>
+<p>
+The girl's smile was tender. "Was there ever anything the matter with
+Arthur, and you didn't think you were in some way to blame for it?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Oh, now, don't confuse me with Leonard. Anyhow, I'm to blame this time!
+Has Isabel told you anything, Ruth?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Yes, Isabel has told me!"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Told you they are engaged?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Told me they are engaged!"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Well," said the young man, "Arthur told me last night; and I took an
+elder brother's liberty to tell him he had played Leonard a vile trick."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Godfrey!"
+</p>
+<p>
+"That would make a much happier nature than Arthur's unhappy, wouldn't
+it?"
+</p>
+<p>
+Ruth was too much pained to reply, but she turned and called cheerily,
+"Father, do you know where Leonard is?"
+</p>
+<p>
+The father gathered his voice and answered huskily, laying one hand upon
+his chest, and with the other gesturing up by the Winslow elm to the
+grove behind it.
+</p>
+<p>
+She nodded. "Yes!... With Arthur, you say?... Yes!... Thank you!...
+Yes!" She passed with Godfrey through the wide gate.
+</p>
+<p>
+"That's like Leonard," said the lover. "He'll tell Arthur he hasn't done
+a thing he hadn't a perfect right to do."
+</p>
+<p>
+"And Arthur has not, Godfrey. He has only been less chivalrous than we
+should have liked him to be. If he had been first in the field, and
+Leonard had come in and carried her off, you would have counted it a
+perfect mercy all round."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Ho-oh! it would have been! Leonard would have made her happy. Arthur
+never can, and she can never make him so. But what he has done is not
+all: look how he did it! Leonard was his beloved and best friend"&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+"Except his brother Godfrey"&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+"Except no one, Ruth, unless it's you. I'm neither persuasive nor kind,
+nor often with him. Proud of him I was, and never prouder than when I
+knew him to be furiously in love with her, while yet, for pure, sweet
+friendship's sake, he kept standing off, standing off."
+</p>
+<p>
+"I wish you might have seen it, Godfrey. It was so beautiful&mdash;and so
+pitiful!"
+</p>
+<p>
+"It was manly,&mdash;gentlemanly; and that was enough. Then all at once he's
+taken aback! All control of himself gone, all self-suppression, all
+conscience"&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+"The conscience has returned," said the girl.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Oh, not to guide him! Only to goad him! Fifty consciences can't
+honorably undo the mischief now!"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Did I not write you that there was already, then, a coolness between
+her and Leonard?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Yes; but the whole bigness and littleness of Arthur's small, bad deed
+lies in the fact that, though he knew that coolness was but a momentary
+tiff, with Isabel in the wrong, he took advantage of it to push his suit
+in between and spoil as sweet a match as two hearts were ever making."
+</p>
+<p>
+"It was more than a tiff, Godfrey; it"&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+"Not a bit more! not&mdash;a&mdash;bit!"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Yes!&mdash;yes&mdash;it was a problem! a problem how to harmonize two fine
+natures keyed utterly unlike. Leonard saw that. That is why he moved so
+slowly."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Hmm!" The lover stared away grimly. "I know something about slowness.
+I suppose it's a virtue&mdash;sometimes."
+</p>
+<p>
+"I think so," said the girl, caressing a flower.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Ah, well!" responded the other. "She has chosen a nature now that&mdash;Oh
+me!... Ruth, I shall speak to her mother! I am the only one who can.
+I'll see Mrs. Morris some time this evening, and lay the whole thing out
+to her as we four see it who have known one another almost from the one
+cradle."
+</p>
+<p>
+Ruth smiled sadly. "You will fail. I think the matter will have to go on
+as it is going. And if it does, you must remember, Godfrey, we do not
+really know but they may work out the happiest union. At any rate, we
+must help them to try."
+</p>
+<p>
+"If they insist on trying, yes; and that will be the best for Leonard."
+</p>
+<p>
+"The very best. One thing we do know, Godfrey: Arthur will always be a
+passionate lover, and dear Isabel is as honest and loyal as the day is
+long."
+</p>
+<p>
+"The day is not long; this one is not&mdash;to me. It's most lamentably
+short, and to-morrow I must be gone again. I have something to say to
+you, Ruth, that"&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+The maiden gave him a look of sweet protest, which suddenly grew remote
+as she murmured, "Isabel and her mother are coming out of their front
+door."
+</p>
+<a name="h2H_4_0006" id="h2H_4_0006"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+<h2>
+ II
+</h2>
+<h3>
+ ISABEL
+</h3>
+<p>
+There were two dwellings in the Winslow garden,&mdash;one as far across at
+the right of the Byington house as the other was at the left. The one on
+the right may have contained six or eight bedchambers; the other had but
+three. The larger stood withdrawn from the public way, a well-preserved
+and very attractive example of colonial architecture, refined to the
+point of delicacy in the grace and harmony of its details. Here dwelt
+Arthur Winslow, barely six weeks a clergyman, alone but for two or three
+domestics and the rare visits of Godfrey, his only living relation. The
+other and older house, in the garden's southern front corner, was a gray
+gambrel-roofed cottage, with its threshold at the edge of the sidewalk;
+and it was from this cottage that Isabel and her mother stepped,
+gratefully answering the affectionate wave of Ruth's hand,&mdash;Mrs. Morris
+with the dignity of her forty-odd years, and Isabel with a sudden eager
+fondness. The next moment the two couples were hidden from each other by
+the umbrageous garden and by the tall white fence, in which was repeated
+the architectural grace of the larger house.
+</p>
+<p>
+Mother and daughter conversed quietly, but very busily, as they came
+along this enclosure; but presently they dropped their subject to bow
+cordially across to the father of Ruth, and when he endeavored to say
+something to them Mrs. Morris moved toward him. Isabel took a step or
+two more in the direction of the Winslow elm and its inviting bench, but
+then she also turned. She was of a moderate feminine stature and perfect
+outline, her step elastic, her mien self-contained, and her face so
+young that a certain mature tone in her mellow voice was often the cause
+of Ruth's fond laughter. As winsome, too, she was, as she was beautiful,
+and "as pink as a rose," said the old-time soldier to himself, as he
+came down his short front walk, throwing half his glances forward to
+her, quite unaware that he was equally the object of her admiration.
+</p>
+<p>
+Though white-haired and somewhat bent he was still slender and handsome,
+a most worthy figure against the background of the red brick house,
+whose weathered walls contrasted happily with the blossoming shrubs
+about their base, and with the green of lawn and trees.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Good-afternoon, Isabel. I was saying to your mother, I hope such days
+as this are some offset for the Southern weather and scenery you have
+had to give up."
+</p>
+<p>
+"You shouldn't tempt our Southern boastfulness, General," Isabel
+replied, with an air of meek chiding. She had a pretty way of
+skirmishing with men which always brought an apologetic laugh from her
+mother, but which the General had discovered she never used in a company
+of less than three.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Oh! ho, ho!" laughed Mrs. Morris, who was just short, plump, and pretty
+enough to laugh to advantage. "Why, General,"&mdash;she sobered abruptly, and
+she was just pretty and plump and short enough to do this well,
+also,&mdash;"my recovered health is offset enough for me."
+</p>
+<p>
+"For <i>us</i>, my dear," said the daughter. "My mother's restored
+health is offset enough for us, General. Indeed, for me"&mdash;addressing the
+distant view&mdash;"there is no call for off-set; any landscape or climate is
+perfect that has such friends in it as&mdash;as this one has."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Oh! ho, ho!" laughed the mother again. Nobody ever told the Morrises
+they had a delicious Southern accent, and their words are given here
+exactly as they thought they spoke them.
+</p>
+<p>
+"My dear," persisted Isabel, rebukingly, "I mean such friends as Ruth
+Byington."
+</p>
+<p>
+Mrs. Morris let go her little Southern laugh once more. "Don't you
+believe her, General&mdash;don't you believe her. She means you every bit as
+much as she means Ruth. She means everybody on Bylow Hill."
+</p>
+<p>
+"I'm at the mercy of my interpreter," said Isabel. "But I thought"&mdash;her
+eyes went out upon the skyline again&mdash;"I thought that men&mdash;that men&mdash;I
+thought that men&mdash;My dear, you've made me forget what I thought!"
+</p>
+<p>
+They laughed, all three. Isabel, with a playful sigh, clutched her
+mother's hand, and the pair drew off and moved away to the bench.
+</p>
+<p>
+"He puts you in good spirits," said the mother, breaking a silence.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Good spirits! He puts me in pure heartache. Oh, why did you tell him?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Tell him? My child! I have not told him!"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Oh, mother, do you not see you've told him point-blank that it's all
+settled?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"No, dearie, no! I only see that your distress is making you fanciful.
+But why should he not be told, Isabel?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"I'm not ready! Oh, I'm not ready! It may suit him well enough to hear
+it, for he knows Leonard is too fine and great for me; but I'm not ready
+to tell him."
+</p>
+<p>
+"My darling, he knows you are good enough for any Leonard he can bring."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Oh yes, on the plane of the Ten Commandments." The girl smiled
+unhappily.
+</p>
+<p>
+"But precious, he loves Arthur deeply, and thinks the world of him."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Mother, what is it like, to love deeply?"
+</p>
+<p>
+The query was ignored. "And the old gentleman is fond of you,
+sweetheart."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Oh, he likes me. What a tame old invalid that word 'fond' has grown to
+be! You can be fond of two or three persons at once, nowadays. My soul!
+I wish I were fond of Arthur Winslow in the old mad way the word meant
+when it was young!"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Pshaw, dearie! you'll be fond enough of him, once you're his. He's
+brilliant, upright, loving and lovable. You see, and say, he is so, and
+I know your fondness will grow with every day and every experience,
+happy or bitter."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Yes.... Yes, I could not endure not to give my love bountifully
+wherever it rightly belongs. But oh, I wish I had it ready to-day,&mdash;a
+fondness to match his!"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Now, Isabel! Why, pet, thousands of happy and loving wives will tell
+you"&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+"Oh, I know what they will tell me."
+</p>
+<p>
+"They'll not tell you they get along without love, dearie. But ten years
+from now, my daughter, not how fond you were when you first joined
+hands, but what you have"&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+"Oh yes,&mdash;been to each other, done for each other, borne from each
+other, will be the true measure. Oh, of course it will; but there's so
+much in the right start!"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Beyond doubt! Understand me, precious: if you have the least ground to
+fear"&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+"Mother! mother! No! no! What! afraid I may love some one else? Never!
+never! Oh, without boasting, and knowing what I am as well as Leonard
+Byington knows"&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+"Oh, pshaw! Leonard Byington!"
+</p>
+<p>
+"He knows me, mother,&mdash;as if he lived at a higher window that looked
+down into my back yard." The speaker smiled.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Then he knows," exclaimed the mother, "you're true gold!"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Yes, but a light coin."
+</p>
+<p>
+"My pet! He knows you're the tenderest, gentlest dear he ever saw."
+</p>
+<p>
+"But neither brave nor strong."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Oh, you not brave! you not strong! You're the lovingest, truest"&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+"Only inclined to be a bit too hungry after sympathy, dear."
+</p>
+<p>
+"You never bid for it, love, never."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Well, no matter; I shall never love any one but myself too much. I
+think I shall some day love Arthur as I wish I could love him now. I
+never did really love Leonard,&mdash;I couldn't; I haven't the stature. That
+was my trouble, dearie: I hadn't the stature. I never shall have; and if
+it's he you are thinking of, you are wasting your dear, sweet care. But
+he's going to be our best and nearest friend, mother,&mdash;he and Ruth and
+Godfrey, together and alike. We've so agreed, Arthur and I. Oh, I'm not
+going to come in here and turn the sweet old nickname of this happy spot
+into a sneer."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Then why are you not happy, precious?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Happy? Why, my dear, I am happy!"
+</p>
+<p>
+"With touches of heartache?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Oh, with big wrenches of heartache! Why not? Were you never so?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"I'm so right now, dearie. For after all is said"&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+"And thought that can't be said"&mdash;murmured Isabel.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Yes," replied the mother, "after all is said and thought, I should
+rather give you to Arthur than to any other man I know. Leonard will
+have a shining career, but it will be in politics."
+</p>
+<p>
+"I tried to dissuade him," broke in the daughter, "till I was ashamed."
+</p>
+<p>
+"In politics," continued Mrs. Morris,&mdash;"and Northern politics, Isabel.
+Arthur's will be in the church!"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Yes," said the other, but her whole attention was within the fence at
+their side, where a rough stile, made in boyhood days by the two
+brothers and Leonard, led over into the garden. She sprang up. "Let's
+go, mother; he's coming!"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Who, my child?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Both! Come, dear, come quickly! Oh, I don't know why we ever came out
+at all!"
+</p>
+<p>
+"My dear, it was you proposed it, lest some one should come in!"
+</p>
+<p>
+The daughter had moved some steps down the road, but now turned again;
+for Ruth and Godfrey, returning, came out through the garden's high
+gateway. However, they were giving all their smiles to the greetings
+which the General sent them from his piazza.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Come over, mother!" called Isabel, in a stifled voice. "Cross to the
+hill path!" But before they could reach it Arthur and Leonard came into
+full view on the stile. Isabel motioned her mother despairingly toward
+them, wheeled once more, and with a gay call for Ruth's notice hurried
+to meet her in the middle of the way.
+</p>
+<a name="h2H_4_0007" id="h2H_4_0007"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+<h2>
+ III
+</h2>
+<h3>
+ ARTHUR AND LEONARD
+</h3>
+<p>
+Godfrey passed over to the General, who had walked down to his gate on
+his way to the great elm. Out from behind the elm came the other two
+men, Arthur leading and talking briskly:&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+"The sooner the better, Leonard. Now while my work is new and taking
+shape&mdash;Ah! here's Mrs. Morris."
+</p>
+<p>
+Both men were handsome. Arthur, not much older than Ruth, was of medium
+height, slender, restless, dark, and eager of glance and speech. Leonard
+was nearer the age of Godfrey; fairer than Arthur, of a quieter eye,
+tall, broad-shouldered, powerful, lithe, and almost tamely placid. Mrs.
+Morris met them with animation.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Have our churchwarden and our rector been having another of their long
+talks?"
+</p>
+<p>
+The joint reply was cut short by Godfrey's imperative hail: "Leonard!"
+</p>
+<p>
+As Byington turned that way, Arthur said quietly to Mrs. Morris, "He's
+promised to retain charge"&mdash;and nodded toward Isabel. The nod meant
+Isabel's financial investments.
+</p>
+<p>
+"And mine?" murmured the well-pleased lady.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Both."
+</p>
+<p>
+The two gave heed again to Godfrey, who was loudly asking Leonard, "Why
+didn't you tell us the news?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Oh," drawled Leonard smilingly, "I knew father would."
+</p>
+<p>
+"I haven't talked with Godfrey since he came," said Mrs. Morris; and as
+she left Arthur she asked his brother: "What news? Has the governor
+truly made him"&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+"District attorney, yes," said Godfrey. "Ruth, I think you might have
+told me."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Godfrey, I think you might have asked me," laughed the girl, drawing
+Isabel toward Arthur and Leonard, in order to leave Mrs. Morris to
+Godfrey.
+</p>
+<p>
+Arthur moved to meet them, but Ruth engaged him with a question, and
+Isabel turned to Leonard, offering her felicitations with a sweetness
+that gave Arthur tearing pangs to overhear.
+</p>
+<p>
+"But when people speak to us of your high office," he could hear her
+saying, "we will speak to them of your high fitness for it. And still,
+Leonard, you must let us offer you our congratulations, for it is a high
+office."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Thank you," replied Leonard: "let me save the congratulations for the
+day I lay the office down. Do you, then, really think it high and
+honorable?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Ah," she rejoined, in a tone of reproach and defense that tortured
+Arthur, "you know I honor the pursuit of the law."
+</p>
+<p>
+Leonard showed a glimmer of drollery. "Pursuit of the law, yes," he
+said; "but the pursuit of the lawbreaker"&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+"Even that," replied Isabel, "has its frowning honors."
+</p>
+<p>
+"But I'm much afraid it seems to you," he said, "a sort of blindman's
+buff played with a club. It often looks so to the pursued, they say."
+</p>
+<p>
+Isabel gave her chin a little lift, and raised her tone for those behind
+her: "We shall try not to be among the pursued, Ruth and Arthur and I."
