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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of A Maid in Arcady, by Ralph Henry Barbour
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: A Maid in Arcady
-
-Author: Ralph Henry Barbour
-
-Illustrator: Frederic J. von Rapp
-
-Release Date: November 2, 2019 [EBook #60612]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A MAID IN ARCADY ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Donald Cummings and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images generously made available by The
-Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- A MAID IN ARCADY
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: “I SHALL WRITE AN ADVERTISEMENT MYSELF,” HE SAID.]
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: title page]
-
-
-
-
- A MAID IN
- ARCADY
-
-
- BY
- RALPH HENRY BARBOUR
-
- AUTHOR OF “KITTY OF THE ROSES”
- “AN ORCHARD PRINCESS”
- ETC.
-
-
- _With Illustrations by_
- FREDERIC J. von RAPP
-
-
- PHILADELPHIA & LONDON
- J. B. LIPPINCOTT COMPANY
- 1906
-
-
-
-
- COPYRIGHT, 1906
-
- BY J. B. LIPPINCOTT COMPANY
-
-
- Published, September, 1906
-
-
- _Electrotyped and Printed by
- J. B. Lippincott Company, Philadelphia, U. S. A._
-
-
-
-
-ILLUSTRATIONS
-
-
- PAGE
-
- “I shall write an advertisement myself,” he said
- _Frontispiece_
-
- The stream sulked in a deep, pellucid pool 10
-
- Who would have thought to find a Grecian goddess under
- New England skies? 20
-
- Slowly she raised her white arms 23
-
- “I think I have explained matters, don’t you?” 52
-
- “I hope you like my pool?” inquired a voice 61
-
- She was throwing crumbs of bread to the swans 113
-
- She went to him and placed her hands on his shoulders 139
-
- “Will you?” he repeated 213
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
-A MAID IN ARCADY
-
-
-
-
-I.
-
-
-The clear water of the little river, in which the willows were mirrored
-quiveringly, shallowed where a tiny bar of silver-white sand thrust the
-ripples aside. Thus confined, the stream sulked for a moment in a deep,
-pellucid pool, and then, with sudden rush and gurgle, swept through a
-miniature narrows and swirled about the naked roots of the willows.
-
-[Illustration: THE STREAM SULKED IN A DEEP, PELLUCID POOL.]
-
-With a quick plunge of the paddle Ethan guided the canoe past the
-threatening bar. A drooping branch swept his face caressingly as the
-craft gained the quiet water beyond. Here, as though repentant of its
-impatience, the river loitered and lapped about a massive granite
-bowlder, tugging playfully at the swaying ferns and tossing scintillant
-drops upon the velvety moss. To the left, the fringe of woodland which,
-in friendly gossip, had followed the little river for a quarter of a
-mile, parted where a second stream, scarcely more than a brook, flowed
-placidly into the first. Reinforced, the river widened a little and
-went slowly, musically on under the drooping branches, alternately
-sun-splashed and shadowed, until it disappeared at a distant turn. But
-the canoe did not follow. Instead it rocked lazily by the bowlder,
-while the ripples broke gently against its smooth sides.
-
-To the bole of an old willow which dropped its leaves in autumn upon
-the white sand-bar was nailed a weather-gray board, on which faded
-letters stated:
-
- PRIVATE PROPERTY!
-
- NO TRESPASSING!
-
-[Illustration]
-
-Ethan observed the warning meditatively. In view of his later course of
-action let us credit him with that hesitation. At length, with a faint
-smile on his face, he turned the nose of the canoe toward the smaller
-stream and his back to the sign.
-
-To have observed him one would scarcely have believed him capable of
-deliberately committing the dire crime of trespass. There was something
-about his good-looking face which bespoke honesty. At least, it would
-have been difficult to credit him with underhand methods; it seemed
-easier to believe that if he ever did commit a crime it would be in
-such a superbly open and above-board fashion as to rob it of half its
-iniquity. Not that there was anything of classical beauty about his
-face. His eyes were a shade of brown, his nose was perhaps a trifle too
-short to reach the standard of the Grecians, his mouth, unhidden by any
-mustache, did not to any great extent suggest a Cupid’s bow. His chin
-was aggressive. For the rest, he had the usual allowance of hair of a
-not uncommon shade of brown, and showed, when he laughed which was by
-no means infrequently――a set of very white and very capable looking
-teeth. And yet I reiterate my former adjective; good-looking he was;
-good-looking in a healthy, frank, happy and rather boyish way that was
-eminently satisfying.
-
-If the sign on the old willow was right, and he really was trespassing,
-I have no excuse to offer, or at least none that my conscience will
-allow me to suggest. I can’t plead ignorance for him, for the simple
-reason that he had seen the sign and read it and that he knew all about
-trespass――or as much as was taught in the three-year course at the
-Harvard Law School, which he had finished barely a fortnight ago.
-
-Meanwhile he has been sending the canoe quietly along the winding water
-path, dipping the paddle with easy, rhythmic swings of his shoulders,
-pushing the blade astern through the clear water and swinging it,
-flashing and dripping, back for the next stroke. He had tossed his
-light cloth cap into the bottom of the canoe and had laid his coat
-over a thwart. The summer morning sunlight, slanting through the
-branches, wove quickly vanishing patterns in gold upon his brown hair.
-The tiny breeze, just a mere breath from the southwest, fragrant with
-the odor of damp, sun-warmed soil and greenery, stirred the sheer white
-shirt he wore and laid it in folds under the raised arm.
-
-The brook was rather shallow; everywhere the pebbled bottom was
-visible. It was a whimsical brook, full of sudden turns and twistings;
-rounding tiny promontories of alder and sheepberry, dipping into quiet
-bays where bush honeysuckles were dripping sweetness from their pale
-yellow funnels, skirting curving beaches of white sand where standing
-armies of purple flags held themselves stiffly at attention and
-restrained the invasion of the eager, swaying fern-rabble.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-He had gone several hundred yards by this time against the slow
-current, and now there was evident a change in the foliage lining
-the banks, even in the banks themselves. Artifice had aided nature.
-Pink and white and yellow lilies dotted the stream, while at a little
-distance a slender, graceful stone bridge arched from shore to shore.
-Woodbine clustered about it and threw cool, trembling leaf-shadows
-against the sunlit stones. The arch framed a charming vista of the
-brook beyond. The canoe slipped noiselessly under the bridge and the
-strip of shadow rested gratefully for an instant on Ethan’s face. On
-the left there was a momentary break in the foliage and a brief glimpse
-of a wide expanse of velvety turf. Then another turn, the canoe
-brushing aside the broad lily-pads, and the end of the journey had
-come, and, sitting with motionless paddle, he gazed spellbound.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
-II.