+</p>
+<p>
+The young lawyer's smile broadened. "My mind is relieved," he said.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Relieved!" exclaimed Isabel, with a rosy toss. "Ruth, dear, here is
+your brother in distress lest Arthur or we should embarrass him in his
+new office by breaking the laws! Mr. Byington, you should not confess
+such anxieties, even if you are justified in them!"
+</p>
+<p>
+His response came with meditative slowness and with playful eyes:
+"Whenever I am justified in having such anxieties, they shall go
+unconfessed."
+</p>
+<p>
+"That relieves <i>my</i> fears," laughed Isabel, and caught a quick hint
+of trouble on Arthur's brow, though he too managed to laugh. Whereupon,
+half sighing, half singing, she twined an arm in one of Ruth's, swung
+round her, waved to the General as he took a seat on the elm-tree bench,
+and so, passing to Arthur, changed partners.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Let us go in," whispered Leonard to his sister, with a sudden pained
+look, and instantly resumed his genial air.
+</p>
+<p>
+But the uneasy Arthur saw his moving lips and both changes of
+countenance. He saw also the look which Ruth threw toward Mrs. Morris,
+where that lady and Godfrey moved slowly in conversation,&mdash;he ever so
+sedate, she ever so sprightly. And he saw Isabel glance as anxiously in
+the same direction. But then her eyes came to his, and under her voice,
+though with a brow all sunshine, she said, "Don't look so perplexed."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Perplexed!" he gasped. "Isabel, you're giving me anguish!"
+</p>
+<p>
+She gleamed an injured amazement, but promptly threw it off, and when
+she turned to see if Leonard or Ruth had observed it they were moving to
+meet Godfrey. Mrs. Morris was joining the General under the elm.
+</p>
+<p>
+"How have I given you pain, dear heart?" asked Isabel, as she and Arthur
+took two or three slow steps apart from the rest, so turning her face
+that they should see its tender kindness.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Ah! don't ask me, my beloved!" he warily exclaimed. "It is all gone!
+Oh, the heavenly wonder to hear you, Isabel Morris, you&mdash;give me loving
+names! You might have answered me so differently; but your voice, your
+eyes, work miracles of healing, and I am whole again."
+</p>
+<p>
+Isabel gave again the laugh whose blithe, final sigh was always its most
+winning note. Then, with tremendous gravity, she said, "You are very
+indiscreet, dear, to let me know my power."
+</p>
+<p>
+His face clouded an instant, as if the thought startled him with its
+truth and value. But when she added, with yet deeper seriousness of
+brow, "That's no way to tame a shrew, my love," he laughed aloud, and
+peace came again with Isabel's smile.
+</p>
+<p>
+Then&mdash;because a woman must always insist on seeing the wrong side of the
+goods&mdash;she murmured, "Tell me, Arthur, what disturbed you."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Words, Isabel, mere words of yours, which I see now were meant in
+purest play. You told Leonard"&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+"Leonard! What did I tell Leonard, dear?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"You told him not to confess certain anxieties, even if they were
+justified."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Oh, Arthur!"
+</p>
+<p>
+"I see my folly, dearest. But Isabel, he ought not to have answered that
+the more they were justified, the more they should go unconfessed!"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Oh, Arthur! the merest, idlest prattle! What meaning could you"&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+"None, Isabel, none! Only, my good angel, I so ill deserve you that with
+every breath I draw I have a desperate fright of losing you, and a
+hideous resentment against whoever could so much as think to rob me of
+you."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Why, dear heart, don't you know that couldn't be done?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Oh, I know it, you being what you are, even though I am only what I am.
+But, Isabel, you know he loves you. No human soul is strong enough to
+blow out the flame of the love you kindle, Isabel Morris, as one would
+blow out his bedroom candle and go to sleep at the stroke of a clock."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Arthur, I believe Leonard&mdash;and I do not say it in his praise&mdash;I believe
+Leonard can do that!"
+</p>
+<p>
+"No, not so, not so! Leonard is strong, but the fire of a strong man's
+love, however smothered, burns on without mercy, my beautiful, and you
+cannot go in and out of that burning house as though it were not on
+fire."
+</p>
+<p>
+"And shall Leonard, then, not be our nearest and best friend, as we had
+planned?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"He shall, Isabel. Ah yes; not one smallest part of your sweet
+friendship will I take from him, nor of his from you. For, Isabel,
+though he were as weak as I"&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+"As weak as <i>I</i>, you should say, dear. You are not weak, Arthur,
+are you?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Weak as the bending grass, Isabel, under this load of love. But though
+he, I say, were as weak as I, you&mdash;ah, you!&mdash;are as wise as you are
+bewitching; and if I should speak to you from my most craven fear, I
+could find but one word of warning."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Oh, you dear, blind flatterer! And what word would that be?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"That you are most bewitching when you are wisest."
+</p>
+<p>
+As Isabel softly laughed she cast a dreaming glance behind, and noticed
+that she and Arthur were quite hidden in the flowery undergrowth of the
+hill path. They kissed.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Beloved," said her worshipper, with a clouded smile, as he let her down
+from her tiptoes, "do you know you took that as though you were thinking
+of something else?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Did I? Oh, I didn't mean to."
+</p>
+<p>
+Such a reply only darkened the cloud. "Of whom were you thinking,
+Isabel?"
+</p>
+<p>
+She blushed. "I was think&mdash;thinking&mdash;why, I was&mdash;I&mdash;I was
+think&mdash;thinking"&mdash;she went redder and redder as he went pale&mdash;"thinking
+of everybody on Bylow Hill. Why&mdash;why, dear heart, don't you see? When
+you"&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+"Oh, enough, enough, my angel! I take the question back!"
+</p>
+<p>
+"You <i>made</i> me think of everybody, Arthur, you were so sudden. Just
+suppose I had done so to you!" They both thought that worthy of a good
+laugh. "Next time, dear," added Isabel,&mdash;"no, no, no, but&mdash;next time,
+you mustn't be so sudden. There's no need, you know,"&mdash;she blushed
+again,&mdash;"and I promise you I'll give my whole mind to it! Get me some of
+that hawthorn bloom yonder, and let's go back."
+</p>
+<a name="h2H_4_0008" id="h2H_4_0008"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+<h2>
+ IV
+</h2>
+<h3>
+ AND BRING DOWN THE REMAINDER
+</h3>
+<p>
+This "hill path" was a narrowed continuance of the street, that led
+gradually down along the hill's steep face to reach the town and the
+river meadows. Godfrey, halting before Ruth and her brother, watched the
+blooming hawthorn, over there, bend and shake and straighten and bend
+again, above Arthur's unseen hands. Then, glancing furtively back toward
+Mrs. Morris, he muttered to Ruth, while Leonard gravely looked out
+across the landscape, "I live and learn."
+</p>
+<p>
+"So we learn to live," was Ruth's playful reply. To her it was painfully
+clear that Mrs. Morris, very sweetly no doubt, had eluded Godfrey's
+endeavors to inform her of anything not to his brother's unqualified
+praise. In the Bylow Hill group, Ruth had a way of smiling abstractedly,
+which was very dear to Godfrey even when it meant he had best say no
+more; and this smile had just said this to him when Isabel and Arthur
+came into view again. As the two and the three drifted toward each
+other, Ruth let Leonard outstep her, and joined Godfrey with a light in
+her face that quickened his pulse.
+</p>
+<p>
+After a word or two of slight import she said, as they slowly walked,
+"Godfrey."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Yes," eagerly responded the lover.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Down in the garden, awhile ago&mdash;did I&mdash;promise something?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"You most certainly did!" She had promised that if he would let a
+certain subject drop she would bring it up again, herself, before he
+must take his leave.
+</p>
+<p>
+"And must you go very soon, now?" she asked.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I've only a few minutes left," said the lover, with a lover's license.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Well, I'm ready to speak. Of course, Godfrey, I know my heart."
+</p>
+<p>
+The young man smiled ruefully. "I've known mine till I'm dead tired of
+the acquaintance."
+</p>
+<p>
+Other words passed, her eyes on the ground as they loitered, and after a
+pause she murmured:&mdash;"But I've known my heart as long as you've known
+yours."
+</p>
+<p>
+"You've known&mdash;What do you&mdash;Oh, Ruth, look at me!"
+</p>
+<p>
+She looked, very tenderly, although she said, "You forget we are
+observed."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Oh, observed! Do you mean hope&mdash;for me&mdash;after all?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"I mean that if you will only wait until we can get a clear light on
+this matter of Isabel's&mdash;which will most likely be by the next time you
+come"&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+"Oh, Ruth, Ruth, my own Ruth at last!"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Please don't speak so. I'm not engaging myself to you now."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Oh yes, you are! Yes, you are! Yes&mdash;you&mdash;are!"
+</p>
+<p>
+"No&mdash;no&mdash;no&mdash;listen! Listen to me, Godfrey. I think that now, among us
+all, we shall manage Isabel's affair well enough, and that the very next
+time&mdash;you&mdash;come"&mdash;She began absently to pick her steps.
+</p>
+<p>
+"What&mdash;what then?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Then you may ask me."
+</p>
+<p>
+The response of the overjoyed lover was but one or two passionate words,
+and her sufficient reply, as they halted among their fellows, was to
+look across the valley with her meditative smile. Isabel took note, but
+kindly gave a long sigh of admiration, and with an exalted sweep of the
+hand drew the gaze of the five to the beauties of the scene below. The
+day was near its end. The long shadow of the great cliff behind Bylow
+Hill hung over the roofs of the town and over the hither meadows. The
+sun's rays were laying their last touches upon the winding river, and
+upon the grainfields that extended from its farther shore. In the upper
+blue rested a few peaceful clouds, changing from silver to pink, from
+pink to pearly gray, and on the skyline crouched in a purpling haze the
+round-backed mountains of another county.
+</p>
+<p>
+To Mrs. Morris and the General the sight, from the old elm-tree seat,
+was even fairer than to the youthful group whose forms stood out against
+the sky, the floral colors of the girls' draperies heightened by the
+western light. For a while the two sitters gave the perfect scene the
+tribute of a perfect silence, and then the General asked, as he
+cautiously straightened his impaired frame, "Has not Isabel been making
+some&mdash;eh&mdash;news for herself&mdash;and us?"
+</p>
+<p>
+The lady's lips parted for their peculiar laugh of embarrassment, but
+the questioner's smile was so serious that she forced her sweetest
+gravity. "Why, General, according to our Southern ways," she
+said,&mdash;every word mellowed by her Southern way of saying it,&mdash;"that's
+for Isabel to tell you."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Then why does she not do it, Mrs. Morris?" asked the veteran, who had
+been district attorney himself once upon a time, and was clever with
+witnesses.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Why, really, General, Isabel hasn't had a cha&mdash;Oh! ho, ho! I oughtn't
+to have said that!" Mrs. Morris had a killing dimple, but never used it.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I suppose&mdash;of course"&mdash;said the General, "she will say
+it's&mdash;eh&mdash;Arthur?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Now you're making me tell," she laughed, "and I mustn't! General,
+Godfrey seems to be going."
+</p>
+<p>
+In fact, Godfrey was shaking hands with Ruth and Leonard. Now he took
+the hands of Arthur and Isabel together, and Mrs. Morris laughed more
+sweetly and with more oh's and ho's than ever; for Isabel sedately
+kissed Arthur's brother.
+</p>
+<p>
+Ruth made signs to her father, who answered them in kind. "What does she
+say, Mrs. Morris? Can you hear?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"She says they're singing 'your hymn' down in a church under the hill."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Ah yes." He beamed and nodded to Ruth; but when Mrs. Morris once more
+laughed, his brow clouded a trifle. "Your daughter, Mrs. Morris"&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+The lady broke in with a note of bright surprise, rose, and took an
+unconscious step forward. The five young friends were advancing in a
+compact cluster, with measured pace. Ruth and Isabel, in front abreast,
+and making happy show of the hawthorn sprays, were just enough apart to
+conceal, except for their superior height, the three lovers, and in
+lowered tones, but with kindling eyes, the five, incited by Ruth, were
+singing the song they had caught up from the valley,&mdash;the old man's
+favorite from the days of his own song-time. The General got himself
+hurriedly to his feet; the shade passed from his brow. The group came
+close; he stepped out, and Isabel, meeting him, laid her two hands in
+his, while the halting cluster ceased their song suspensively on a line
+that pledged loves and friendships too ethereal to clash.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Isabel,"&mdash;he turned up a broadened palm,&mdash;"here's my amen to that line;
+where's yours?"
+</p>
+<p>
+With blushing alacrity she laid her hand on his.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Arthur!" he called, and the lively lover added his to the two. "Now,
+Ruth!"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Father!" laughed the daughter, "isn't this rather youngish?" But she
+laid her hand promptly upon Arthur's, and the lines of the General's
+face deepened playfully, and Mrs. Morris's dimple did the same, as
+Godfrey thrust his hand in upon Ruth's, unasked. The matron laughed very
+tenderly on the key of O while she added her hand, and received
+Leonard's heavy palm above it. Then Arthur clapped a second hand upon
+Leonard's, and Leonard was about to lay a second quietly upon Arthur's,
+when Isabel, rose-red from brow to throat, gayly broke the heap and
+embraced Ruth.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Well, honey-girlie," said Mrs. Morris, as she and Isabel reentered
+their cottage, "wasn't it sweet of them all, that 'laying on of hands,'
+as Arthur called it?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Yes," replied the Southern girl, starting up the cramped old New
+England stairway to her room. "It was child's play, but it was very
+sweet of them, and especially of the General."
+</p>
+<p>
+The mother detained her fondly. "And still, my child, you're not
+satisfied?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Ah, mother, are you blind, stone blind, or do you only hope I am?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"My dearie!"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Why, mother, excepting Leonard, we haven't had one word of true consent
+from one of them."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Oh, now, Isabel! They'll all be glad enough by and by."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Yes," said the daughter, from the landing above, "I've no doubt of
+that."
+</p>
+<p>
+She passed into her room, closed the door, and standing in the middle of
+the floor, with her temples in her palms, said, "O merciful God! Oh,
+Leonard Byington, if only that second hand of yours had hung back!"
+</p>
+<a name="h2H_4_0009" id="h2H_4_0009"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+<h2>
+ V
+</h2>
+<h3>
+ SKY AND POOL
+</h3>
+<p>
+Arthur and Isabel were married in their own little church of All Angels,
+at the far end of the old street.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I cal'late," said a rustic member of his vestry, "th' never was as
+pretty a weddin' so simple, nor as simple a weddin' so pretty!"
+</p>
+<p>
+Because he said it to Leonard Byington he ended with a manly laugh, for
+by the anxious glance of his spectacled daughter he knew he had slipped
+somewhere in his English. But when he heard Leonard and Ruth, in
+greeting the bride's mother, jointly repeat the sentiment as their own,
+he was, for a moment, nearly as happy as Mrs. Morris.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Such a pity Godfrey had to be away!" said Mrs. Morris. It was the only
+pity she chose to emphasize.
+</p>
+<p>
+Godfrey was on distant seas. The north-bound mid-afternoon express bore
+away the bridal pair for a week's absence.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Too short," said a friend or so whom Leonard fell in with as he came
+from the railway station, and Leonard admitted that Arthur was badly in
+need of rest.
+</p>
+<p>
+At sunset Ruth came out of her gate and stood to welcome her brother's
+tardy return. Both brightly smiled; neither spoke.
+</p>
+<p>
+When he gave her a letter with a foreign stamp her face lighted
+gratefully, but still without words she put it under her belt. Then they
+joined hands, and he asked, "Where's father?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Inside on the lounge," she replied. Her lips fell into their faraway
+smile, to which she added this time a murmur as of reverie, and Leonard
+said almost as musingly, "Come, take a short turn."
+</p>
+<p>
+They moved on to the Winslow gate, and entered the garden by a path
+which brought them to a point midway between the old cottage and the
+larger house. There it crossed under an arch transecting an arbor that
+extended from a side door of the one dwelling to a like one of the
+other, and the brother and sister had just passed this embowered spot
+and were stepping down a winding descent by which the path sought the
+old mill-pond, when behind them they observed two women pass athwart
+their track by way of the arbor, and Ruth smiled and murmured again.
+The crossing pair were Mrs. Morris and Sarah Stebbens, the Winslows'
+life-long housekeeper, deeply immersed in arranging for Isabel to
+become lady of the larger house, while her mother, with a single
+young maidservant, was to remain mistress of the cottage.
+</p>
+<p>
+The deep pond to whose edge Leonard and Ruth presently came was a narrow
+piece of clear water held in between Bylow Hill and the loftier cliff
+beyond by an old stone dam long unused. Rude ledges of sombre rock
+underlay its depths and lined and shelved its sides. Broad beeches and
+dark hemlocks overhung it. At every turn it mirrored back the slanting
+forms of the white and the yellow birch, or slept under green mantles
+of lily pads. It bore a haunted air even in the floweriest days of the
+year, when every bird of the wood thrilled it with his songs, and it
+gave to the entire region the gravest as well as richest note among all
+its harmonies. Down the whole way to it some one long gone had gardened
+with so wise a hand that later negligence had only made the wild
+loveliness of this inmost refuge more affluent and impassioned.
+</p>
+<p>
+At one point, where the hemlocks hung farthest and lowest over the pool,
+and the foot sank deep in a velvet of green mosses, a solid ledge of
+dark rock shelved inward from the top of the bank and down through the
+flood to a depth cavernous and black. Here, brought from time to time by
+the Byington and Winslow playmates, lay a number of mossy stones rounded
+by primeval floods, some large enough for seats, some small; and here,
+where Ruth had last sat with Godfrey, she now came with her brother.
+</p>
+<p>
+The habitual fewness of Leonard's words was a thing she prized beyond
+count. It made Mrs. Morris nervous, drained her mind's treasury, and
+sent her conversational powers borrowing and begging; Isabel it awed;
+Arthur it tantalized; to Godfrey it was an appetizing drollery; but to
+Ruth it was dearer and clearer than all spoken eloquence.
+</p>
+<p>
+The same trait in her, only less marked, was as satisfying to him, and
+from one rare utterance to another their thoughts moved like consorted
+ships from light to light along a home coast. A motion, a glance, a
+gleam, a shade, told its tale, as across leagues of silence a shred of
+smoke may tell one dweller in the wilderness the way or want of another.
+Such converse may have been a mere phase of the New Englander's passion
+for economy, or only the survival of a primitive spiritual commerce
+which most of us have lost through the easier use of speech and print;
+but the sister took calm delight in it, and it bound the two to each
+other as though it were itself a sort of goodness or greatness.
+</p>
+<p>
+"They have it of their mother," the old General sometimes said to
+himself.
+</p>
+<p>
+There were moments, too, when their intercourse was still more subtle,
+and now they sat without exchange of glance or gesture, silent as chess
+players, looking up the narrow water into a sunset exquisite in the
+delicacy of its silvery plumes, fleeces pink and dusk, and illimitable
+distances of palest green seen through fan-rays of white light shot down
+from one dark, unthreatening cloud.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Leonard," at length said the sister, as if she had studied every
+possibility on the board before touching the chosen piece, "couldn't you
+go away for a time?"
+</p>
+<p>
+And with deliberate readiness the other gentle voice replied, "I don't
+think I'd better."
+</p>
+<p>
+While they spoke their gaze rested on the changing beauties of pool and
+sky, and after the brief inquiry and response it still remained, though
+the inner glow of their mutual love and worship deepened and warmed as
+did the colors of the heavens and of the glassing waters. The brother
+knew full well Ruth's poignant sense of his distresses; and to her his
+mute tongue and unbent head were a sister's convincement that he would
+endure them in a manner wholly faithful to every one of the loved hands
+that had lain under his the evening Godfrey had said good-by.
+</p>
+
+<a name="image-0002"><!--IMG--></a>
+
+<div class="figure">
+<a href="images/illust-02.jpg">
+<img src="images/illust-02.jpg" width="70%"
+alt="'Indeed it was clear that to go away would be unfair.'" /></a><br />
+<b>"Indeed it was clear that to go away would be unfair."</b>
+</div>
+
+<p>
+Indeed, it was clear that to go away&mdash;unless he honestly felt too weak
+to remain&mdash;would be unfair to almost every person, every interest,
+concerned; and such a step was but second choice in Ruth's mind,
+conditioned solely on any unreadiness he might have uprightly to bear
+the burden brought upon him by&mdash;well, after all, by his own too
+confident miscalculations in the game of hearts.
+</p>
+<p>
+To him such flight signified the indeterminate continuance of his
+sister's maiden singleness and a like prolongation of her lover's
+galling suspense. To Ruth it stood not only for the loss of her brother,
+but for the narrowing of their father's already narrowed life,&mdash;a
+narrowing which might come to mean a shortening as well; and it meant
+also the leaving of Isabel and Arthur to their mistake and to their
+unskilfulness slowly and patiently to work out its cure. To go away
+were, for him, to consent to be the one unbroken string on a noble but
+difficult instrument. These thoughts and many more like them passed to
+and fro, out through the abstracted eyes of the one, across to the
+fading clouds, and back through the abstracted eyes and into the
+responding heart of the other.
+</p>
+<p>
+At length the sister rose. "I must go to father," she said.
+</p>
+<p>
+The brother stood up. Their eyes exchanged a gentle gaze and tenderly
+contracted.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I will come presently," he replied, and was turning toward the water,
+when he paused, threw a hand toward the steep wood across the pool, and
+silently bade her listen.
+</p>
+<p>
+The note he had remotely heard was rare on Bylow Hill since the town had
+come in below, and one of the errands which oftenest brought the hill's
+dwellers to this nook in solitary pairs was to hearken for that voice of
+unearthly rapture,&mdash;a rapture above all melancholy and beyond all
+mirth,&mdash;the call of the hermit thrush.
+</p>
+<p>
+Now the waiting seemed in vain. The brother's hand sank, the sister
+turned, and soon he saw her pass from view among the boughs as she wound
+up the rambling path toward the three homes.
+</p>
+<p>
+At the top she halted, still longing to hear at his side that marvellous
+wood-note, and was just starting on once more, when from the same
+quarter as before it came again, with new and fervent clearness. With
+noiseless foot she sprang back down the bendings of the path, having no
+other thought but to find her brother standing as she had left him, a
+rapt hearer of the heavenly strain.
+</p>
+<p>
+She reached the spot, but found no hearkening or standing form. The
+young man's stalwart frame lay prone on the green bank, where he had
+thrown himself the moment she had left his sight, and his face was
+buried in the deep moss.
+</p>
+<p>
+The stir of her swift coming reached his ear barely in time for him,
+as she choked down a cry that had all but escaped her, to turn upon
+his back, meet her glance, and drive the agony from his face with a
+languorous smile. The melting song pervaded the air, but neither of
+them lifted a noting finger.
+</p>
+<p>
+Leonard rose to his feet. Ruth gave him a hand and then its fellow, and
+as he pressed them together she said, "I wish you <i>would</i> go away
+for a time."
+</p>
+<p>
+He dropped one of her hands, and keeping the other, started slowly
+homeward; and it was not until they had climbed half the ascent that,
+with his most remote yet boyish smile, he replied, "I don't think I'd
+better."
+</p>
+<a name="h2H_4_0010" id="h2H_4_0010"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+<h2>
+ VI
+</h2>
+<h3>
+ IN THE PUBLIC EYE
+</h3>
+<p>
+August, September, October, November,&mdash;so passed the year in gorgeous
+recession over Bylow Hill. Among their dismantled trees the three homes
+stood unveiled to the town on the meadows and to travellers who looked
+from train windows while crossing the river bridge. To those who
+inquired whose they were there was always some one more than ready to
+give names and details, and to tell how perfect a bond ever had
+been&mdash;how beautiful a fellowship was yet, now&mdash;up there.
+</p>
+<p>
+Sevenfold they called it, although one of the seven was away; namely,
+Lieutenant Godfrey Winslow, of the navy, famed for his splendid behavior
+in the late so-and-so affair. That stately house at the right, they
+said, was his home what brief times the sea was not.
+</p>
+<p>
+There lived, it would be added, his younger brother, so rapidly coming
+into note,&mdash;the eccentric but gifted rector of All Angels; whose great
+success in the heart of a Congregational community was due hardly more
+to his high talents than to the combined winsomeness and practical
+sympathies of his beautiful bride, or to the resourceful wisdom and zeal
+of his churchwarden, Leonard Byington.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Any relation to Byington, your new political leader in these parts?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Same man," the answer would be, and there the narrator was sure to fall
+into a glowing tribute to the ideal companionship existing between the
+rector, his bride, the young district attorney, and Ruth Byington.
+</p>
+<p>
+What made this intimacy the more interesting was, in the eyes of a
+growing number of observers, that, as they said, "Arthur Winslow was not
+always an affable man, and was much more rarely a happy one."
+</p>
+<p>
+Behind and above this popular verdict was that of the old street behind
+and above the town,&mdash;a sort of revised version, a higher criticism. If
+the young rector, this old street explained, oftener looked anxious than
+complacent, so in their time, most likely, did St. Paul and St. Peter.
+If he was not always affable, why, neither are volcanoes; the man was
+all molten metal within. Anyhow, he filled his church to the doors.
+</p>
+<p>
+Coaching parties of the vastly rich made the town their Sunday stopping
+place purely to hear him; not so much because the boldness of his
+speculations kept his bishop frightened as because he always fused those
+speculations on, white-hot, to the daily issues of private and public
+life, in a way to make pampered ladies hold their breath, and men of the
+world their brows. Such a man, to whom the least sin seemed black and
+bottomless, yet who appeared to know by experience the soul's every
+throe in the foulest crimes, was not going to show his joys on the
+surface in quips and smiles.
+</p>
+<p>
+"You should have heard," said the old street, "his sermon to husbands
+and wives! His own bride turned pale. He turned pale himself."
+</p>
+<p>
+It was wonder enough that even the bride could be happy, at such an
+altitude, so to speak; immersing herself utterly, as she did, in the
+interests that devoured him. All Angels forgot his gloom in the radiance
+of her charms,&mdash;the sweet genuineness of her formal pieties, the tender
+glow and universality of her sympathies, the witchery of her ever ready,
+never too ready playfulness. It was captivating to see how instantly and
+entirely she had fitted herself into a partnership so exacting; though
+it was pitiful to note, on second glance, how the tint and contour of
+her cheek were losing their perfection, and her eyes were showing those
+rapid alternations of languor and vivacity which story-tellers call a
+"hunted look." Yet, oh, yes, she was happy; the pair were happy. It was
+as a pair that they were happiest. Else, said the old street, they could
+not keep up the old Winslow-Byington alliance so beautifully.
+</p>
+<p>
+To the truth of this general outline the three homes' domestics,
+dominated by Sarah Stebbens, certified with cordial and loyal brevity.
+Yet when Ruth wrote Godfrey how well things were going, there lurked
+between her bright lines one or two irrepressible meanings that locked
+his jaws till they creaked.
+</p>
+<p>
+In fact, both his brother and hers were "ailing." Both carried a jaded,
+almost a broken look, and Arthur was taking things to make him eat and
+sleep; while Leonard had daily accepted more and more of the young
+rector's complicating cares, until he was really the parish's chief
+burden-bearer.
+</p>
+<p>
+"No," he said to his father, "Arthur carries his whole work manfully on
+his own shoulders."
+</p>
+<p>
+"But, my son," replied the old General, "don't you see you're carrying
+Arthur?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"No, I sha'n't do that," dryly responded the son; but Ruth saw a change
+on his brow as on that of a guide who fears he has missed the path.
+</p>
+<p>
+The four young friends spent many delightful evenings together in the
+Winslow house, with Mrs. Morris and the General on one side at cribbage.
+Ruth had frequent happy laughs, observing Isabel's gift for making
+Leonard talk. It gave her a new joy in both of them to have the lovely
+hostess draw him out, out, out, on every matter in the wide arena to
+which he so vitally belonged; eliciting a flow of speech so animated
+that only afterward did one notice how dumb as any tree on Bylow Hill
+he had been in regard to himself.
+</p>
+<p>
+"They are bow and violin," said Arthur to Ruth, with his dark, unsmiling
+face so free from resentment that she gratefully wondered at him, and
+was presently ashamed to find herself asking her own mind if he was
+growing too subtle for her.
+</p>
+<p>
+On these occasions Isabel was wont to court Ruth's counsel concerning
+her wifely part in Arthur's work, thus often getting Leonard's as well.
+Sometimes she impeached his masculine view of things, in her old
+skirmishing way. Then she would turn rose-color once more and mirthfully
+sigh, while Ruth laughed and wished for Godfrey, and Mrs. Morris
+breathed soft ho-ho's from the cribbage board.
+</p>
+<p>
+So came the Thanksgiving season, with strong, black ice on the mill
+pond, where the four skated hand in hand. Then the piling snows stopped
+the skating with a white Christmas, the old year sank to rest, the new
+rose up, and Bylow Hill, under its bare elms and with the pine-crested
+ridge at its back, sat in the cold sunshine like a white sea bird with
+its head in its down. And when the nights were frigid and clear its
+ruddy lights of lamp and hearth seemed to answer the downward gaze of
+the stars in silent gratitude for conditions of happiness strangely
+perfect for this imperfect world, and the town marvelled at the young
+rector's grasp of his subject when his text was, "The heart knoweth his
+own bitterness."
+</p>
+<a name="h2H_4_0011" id="h2H_4_0011"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+<h2>
+ VII
+</h2>
+<h3>
+ THE HOUR STRIKES
+</h3>
+<p>
+But on a day in the very last of winter, when every one was in the thick
+of all the year's tasks and cares, there came to Leonard this letter:&mdash;
+</p>
+<p class="quote">
+ LEONARD BYINGTON, ESQUIRE:
+</p>
+<p class="quote">
+ SIR,&mdash;I find myself compelled to ask that you consider your
+ acquaintanceship with my wife at an end. Doubtless this request will
+ give you more relief than surprise. The visible waste of your frame
+ and the loss of her exquisite bloom are proof enough that both you
+ and she have long been in daily dread of a far worse visitation.
+ It is not worse, because I know how sentimental your impotent and
+ conscience-plagued interchanges of affection have been. I shall permit
+ and assist you to keep this matter a secret. To let it be known would
+ instantly wreck your own career, and would blast at a breath the
+ fortunes of our church and of every one of both our kindreds. I will
+ therefore not at this time require you to resign your church office or
+ to break off those business intimacies with me which, though no longer
+ founded in personal esteem, are vital to interests that common decency
+ must move you to shield from new peril.
+</p>
+<p class="quote">
+ I ask for no repair of the inextinguishable wrong you have done me.
+ I only ask you not to fancy that I am to be beguiled by arguments or
+ denials or moved by threats, or that one word I here write is founded
+ on conjecture or inference. Grovelling at my feet, in sobs of shame
+ and with prayers for pardon, Isabel has told me all. Has told me all,
+ Leonard Byington, my once trusted friend. Now, though prostrated on
+ her bed, she rejoices in the double forgiveness of her husband and
+ her priest, blessing him for deliverance from the misleadings of one
+ who&mdash;great God! must I write it?&mdash;might at last have dragged her into
+ crime. It is her request, as it is my command, that you darken our
+ threshold no more, and that as far as practicable you keep yourself
+ from her sight.
+</p>
+<p class="quote">
+ Faithfully,
+</p>
+<p class="quote">
+ ARTHUR WINSLOW.
+</p>
+<p>
+With his swivel-chair overturned behind him the young lawyer stood at
+the desk of his inner office, read this letter through at headlong
+speed, turned it again, and re-read it slowly, searchingly, from his own
+name to its writer's.
+</p>
+<p>
+Then readjusting his chair he stepped to a door, asked a clerk in the
+outer office to order his cutter, turned back, and was closing his desk,
+when his partner came to him.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Byington, are you ill?" asked the fatherly man.
+</p>
+<p>
+"No; I'm only going out on some business. I'll be back about&mdash;" He
+looked at his watch.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Byington, don't go. You're ill. You don't realize how ill you are. If
+you go at all, go home, and let me send some one with you. Why, your
+hand is as cold"&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+"I'm all right," said the young man, freeing his hand and smiling with
+white lips. He took his hat and passed out.
+</p>
+<p>
+Meanwhile Isabel lay on her bed too overwhelmed to rise. In his room
+adjoining, with doors locked, Arthur paced the floor. He had spent the
+first half of the night in an agonizing interview with his wife, and the
+second half in writing and rewriting the letter to Leonard.
+</p>
+<p>
+Now Isabel noticed the cessation of his steps. In the door between
+them the key turned; then the door opened, and he stood, haggard and
+dishevelled, gazing on her. She sat up in the bed, wan, tear-spent,
+her glorious hair falling over the embroideries of her nightdress.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Arthur, dear, I am sorry for every angry word I have spoken. But the
+things I have denied I must deny forever.
+</p>
+<p>
+"If you should wait till doomsday, I could confess no more.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I have never harbored one throb of unworthy or unsafe regard toward any
+man in this wide world.