-
-
-The banks of the stream fell suddenly away on either side and the
-canoe glided slowly and softly into a miniature lake. It was perhaps
-twenty yards across at its widest place and much more than that in
-length. Occasionally a far-reaching branch threw trembling shadows on
-the water, but for the most part the trees stood back from the margin
-of the pool and allowed the fresh green turf to descend unhampered to
-the water’s edge. At a point farthest from where Ethan had entered
-a little cascade tumbled. On all sides the ground sloped slightly
-upward, and in one place a group of larches crowned the summit of a
-knoll and mingled their delicate branches far above the neighboring
-maples. Almost concealed among them an uncertain gleam of white caught
-at moments through the trees to the right suggested a building of
-some sort――perhaps the marble temple of the divinity, who, seated on
-the bank with her bare sandaled feet crossed before her, observed the
-intruder with calm, dreamy, almost smiling unconcern.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-[Illustration]
-
-It was a beautiful scene into which Ethan had floated. Overhead was
-a blue sky against which a few soft white clouds hung seemingly
-motionless as though, like Narcissus, they had become enamored of their
-reflections in the pool there below. On a tiny islet in the pool,
-dwarf willows caressed the water with the tips of their pendulous
-branches. Further on a trio of white swans sunned themselves, and
-about the margin the bosom of the pool was carpeted with lily-pads and
-starred with a multitude of fragrant blooms, white, rose-hued, carmine,
-pale violet, sulphur-colored and blue. The gauze wings of darting
-dragon-flies caught the sunlight, insects hovered above the flower-cups
-and in the branches around many a feathered cantatrice was singing her
-heart out. And for background there was always the varied green of
-encircling trees.
-
-Yes, it was very beautiful, but Ethan had no eyes for it. With paddle
-still suspended between gunwale and water he was staring in a fashion
-at once depicting surprise, curiosity, and admiration at the figure on
-the grass. And what wonder? Who would have thought to find a Grecian
-goddess under New England skies? Ethan’s thoughts leaped back to
-mythology and he sought a name for her. Diana? Minerva? Venus? Iris?
-Penelope?
-
-And all the while――a very little while despite the telling――his eyes
-ranged from the sandaled feet to the warm brown hair with its golden
-fillet. A single garment of gleaming white reached from the feet to
-the shoulders where it was caught together on either side with a metal
-clasp. The arms were bare, youthfully slender, aglow in the sunlight.
-And yet it was to the eyes that his gaze returned each time. “Minerva!”
-his thoughts triumphed, “‘Minerva, goddess azure-eyed!’” And yet in the
-next instant he knew that while her eyes were undeniably blue she
-was no wise Minerva. Such youthful softness belonged rather to Iris or
-Daphne or Syrinx.
-
-[Illustration: WHO WOULD HAVE THOUGHT TO FIND A GRECIAN GODDESS UNDER
-NEW ENGLAND SKIES?]
-
-And all the while――just the little time it took for the canoe to
-glide from the stream well into the pool――she had been regarding
-him tranquilly with her deep blue eyes, her bare arms, stretching
-downward to the grass, supporting her in an attitude suggesting recent
-recumbency. And now, as the craft brushed the lily-pads aside, she
-spoke.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-“Do you not fear the resentment of the gods?” she asked gravely. “It is
-not wise for a mortal to look upon us.”
-
-“I crave your mercy, O fair goddess,” he answered. “Blame rather this
-tiny argosy of mine which, propelled by hands invisible, has brought me
-hither. I doubt not that the gods hold me in enchantment.” He mentally
-patted himself on the back; it wasn’t so bad for an impromptu!
-
-She leaned forward and sunk her chin in the cup of one small hand,
-viewing him intently as though pondering his words.
-
-“It may be so,” she answered presently. “What call you your frail
-vessel?”
-
-“From this hour, Good Fortune.” Her gaze dropped.
-
-“Will you deign to tell me your name, O radiant goddess?” he continued.
-She raised her eyes again and he thought a little smile played for a
-moment over her red lips.
-
-“I am Clytie,” she answered, “a water-nymph. I dwell in this pool. And
-you, how are you called?”
-
-He answered readily and gravely: “I am Vertumnus, clad thus in
-mortal guise that I may gain the presence of Pomona. Long have I wooed
-her, O Nymph of the Pool.”
-
-“I too love unrequited,” she answered sadly. “Apollo has my heart.
-Though day by day I watch him drive his fiery chariot across the
-heavens he sees me not.”
-
-She arose and turned her face upward to the sun. Slowly she raised her
-white arms and stretched them forth in tragic appeal.
-
-[Illustration: SLOWLY SHE RAISED HER WHITE ARMS.]
-
-“Apollo!” she cried. “Apollo! Hear me! Clytie calls to you!”
-
-Such a passion of melancholy longing spoke in her voice that Ethan
-thrilled in spite of himself. Unconsciously his gaze followed hers
-to the blazing orb. The light dazzled his eyes and blinded him for a
-moment. When he looked again toward the bank it was empty, but between
-the trees, along the slope, a white garment fluttered and was lost to
-sight.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-“Clytie!” he called in sudden dismay. And again.
-
-“Clytie!”
-
-A wood-thrush in a nearby tree burst into golden melody. But Clytie
-answered not.
-
-
-
-
-III.
-
-
-The Roadside Inn at Riverdell sprawls its white length along the old
-post-road over which many years ago the coaches swayed and rattled
-between New York and Boston. The Roadside, known in those days as
-Peppit’s Tavern, has changed but little. The front room over the porch,
-has held notable guests: Washington, Hancock, Adams, Lafayette and many
-more. On the tap-room windows you may still find the diamond-etched
-initials of by-gone celebrities. And much of the old-time atmosphere
-remains.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-The room into which Ethan had his bag taken after his return from his
-adventure in Arcady was low-ceilinged and dim. The two small windows,
-one overlooking the dilapidated orchard at the rear and the little
-river beyond, the other revealing the murmuring depths of a big elm,
-afforded little light. The floor was delightfully uneven; Ethan went
-downhill to the washstand and uphill again to the old mahogany bureau.
-The wide fire-place held a pair of antique andirons coveted by many
-a visitor, and the narrow shelf above was adorned with an equally
-desirable brass candlestick and a couple of opaque white glass vases
-which, ancient as they were, post-dated the shelf itself by half a
-hundred years. The bedstead, of mahogany, with rolling footboard, had
-made concessions to modernity. The pegs along the side, from which
-ropes had once been stretched, remained, but an up-to-date wire spring
-and hair mattress had superseded the olden furnishings.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-Ethan lighted a cigarette, unstrapped his bag and took out a leathern
-portfolio. With this on his knee, he sat at one of the open windows and
-scrawled a note.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- “Dear Vin, I am sending my man Farrell on to you with the
- machine with orders to place it at your disposal. Make what use
- you can of it. I think it is all right now, though it went back
- on us this morning about two miles north of here. Funny place
- for it to bust, wasn’t it; looks as though it meant me to pay
- a visit here, eh? Well, I’m humoring it. I’ve decided to stay
- here for a day or two at the Roadside. I want to brush up a bit
- on mythology. Very interesting subject, mythology, Vin. Just
- when I’ll follow the machine I can’t say yet; possibly in a
- day or two. Make my excuses to your mother and sisters; invent
- any old story you like. You might say, for instance, that
- Vertumnus, fickle god, has transferred his affections from
- Pomona to a water-nymph. But you needn’t if you’d rather not. I
- don’t care what you say. Expect me when you see me.
-
- “Yours,
-
- “ETHAN.”
-
-With a smile as he thought of his friend’s perplexity on reading the
-note, Ethan folded it and tucked it into an envelope. Then addressing
-it to “Mr. Vincent Graves, The Boulders, Stillhaven, Mass.,” he sealed
-it, dropped it into his pocket and made his way downstairs to dinner.