+</p>
+<p>
+"For me to say differently would be to lie in God's own face.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I have had great happiness of Leonard's companionship, and I have been
+proud to be myself a proof that a man and a woman can be close, dear,
+daily friends without being lovers or kin, and earth be only more like
+heaven for it, to them and all theirs. If Leonard has confessed one word
+more than that for me,&mdash;or even for himself, Arthur, dearest,&mdash;he has
+lost his reason. It's a frightful explanation, but I find no other.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Leonard Byington is not wicked, and if he were he wouldn't be so in a
+dastard's way.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Never since the day I first plighted my faith to you, dear heart, has
+he given me one sign of a lover's love.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Oh, Arthur, I do love my husband! This night has proved it to me as
+I never knew it before; and if you will only believe me and go back to
+Leonard, I believe he can tear the mask off this horrible mystery."
+</p>
+<p>
+Arthur turned and once more locked the door. His wife flamed red and
+hearkened, and the light footfall which had tortured her for hours began
+again. Suddenly she left the bed and hurried to dress.
+</p>
+<p>
+At the mirror, with her hair lifted on her hands, she paused and again
+hearkened. Sleighbells stopped at the front door.
+</p>
+<p>
+Now some one was let in down there, and now, at her husband's room,
+Giles, his English man of all work, announced Mr. Byington:&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+"Yes, sir, but he says if you can't come down 'e will 'ave to come up,
+sir."
+</p>
+<a name="h2H_4_0012" id="h2H_4_0012"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+<h2>
+ VIII
+</h2>
+<h3>
+ GIVE YOU FIVE MINUTES
+</h3>
+<p>
+As Arthur entered the library Leonard came from its farther end, and
+they halted on opposite sides of a large table. Arthur was flushed and
+looked fearfully spent. Leonard was pale.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I have your letter, Arthur."
+</p>
+<p>
+The rector bowed. He gave a start, but tried to conceal a gleam of
+triumph.
+</p>
+<p>
+Leonard ignored it and spoke on:&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+"A gentleman, Arthur,&mdash;I mean any one trying to be a whole
+gentleman,&mdash;is a very helpless creature, nowadays, in matters of this
+sort."
+</p>
+<p>
+He looked formidable, and as he lightly grasped a chair at his side it
+seemed about to be turned into a weapon.
+</p>
+<p>
+"The old thing once called satisfaction," he continued, "is something
+one can no longer either ask or offer, in any form. He can neither rail,
+nor strike, nor spellbind, nor challenge, nor lampoon, nor prosecute."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Nearly as helpless as a clergyman," said Arthur.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Almost," replied the visitor. "No, there is no more satisfaction in any
+of those things, for him, than if he were all a clergyman is supposed to
+be. There is none even in saying this, to you, here, now, and I'm not
+here to say it. Neither am I here to vindicate myself&mdash;no, nor yet
+Isabel&mdash;with professions or arguments to you; I might as well argue with
+a forest fire."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Quite as well. What are you here for?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Be patient and I'll tell you; I'm trying to be so with you."
+</p>
+<p>
+"You&mdash;trying"&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+"Stop that nonsense, Arthur. Ah me, Arthur Winslow, I have no wish to
+humiliate you. Through the loyalty of your wife's pure heart, whatever
+humiliates you must humiliate her. Oh, I could wish her in her shroud
+and coffin rather than have her suffer the humiliation you have prepared
+for yourself and for her through you."
+</p>
+<p>
+Arthur showed a thrill of alarm. "Do you propose to go down to public
+shame and drag us all with you?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"No, nor to let you, if I can prevent you. Arthur, you have allowed a
+base jealousy to persuade you, in the face of every contrary evidence,
+that your fair young wife has lost her loyalty&mdash;and your nearest friend
+the commonest honesty&mdash;in a clandestine love. Under the goadings of that
+passion you have foully guessed, have heartlessly accused, have brazenly
+lied. Isabel has confessed nothing to you, and I know by your lies to
+me how pusillanimously you must have been lying to her. Had your guess
+been right, I should not have known you were only guessing, and your
+successful iniquity would have remained hidden from everybody but
+yourself&mdash;I still do you the honor to believe you would have realized
+it. Now the vital question is, do you realize it, and will you undo it?"
+</p>
+<p>
+Arthur was deadly pale; his pointing finger trembled. "Leave"&mdash;he
+choked&mdash;"leave this house."
+</p>
+<p>
+Leonard turned scarlet, but his tone sank low. "Arthur, I don't believe
+your soul is rotten. If I did, I should not be such a knave or such a
+fool as to make any treaty with you that would leave you in your pulpit
+one Sabbath Day."
+</p>
+<p>
+"What do you&mdash;what do you mean by that?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"I mean that such a treaty would be foul faith to everybody."
+</p>
+<p>
+"So, then, you do propose one common shipwreck for us all."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Quite the contrary. To trust the fortunes of our loved ones to any
+treaty with a rotten soul would indeed be to launch them upon a stormy
+sea in a rotten boat. But I do not believe your soul is so. I believe it
+is sound,&mdash;still sound, though on fire; and so, to help you quench its
+burning, I give you my pledge to be from this day a stranger to your
+sweet wife. And now will you do something for me, to prove that your
+soul is sound and is going to stay sound? It shall be the least I can
+ask in good faith to the world we live in."
+</p>
+<p>
+"What is it?" asked Arthur. There was no capitulation in his face or his
+voice.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I want you to make to Isabel a full retraction and explanation of every
+falsehood you have uttered to her or to me in this matter." Leonard was
+pale again; Arthur burned red a moment, and then turned paler than
+Leonard.
+</p>
+<p>
+"You fiend!" gasped the husband. "I am to exalt you, and abase myself,
+to her?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"No. No, Arthur. Women are strange; every chance is that in her eyes I
+shall be abased." The speaker went whiter than ever.
+</p>
+<p>
+"But be that as it may, you shall have lifted your soul out of the mire.
+You must do it, Arthur; don't you see you must?"
+</p>
+<p>
+Arthur sank into the chair at his side. He seemed to have guessed what
+Leonard was keeping unsaid. A moisture of anguish stood on his brow.
+Yet&mdash;
+</p>
+<a name="image-0003"><!--IMG--></a>
+
+<div class="figure">
+<a href="images/illust-03.jpg">
+<img src="images/illust-03.jpg" width="70%"
+alt="'Arthur Winslow, I give you five minutes.'" /></a><br />
+<b>"Arthur Winslow, I give you five minutes." </b>
+</div>
+
+<p>
+"I will die before I will do it," he said.
+</p>
+<p>
+Leonard drew forth the letter, and then his watch. "Arthur Winslow, I
+give you five minutes. If you don't make me that promise in that time, I
+shall this day show this letter to your bishop."
+</p>
+<p>
+The rector sat clenching his fingers and spreading them again, and
+staring at the table.
+</p>
+<p>
+A bead of sweat, then a second, and then a third started down his
+forehead.
+</p>
+<p>
+Presently he clutched the board, drew himself to his feet, and turned to
+leave the chair, but fell across its arms, slid heavily from them, and
+with one rude thump and then another lay unconscious on the floor.
+</p>
+<p>
+Leonard sprang round the table, but when he would have lifted the fallen
+head it was in the arms of Isabel, and her dilated eyes were on him in a
+look of passionate aversion.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Ring!" she cried. "Ring for Sarah&mdash;and go!
+</p>
+<p>
+"No! stop! don't ring! he's coming to! Only go! go quickly and forever!
+Say not a word,&mdash;oh, not a word! I heard it all! Despise me too, for I
+listened at the door!
+</p>
+<p>
+"Oh, my husband! Arthur, look at me, Arthur. Look, Arthur; it's your
+Isabel. Oh, Arthur, my husband, my husband!"
+</p>
+<a name="h2H_4_0013" id="h2H_4_0013"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+<h2>
+ IX
+</h2>
+<h3>
+ THE YOUNG YEAR SMILES
+</h3>
+<p>
+Martin Kelly, pious Irishman and out-door factotum of the Byington
+place, paused from the last snow-shovelling of the season to reply to a
+wandering salesman of fruit trees.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Mr. Airthur Winslow or Mr. Linnard Boyington,&mdash;naw, sor! ye can see
+nayther the wan nor th' other, whatsomiver! How can ye see thim, moy
+graciouz! whin 'tis two weeks since the two o' thim was tuck the same
+noight wid the pneumonias, boy gorra! and the both of thim has thim on
+the loongs!"
+</p>
+<p>
+The nursery agent asked how it had happened so.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Hawh! ask yer grandmother! All ye can say is they was roipe to catch
+the maladee, whatsomiver! Ye cannot always tell how 'tis catched, and
+whin ye cannot tell, moy graciouz! ye have got the wurrst koind!"
+</p>
+<p>
+The two sick men recovered very nearly at the same time.
+</p>
+<p>
+One day when Leonard had read all his accumulated mail and had seen
+three or four men officially in his bedchamber, he told Ruth that a
+certain criminal case, the trial of which had been waiting for his
+recovery, would take him to the county-seat, and would keep him there
+many days, probably weeks, except for brief visits to his office and yet
+briefer moments at home.
+</p>
+<p>
+Ruth gave him a look of tender approval, laid a hand in his, and bent
+into the evening fire her far-off smile. Thus, and only thus, he knew
+she had divined what had befallen.
+</p>
+<p>
+A day or two afterward Mrs. Morris brought him a note from Arthur. He
+wrote an answer while she stayed, and while Ruth listened elatedly to
+her sprightly account of how well Isabel still bore the burden of
+nursing a most loving but most nervous husband.
+</p>
+<p>
+The missive from Arthur was a short but complete and propitiative
+acknowledgment of his error and fraility. It offered no change in the
+agreement as to Isabel, but it professed a high yet humble resolve to
+fall no more, and it ended with a manly offer to resign his pulpit, and
+even to lay aside his sacred calling, if Leonard retained any belief in
+the moral necessity of his so doing.
+</p>
+<p>
+Leonard's reply was a very brief exhortation to his friend to put away
+all thought of resigning, and to take up his work again with the zeal
+with which he had first entered upon it.
+</p>
+<p>
+Mrs. Morris went away refreshed, and left the Byingtons equally so. Her
+buoyancy had been as prettily restrained, her sympathies as sweet, her
+dimple as unconscious, her belief in everybody's wit and wisdom except
+her own as genuine, and her timid dissimulations as kindly meant and as
+transparent, as ever. Yet there was an unspoken compassion for her when
+she was gone, for in the parting words with which she playfully vaunted
+her ignorance of the correspondence she was bearing, it was clear, even
+to the General, that behind that small ignorance she had a larger
+knowledge,&mdash;a fact that made her dainty cheerfulness seem very brave.
+</p>
+<hr />
+<p>
+The freshets swept down the valleys, the myriad yellow twigs of the
+brookside willows turned green, a cheery piping rose from the ponds, the
+last gleam of snow passed from the farthest hills, the bluebird sang,
+the harrow followed the plough, Ruth's crocuses shone above the greening
+sod, and down by the old mill-pool and on the steep hillside beyond it
+she and Isabel gathered arbutus, anemones, and the yellow violet. Spring
+had come.
+</p>
+<p>
+Then through the thickening greenery the dogwood shone like belated
+drifts, the flashing warblers passed on into the north, the bobolink had
+arrived, the robin was already overeating, the whole chorus of birds
+that had come to nest and stay broke forth, and it was summer.
+</p>
+<p>
+Leonard was back in his own town, enriched with new esteem from the
+public and from the men of his profession. The noted case was won, a
+victory for the peace and dignity of the state, due wholly, it was said,
+to the energy and sagacity of the young district attorney. A murder had
+been so cunningly done that suspicion could fasten nowhere, until
+Byington laid his finger upon a man of so unspotted a name that no one
+else had had the mental courage to point to him. Through a long and
+masterly untangling of contradictions the state's counsel had so
+overwhelmingly proved him guilty that he had confessed without waiting
+for the jury's verdict.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Yes," said many, "it was a great stroke, Leonard's management of that
+thing." And not a few added that it had made him an older man&mdash;"that or
+something." Those who were of his politics, and even some who were not,
+stopped him in Main Street and State Street to "shake" and to say,
+without too much care for logical sequence, how soon, in their opinion,
+he would be the commonwealth's "favorite son."
+</p>
+<p>
+"My dear Mrs. Morris," said the General, "every town has at least one."
+But even Mrs. Morris could see the father's faith and pride through the
+old soldier's satire.
+</p>
+<a name="h2H_4_0014" id="h2H_4_0014"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+<h2>
+ X
+</h2>
+<h3>
+ THE STORM REGATHERS
+</h3>
+<p>
+On the other hand, things were going ill with the little church of All
+Angels. Arthur kept his people as tensely strung as ever, but he no
+longer drew from them the chords of aspiration and enterprise. It was a
+sad disenchantment, and none the less so because no one seemed to know
+what the matter was. One darkly guessed he was writing a book, and the
+vestryman who had praised the lovely simplicity of the wedding lucidly
+explained that the young rector had "lost his grip."
+</p>
+<p>
+At times there were flashes of recovery. One Sabbath the whole
+congregation came out under his benediction uplifted by his word that
+"loving is living."
+</p>
+<p>
+"The more we love," they quoted him on their various ways home, "the
+more we live. The deeper we love, the deeper we live. The more selfishly
+or unselfishly, the higher, the broader, the purer, the wiser, we love,
+the more selfishly or unselfishly, the higher, the broader, the purer,
+the wiser, we live!" The rector's gentle wife was visibly and ever so
+prettily rejoiced.
+</p>
+<p>
+True, but hardly the whole truth. In her mother's cottage her smiles
+were almost sad, and when she had crossed the garden and got into her
+own room she dropped upon her bed and wept. Yet she quickly ceased, and
+put on again a brave serenity, for a very tender reason which forbade
+such risks.
+</p>
+<p>
+A bunch of the church's best men got together and agreed that all Arthur
+needed was rest; that this bright moment was the right one in which to
+offer him a vacation; that his physician should flatly order him to take
+it; and that Byington should arrange the matter.
+</p>
+<p>
+Leonard accepted the task, the physician spoke with startling flatness,
+and the whole kind plot worked well. Arthur consented to go away up into
+the hills beyond all the jar of the busy world's unrest.
+</p>
+<p>
+Isabel was to go with him, and they were to sojourn at some point where
+she would still be within prompt reach of medical skill, yet from which
+he could make long jaunts into the absolute wilds.
+</p>
+<p>
+Mrs. Morris was far from well when they left, and the day afterward she
+was seriously ill. That night Ruth sat up with her, and the next day she
+was worse, yet begged that no telegram be sent to her daughter.
+</p>
+<p>
+At the close of the day there came a letter from Isabel. It said that
+Arthur, "already a new man," would start the next morning at dawn for a
+three days' trip into the wilderness. He went; and he had not been three
+hours gone when Isabel received a dispatch calling her to her mother.
+The only day train would leave in a few minutes, and she had the fortune
+to catch it.
+</p>
+<p>
+Ruth met her at the station with the blessed word "better." They went up
+from the town in Ruth's carriage, Martin Kelly driving, who let it be
+known that though the doctor's name, "moy graciouz!" were signed to the
+telegram seven times over, the actual painstaker and sender was "Linnard
+Boyington, whatsomiver!"
+</p>
+<p>
+Still Ruth called it the doctor's telegram, and said it made no
+difference who sent it; but she saw Isabel was disturbed. "Well, Martin,
+Doctor will have to wait on himself to-morrow; Leonard will be out of
+town."
+</p>
+<p>
+That evening, alone with her brother, she said, "But I thought you were
+to be out of town to-morrow."
+</p>
+<p>
+"No," he replied, "I don't think I'd better."
+</p>
+<p>
+Another day passed, another came, and Mrs. Morris was still in danger.
+Isabel wrote Arthur that she would be with him the moment the peril was
+over, if he needed her; but if he did not, she would stay on for her
+mother's fuller recovery. Her letter had barely gone when she received a
+pencilled line brought in to the mountain hotel by a chance messenger
+and sent on to her, saying he would be out on his tramp five days
+instead of three. On the fifth day she telegraphed that her mother was
+getting well so fast that she would come, now, at his word.
+</p>
+<p>
+The next morning she betrayed to Ruth a glad sense of relief as she
+showed her a dispatch from Arthur, which read: "Going on another trip
+to-morrow. Stay till I write."
+</p>
+<p>
+Ruth repeated it to her father and brother at their noonday meal.
+Leonard made no comment, but the General asked pleasantly&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+"Is she certain he won't come in on this evening's express?" He was
+discerning more than any one wanted him to.
+</p>
+<p>
+However, at dusk came the train, took water at the tank, stopped at the
+station, and passed on, and Arthur did not appear.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Well, I'll go to bed," blithely spoke the General. "I'm not so old as I
+used to be, but I'm tired, after writing that letter this afternoon&mdash;to
+Godfrey. Good-night." So he gave fair notice that he had moved in this
+matter, himself.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I didn't know father had received a letter from Godfrey," said Ruth,
+shading her face from the lamp, and lifting to Leonard a smile which
+implied that it would have been but fair for him to have told her.
+</p>
+<p>
+"It came the day before Arthur went away," replied Leonard, and Ruth
+reluctantly chose a new topic.
+</p>
+<p>
+They rarely had an evening together thus, and with a soft rain falling
+at the open windows they sat and talked on many themes in what was to
+them a very talkative way. When something brought up the subject of the
+late noted trial, Ruth asked her brother how it had first come to him to
+suspect so unsuspected a man.
+</p>
+<p>
+His reply was tardy. "Partly," he said, and mused while he spoke,
+"because I am so unsuspected a man myself."
+</p>
+<p>
+He looked up with a smile, half play, half pain. "I know what the mind
+of an unsuspected man is capable of&mdash;under pressure."
+</p>
+<p>
+The questioner looked on him with fond faith, and then, dropping her
+eyes to her needlework, said, "That wasn't all that prompted you, was
+it?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"No," replied the brother, again musing. "I had noticed the singular
+value of wanton guesswork."
+</p>
+<p>
+"I thought so," said the sister. Her needle flagged and stopped, and
+each knew the other's mind was on the implacable divinations of one
+morbid soul.
+</p>
+<p>
+Leonard leaned and fingered the needlework,&mdash;a worsted slipper, too
+small for most men, too large for most women. "Is that for him?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Yes," apologized Ruth; "it's the thing every clergyman has to incur.
+But I'm only doing it to help Isabel out; she has the other."
+</p>
+<p>
+The evening went quickly. When Leonard let down the window sashes and
+lowered the shades, Ruth, standing by the lamp as if to put out its
+light, said, "I'll not go up for a moment or two yet."
+</p>
+<p>
+She sent him an ardent smile across the room and turned to a desk.
+</p>
+<a name="h2H_4_0015" id="h2H_4_0015"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+<h2>
+ XI
+</h2>
+<h3>
+ HAS IT COME TO THIS?
+</h3>
+<p>
+Ruth wrote to her lover. Her father's keeping secret his receipt of
+Godfrey's letter until he had mailed its answer, could mean only that
+the answer was for Godfrey to come home. The General's talk of being
+tired by the writing of it was a purely expletive irony, for he had
+written with the brevity of an old soldier to a young sailor; but he had
+written that trouble was impending, that its source was Arthur, and that
+the last hope of removing it lay with him, Godfrey.
+</p>
+<p>
+A line from Ruth, pursuing after this message, would be one steamer
+behind it all the way, but it would reach the far wanderer before any
+leave would permit him to start homeward.
+</p>
+<p>
+So, now, what should she write? If her father had discerned so much more
+than he had let any one know he had discerned, how about others? How
+about the kind whose chief joy is ruthless guesswork? <i>That</i> need
+of haste was one she had overlooked. Wise father!
+</p>
+<p>
+And yet&mdash;haste itself is such a hazardous thing! Ah, if Arthur had come
+in on that evening express, what to write were an easier question. The
+minutes sped by; her pen overhung the paper with the opening sentence
+unfinished, and every moment the thought she kept putting away came
+back: "Leonard!&mdash;Leonard!&mdash;Godfrey's summons should go to him from
+Leonard; and it should flash under the seas, not crawl across
+them!"&mdash;Hark!
+</p>
+<p>
+She rose and glided to the door through which her brother had gone.
+There she was startled by the sight of him speeding cautiously down
+the stair.
+</p>
+<hr />
+<p>
+On entering his unlighted room Leonard had moved across it to a front
+window, where, veiled by the chamber's dusk, he stood looking out into a
+night dimly illumined by the overclouded moon. The Winslow house widened
+palely among its surrounding trees. The servants' rooms were remote as
+well as on the farther side, and on the nearer side no lamplight shone.
+A short way down the street a glow came from the Morris cottage.
+Evidently Isabel was with her mother.
+</p>
+<p>
+He stood and mused, unconsciously lulled by the cool drip of myriad
+leaves, and with his mind poised midway between emotion and thought. To
+yield to emotion would have been to chafe against the bands that knitted
+his life and hers to every life about them. To yield to thought would
+have been to think of her as no more to be drawn from these surrounding
+ties than some animate rainbow-fringed flower of the sea can be torn
+from its shell without laceration and death. To give thought word would
+have been to cry, "Oh, truest of womankind, where would this unsuspected
+man, this Leonard Byington, be if you were other than you are?" Yet the
+suspense between avoided feeling and avoided thought held him where he
+stood.
+</p>
+<p>
+So standing, it drifted idly into his mind that yonder arbor must be
+very wet to-night, and the cinder sidewalk out here much drier. As the
+thought moved him to draw one step back, the glow from the cottage
+broadened. Its front door had opened, and Mrs. Morris's young maid came
+out with a lantern, followed by Isabel saying last fond words to her
+mother as the convalescent closed the door.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Good-night!" she called back.
+</p>
+<p>
+In one great wave the young man's passion rolled over its bounds and
+brought him to his knees with arms outstretched. "Oh, Isabel!" he
+murmured. "Oh, my God! Oh, Isabel! Isabel! if I had but lost you
+fairly!"
+</p>
+<p>
+The two slight figures came daintily along the wet path in single file,
+the maid throwing the lantern's beams hither and yon as she looked back
+to answer Isabel's kindly questions; Isabel one moment half lost in the
+gloom of the trees, and then so lighted up again from foot to brow that
+it was easy to see the very lines of her winsome mouth, ripe for
+compassion or fortitude, yet wishful as a little child's.
+</p>
+<p>
+Her secret observer moaned as he stood erect. The fury of his soul
+seemed to enhance his stature. He did not speak again, but, "Oh, Isabel!
+harder to strive against than all the world beside!" was the unuttered
+cry that wrote itself upon his tortured brow. "If your unfair winner
+would only hold you by fair means! Yet I too was to blame! I too was to
+blame, and you alone were blameless!"
+</p>
+<p>
+Opposite his window Isabel ceased her light talk with the maid, halted,
+bent, and scanned something just off the firm path, in the clean wet
+sand.
+</p>
+<p>
+The maid turned and flooded her with the light of the lantern just as
+she impulsively lifted an alarmed glance to Leonard's window and as
+quickly averted it. "Go on," said the mistress. "I can walk faster if
+you can."
+</p>
+<p>
+The girl quickened her steps, but had not taken a dozen when Isabel
+stopped again. "Wait, Minnie. Now you can run back, thank you." She
+reached for the lantern.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I&mdash;I thought I was to go all the way, and&mdash;and bring the lantern back."
+</p>
+<p>
+"No, I'll keep the lantern; but I'll stay here and throw the light after
+you till you get in. Run along."
+</p>
+<p>
+Minnie tripped away. As she came where they had first halted, a
+purposely belated good-night softly overtook her; and when she looked
+back, Isabel, as if by inadvertency, sent the lantern's beam into her
+eyes. So too much light sent the maid by the spot unenlightened.
+</p>
+<p>
+Leonard drew aside lest the beam swing next into his window. But the
+precaution was wasted; the glare followed Minnie.
+</p>
+<p>
+Isabel also followed, slowly, a few paces, and then moved obliquely into
+the roadway and toward the window. Only for a moment the ray swept near
+her unseen observer, and, lighting up the rain-packed sand close before
+herself, revealed a line of footprints slanting toward her from
+Leonard's own gate.
+</p>
+<p>
+As the cottage door shut Minnie in, Isabel, reassured by the brightness
+of the Byingtons' lower windows, stopped for a furtive instant, and
+holding in her hand the fellow of the slipper so lately in Ruth's
+fingers, exactly fitted it to one of these footprints. Then, with the
+lantern on her farther side, and every vein surging with fright and
+shame, she made haste toward the open gateway of the Winslow house.
+</p>
+<p>
+A short space from it she recoiled with a gesture of dismay and
+self-repression, and her light shone full upon a man. He stepped from
+the garden, his form tensely lifted, his face aflame with anger.
+</p>
+<p>
+But her small figure straightened also, and swiftly muffling the lantern
+in a fold of her skirt, she exclaimed, audibly only to him, though in
+words clear-cut as musical notes, "Oh, Arthur Winslow, has it come to
+this?"
+</p>
+<p>
+She arrested his resentful answer by the uplift of a hand, which left
+the lantern again uncovered. "Inside! In the house!" she softly cried,
+starting on. "Not here! Look!&mdash;those upper windows!&mdash;we're in full view
+of them!"
+</p>
+<p>
+Quickly she remuffled the lantern, but not in time to hide his motion as
+he threw out an arm and pushed her rudely back, while he exclaimed, "In
+full view of them answer me one question!"
+</p>
+<p>
+It was then that Leonard went hurriedly downstairs.
+</p>
+<a name="h2H_4_0016" id="h2H_4_0016"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+<h2>
+ XII
+</h2>
+<h3>
+ THE LANTERN QUENCHED
+</h3>
+<p>
+"I will answer you nothing!" murmured Isabel, still facing her husband
+as she moved round into the garden driveway. "Arthur Winslow, it is you
+who are on trial, not I!"
+</p>
+<p>
+"I on trial! God, listen to that!"
+</p>
+<p>
+He sprang after her, gripped her shoulders, and hung over her, snarling,
+"You two-faced runaway! what have I done but suffer?"
+</p>
+<p>
+She kept the lantern hid. "What have you done? Oh, my husband, will you
+hear if I tell you? You have hung the fates of all of us, living or yet
+to live, on one thread,&mdash;please, dear, don't bear so heavily on me,&mdash;on
+one poor thread which the jar of another misstep will surely break. Oh,
+let us not make it! Come, Arthur,&mdash;my husband,&mdash;into the house; maybe
+we can yet save ourselves and our dear ones! Arthur, you're hurting me
+dreadfully. If you press me down that way, you'll force me to my knees."
+</p>
+<p>
+Still she spoke in undertone, and still she muffled the light, while
+steadily the weight of his arms increased. Suddenly he crowded her to
+the earth. "Arthur," she murmured, "Arthur, what are you going to do?
+Don't kill me here and now, Arthur; wait till to-morrow. I have that to
+pass through to-night which may end my life peaceably in bed; and if it
+should, then there will be no infamy on any of us,&mdash;on you or our child,
+living, or on me, dead; and Godfrey, and Ruth, and mother, and all can
+be"&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+"Give me that lantern!" He held her with one hand, snatched the light
+from cover, and thrust it into her face. "So this is what you signal him
+with, is it?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Oh no, no! Arthur, dear, no! Before God's throne, no!"
+</p>
+<p>
+He lifted it as high as his arm would go, and with all his force swung
+it down, crashing and quenched, upon her head.
+</p>
+<p>
+She gave a gentle sigh and rolled at his feet. Groaning with horror and
+fright, he lifted her in his arms and bore her to her room and bed.
+</p>
+<p>
+There she presently opened her eyes to find him laving her face and
+head, moaning, covering them with kisses, and imploring her forgiveness
+in a thousand hysterical repetitions.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Hush, dear," she whispered. "I see how it all happened. Does anybody
+know? Oh, God be thanked! don't let any one find out! It was all a
+misunderstanding. So many things crowded together to mislead you!"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Oh yes, so many, many things at once, my treasure! Oh yes, yes!"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Call Sarah, will you, dear?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Oh, beloved, why should I? You don't need Sarah for anything."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Yes, I need her. I must send her for mother&mdash;and Ruth&mdash;I promised Ruth;
+and you must send Giles for the doctor; my hour is come."
+</p>
+<hr />
+<p>
+In the Byington house Ruth and her brother met at the foot of the
+stairs.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Leonard," she whispered, "what is it? Is father ill? Leonard! Oh, what
+have you seen?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Let me pass! quick!" He would have pressed her aside, but she laid
+hands on him.
+</p>
+<p>
+"What has Arthur done?" she asked. "What is he doing?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Ruth! Ruth! he is putting her out of his own gate!" The brother
+extended both hands to turn the sister from his path, but she twined her
+arms on his.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Leonard! Leonard! for the love of heaven, let him do it! She has only
+to go to her mother; let her go! It's the last hope. But she'd better be
+dead, and she'd a hundred times rather be dead, than that Leonard
+Byington should be her rescuer! Come in here a minute."
+</p>
+<p>
+Slipping both hands into his she drew him into the lighted room, adding
+as they went, "In a few minutes I can make some errand to her and find
+how matters stand"&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+They stumbled over a disordered rug. She fell into a chair; he sank to
+his knees, and with his face in her hands he moaned, "Oh, Ruth! Oh,
+Ruth! it's my fault after all! I should have gone away at the
+beginning!"
+</p>
+<p>
+Ruth and Arthur met face to face in the Winslow garden. "I was just
+coming for you," he said, excitedly.
+</p>
+<p>
+"For Isabel?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Yes, her mother is with her, and"&mdash;a sound of wheels&mdash;"here's Giles,
+now, off for the doctor."
+</p>
+<p>
+The servant passed. "Yes, I got here by the sunset express. I couldn't
+stay away&mdash;with this impending."
+</p>
+<p>
+"I didn't see you come."
+</p>
+<p>
+"No, of course you didn't see me, for I didn't go to the station, and so
+I didn't pass anywhere near your house. I got off at the tank and came
+up the hill path."
+</p>
+<p>
+"You must have got drenched; you <i>are</i> drenched."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Oh no! I got in before the rain began. Let myself in without seeing any
+one, and found Isabel was over at her mother's. So I waited here."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Didn't let her know you were home?" asked Ruth, with a penetrating
+gaze.
+</p>
+<p>
+"No, I haven't been off the place since I came, but I stepped out so
+many times into the garden to see if she was coming that I'm soaking
+wet."
+</p>
+<p>
+They entered the lighted house, and he turned upon her a glance heavy
+and wavering with falsehood. His tongue ran like a terrified horse.
+"Oh&mdash;eh&mdash;before you go upstairs&mdash;Ruth&mdash;there's one thing I'm distressed
+about. I've told Mrs. Morris, and she's promised to see that the doctor
+understands it perfectly,&mdash;though I shall explain it to him myself the
+moment he comes. And still I wish you'd see that he understands, will
+you?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"What is it?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Why, at last, as I was waiting for Isabel, and saw her coming, I went
+to meet her. Unfortunately she took me for a stranger, turned to run,
+and tripped and fell headlong! She somehow got her lantern between the
+base of a tree and the crown of her head, smashed the lantern, and cut
+and bruised her head pitifully!"
+</p>
+<p>
+To hide her start of distress Ruth moved up the stair; but after a step
+or two she turned. "Arthur, why say anything about it, if nothing is
+asked?"
+</p>
+<p>
+The husband stared at her and turned deadly pale.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Th&mdash;that's tr&mdash;true!" he said, with an eager gesture. "I'll not mention
+it. And&mdash;Ruth!"&mdash;she was leaving him&mdash;"you might s&mdash;say the same to Mrs.
+Morris!"
+</p>
+<p>
+She nodded, but would not trust her eyes to meet his. He was right; she
+had divined his deed.
+</p>
+<p>
+He went loiteringly into the library and gently closed the door. Then he
+turned the light low, paced once up and down the room, and all at once
+slammed himself full length upon a lounge, and lay face up, face down,
+by turns, writhing and tearing his hair.
+</p>
+<p>
+Soon again he was pacing the floor, and presently was prone once more,
+and then once more up.
+</p>
+<p>
+Giles, his English man, brought the doctor, and Arthur heard him
+discoursing as the vehicle drew up.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Yes, sir, quite so; quite so, sir. And yet I believe, sir, if h-all
+money and lands was 'eld in common, the 'ole 'uman ryce would be as
+'appy as the gentlemen and lydies on Bylow 'Ill!"
+</p>
+<p>
+The young husband met the physician cheerily, sent him up, and went back
+to his solitude.
+</p>
+<p>
+An hour passed, and then Sarah Stebbens knocked and leaned in. "Mr.
+Arthur!"