-
-After dinner a big blue touring-car chugged its way southward along the
-shaded road, with Farrell at the wheel and Ethan’s note in Farrell’s
-pocket. Ethan watched it disappear. Then, drawing a chair to the edge
-of the porch, he set himself in it, put his heels on the railing,
-stuffed his hands into his pockets and asked himself with a puzzled
-smile why he had done it.
-
-
-
-
-
-IV.
-
-
-The grass grew tall and lush under the gnarled old apple-trees back
-of the Inn, and the straggling footpath which led to the landing was
-a path only in name. By the time he had gained the river Ethan’s
-immaculate white shoes were slate-colored with dew. The canoe rested
-on two poles laid from crotches of the apple trees, which overhung the
-stream. Ethan lifted it down and dropped it into the water. With paddle
-in hand he stepped in and pushed off down-stream.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-On his left the orchard and garden of the Inn marched with him for a
-way, giving place at length to a neck of woodland. On his right, seen
-between the twisted willows, stretched a pleasant view of meadows and
-tilled fields in the foreground, and, beyond, the gently rising hills,
-wooded save where along the base the encroaching grasslands rose and
-dipped. A couple of sleepy-looking farmhouses were nestled in the
-middle-distance and the faint _whir-r-r_ of a mowing machine floated
-across the meadows. In the high grass daisies were sprinkled as thickly
-as stars in the Milky Way, and buttercups thrust their tiny golden
-bowls above the pendulous plumes of the timothy, foxtail, and fescue.
-The blue-eyed grass, too, was all abloom, like miniatures of the blue
-flags which congregated wherever the spring floods had inundated the
-meadows.
-
-The sand-bar came in sight and the little river began to fuss and
-fret as it gathered itself for what it doubtless believed to be an
-awe-inspiring rush. The canoe bobbed gracefully through the rapids and
-swung about in the pool below. Ethan winked soberly at the sign on the
-willow tree and dipped his paddle again. The canoe breasted the lazy
-current of the brook.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-It was just such a day as yesterday. The little breeze stirred the
-rushes along the banks and brought odors of honeysuckle. Fleecy white
-clouds seemed to float on the unshadowed stretches of the stream. On
-one side a sudden blur of deep pink marked where a wild azalea was
-ablossom. Again, a glimpse of white showed a viburnum sprinkling the
-ground with its tiny blooms. Cinnamon ferns were pushing their pale
-bronze “fiddle-heads” into the air. Now and then a wood lily displayed
-a tardy blossom. Near the stone bridge a kingfisher darted downward to
-the brook, broke its surface into silver spray and arose on heavy wing.
-
-Once past the bridge and with only a single winding of the brook
-between him and the lotus pool, Ethan trailed his paddle for a moment
-while he asked himself whether he really expected to find the girl
-waiting for him. Of course he didn’t, only――well, there was just
-a chance――――! Nonsense; there was not the ghost of a chance! Oh,
-very well; at least there was no harm in his paddling to the lotus
-pool――barring that he was trespassing! He smiled at that. He smiled at
-it several times, for some reason or other. Then he dipped his paddle
-again and sent the “Good Fortune” gliding swiftly over the sunlit
-water of the pond. And when he looked there she was, seated on the
-bank, just as――and he realized it now――he had expected all along that
-she would be!
-
-[Illustration]
-
-But it was not Clytie he saw; not unless the fashions have changed
-considerably and water-nymphs may wear with perfect propriety white
-shirtwaist suits and tan shoes. It was not impossible, he reasoned;
-for all he knew to the contrary, the July number of the Goddesses’
-Home Journal――doubtless edited by Minerva――might prescribe just
-such garments for informal morning wear. At all events, being less
-_bizarre_ than the flowing peplum of yesterday, Ethan――whose tastes
-in attire were quite orthodox――liked it far better. The effect was
-quite different, too. Yesterday she might have been Clytie; to-day
-reason cried out against any such possibility; she was a very
-modern-appearing and extremely charming young lady of, apparently,
-twenty or twenty-one years of age, with a face, at present seen
-in profile, piquant rather than beautiful. The nose was small and
-delicate, the mouth, under a short lip, had the least bit of a pout
-and the chin was softly round and sensitive. This morning she wore her
-hair in a pompadour, while at the back the thick braids started low on
-her neck and coiled around and around in a perfectly delightful and
-absolutely puzzling fashion. Ethan liked her hair immensely. It was
-light brown, with coppery tones where the sunlight became entangled.
-She was seated on the sloping bank, her hands clasped about her knees
-and her gaze turned dreamily toward the cascade which sparkled and
-tinkled at the upper curve of the pool. As the canoe had made almost
-no sound in its approach, she was, of course, ignorant of Ethan’s
-presence. And yet it may be mentioned as an interesting if unimportant
-fact that as he gazed at her for the space of half a minute a rosy
-tinge, all unobserved of him, crept into her cheeks. He laid his paddle
-softly across the canoe, and,――――
-
-“Greetings, O Clytie!” he said.
-
-She turned to him startledly. A little smile quivered about her lips.
-
-“Good morning, Vertumnus,” she answered. Perhaps his gaze showed a
-trifle too much interest, for after a brief instant hers stole away. He
-picked up the paddle and moved the canoe closer to the shore.
-
-“I’m very glad to find you have not yet taken root,” he said gravely.
-
-“Taken root?” she echoed vaguely.
-
-“Yes, for that was your fate at the last, wasn’t it? If I am not
-mistaken you sat for days on the ground, subsisting on your tears and
-watching the sun cross the heavens, until at last your limbs became
-rooted to the ground and you just naturally turned into a sunflower. At
-least, that’s the way I recollect it.”
-
-“Oh, but you shouldn’t tell me what my fate is to be,” she answered
-smilingly.
-
-“Forearmed is forewarned; no, I mean the other way around!” he replied.
-“Maybe if you just keep your feet moving you’ll escape that fate. It
-would be awfully uncomfortable, I should say! Besides, pardon me if it
-sounds rude, sunflowers are such unattractive things, don’t you think
-so?”
-
-[Illustration]
-
-“Yes, I’m afraid they are. The fate of Daphne or Lotis or Syrinx would
-be much nicer.”
-
-“What happened to them, please?”
-
-“Why, Daphne was changed to a laurel; have you forgotten?”
-
-“No, but how about the other ladies?”
-
-“Lotis became a lotus and Syrinx a clump of reeds. Pan gathered some
-and made himself pipes to play on.
-
- “‘Poor nymph!――Poor Pan!――how he did weep to find
- Naught but a lovely sighing of the wind
- Along the reedy stream; a half-heard strain
- Full of sweet desolation――balmy pain.’”
-
-“Shelley, for a dollar,” he said questioningly.
-
-She shook her head smilingly. “Keats,” she corrected.
-
-“Oh, I have a way of getting them mixed, those two chaps.” He paused.
-“Do you know, it sounds odd nowadays to hear anyone quote poetry?”
-
-“I suppose it does; I dare say it sounds very silly.”
-
-“Not a bit of it! I like it! I wish I could do it myself. All I know,
-though, is
-
- “‘The Lady Jane was tall and slim,
- The Lady Jane was fair,
- And Sir Thomas, my lord, was stout of limb,
- But his breath was short, and――――’
-
-and so on. I used to recite that at school when I was a youngster;
-knew it all through; and I think there were five or six pages of it.
-I was quite proud of that, and used to stand on the platform Saturday
-mornings and just gallop it off. I think the humor appealed to me.”