+</p>
+<p>
+"What, Sarah?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Oh! I didn't see you. All's well, and it's a daughter."
+</p>
+<a name="h2H_4_0017" id="h2H_4_0017"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+<h2>
+ XIII
+</h2>
+<h3>
+ BABY
+</h3>
+<p>
+It was most pleasant, being asked by everyone, even by General Byington,
+how it felt to be a grandmother. "Oh! ho, ho!" Mrs. Morris's unutilized
+dimple kept itself busy to the point of positive fatigue.
+</p>
+<p>
+Even more delightful was it, when the time came round for the totality
+of her sex&mdash;the only sex worth considering&mdash;to call and see the babe and
+mother, to hear them all proclaim it the prettiest infant ever seen, and
+covertly pronounce Isabel more beautiful than on her wedding day.
+</p>
+<p>
+In a way she was; and particularly when they fondly rallied her upon her
+new accession of motherly practical manner, and she laughed with them,
+and ended with that merry, mellow sigh which still gave Ruth new pride
+in her and new hope. But another source of Ruth's new hope was that
+Arthur, who had written to the bishop and resigned his calling the day
+after Mrs. Morris's little namesake was born, had at length withdrawn
+his letter.
+</p>
+<p>
+"It is to your brother we owe its withdrawal," said the bishop,
+privately, to Ruth.
+</p>
+<p>
+She beamed gratefully, but did not tell him that, after the long, secret
+conference between her brother and the rector, Leonard had come to her
+and wept for Arthur the only tears he had ever shed in her presence.
+Now Leonard had found occasion to go West for a time, though he still
+held his office; and Arthur was filling the rectorate almost in the old
+first way. On some small parish matter the rustic vestryman with the
+spectacled daughter came to Arthur's library in better spirits than he
+had shown for months, and by and by asked conjecturally, "I&mdash;eh&mdash;guess
+you don't keep any babies here you're ashamed to show, do ye?" and held
+his mouth very wide open.
+</p>
+<p>
+The infinitesimal was brought.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Well, I vum! Why, Miz. Winslow, I don't believe th' ever was a pretty
+baby so puny, nor a puny baby so pretty! Now, if it's a fair question, I
+hope y' ain't tryin' to push in between this baby and the keaow, be ye?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"No," laughed Isabel. "I'm not that conceited. I should only be in the
+way."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Well," he said as they parted, shaking Arthur's hand to the end of his
+speech, "I like to see a baby resemble its father, and that's what this
+'n 's a-tryin' to do, jest 's hard 's she can."
+</p>
+<p>
+So went matters for a time, and then, while the babe began to fill out
+and lengthen out, Isabel showed herself daily more and more overspent.
+The physician reappeared, and spoke plainly:&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+"And if your cousin down South is so determined to have you at her
+wedding, why, go! Leave your baby with your mother; she's older in the
+business than you are."
+</p>
+<p>
+But the cousin's wedding was weeks away yet, and Isabel clung to her wee
+treasure, and temporized with the aunts and cousins in the South and
+with her mother and Ruth at home, until the doctor spoke again.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Let's see," he said to Arthur. "This is November, baby's five months
+old. Send your wife away. Put her out! Something's killing her by
+inches, and I believe it's just care o' the nest. We must drive her off
+it, as I drove Leonard Byington off,&mdash;which, you remember, you, quietly,
+were the first to suggest to me to do.... Coming back, you
+say,&mdash;Byington? Yes, but only for a day or two,&mdash;election time."
+</p>
+<p>
+It did not occur to the doctor that Arthur was secretly keeping his wife
+from going anywhere.
+</p>
+<p>
+The night Leonard came home the old pond, for the first time in the
+season, froze over, and through Giles's activities it was arranged next
+day that Martin Kelly, Sarah Stebbens, Minnie, and he should go down
+there after supper and skate by the light of fagot fires made out on the
+ice. Giles piled the fagots; but at a late moment, to the disgust of
+Giles and Minnie, the older pair pitilessly changed their minds, and
+decided they were too old to make such nincompoops of themselves. Minnie
+would not go without Sarah, for Minnie was up to her pretty eyebrows in
+love with Giles, as well as immensely correct; and so there, as it
+seemed, was the end of that.
+</p>
+<p>
+At tea Arthur told Isabel he was going for a long walk down through the
+town and across the meadows, and would not be home before bedtime.
+Isabel approved heartily, and said Sarah would stay near the sleeping
+babe, and she would spend the evening with her mother. She and Arthur
+went together as far as the cross-paths in the arbor, and there, in
+parting, he clasped and kissed her with a sudden frenzy that only added
+one more distressful misgiving to the many that now haunted her days.
+</p>
+<p>
+She found her mother alone. They sat down, hand in hand, before an open
+fire, and had talked in sweet quietness but a short while, when a chance
+word and the knowledge that this time they would not be interrupted made
+it easy for Isabel to say things she had for weeks been trying to say.
+</p>
+<a name="h2H_4_0018" id="h2H_4_0018"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+<h2>
+ XIV
+</h2>
+<h3>
+ THE TALKATIVE LEONARD
+</h3>
+<p>
+Across the street the father of Leonard and Ruth, already abed, lay
+thinking of their tribulation and casting about in his mind for some new
+move that might help to end it happily. Godfrey had not come. He had not
+looked for him to appear with a hop, skip, and a jump, "a man under
+authority" as he was; but here were five months gone.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I can't clamor for him," thought he, and feared Ruth had written him
+that the emergency was past. And so she had, in those days of new hope
+and new suspense which had followed for a while Arthur's withdrawal of
+his resignation.
+</p>
+<p>
+At the fireside below sat Leonard and Ruth, not hand in hand, like
+Isabel and her mother, yet conversing on the same theme as they.
+</p>
+<p>
+Leonard had spent the day at the polls; his party had won an easy
+victory; and, though not on the ticket, he was now awaiting a
+telegraphic summons to the state capital. His fortunes were growing.
+Yet that was not a thing to be wordy about, and now, when the murmur of
+his voice continued so long and steadily that it found even the dulled
+ear of the aged father in the upper room, that father knew what the
+topic must be. On all other matters the son and brother had become more
+silent than ever,&mdash;was being nicknamed far and near, flatteringly and
+otherwise, for his reticence; but let Ruth sit down with him alone and
+barely draw near this theme,&mdash;this wound,&mdash;and his speech bled from him
+and would not be stanched.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I can admit I have made the mistake of my life," he said, "but I cannot
+and will not, even now, give up and say there is nothing to be saved out
+of it. It's a mistake that has bound me to her, to you, to Godfrey, to
+him, to all, and demands of me, pinioned and blindfolded as I am, every
+effort I can make, every device I can contrive, to compel him to free
+her and you and all of us from this torture.
+</p>
+<p>
+"He shall not go on eating out our lives. I have dawdled with him
+weakly, pitifully, but I did it in my hope to save him. I tried to save
+him for his own sake, Ruth, truly,&mdash;as truly as for her sake and ours;
+and I wanted to save his work with him,&mdash;his church, his and hers; so
+much of it is hers. Oh, Ruth, I love that little bird-box, spite of all
+its spunky beliefs and twittering complacencies. I wanted to save it and
+him; and over and over there has seemed such good ground of hope in him.
+It's been always so unbelievable that he should utterly fail us.
+Ruth, if you could have seen his contrition the night I tore up that
+shameful, servile resignation! I don't need to see Isabel to know he
+is wearing the soul out of her. You needn't have answered one of my
+questions,&mdash;which I honor you for answering so unwillingly; Mrs. Morris
+gave me their answer in five minutes, though we talked only of
+investments. And Mrs. Morris needn't have given it; to see Arthur
+himself is enough. All the genuineness has gone out of the man,&mdash;out of
+his words, out of his face, out of his voice. I wonder it hasn't gone
+from all of us, driven out by this smirking masquerade into which he
+has trapped us."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Have you determined what to do?" asked the sister, gazing into the
+fire.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Not yet. But I sha'n't go back West. Flight doesn't avail. And, Ruth"&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+"Yes, brother; you've cabled?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"I have. He'll come at once, this time." A step on the porch drew the
+speaker to the door.
+</p>
+<p>
+The telegram from the capital had come. But until its bearer had gone
+again and was out of hearing down the street the young man lingered in
+the porch. His mind was wholly on that evening when Isabel had passed
+with the lantern. Would she pass now? From the idle query he turned to
+go in, when Ruth came out, and they stayed another moment together.
+Presently their ear caught a stir at the side of the Morris cottage.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Hmm," murmured Ruth half consciously, and, with a playful shudder at
+the cold, whispered, "Come in, come in!"
+</p>
+<p>
+But then quickly, lest this should carry a hint of distrust, she tripped
+in alone, closed the door, and glided to the bright hearth. There a
+moment of waiting changed her mind. She ran again to the door, and began
+to say as she threw it open, "My brother! you'll catch your"&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+But no brother was there.
+</p>
+<a name="h2H_4_0019" id="h2H_4_0019"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+<h2>
+ XV
+</h2>
+<h3>
+ THE THIN ICE BREAKS
+</h3>
+<p>
+Isabel, who had never confessed her trouble to her mother until now, had
+this evening told all there was to tell.
+</p>
+<p>
+"No, no, my dear," she said as she moved to go, "I have no dread of his
+blows. I don't suppose he will ever strike me again. Ah, there's the
+worst of it; he's got away, away beyond blows. I wish sometimes he'd
+brain me, if only that would stop his secretly watching me.
+</p>
+<p>
+"If he'd never gone beyond blows, I would have died before I would
+have told; not for meekness, dearie, nor even for love,&mdash;of you, or my
+child, or any one,&mdash;but just for pride and shame. But to know, every
+day and hour, that I'm watched, and that every path I tread is full of
+traps,&mdash;there's what's killing me. And I could let it kill me and never
+tell, if being killed were all. But I tell you because&mdash;Oh, my poor
+little mother dearie, do I wear you out, saying the same things over
+and over?
+</p>
+<p>
+"This is all I ask you to remember: that my reason for telling you is to
+save the honor of my husband himself, and of you, dear heart, and of&mdash;of
+my child, you know. For, mother, every innocent thing I do is being
+woven into a net of criminating evidence. Sooner or later it's certain
+to catch me fast and give me over, you and me and&mdash;and baby, to public
+shame."
+</p>
+<p>
+As they went toward the arbor door Isabel warily hushed, but her mother
+said: "There's no one to overhear, honey-blossom; Minnie's at your house
+with Sarah."
+</p>
+<p>
+But neither was there more to be said. The daughter shut herself out,
+and stood alone on the doorstep pondering what she had done. For she had
+acted as well as spoken, and, without knowledge of Leonard's move, was
+calling Godfrey home herself. Her mother was to send the dispatch in the
+morning.
+</p>
+
+<a name="image-0004"><!--IMG--></a>
+
+<div class="figure">
+<a href="images/illust-04.jpg">
+<img src="images/illust-04.jpg" width="70%"
+alt="'But to know every day and hour that I'm watched.'" /></a><br />
+<b>"But to know every day and hour that I'm watched."</b>
+</div>
+
+<p>
+So standing and distressfully musing, she heard the click of the
+Byingtons' door as Ruth left Leonard on the porch. But her thought went
+after Arthur. Where was he? That he had honestly gone where he had said
+he was going she painfully doubted. She stirred to move on, but had not
+taken a step when a feminine cry of terror set her blood leaping and
+sent her flying down the arbor, and where the two paths crossed she and
+Leonard met at such a speed that only by seizing her with both his hands
+did he avoid trampling her down. The scream was repeated again and
+again.
+</p>
+<p>
+"It's Minnie!" cried Isabel as they sprang down the path to the mill
+pond; and Leonard, outrunning her, called back,&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+"We'll get her out! She's not gone under!"
+</p>
+<p>
+The next moment he, and then she, were on the scene. Minnie stood on
+the firmer ice away from the bank, moaning in continued agitation, but
+already rescued. It was Arthur Winslow who had saved her.
+</p>
+<p>
+Now he gained the bank with the dripping girl, where he yielded her to
+his wife, and without a word from him, from Isabel, or from Leonard to
+any one but the incessantly talking maid, the four hurried up the path.
+When they reached the arbor Ruth had joined them, and there the three
+women turned to the cottage. Leonard passed on toward his home. Arthur
+went into his own house.
+</p>
+<p>
+In the cottage, while being hurried into dry clothes, Minnie more
+coherently explained her mishap. Wishing to play a joke on Giles, she
+had slipped away from the fireside company of him and Sarah to put a
+match to his fagots on the pond, run back with word that they were
+burning, and laugh with Sarah while Giles should plunge out to find the
+incendiaries. But she had forgotten how frail good ice may be against a
+warm bank, and leaping down, had promptly broken through. She had had
+the fortune to hold on by the ice's outer edge until Arthur, whom she
+felt sure only Providence could have sent there, drew her out. She was
+tearfully ashamed, yet not so broken in spirit but she fiercely vowed
+she would get even with Giles for this yet.
+</p>
+<p>
+Leonard went to his room, Arthur to his, and each in his way shut
+himself in to darkness, silence, and the fury of his own heart.
+</p>
+<p>
+One of the things most harrowing to Leonard was that, at every turn,
+the active part fell to Arthur, while him fate held mercilessly to the
+passive; and his soul writhed in unworded prayer for any conceivable
+turn of events that would give him leave to act, to do!
+</p>
+<p>
+But all he could do was done. Godfrey was sent for: everything must
+await his coming. Heaven hold Arthur's hand till Godfrey could come!
+</p>
+<p>
+Ruth returned home and began to lock up the house. When, presently, she
+tapped at her brother's door and looked in, he had lighted the room and
+was reading his telegram.
+</p>
+<p>
+"All right over the way," she said, and to hurry on over the grim
+untruth repeated briefly Minnie's story. "Good-night. You go&mdash;to-morrow?
+Well, you'll make haste back."
+</p>
+<p>
+She left him, but later returned.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Leonard." At the slightly opened door she thrust in her Bible, with a
+finger on the line, "My soul, wait thou only upon God."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Thank you," said the brother. "Good-night. I'm afraid we've kept Him
+waiting on us."
+</p>
+<a name="h2H_4_0020" id="h2H_4_0020"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+<h2>
+ XVI
+</h2>
+<h3>
+ MUST GIVE YOU UP
+</h3>
+<p>
+Over on the Winslow side of the way, Isabel, having tarried in the
+cottage to explain to her frightened mother how perfectly natural it was
+that Arthur, after his tramp across the meadows, should have made a
+circuit to the upper side of the old mill pool, went pensively home.
+Presently, holding a lamp, she stood in the door between her room and
+Arthur's, lifted the light above her head, and, shading her brows,
+called his name. Hidden in the gloom, silent and motionless, he stared
+for a moment on the beautiful apparition, and then moved without a sound
+into the beams of the lamp, a picture of misery and desperation.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Why in the dark?" amiably inquired the wife.
+</p>
+<p>
+With widening eyes and spectral motions he drew near.
+</p>
+<p>
+"In the dark?" he asked. "Why in the dark? The darkness is in me, and
+all the lamps that light the world's ships into harbor could not dispel
+it."
+</p>
+<p>
+All at once he went to his knees. "Oh, my wife, my wife! save me, save
+me! Hell is in my soul!"
+</p>
+<p>
+She drew back, and with low vehemence urged him to his feet. "Up! up! My
+husband shall not kneel to me!"
+</p>
+<p>
+Laying her hand reverently upon his shoulder she pressed him into his
+room, set the lamp aside, and let him clasp her wildly in his arms.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Save me, Isabel," he moaned again. "Save me."
+</p>
+<p>
+"From what, dear heart,&mdash;from what can I save you?" She drew him to a
+seat and knelt beside him.
+</p>
+<p>
+"From the green-eyed demon that has gnawed, gnawed, gnawed at my heart
+till it is rent to shreds, and at my brain&mdash;my brain!&mdash;till it is almost
+gone." His brow drooped to hers. "Almost gone, beloved; my brain is
+almost gone."
+</p>
+<p>
+"No, Arthur, dearest, no, no, no; your heart is torn, but your mind,
+thank God, is whole. This is only a mood. Come, it will pass with one
+night's sleep."
+</p>
+<p>
+Still he held her brow beneath his. "Save me, Isabel; my soul is almost
+gone. Oh, save me from the fiends that come before me and behind me, by
+night and by day, eyes shut or eyes open."
+</p>
+<p>
+"My husband! my love! how can I save you? How can I help you? Tell me
+how."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Hear me! hear me confess! That will save me, oh, so sweetly, so
+sweetly! That will save me from the faces&mdash;the white, white faces that
+float on that black pool down yonder, and move their accusing lips at
+me: <i>his</i> face&mdash;and mine&mdash;and thine. Oh, Isabel, until you stood
+before me in the golden light of your lamp, transfigured into a
+messenger from heaven, it was in my lost soul to do the deed this
+night."
+</p>
+<p>
+The wife laid her palms upon her husband's temples, and putting forth
+her strength lifted them and looked tenderly into his eyes.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Dear heart, you do not frighten me. You know how unaccountably fear
+deserts me in fearful moments. But I know there's nothing for either of
+us to fear now. This is all in your tortured imagination, and there,
+though you had not seen me, it would have stayed; you never would have
+come to the act. Arthur, your soul is not lost. You who have pointed the
+way of escape and deliverance so clearly and savingly to so many, you
+need not miss it now yourself."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Idle words, Isabel,&mdash;idle, idle words. The very words of Christ are
+idle to me until I give you up."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Give me up, my husband? Dear love, you cannot! You shall not! I will
+not be given up. You haven't the cause, and I haven't the cause."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Oh, Isabel, I stole you! And the curse of God has gone with the theft,
+and with every step of the thief, from the first day till now. From the
+first day until now God has lifted that other man up and brought me
+down. And yet, before God who said, Thou shalt not covet thy neighbor's
+wife, he loves you this moment&mdash;now!&mdash;with the love of a man for a
+woman."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Arthur, no! If he did"&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+"Isabel, if he did not&mdash;if he did not love you yet as before he lost
+you&mdash;oh! if he did not love you infinitely more now than then&mdash;he would
+not be Leonard Byington. That is all my evidence, all my argument, all
+the ground of my hate; and I hate him with a hatred that has
+finished&mdash;finished!&mdash;with my heart, and is devouring my brain."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Oh, my poor husband, listen to"&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+"Listen to me!" he broke in. "Listen before I lose the blessed impulse
+to say there is but one cure. I must give you up to Leonard Byington.
+Oh, let me speak! I took you from him by law; by law I will give you
+back."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Do you mean divorce, Arthur?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"I do."
+</p>
+<p>
+"On what ground?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"On the ground of ill treatment. You shall bring suit; I will plead
+guilty."
+</p>
+<p>
+She rose, with his temples still in her hands. "Ah! whose words are idle
+now?"
+</p>
+<p>
+She bent over him with eyes of passionate kindness. "You did not take me
+from him. You asked me to take you, and for better for worse, till death
+us do part, I took you, Arthur, knowing as much of any other man's love
+for me as I know at this hour. You could not steal me; the shame would
+be mine, to have let you. You are no thief! I am no stolen thing! You
+shall be happy with me; you shall not give me up!"
+</p>
+<p>
+He leaped to his feet and snatched her into his arms. The babe cried
+sleepily from its mother's room. She tenderly disengaged herself, left
+him in the door, moved on to the child's crib, and in the dim light of
+the bedside taper, facing him from beyond it, soothed the little one by
+her silent touch.
+</p>
+<p>
+To Arthur, wan and frail though she was, the sight was heavenly fair, a
+vision of ineffable peace to which it seemed a sacrilege to draw nearer;
+but she beckoned, and he stole to the spot. With the quieted babe in its
+crib between them, the pair knit arms about each other's neck and
+kissed.
+</p>
+<p>
+"My own! my own at last!" murmured the husband. "I never had you until
+now!"
+</p>
+<p>
+"The cure has worked, dear heart," breathed the wife,&mdash;"worked without
+surgery, has it not?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"The cure has worked," he replied,&mdash;"worked without the sacrifice. Oh,
+the sudden sweet ease of it!"
+</p>
+<p>
+Whispering a fervent good-night in response to hers, he covered her head
+and brows with caresses; then stole away with eyes still fastened on
+her, and at the dividing threshold waved a last parting and closed the
+door.
+</p>
+<a name="h2H_4_0021" id="h2H_4_0021"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+<h2>
+ XVII
+</h2>
+<h3>
+ SLEEP, OF A SORT
+</h3>
+<p>
+Isabel went to her couch in great heaviness and agitation. Her sad
+confidings to her mother, Minnie's adventure, Arthur's pitiful if not
+alarming condition, she strove to reconsider duly and in their order;
+but perpetually there interfered, with its every smallest detail
+thrillingly clear and strong, that moment which had thrown her once more
+into the company, tossed her into the very clutch, of Leonard Byington.
+She turned her face into her pillow and prayed God for other thoughts
+and visions, and at length, while charging herself to see her mother in
+time to postpone the sending of her dispatch to Godfrey, she slept.
+</p>
+<p>
+Sleep, of a sort, came also to Arthur, though not before many an evil
+imagination had come back to tease and sting his galled mind.
+</p>
+<p>
+What chafed oftenest was the fact that Isabel, had he allowed it, would
+have sought to argue down his belief that Leonard loved her. Great
+heaven! what must be her feeling toward him, that she should offer to
+argue such a question? She might truly deny all knowledge of his
+passion, but oh, where were her quick outcries of womanly abhorrence?
+Where was the word that Leonard Byington was no more to her than any
+other man,&mdash;that word which would have been the first to flash from her
+if conscience had not stopped it? Twice he sprang up in his bed,
+whispering: "They love! They love! Each knows it of the other! They
+love!"
+</p>
+<p>
+The second time, as he stared, suddenly he saw them! They stood just
+beyond the foot of his couch, wrapped in each other's arms. Choking with
+wrath, freezing with horror, he slid to the floor; but at his first step
+they floated apart. Isabel glided toward her own door, fading as she
+went, and dissolved in a broad moonbeam. Leonard, as he receded, grew
+every instant more real, until, at his pursuer's second step, he melted
+through a window and was gone. Arthur sprang to the spot and stared out
+and down; but all he saw was the moon, the frosty night, and the silent,
+motionless garden.
+</p>
+<p>
+With a whisper of fierce purpose he turned and noiselessly threw on his
+clothes, then clutched his head in his hands in a wild effort to recall
+what the purpose was, and by and by lay quietly down again on his bed.
+He could not recollect; but the inner tumult quieted more and more, and
+after a time, without putting off any part of his dress, he drew the
+bedcovers over himself, and in a few moments was partially asleep. So
+for an hour or more he lay in half-waking dreams, ghastly with phantoms
+and breathless with dismay of his own ferocious strivings. Then he rose
+once more, and, with the noiselessness which habit had perfected, left
+his room, moved down the upper hall and the stair, and let himself out
+into the garden. Wadded in his arms he bore one or two of the coverings
+from his bed. He took his way to the pond.
+</p>
+<p>
+He was walking in his sleep.
+</p>
+<p>
+At an earlier day Isabel would have been awakened by her husband's
+softest movement; but now, used to his stirrings, weary in body and
+mind, and in some degree reassured, she slept on unstartled until
+Arthur's return.
+</p>
+<p>
+He came as silently as he had gone, and was empty-handed. He had tied a
+great stone in the two bed-coverings, and through the thin new ice of
+the hole where Minnie had broken in had sunk them in the black depth
+under the shelving rock. He was still asleep.
+</p>
+<p>
+The door between the two chambers gave a faint sound as he opened it,
+yet neither mother nor child moved. A moment passed, and he had reached
+the bed. Another went by, and Isabel was awake, wildly but vainly trying
+to scream, to rise. A knee was on her bosom, two hands grappled her
+throat, and two out-starting eyes were close to hers. Her husband was
+strangling her.
+</p>
+<p>
+Then he too awoke. With a horrified cry he recoiled, and she, for the
+first time in her life in a transport of terror, hurled him, in the
+strength of her frenzy, to the farther side of the bed, and writhing out
+on the opposite side, crept under it and lay still. In a torture of
+bewilderment and remorse Arthur buried his face in the bedside. Then,
+helpless to distinguish what he had done from what he had dreamed, he
+sprang back to the place where Isabel had lain sleeping, and lo, it was
+empty.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Oh, was it thou, was it thou?" he wailed, in a stifled voice. "Was it
+not he?"
+</p>
+<p>
+Whispering and moaning her name, hearkening and groping, he sought her
+from corner to corner, first of her room and then of his own, and then
+went to the hall and to other rooms in the same harrowing quest.
+</p>
+<p>
+Isabel crept forth and darted to her babe. Yet as she leaned to take it
+in her arms her better judgment told her the child was safe. The husband
+too, and every one beside, were safer from his jealous wrath while the
+babe remained. With one anguished knitting of her hands over it she left
+it, and fled in her night-dress. Arthur's course was made plain by his
+moanings, and easily avoiding him, she glided down a back stair, out
+into the arbor, and across to her mother's cottage and bed-chamber. As
+she did so he returned hurriedly to his room, with low cries of less
+wretched conviction, and looked eagerly under his bed and then under
+hers. Thereupon the last hope died, and he dropped to his face on the
+floor in abject agony.
+</p>
+<a name="h2H_4_0022" id="h2H_4_0022"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+<h2>
+ XVIII
+</h2>
+<h3>
+ MISSING
+</h3>
+<p>
+After a time a new conjecture brought him to his feet. To solve it he
+would go to the pond. If he had truly been there and done this appalling
+thing, he would know it by the empty imprint of the boulder he had taken
+from its resting place of years. If he had not, then Isabel had fled to
+her mother and would be found with her in the morning, and the blot of
+her murder, though it blackened his soul, was yet not on his hands.
+</p>
+<p>
+He went to the water, and soon he came again with the step and face of
+one called out of his grave. Slowly he counted the disordered coverings
+of his wife's couch, stood a moment in desolate perplexity, and then
+went quickly and counted those of his own. A sheet and a blanket were
+gone. He turned to a closet and supplied the lack, and then paced the
+floor until dawn.
+</p>
+<p>
+Before the servants were fairly astir he laid away the clothing Isabel
+had put off, and contrived to leave the house and pass through the arbor
+unseen until he reached its farther end; but there Mrs. Morris, in a
+dressing gown, opened to him before he could knock. She forced her usual
+laugh, but he saw the white preparedness of her face.
+</p>
+<p>
+"She knows my crime," he thought, and was in agony to guess how she had
+got the knowledge and what she would do with it.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Why, Arthur," she sweetly began, "what brings you"&mdash;But her throat
+closed.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Mother," he interrupted emotionally as they shut themselves in, "is
+Isabel here?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Isabel?&mdash;No-o! Why&mdash;why, Arthur, she went home last night before ten
+o'clock!" The little lady knew her acting was not good, but it was
+better than she had hoped to make it. "Arthur Winslow! don't tell me my
+child is not at home! Oh, my heavens!"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Wait, mother; listen. I beseech you. Do you absolutely know she's not
+here?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"I know it! Oh, Arthur, are you only trying to break bad news to me by
+littles? Has Isabel destroyed herself? Has she fled?" The inquirer
+played well now; her pallor, that had seemed to accuse him, was gone,
+and her question offered a cue which he greedily took.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Fled? Isabel! Destroyed herself,&mdash;that spotless soul? Oh no, no, no!
+But Oh merciful God! I am afraid she has been stolen!" He sank into a
+seat and dropped his face into his hands.
+</p>
+<p>
+The maid's steps sounded overhead, and he started up. Mrs. Morris laid a
+hand on his arm. She was pale again, but her words were reassuring.
+</p>
+<p>
+"It's Minnie," she murmured: "let me go and see her. She'll not be
+surprised; I'm always the first one up." She went, and was soon back
+again.
+</p>
+<p>
+"There is no time to lose"&mdash;Arthur began.
+</p>
+<p>
+"No, you must go. Go search for every clue that will tell us a word of
+her; but, whatever you do, let no one, not even Sarah, know she is
+missing, until we know enough ourselves to protect her from every shadow
+of reproach!"
+</p>
+<p>
+"True! true! right! right!" said Arthur, while with secret terror he
+cried to himself: "This woman knows! She knows, she knows, and all this
+is make-believe, put on to gain time!"
+</p>
+<p>
+But he saw no safer course than to help on the sham. "Right," he said
+again; "only, mother, dear, how shall we hide her absence?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"We needn't hide it. You know she got another telegram last night,
+begging her to come at once to the wedding. We can say she went on this
+morning's train, before day; it makes such good Southern connections.
+And now go! make your search with all your might! and after a while I'll
+come over and pack a trunk full of her things, and express it South,
+just as if she were there, and had gone so hurriedly that&mdash;Don't you
+see?"
+</p>
+<p>
+Arthur said he saw it all, but he did not; he saw much that was not,
+and much that was he saw not. He did not see that the dust of the old
+street, and of the new town as well, was on Mrs. Morris's shoes; and
+that Isabel, in a gown which she had left at the cottage when she went
+to be mistress of his home, was really on the train, bound South.
+</p>
+<p>
+Dropping all pretence of having any search to make, he hurried back to
+his own room, and by and by told the pleasantly astonished Sarah and
+Giles the simple truth as Mrs. Morris had put it into his mouth, but
+told it in the firm belief that he was covering a hideous crime with an
+all but transparent lie.
+</p>
+<p>
+After a false show of breakfasting he went into his study,&mdash;"to work on
+his sermon," he said; but did nothing there but pace the floor, hold his
+head, and whisper, "It will not last an hour after <i>he</i> has heard
+it," and, "O God, have mercy! Oh, my wife, my wife! Oh, my brain, my
+brain!"
+</p>
+<a name="h2H_4_0023" id="h2H_4_0023"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+<h2>
+ XIX
+</h2>
+<h3>
+ A DOUBLE STILL HUNT
+</h3>
+<p>
+Mrs. Morris's task was too large for her. She had always taken such
+care of her innocence that her cultivation of the virtues had been only
+incidental. Hence, morally, she had more fat than fibre; and hence
+again, though to her mind guilt was horrible, publicity was so much
+worse that her first and ruling impulse toward any evil doing not her
+own was to conceal it. That was her form of worldliness, the only fault
+she felt certain she was free from. And here she was, without a helping
+hand or a word of counsel, laboring to hide from the servants and from
+the dear Byingtons, from the church and from a scoffing world, the
+hideous fact that Isabel was a fugitive from the murderous wrath of a
+jealous husband, and that the rector of All Angels had crumbled into
+moral ruin.
+</p>
+<p>
+"And oh," she cried, "is it the worst of it, or is it the best of it,
+that in this awful extremity he keeps so sane, so marvellously sane?"
+She said this the oftener because every few hours some new sign to the
+contrary forced itself upon her notice. Oblivion was her cure-all.
+</p>
+<p>
+For a while after his conference with Mrs. Morris Arthur made some
+feeble show&mdash;for her eye alone&mdash;of looking after clews, and then, as
+much to her joy as to her amazement, told her it was a part of his
+detective strategy to return into his study, and seemingly to his
+ordinary work, until time would allow certain unfoldings for which he
+looked with confidence.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Have you found out anything?" she asked, with a glaringly false
+eagerness that gave him a new panic of suspicion and whetted his
+cunning.
+</p>
+<p>
+He said he had, but must beg her not to ask yet what it was. Then he
+inquired if any neighbor had left town that morning for Boston, and her
+heart rose into her throat as she marked the subtlety he could not keep
+out of his dark face.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Why, ye&mdash;yes&mdash;n&mdash;no, no one that I know of ex&mdash;except Leonard
+Byington," she replied, and thought, "If he should accuse Leonard, we
+are undone!"
+</p>
+<p>
+To avoid that risk she would have told him, then and there, all she
+knew, had she not feared she might draw his rage upon herself for aiding
+the wife's flight. She must, must, must keep on good terms with him till
+she and Isabel could somehow get the child. So passed the awful hours,
+mother and husband each marvelling in agony over the ghastly puzzle of
+the other's apathy.
+</p>
+<p>
+Later in the day she knocked timorously at his study door. She had come
+with a silly little proposition that he let her take the infant and go
+South as if to join Isabel. Thus the trunk would not lie in the express
+office down there, unclaimed and breeding awkward inquiries, and she
+from that point, with him at this, could keep up the illusion they had
+invented until Isabel herself should&mdash;eh&mdash;return!
+</p>
+<p>
+But when he let her in, he stood before her a silent embodiment of such
+remorse and foreboding that she could have burst into sobs and cries.
+</p>
+<p>
+Yet she broached her plan, trembling visibly, while he heard her through
+with melancholy deference.