-
-“It must have been delightful!” she laughed. “But you haven’t got even
-that quite right!”
-
-“Haven’t I? I dare say.”
-
-“No, Sir Thomas was _her_ lord, not _my_ lord, and it was his cough
-that was short instead of his breath.”
-
-“Shows that my memory is failing at last,” he answered. “But, tell me,
-do you know every piece of poetry ever written?”
-
-“No, not so many. I happen to remember that, though. Besides, we
-dwellers on Olympus hold poetry in rather more respect than you
-mortals.”
-
-“You forget that I am Vertumnus,” he answered haughtily.
-
-“Of course! And you puzzled me with that yesterday, too. I had to go
-home and hunt up a dictionary of mythology to see who Vertumnus was.”
-
-“I――I trust you found him fairly respectable?” he asked. “To tell the
-truth, I don’t recollect very much about him myself; and some of those
-old chaps were――well, a bit rapid.”
-
-“Vertumnus was quite respectable,” she replied. “In fact, he was quite
-a dear, the way he slaved to win Pomona. I never cared very much about
-Pomona,” she added frankly.
-
-“I――I never knew her very well,” he answered carelessly.
-
-“I think she was a stick.”
-
-“You forget,” he said gently, “that you are speaking of the lady of my
-affections.”
-
-“Oh, I am so sorry!” she cried contritely. “Please forgive me!”
-
-“If you will let me smoke a cigarette.”
-
-“Why not? Considering that I am on shore and you on the water it hardly
-seems necessary――――”
-
-“Well, of course it’s your own private pool,” he said. “I thought
-perhaps nymphs objected to the odor of cigarette-smoke around their
-habitations.”
-
-“This nymph doesn’t mind it,” she answered.
-
-He selected a cigarette from his case very leisurely. He had had
-several opportunities to see her eyes and was wondering whether they
-were really the color they seemed to be. He had thought yesterday
-that they were blue, like the sky, or a Yale flag or――or the ocean in
-October; in short just _blue_. But to-day, seen from a distance of some
-fifteen feet, and examined carefully, they appeared quite a different
-hue, a――a violet, or――or mauve. He wasn’t sure just what mauve was,
-but he thought it might be the color of her eyes. At all events, they
-weren’t merely blue; they were something quite different, far more
-wonderful, and infinitely more beautiful. He would look again just as
-soon as he had the cigarette lighted, and――――
-
-“Were you surprised to find me here this morning?” she asked suddenly.
-There was no hint of coquetry in her tone and he stifled the first
-reply occurring to him.
-
-“I――no, I wasn’t――for some reason,” he answered honestly. “I dare say I
-ought to have been.”
-
-“I came on purpose to meet you,” she said calmly.
-
-“Er――thank you――that is――――!”
-
-“I wanted to explain about yesterday. You see I didn’t want you to
-think I was just simply insane. There was――method in my madness.”
-
-[Illustration]
-
-“But I didn’t think you insane,” he denied, depositing the burnt
-match carefully on a lily-pad and raising his gaze to hers. “I
-thought――that――――”
-
-“Yes, go on,” she prompted. “Tell me what you did think when you found
-me here in that――that _thing_!”
-
-“I thought I was in Arcadia and that you were just what you said you
-were, a water-nymph.”
-
-“Oh,” she murmured disappointedly; “I thought you were really going to
-tell me the truth.”
-
-“I will, then. Frankly, I didn’t know what to think. You said you were
-Clytie, and far be it from me to question a lady’s word. I was stumped.
-I tried to work it out yesterday afternoon and couldn’t, and so I came
-back to-day in the hope that I might have the good fortune to see you
-again.”
-
-“It was rather silly,” she answered. “And I ought to have run away
-when I saw your canoe coming. But it was so unexpected and sudden,
-and I was bored and――and I wondered what you would look like when I
-told you I was a water-nymph!” She laughed softly. “Only,” she went
-on in a moment, with grievance in her tones, “you didn’t look at all
-surprised! I might just as well have said ‘I am Mary Smith’ or――or
-‘Laura Devereux!’”
-
-(“Aha!” quoth Ethan to himself, “I am learning.”)
-
-“You were very disappointing,” she concluded severely.
-
-“I am sorry, really. I realize now that I should have displayed
-astonishment and awe. Perhaps if you had said you were Laura――Laura
-Devereux, was it?――I would have really shown some emotion.”
-
-“Why?” she questioned.
-
-“Well, don’t you think――Laura, now, is――I’m afraid I can’t just
-explain.” He was watching her intently. She was studying her clasped
-hands. “I suppose what I meant was that Laura is such an attractive
-name, so――so musical, so melodious! And then coupled with Devereux it
-is even――even――er――more so!”
-
-“Is it?” She didn’t look at him and her tone was almost icy.
-
-(“I fancy that’ll hold you for awhile,” he said to himself. “My boy,
-you’re inclined to be a little too fresh; cut it out!”)
-
-“I never thought Laura especially melodious,” she said.
-
-“Perhaps you are prejudiced,” he suggested amiably.
-
-“Why should I be?” she asked, observing him calmly. He hesitated and
-paid much attention to his cigarette.
-
-“Oh, no reason at all, I suppose,” he answered finally. He looked up
-in time to surprise a little mocking smile in her eyes. Nonsense! He’d
-show her that she couldn’t bluff him down like that! “To be honest,” he
-continued, “what I meant was that some folks take a dislike to their
-own names; in which case they are scarcely impartial judges.” He looked
-across at her challengingly. She returned the look serenely.
-
-“So you think that is my name?” she asked.
-
-“Isn’t it?”
-
-“I don’t see why you should think so,” she parried. “I might have found
-it in a novel. I’m sure it sounds like a name out of a novel.”
-
-“But you haven’t denied it,” he insisted.
-
-“I don’t intend to,” she replied, the little tantalizing smile
-quivering again at the corners of her mouth. “Besides, I have already
-told you that my name is Clytie.”
-
-He tossed the remains of his cigarette toward where one of the swans
-was paddling about. The long neck writhed snake-like and the bill
-disappeared under the water. Then with an insulted air and an angry bob
-of the tail, the swan turned her back on Ethan and sailed hurriedly
-back to her family.
-
-“I understand,” he said. “I will try not to forget hereafter that this
-is Arcadia, that you are Clytie and that I am Vertumnus.”
-
-“Thank you, Vertumnus,” she said. “And now I must tell you what I came
-here to tell. You must know, sir, that I am not in the habit of sitting
-around on the grass in broad daylight dressed――as I was yesterday. If
-I did I should probably catch cold. Yesterday morning we――a friend and
-I――dressed up in costume and took each other’s pictures up there under
-the trees. Afterwards the fancy took me to come down here and――and
-‘make believe.’ And then you popped on to the scene all of a sudden.”
-
-[Illustration]
-
-“I see. Very rude of me, I’m sure. Of course, as we are in Arcady, and
-you are a nymph and I a――a god, I don’t understand at all what you are
-talking about; but I _would_ like to see those pictures!”
-
-“I’m afraid you never will,” she laughed.
-
-“I’m not so sure,” he said thoughtfully. “Strange things happen
-in――Arcady.”
-
-“Weren’t you the least bit surprised when you saw me? And when
-I――acted so silly?”
-
-“I certainly was! Really, for a while――especially after you had gone――I
-was half inclined to think that I had been dreaming. You did it rather
-well, you know,” he added admiringly.
-
-“Did I?” She seemed pleased. “Didn’t it sound terribly foolish when I
-spouted that about Apollo?”
-
-“Not a bit! I――I half expected the sun to do something when you raised
-your hands to it; I don’t know just what; wink, perhaps, or have an
-eclipse.”
-
-“You’re making fun of me!” she said dolefully.
-
-“But I am not, truly! However, I don’t think you treated your audience
-very nicely. To get me sun-blind and then steal away wasn’t kind. When
-I looked around you had simply disappeared, as though by magic, and
-I――” he shivered uncomfortably――“I felt a bit funny for a moment.”
-
-“Really?” She positively beamed on him, and Ethan felt a sudden warmth
-at his heart. “I suppose every person has a sneaking desire to act,”
-she went on. “I know I have. Ever since I was a little girl I’ve loved
-to――to ‘make believe.’ That’s why I did it yesterday.”
-
-“Have you ever considered a stage career?” he asked gravely. She leaned
-her chin in one small palm and observed him doubtfully.
-
-“I never seem to know for certain,” she complained, “whether you are
-making fun of me or not. And I don’t like to be made fun of――especially
-by――――”
-
-“Strangers? I don’t blame you, Miss――Clytie. I wouldn’t like it
-myself.”
-
-She continued to study him perplexedly, a little frown above her
-somewhat impertinent nose. Ethan smiled composedly back. He enjoyed it
-immensely. The sunlight made strange little golden blurs in her eyes.
-They were very beautiful eyes; he realized it thoroughly; and he didn’t
-care how long she allowed him to look into them like this. Only, well,
-it was a bit disquieting to a chap. He could imagine that invisible
-wires led from those violet orbs of hers straight down to his heart.
-Otherwise how account for the tingling glow that was pervading the
-latter? Not that it was unpleasant; on the contrary――――
-
-“I beg your pardon?” he stammered.
-
-“I merely said that I had no idea of the stage,” she replied distantly,
-dropping her gaze.
-
-“Oh!” He paused. It took him a moment to get the sense of what she had
-said through his brain. Plainly, Arcadian air possessed a quality not
-contained in ordinary ether, and its effect was strangely deranging
-to the senses. “Oh!” he repeated presently, “I am glad you haven’t. I
-shouldn’t want you to――er――――”
-
-But that didn’t appear to be just the right thing to say, judging from
-the sudden expression of reserve which settled over her countenance.
-Ethan shook himself awake.
-
-“It is time for me to go,” she said, getting to her feet. Ethan made an
-absurdly futile motion toward assisting her. “I think I have explained
-matters, don’t you?”
-
-[Illustration: “I THINK I HAVE EXPLAINED MATTERS, DON’T YOU?”]
-
-“You have explained,” he answered judicially, “but there is much
-more that would bear, that even demands elucidation.”
-
-“I don’t see that there is,” she replied a trifle coldly.
-
-“Oh, of course, if you prefer to have me place my own interpretation
-on――things――――!”
-
-“What things?” she demanded curiously.
-
-“What things?” he repeated vaguely. “Oh, why――er――lots,” he ended
-lamely.
-
-She turned her back.
-
-“Good morning,” she said.
-
-He took a desperate resolve.
-
-“Good morning. Now that I know who you are――――”
-
-“You don’t know who I am!” she retorted, facing him defiantly.
-
-“Pardon me, but――――”
-
-“I didn’t say my name was――that!”
-
-“And I know more besides,” he added mysteriously.
-
-“You don’t!”
-
-“Oh, very well.” He smiled superiorly.
-
-“How could you?”
-
-“You forget that we gods have powers of――――”
-
-“Oh! Well, tell me, then.”
-
-“Not to-day,” he answered gently. “To-morrow, perhaps.”
-
-He raised his paddle and turned the canoe about.
-
-“But you will not see me to-morrow,” she said, stifling the smile that
-threatened to mar her severity.
-
-“You are not thinking of leaving Arcady?” he asked in surprise. “Where,
-pray, could you find a more delightful pool than this? Observe those
-swans! Observe the lilies! Besides, even in Arcady one doesn’t move so
-late in the season.”
-
-[Illustration]
-
-She regarded him for a moment with intense gravity. Then,
-
-“You really think so?” she asked musingly.
-
-“I really do.”
-
-He waited, wondering at himself for caring so much about her decision.
-At last,
-
-“Perhaps you are right,” she said. “Good morning.”
-
-“And I, shall see you to-morrow?” he cried eagerly.
-
-She turned under the first tree. The green shadows played over her hair
-and dappled her white gown with tremulous silhouettes.
-
-“That,” she laughed softly, tantalizingly, “is in the hands of the
-gods.”
-
-Her dress showed here and there through the trees for a moment and
-then was lost to sight. Ethan heaved a sigh. Then he smiled. Then he
-seized the paddle and shot the canoe toward the outlet.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-“Well,” he muttered, “I know how this god will vote!”
-
-
-
-
-V.
-
-
-Ethan laid aside his paddle and mopped his face with his handkerchief.
-The canoe, left to its own devices, poked its nose against the meadow
-bank and allowed its stern to float slowly around in the languid
-current. He gazed across the fields over which the heat-waves danced
-and shimmered and addressed himself to his cigarette case.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-“Providence,” he said, “showed great wisdom when it arranged that the
-Pilgrims should land on the coast of Massachusetts. ‘From what I’ve
-seen of these folks and what I’ve heard about them,’ says Providence,
-‘I don’t believe they’re going to be much of an acquisition to the
-New World. But I’ll give ’em a fair show. I’ll see that they land
-at Plymouth and if they can survive a Massachusetts winter _and_ a
-Massachusetts summer I’ll have nothing more to say. Those of them alive
-a year from now will be entitled to prizes in the Endurance Test and
-will have qualified to become Hardy Pioneers and build up the country.’”
-
-He mopped his face again, lighted a cigarette and took up his paddle.
-
-“One would think that this state might show moderation at some season
-of the year,” he added disgustedly. “But not content with her Old
-Fashioned Winters, Backward Springs and Early Falls she has to try and
-wrest the Hot Weather blue ribbon from Arizona! No wonder they say a
-Bostonian isn’t contented in Heaven; doubtless he finds the weather
-frightfully equable and monotonous!”
-
-He righted the canoe and went on, with a glance at the sky above the
-hills.
-
-“We’re probably in for a jolly good thunder-storm this afternoon,” he
-muttered.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-By the time he had reached the entrance to the brook his forehead was
-again beaded with perspiration and his thin negligée shirt showed a
-disposition to cling to his shoulders. It was one of those intensely
-hot and exceedingly humid days which the early summer so often visits
-upon New England. Even the birds seemed to feel the heat and instead of
-singing and darting about across the shadowed stream were content to
-flutter and chirp drowsily amidst the branches. The hum of the insects
-held a lethargic tone that somehow, like a locust’s clatter in August,
-seemed to increase the heat. Ethan went slowly up the winding stream
-with divided opinions on the subject of his own sanity. To sit in a
-canoe in the broiling sun on a morning like this merely to talk to a
-girl was rank idiocy, he told himself. Then he recalled her eyes, her
-tantalizing little laugh, the soft tones of her voice, the provocative
-ghost of a smile that so often trembled about her red lips, and owned
-that she was worth it. After he had slipped under the stone footbridge
-it suddenly occurred to him that perhaps the girl would object quite
-as strongly as he to making a martyr of herself in the interests of
-polite conversation! Perhaps she wouldn’t come at all! In which case
-he would have had his journey for naught――and possibly a sunstroke
-thrown in! The more he considered that possibility the more reasonable
-it became, until, when he had shot the canoe into the little pond, and
-saw that the bank was empty of aught save a pair of the swans who were
-stretching their wings in the sunlight, he was not surprised.