+</p>
+<p>
+In reply he commended it, but called to her notice how much better it
+would be for her to go alone. Then the babe, left behind, would be an
+unspoken yet most eloquent guarantee that its mother would soon
+reappear.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Very true," responded the emboldened lady; "yet on the other hand"&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+He put out an interrupting touch. "The child is as safe with me as if it
+were in its mother's bosom."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Oh, it isn't so much a question of safety as"&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+The father interrupted again, with a gleam in his eyes like the
+outflashing of a knife. "I hold the child against all comers, and would
+if I had to slay its mother to do it."
+</p>
+<p>
+Mrs. Morris stifled an outcry and would have left him, but he would not
+let her.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Stay! Oh, listen to a soul in torment! The babe is already motherless.
+Isabel can never return, mother; she is with the dead. I am not waiting
+idly here for her; I am waiting busily&mdash;for her slayer. He has fled; but
+when he sees he is not pursued he will come back to the spot,&mdash;to the
+black, black hole. He cannot help it. I <i>know</i> that. Oh, how well I
+know it! And the moment he comes he is caught,&mdash;caught in the web of
+proofs I am weaving!"
+</p>
+<p>
+He held her arm and gazed into her gazing eyes in ferocious fear of the
+web she might be weaving for him; while she, reeling sick with fear of
+him, tried with all her shaken wits to sham an impassioned accord.
+</p>
+<p>
+"And you <i>will</i> wait?" she exclaimed approvingly. "You will not
+stir till the thing is sure?"
+</p>
+<p>
+He would not stir till the thing was sure.
+</p>
+
+<a name="image-0005"><!--IMG--></a>
+
+<div class="figure">
+<a href="images/illust-05.jpg">
+<img src="images/illust-05.jpg" width="70%"
+alt="'I am waiting busily for her slayer.'" /></a><br />
+<b>"I am waiting busily for her slayer."</b>
+</div>
+
+<p>
+As soon as it was dark enough to slip over to the Byingtons' unseen, she
+went, bearing to Ruth Isabel's apologetic good-bys, trying her small
+best to play at words with the General, and quickly getting away again,
+grateful for a breath of their atmosphere, though distressfully
+convinced that Ruth had divined the whole trouble, through the joy
+betrayed by herself on hearing that Leonard would be away for a week.
+</p>
+<p>
+She went home and slept like a weary child, and neither the next day nor
+the next, nor the next, was so awful as this first had been; they lacked
+the crackle and glare, and the crash, of the burning and falling temple.
+</p>
+<a name="h2H_4_0024" id="h2H_4_0024"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+<h2>
+ XX
+</h2>
+<h3>
+ A DOUBLE RETURN
+</h3>
+<p>
+Let us not attempt the picture of Isabel keeping the happy guise of a
+wedding guest among her kindred and childhood playmates while her heart
+burned with perpetual misery, yearning, and alarm. "My baby, my baby!"
+cried her breast, while the babe slept sweetly under faultless care.
+</p>
+<p>
+Nor need we draw a close portrait of her husband's mind, if mind it
+could longer be called. A horror of sleep, a horror of being awake and
+aware, remorse, phantoms, voices, sudden blazings of wrath as suddenly
+gone, sweating panics, that craven care of life which springs so rank as
+the soul decays, and a steady, cunning determination to keep whole the
+emptied shell of reputation and rank,&mdash;these were the things that filled
+his hours by day, by night; these, and a frightful expectance of one
+accusing, child-claiming ghost that never came. The air softened to
+Indian summer; the ice faded off the pool; a million leaves, crimson and
+bronze, scarlet and gold, dropped tenderly upon its silvering breadth
+and lay still; and both the joyless master of the larger house and the
+merry maid of the cottage asked Heaven impatiently if the pond would
+never freeze over again.
+</p>
+<p>
+It was Saturday afternoon when Giles, asked by Sarah Stebbens where Mr.
+Arthur was, told her he was again, as he had been so many times the last
+three days, down by the water, sitting at the edge of the overhanging
+bank; or, as the Englishman expressed it, "'dreamink the 'appy hours
+aw'y.'" So the week passed out; a second came in, and the rector of All
+Angels went to his sacred office.
+</p>
+<p>
+He knew, before he appeared in the chancel, that Mrs. Morris was in her
+accustomed place, and Ruth and her father in theirs, and that Leonard
+was not yet reported back nor looked for; but exactly as he began to
+read, "'Dearly beloved brethren, the Scripture moveth us, in sundry
+places, to acknowledge and confess our manifold sins and wickedness, and
+that we should not dissemble nor cloak them before the face of Almighty
+God our heavenly Father'"&mdash;a sickness filled Mrs. Morris's frame, a
+deathly hue overspread the minister's face, and Leonard came in and sat
+beside his father and sister.
+</p>
+<p>
+Yet the service went on. The people knelt.
+</p>
+<p>
+"'Almighty and most merciful Father; We have erred, and strayed from thy
+ways like lost sheep. We have followed too much the devices and desires
+of our own hearts'"&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+Thus far the rector's voice had led, but here it sank, and the old
+General's, in a measure, took its place.
+</p>
+<p>
+Then it rose again, in the confession, "There is no health in us," and
+in the supplication, "Have mercy upon us, miserable offenders."
+</p>
+<p>
+There once more it failed, while the people, faltering with distress,
+repeated, "That we may hereafter lead a godly, righteous, and sober
+life, To the glory of thy holy Name. Amen."
+</p>
+<p>
+At this the farmer with the spectacled daughter stepped nimbly over the
+rail and caught Arthur as he rose and staggered. Leonard was hurrying
+forward, and half the people kneeling, half standing, when Mrs. Morris
+vacantly stopped his way with a face so aghast and words so confused
+that he had to give her over to Ruth. Then he hastened on to where
+Arthur was being led into the vestry by his physician and others.
+</p>
+<p>
+But now he was turned back by the doctor, requesting him to dismiss the
+congregation; which he did, with the physician's assurance that the
+trouble was no more than vertigo, and that Arthur was even now quite
+able to proceed home in the farmer vestryman's rockaway. The people
+noticed that the physician went with him.
+</p>
+<p>
+Mrs. Morris followed on foot with the farmer's daughter, and with Ruth
+and the General, and Leonard went into town to telegraph Isabel, in her
+mother's name, to come home. As he was starting, Mrs. Morris drew Ruth
+aside and whispered something about Godfrey. To which Ruth softly
+replied, with an affectionate twist in her smile, "It couldn't hurry
+him; he's already on the way."
+</p>
+<p>
+In the room next that in which her son-in-law lay asleep under anodynes
+the little mother's odd laugh was turned all to moan. "Oh!&mdash;ho&mdash;ho!" she
+sighed in solitude, "if Arthur could have learned from Godfrey how to
+wait, or even if Isabel could but have learned from Ruth how to keep one
+waiting!"
+</p>
+<p>
+She paused at a window that looked over the garden and into the street.
+Leonard passed. She turned quickly away, only sighing again,
+"Oh!&mdash;ho&mdash;ho!" Her thought might have been kinder had she known he was
+stabbing himself at every step with blame of all this woe.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I ought to have foreseen," was his constant silent cry. "I am the one
+who ought to have foreseen."
+</p>
+<p>
+Lack of Sunday trains and two failures to connect kept Isabel from
+arriving until nightfall of the third day, Wednesday. Arthur knew Mrs.
+Morris had telegraphed for her; but to him that was only part of the
+play under which he thought he and she were hiding the frightful truth.
+</p>
+<p>
+On this day he had so outwitted his village physician as to be given the
+freedom for which he ravened; liberty to take the air in his garden, as
+understood by the doctor, but by him liberty to stand guard down at the
+edge of that dark pool which would not freeze over,&mdash;liberty to take an
+air sweet with the odors of the parting year, but crowded also with
+distended eyes and strangling groans.
+</p>
+<p>
+He was down there in the early starlight when Ruth drove softly into the
+garden, bringing Isabel. Warily the mother came out into the pillared
+porch, and silently received the house's mistress into her arms.
+</p>
+<p>
+"He doesn't know," she said. "I couldn't tell him till you should come,
+for fear of disappointing him."
+</p>
+<p>
+The argument seemed strained, but no one said so, and with a whispered
+good-night Ruth drove away, and the two went in. As they stole upstairs
+they debated how Isabel had best reveal herself. "I'm terribly afraid
+that won't work, blessing," said Mrs. Morris; "you'd better let me break
+it to him, first."
+</p>
+<p>
+"No, dearie, I don't think so. I haven't the shadow of a fear"&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+"Oh, my darling child, you never have!"
+</p>
+<p>
+"But I know him so well, mother. We have only to come unexpectedly face
+to face and&mdash;Oh, I've seen the effect so often!" They entered her room
+whispering: "I'll change this dress for the one he last saw me in, and
+stand over here by the crib where I stood then, and&mdash;Oh, sweet Heaven!
+is this my little flower sleeping just as I left her?" With clasped
+hands and tearful eyes she bent over the child.
+</p>
+<a name="h2H_4_0025" id="h2H_4_0025"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+<h2>
+ XXI
+</h2>
+<h3>
+ EVENING RED
+</h3>
+<p>
+Then she began to unrobe, but stopped to throw her arms about her
+mother's neck.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Now, dearly beloved, you hurry away down the path and persuade him up
+and send him in. I'm only afraid you'll find him chilled half to death,
+it's growing cold so fast. And you can follow in after him, dearie, if
+you wish,&mdash;only not too close."
+</p>
+<p>
+The mother went, and had got no farther than the cross-path when she
+came all at once upon the master of the house.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Oh! ho, ho! here you are! I was just&mdash;Arthur, dear, where is your
+overcoat? Do go right up to your room, my son, till I can get Sarah
+to have a fire started in the library." She multiplied words in pure
+affright, so drawn was his face with anguish, and so wild his eyes
+with aimless consternation.
+</p>
+<p>
+Without reply he passed in and went upstairs. Mrs. Morris remained
+below.
+</p>
+<p>
+Isabel's heart beat fast. She had made her change of dress, and in a far
+corner of her room, with her face toward the open door that let into
+his, was again leaning with a mother's ecstasy over the sleeping babe,
+when she heard his step.
+</p>
+<p>
+It came to his outer door, which from her place could not be seen.
+</p>
+<p>
+Did he stop, and stand there? No, he had not stopped; he was only moving
+softly, for the child's sake.
+</p>
+<p>
+She stood motionless, listening and looking with her whole soul, and
+wishing the light were less dim in this shadowy corner, but knowing
+there was enough to show her to him when he should reach the nearer
+door. The endless moment wore away, and there on the threshold he
+stood&mdash;if that&mdash;Oh merciful God!&mdash;if that was Arthur Winslow.
+</p>
+<p>
+His eyes fell instantly upon her, yet he made neither motion nor sound,
+only stayed and stared, while an unearthly terror came into his face.
+</p>
+<p>
+Care of the child kept her silent, but in solemn tenderness she lifted
+her arms toward him.
+</p>
+<p>
+He uttered a freezing shriek and fled. In an instant his tread was
+resounding in the hall, then on two or three steps of the stair as she
+hurried after, and then there came a long, tumbling fall, her mother's
+wail in the hail below, and a hoarse cry of dismay from Giles as he
+rushed out of the library.
+</p>
+<p>
+"He's only stunned, mum," Giles was saying as Isabel reached the spot.
+"He's no more nor just stunned, mum."
+</p>
+<p>
+He had lifted the fallen man's head and shoulders, and Mrs. Stebbens
+came, dropping to her knees and sprinkling water into the still, white
+face.
+</p>
+<p>
+Isabel threw herself between.
+</p>
+<a name="image-0006"><!--IMG--></a>
+
+<div class="figure">
+<a href="images/illust-06.jpg">
+<img src="images/illust-06.jpg" width="100%"
+alt="'Arthur! Arthur! Can't you speak?'" /></a><br />
+<b>"Arthur! Arthur! Can't you speak?"</b>
+</div>
+
+<p>
+"Arthur! Arthur! can't you speak? Oh, let us move him into the library!"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Yes, um!" exclaimed Giles. "'E'll come to in there; you can see 'e's
+only stunned."
+</p>
+<p>
+He tried to raise him, and Isabel and Sarah moved to help; but the wife
+turned on hearing Ruth's voice at her side, and Leonard Byington lifted
+the limp man in his arms unaided, and bore him to the library lounge.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Arthur," he pleaded, with arms still under him, "can't you speak to us,
+dear boy? Say at least good-by, can't you, Arthur?" He parted the
+clothing from neck and breast, and laid an ear to his heart.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Do you hear it, Leonard?" cried the wife. "Oh, you do hear it, don't
+you, Leonard?"
+</p>
+<p>
+There was no answer. For a moment Leonard's own form relaxed, and he
+turned his face and buried it in the unresponsive breast. Then he lifted
+it again, and taking the other face between his hands he sank his brow
+to the brow upturned and cried: "God rest your soul, Arthur! Oh, Arthur,
+Arthur, God rest your soul!"
+</p>
+<a name="h2H_4_0026" id="h2H_4_0026"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+<h2>
+ XXII
+</h2>
+<h3>
+ MORNING GRAY
+</h3>
+<p>
+Mrs. Morris gave the physician her account of the accident, the
+physician gave the reporters his, and no other ever got into the old
+street or the town it looks down upon with such sweet superiority.
+</p>
+<p>
+Said the rustic vestryman to another pall-bearer, as they turned toward
+their homes, "Many's the time All Angels's been craowded, but I never
+see it craowded as 'twas this time."
+</p>
+<p>
+The new mound was white under January snows when Godfrey and Isabel
+first stood beside it together; and when summer had come and gone again,
+and at last the time drew near when, by the regular alternations of the
+service, the ocean wanderer's three years afloat were to be followed by
+three ashore, it was beside that mound that Ruth let him ask the
+long-withheld question.
+</p>
+<p>
+And once more the new year followed the old.
+</p>
+<p>
+On one of its earliest days, "I cal'late," a certain somebody began to
+say to General Byington, "th' never was a happier weddin' so quiet, nor
+a qui&mdash;" But he caught the sheen of his daughter's spectacles and
+forebore.
+</p>
+<p>
+And still moved on the heavenly procession of the seasons; and as each
+new one passed with smile and song, and strewed its flowers or fruits
+on Bylow Hill, the memory of one who after life's fitful fever slept
+soundly at last was ever a sweet forgetting of all that had once been
+bitter, and a sweeter and sweeter remembrance of whatsoever things had
+been pure, lovely, and of good report.
+</p>
+<p>
+One day the travelling salesman of fruit trees came again. This time he
+met Minnie, some of whose information puzzled him.
+</p>
+<p>
+"But I thought you said the young Mrs. Winslow lived in the large house
+on this side."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Yes, but that's the other one; that's Mrs. Isabel Winslow, the widow.
+Captain Winslow, he's so much o' the time to the navy yard that him and
+his wife they just keep their home along with her father and Mr.
+Leonard."
+</p>
+<p>
+"And who is it that, I understand, a Mr. Giles over here is about to
+marry?"
+</p>
+<p>
+For reply Minnie covered her mouth and nose with her hand, sputtered,
+and shut the door in his face.
+</p>
+<p>
+Another year went by, yet another followed, and still Ruth&mdash;daughter,
+sister, wife, and mother&mdash;remained the happy mistress of the house in
+which she was born, and Leonard remained one of her household. Mrs.
+Morris turned the cottage over to Mr. and Mrs. Giles&mdash;hem!&mdash;and dwelt in
+the Winslow house with Isabel; who, even the young said, grew more
+beautiful and lovable all the time.
+</p>
+<p>
+But there came a day, after all,&mdash;year uncertain,&mdash;when Leonard, with
+Mrs. Morris's little namesake on his knee, asked Isabel if she did not
+think it would be well for him to go away for a while; and Isabel
+murmured no.
+</p>
+<p>
+So by and by the Winslow pair went to live in the Winslow house, and the
+Byington pair in the Byington house; and if you listen well, you may
+hear an aged voice, a voice with a brogue, saying:&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+"Ay! there's a Linnard Winslow, now, and there's a Godfrey Boyington.
+And there's still an Isable Winslow and a Ruth Boyington. But the mother
+of Ruth Boyington is she that wor Isable Winslow, moy graciouz! and the
+mother of Isable Winslow is she that wor Ruth Boyington. And so there
+be's an Isable in the wan house and an Isable in th' other; and there
+be's a Ruth in the wan house and a Ruth in th' other, moy graciouz! and
+there's an Airthur in each, whatsomiver!"
+</p>
+<div style="height: 6em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+<div>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 14575 ***</div>
+</body>
+</html>
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