-
-“She certainly has more sense than I have,” he muttered.
-
-Not a breath of air stirred the leaves of the encircling fringe of
-trees. The little lake was like an artist’s palette set with all the
-tender greens and pinks and whites and yellows of summer.
-
-“I hope you like my pool?” inquired a voice.
-
-[Illustration: “I HOPE YOU LIKE MY POOL?” INQUIRED A VOICE.]
-
-Ethan turned from his survey of the scene and saw that the girl was
-standing under the shade of a willow a little distance up the slope.
-She was all in white, as yesterday, but a broad-brimmed hat of soft
-white straw hid her hair and threw a shadow over her face. Ethan raised
-his own less picturesque panama and bowed.
-
-“It’s looking fine to-day, I think,” he answered. “Perhaps just a
-little bit ornate, though. There’s such a thing as over-decorating even
-a lotus pool.”
-
-He turned the bow of the canoe toward the bank, swung it skilfully
-and stepped ashore. The girl watched him silently. When he had pulled
-the nose of the craft onto the grass and dropped his paddle he walked
-toward her. A little flush crept into her cheeks, but her eyes met his
-calmly.
-
-“This is all dreadfully wrong, you know,” she said gravely. He stopped
-a few feet away and fanned himself with his hat.
-
-“Yes, very warm, isn’t it?” he agreed affably.
-
-“In the first place,” she went on severely, “you are trespassing.”
-
-“I beg your pardon?” he asked as though he had not comprehended.
-
-“I said you are trespassing.”
-
-“Oh! Yes, of course. Well, really, you couldn’t expect me to sit out
-there in that hot sun, could you now? I――I have a rather delicate
-constitution.”
-
-“But you were trespassing before! Coming up here only makes it worse.”
-
-“Better, I call it,” he answered, turning to look back unregretfully at
-the pool.
-
-“And then――then it is equally wrong for me to stay here and talk to
-you.”
-
-“Oh come now!” he objected. “Nymphs in my day were not so conventional!”
-
-“So I shall leave you,” she continued, unheeding and turning away.
-
-“Then I shall go with you.”
-
-“You wouldn’t dare!” she cried.
-
-“Why not? Really, Miss Clytie, I am fairly respectable and I know of
-no reason why you shouldn’t be seen in my company. I have never done
-murder and never stolen less than a million dollars at a time. To be
-sure, I hope to become a practising attorney in the course of a year or
-so, but as yet my honor is unsullied.”
-
-She hesitated, her eyes turned in the direction of the house.
-
-“Besides,” he added hastily, “I was going to tell you what I know about
-you.”
-
-“Then,” she answered reluctantly, “I’ll stay――a minute.”
-
-“Thank you. And shall we be comfortable during that minute? ‘Come, let
-us sit upon the ground and tell sad stories of the death of kings.’”
-
-She shook her head.
-
-“Please!” he begged. “You will never be able to stand during all I have
-to tell you. Besides, you forget my delicate physique; I have been
-repeatedly warned against over-exertion.”
-
-She sank gracefully to the grass in a billowing of white muslin,
-smiling and frowning at once as though annoyed by his persistence,
-yet too amiable to refuse. All of which produced its effect, Ethan
-realizing that she was doing him a great favor and becoming duly
-grateful. He followed her example, seating himself on the turf in front
-of her, paying, however, less attention to the disposition of his feet.
-Unconsciously his hand sought a pocket, then dropped away again. She
-laughed softly.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-“Please do,” she said.
-
-“You’re sure you don’t mind?”
-
-“Not at all,” she answered. So he produced his cigarette case and
-then his match-box and finally blew a breath of gray smoke toward the
-motionless branches overhead.
-
-“Feel better?” she asked sympathetically.
-
-“Much, thank you.”
-
-“Then you may begin.”
-
-“Begin――――?”
-
-“Tell me what you know about me.”
-
-“Oh! To be sure. Well, let me see. In the first place, your name is
-Laura Devereux. I am right?”
-
-She smiled mockingly.
-
-“I haven’t agreed to tell you that.”
-
-“Oh! But I know I am. I haven’t asked any questions, for that would
-have been taking an unfair advantage, I fancy. But I happened to
-overhear yesterday afternoon at the Inn that a family by the name
-of Devereux had taken The Larches. And, as I have been in Riverdell
-before, I know where The Larches is――are――. Would you say is or are?”
-
-“I am only a listener.”
-
-“Then I shall say am, to be on the safe side; I know where The Larches
-am. You are living at The Larches.”
-
-“No, I――I am merely staying there.”
-
-“For the summer; exactly. That’s what I meant. When you are at home
-you live in Boston. I won’t tell you how I discovered that, but it was
-quite fairly.”
-
-“Do I――are you sure I am a Bostonian?”
-
-“Hm! Now that you mention it――I am not. Perhaps your family moved to
-Boston from somewhere else?”
-
-“Yes?”
-
-“From――let me see! Pennsylvania? But no, you don’t talk like a
-Pennsylvanian. Maryland? No again. Where, please?”
-
-“But I haven’t acknowledged the correctness of any of your premises
-yet,” she objected.
-
-“But you don’t dare tell me I’m wrong,” he challenged.
-
-“At least, I am not going to tell you so,” she answered.
-
-“That is as good as an admission!”
-
-“Very well,” she replied serenely. “And now that you know so much about
-me――that is all, by the way?”
-
-“So far,” he replied.
-
-“Then don’t you think I ought to know something about you?”
-
-“I am flattered that you care to.” He laid a hand over his heart and
-bowed profoundly.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-“My curiosity is of the idlest imaginable,” she responded cruelly.
-
-“I regret that bow,” he said. “However, I shall tell you anyhow. I am
-like the prestidigitateur in that I have nothing to conceal. And,” he
-added ruefully, “mighty little to reveal. My name is Parmley, surnamed
-Ethan. I am holding nothing back there, for I have no middle name. It
-has been a custom in our family since the days of the disreputable old
-Norman robber from whom we are descended to exclude middle names. I
-was born in this same Commonwealth of Massachusetts of well-to-do and
-honest parents, both of whom have been dead for some years. I was an
-only child. Pray, Miss Devereux, consider――――”
-
-“If you don’t mind,” she interrupted, “I’d rather you didn’t call me
-that. I haven’t owned to it, you know.”
-
-“Pardon me! I was about to ask you, Miss Clytie, to consider that fact
-when weighing my faults. As a child I was intensely interesting; I
-have gathered as much from my mother. I passed successfully through
-the measles, mumps, scarlet fever and whooping-cough. I also had the
-postage-stamp, bird-egg and autograph manias. Later I wriggled my way
-through a preparatory school――a sort of hot-house for tender young
-snobs――and later managed, by the skin of my teeth and a condition or
-two, to enter college. As it has been the custom for the Parmleys to
-go to Harvard, I went there too. I am boring you frightfully?”
-
-“No.”
-
-“I succeeded in completing a four-year course in five. Some chaps do
-it in three, but I didn’t want to appear arrogant. I took it leisurely
-and finished in five. Then, as there had never been a lawyer in the
-family, I decided to study law. I entered the Harvard Law School and
-graduated a few weeks ago. I am now spending a hard-earned vacation. In
-September I am to enter a law firm in Providence as a sort of dignified
-office-boy.
-
-“I am the possessor of some worldly wealth, not a great deal, but
-enough for one of my simple tastes. I am even a member of the landed
-gentry, since I own a piece of land with a house on it. I also own an
-automobile, and it is that I have to thank for this pleasant meeting.”
-
-She smiled a question.
-
-“I left Boston bright and early Monday morning with Farrell. Farrell
-calls himself a chauffeur, in proof of which he displays a license
-and a badge. If it wasn’t for that license and that badge I’d never
-suspect it. Farrell’s principal duty seems to be to hand me wrenches
-and screw-drivers and things when I lie on my back in the road and
-take a worm’s-eye view of the machine. All went as nice as you please
-until we reached a spot some two miles north of this charming hamlet.
-There things happened. I won’t weary you with a detailed list of
-the casualties. Suffice it to say that I walked into Riverdell and
-Farrell followed an hour later leaning luxuriously back in the car
-and watching that the tow-rope didn’t snap. I ate a supplementary
-breakfast at the Inn while Farrell entertained the blacksmith, and
-then, having nothing better to do, I dropped the canoe into the water
-and paddled downstream. Ever since I stole my first apple forbidden
-territory has possessed an unholy fascination for me, and that is why,
-perhaps, I roamed up the brook and stumbled, as it were, into Arcady.”
-
-[Illustration]
-
-“What color is your machine?” she asked.
-
-“Exceedingly blue.”
-
-“And――isn’t it almost repaired?”
-
-“Er――almost, yes.”
-
-“It is taking a long while, seems to me.”
-
-“Well, its malady was grave. I think it had tonsillitis, judging from
-the sounds it made.”
-
-“Indeed? But it seemed to go very well.”
-
-“I beg your pardon?”
-
-“I said that it seemed to go very well.”
-
-“You have seen it?”
-
-“Yes, it passed the house yesterday at about two o’clock.”
-
-“There are a great many blue cars in the world,” he defended.
-
-“Has it returned yet?” she asked, unheeding.
-
-“No. The fact is, I was on my way to Stillhaven to visit friends there,
-so I sent the car on for them to use. I have observed that, failing my
-presence, the car does fairly well for my friends.”
-
-[Illustration]
-
-“What a pessimist! And you are staying in Riverdell?”
-
-“For a few days, yes; at the Roadside.”
-
-“Riverdell should feel flattered to find that you prefer it to
-Stillhaven as a summer resort.” She gathered her skirts together with
-one hand and started to rise. Ethan jumped to his feet and enjoyed the
-intoxicating felicity of feeling her hand in his.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-“Thank you,” she murmured, smoothing her gown. Then, with a return of
-that provoking, mocking little smile, “Would it be a terrible blow to
-your vanity,” she asked, “if I were to tell you that your guesses are
-all wrong?”
-
-“Terrible,” he answered anxiously.
-
-“Then I won’t tell you,” she said soothingly.
-
-“But――but――they’re not wrong, are they?”
-
-“‘Where ignorance is bliss――――’” she murmured.
-
-“But I’d rather know! Tell me the worst, please!”
-
-She shook her head smilingly.
-
-“Good-bye,” she said.
-
-“Aren’t you going to let me see you again?” he asked dolefully. Again
-she shook her head.
-
-“I have had the offer of a new pool,” she said, “one with all modern
-improvements, and I think I shall move.”
-
-“But――now, look here, it isn’t fair! What am I to do? It’s evident
-you’ve never spent a holiday in Riverdell, or else you’d appreciate my
-plight. There’s nothing to do save paddle around on that idiotic little
-river. And every time I’m afraid the water will leak out when I’m not
-watching it and leave me high and dry. If only for charity, please let
-me come here and see you now and then――just for a moment! I’ll be very
-good, really; I’ll even agree to stay in the canoe and frizzle before
-your eyes!”
-
-“You speak,” she answered perplexedly, “as though I had invited you
-to come to Riverdell, or at least as though I were to blame for your
-remaining here!”
-
-He resisted the words that sprang to his lips.
-
-“I beg your pardon then. I wouldn’t for the world imply anything so
-absolutely criminal. But I am here and I am bored; and surely you
-haven’t so many excitements, so many engagements in the mornings but
-that you can spend a few moments communing with nature here at the
-pool? Of course, I don’t recommend myself as an excitement; perhaps
-I’m more of a narcotic; but I’ll do anything in my power to amuse you!
-I’ll――I’ll even tell you fairy stories or sing to you; and I’ve never
-done either in my life!”
-
-“That is indeed an inducement then,” she laughed. “But――good-bye.”
-
-“You won’t?”
-
-“Do you think it likely?” she asked a trifle haughtily.
-
-“Not when you look like that,” he answered dismally.
-
-“Good-bye,” she said again, moving away.
-
-“Good morning,” he answered. His eyes were on the ground where she had
-been sitting. He took a step forward. From there he watched her pass
-up the slope under the trees. At the last she turned back and looked
-regretfully at the pool shimmering in the noontide heat.
-
-“I shall be sorry to leave it,” she said softly, yet distinctly.
-“Perhaps――I shall change my mind.”
-
-Then she went on, passing from shadow to sunlight, until the trees hid
-her. When she was quite out of sight Ethan lighted a cigarette, smiling
-the while. Then he flicked aside the charred match, lifted his left
-foot, stooped and picked up a little white wad which, as he gently
-shook it out, became a dainty white handkerchief. He looked at it,
-held it to his nose, touched it to his lips, folded it carefully and
-clumsily and placed it in his pocket. Then he turned toward the pool
-and the canoe.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-“She’s a coquette,” he muttered, “an arrant coquette. But――but she’s
-simply――ripping!”
-
-
-
-
-VI.
-
-
-Ethan finished his second cigarette and tossed it hissing into the
-pool. The nearest swan immediately paddled over to investigate. Ethan
-sighed exasperatedly.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-“Go ahead, then, you old idiot!” he muttered. “You won’t like it any
-better than you liked the last one; they’re out of the same box; but
-try it if you want to. There, I told you so! Oh, that’s it; blame me
-now! Blessed if you aren’t almost human!”
-
-He looked for the twentieth time toward where the corner of the white
-pergola gleamed through the trees and for the twentieth time turned his
-gaze disappointedly away again. He had been there almost three-quarters
-of an hour, and he wasn’t going to stay another minute! If she didn’t
-want to come, all right! Only she wouldn’t get her handkerchief if she
-didn’t! He had begun to doubt this morning whether she had dropped
-that article on purpose, as he had suspected yesterday. If it had
-been an accident she had probably returned already and searched for
-it, and he could not base his hopes of seeing her on the score of the
-handkerchief. It was quite evident, anyhow, that she wasn’t coming.
-That farewell remark of hers which he had translated to his own liking
-meant nothing, after all. He would throw his things into his bag and go
-on to Stillhaven after dinner. He had been a comical ass to fool around
-here like this tagging after a girl who didn’t want to be bothered
-with him and risking dyspepsia at the Inn! And what the deuce was he
-thinking about women for, anyway? Hadn’t he taken a solemn vow on the
-occasion of his first, last and only affair to leave them severely
-alone? He grinned reminiscently.
-
-That had been a desperate affair, brief and tragic. It had occurred
-in his freshman year. _She_ was a “saleslady” in a florist’s shop on
-the Avenue. She had cheeks like one of the bridesmaid roses she sold,
-a tip-tilted nose, sparkling gray eyes and a mass of black hair which
-stood up from her forehead in a mighty rolling billow and smelled
-headily of violet perfume when she pinned a carnation to his coat. It
-had been love at first sight with Ethan, and he had seldom appeared
-in public without a flower in his button-hole. He remembered with
-something between a shudder and a sigh the exaltation of pride and joy
-with which he had accompanied her to the theatre that first time! When
-he had returned from his Christmas vacation to find her engaged to
-the red-haired drug-clerk on the next corner he had promptly become a
-confirmed misogynist. During the seven years which had elapsed between
-that time and this he had relented somewhat, had gone through more than
-one mild flirtation and had kept his heart. There had been so many,
-many other things to occupy him that love had remained unconsidered.
-And now, what was he doing here, sitting in a canoe in a lily pond when
-he ought of right to be at Stillhaven helping Vincent sail the “Sea
-Lark” in the club races? Wasn’t he making a fool of himself again? Then
-something white moved toward him between the trees and the question
-went unanswered.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-“I think I must have lost a handkerchief here yesterday,” she announced
-by way of greeting and explanation.
-
-“A handkerchief?” he cried. “Let me help you search.”
-
-“Oh, don’t bother! It doesn’t matter, of course, only――I thought that
-if it was here I’d get it.”
-
-But Ethan was already out of the canoe.
-
-“Er――what was it like?” he asked.
-
-“Rather plain, I think; just a narrow lace edge.”
-
-They looked diligently over the grass. Plainly it was not there. She
-raised her head, brushed a stray lock of hair from her forehead and
-laughed.
-
-“I’m always losing them,” she said apologetically.
-
-“Perhaps,” he suggested, “it might be well to offer a reward.”
-
-“A splendid idea!” she cried. “We’ll post it on this tree here. Have
-you a piece of paper? And a pencil?”
-
-“Both.” He tore the front from an envelope and handed her his pencil.
-She accepted them and set herself down on the grass.
-
-“Oh, dear, what shall I write on? The canoe paddle? Thanks. Now let me
-see. What shall I say?”
-
-“You must start by writing ‘Lost!’ in big letters at the top. That’s
-it.” Ethan’s rôle of adviser carried delicious privileges. It allowed
-him to kneel quite close behind her and observe the pink lobe of one
-small ear from a position of disquieting proximity.
-
-“And then what?”
-
-“I beg your pardon!” he said, with a start. “Why, then――er――let me see.
-‘Lost’――――”
-
-“I have that,” she said demurely.
-
-“A small handkerchief belonging――――”
-
-“How did you know it was small?” she asked with smiling interest.
-
-“They always are,” he answered. “Where was I?”
-
-“‘A small handkerchief belonging’――――”
-
-“That doesn’t sound quite shipshape. Let’s try again. ‘Lost, a small
-lady’s’――――”
-
-They laughed together as though it was a most novel and excellent joke.
-
-“I don’t care to advertise my smallness,” she objected.
-
-“Well, once more now. ‘Lost, a small handkerchief with a funny little
-lace border and an embroidered D in the left-hand lower corner.
-Finder――――’”
-
-“An embroidered D?” she asked puzzledly.
-
-“Wasn’t it a D?”
-
-“Perhaps it was,” she allowed. She leaned a little farther forward, for
-the brief glance she had cast toward him had revealed the fact that his
-head was startlingly near. “And――and the reward?” she asked a trifle
-constrainedly.
-
-“Finder may keep same for his honesty!”
-
-“But――but that’s ridiculous!” she cried. “What’s the use of advertising
-at all?”
-
-“To save the finder from committing theft,” he answered soberly. “Think
-of his conscience!”
-
-“How do you know it’s a ‘him’?” she asked carelessly.
-
-“I used the masculine gender merely in a――er――general way.”
-
-“Oh!”
-
-“Yes. Have you written that?”
-
-“No, what’s the good of it? If the finder is dishonest enough to keep
-it he may look after his own conscience!”
-
-“That’s unchristian,” he answered sadly.
-
-“I’ll do this, though,” she said. “If the finder will produce it I will
-allow him to keep it on one condition.”
-
-“And that?” he asked suspiciously.
-
-“If there is a D on it he may have it. Otherwise――――”
-
-The finder produced it, unfolded it and looked at the “left-hand lower
-corner.”
-
-“Well?” she asked, smilingly. He frowned.
-
-“It――it looks more like an H,” he answered.
-
-“It is an H! Now may I have it?”
-
-“But it ought to be a D,” he said. “H stands neither for Devereux,
-Laura, nor Clytie.”
-
-“I never said it did!”
-
-“This is quite plainly not your property,” he went on, refolding it.
-“Being unable to find the owner, I shall retain possession of it.”
-
-“But it’s mine!” she cried.
-
-“Yours? What does the H stand for, then?”
-
-She hesitated and flushed.
-
-“I never said my name was Laura Devereux,” she murmured.
-
-“No, but you see I happen to know that it is.” He replaced the
-handkerchief in his pocket. Then he reached forward and took the paper
-and envelope from her lap. “I shall write an advertisement myself,” he
-said.
-
-She watched him while he did so, biting her lip in smiling vexation.
-When it was done he passed the composition across to her.
-
- “FOUND!”
-
- “A lady’s lace-bordered handkerchief bearing the initial H in
- one corner. Owner may recover same by proving ownership and
- rewarding finder. Apply to Vertumnus, care Clytie, Lotus Pool,
- Arcadia, between ten and twelve.”
-
-[Illustration]
-
-“What’s the reward?” she asked. He shook his head thoughtfully.
-
-“I haven’t decided yet. Something――rather nice, I fancy.”
-
-A faint flush crept into her cheeks and she turned her gaze toward the
-pool.
-
-“It is much cooler to-day,” she said.
-
-“Yes, last night’s thunder-storm cleared the air,” he replied, in a
-similar conversational tone. She glanced at the tiny watch hanging at
-her belt. Then she murmured something and sprang lightly to her feet
-before Ethan could go to her assistance.
-
-“You are not going?” he asked in dismay.
-
-She nodded gravely.
-
-“But it’s quite early!”
-
-“I don’t think it right to associate with dishonesty,” she answered
-severely. “You know very well that that handkerchief is mine!”
-
-“Yes, I do,” he answered. “That is, I saw you drop it yesterday.
-Probably it belongs really to someone else. Unless――” he smiled――“unless
-you bought it at a bargain sale? In which case the initial didn’t really
-matter, I suppose.”
-
-“Will you give it to me?” she asked unsmilingly.
-
-“But it’s such a little thing!” he pleaded earnestly. “You have so many
-more that surely the loss of this one won’t inconvenience you. And
-I――I’ve taken a fancy to it.”
-
-“That’s a convenient excuse for theft!” she answered.
-
-“It’s the only one I have to offer,” he replied humbly.
-
-“But――it’s so absurd!” she cried impatiently. “What can you want with
-it?”
-
-He was silent a moment. She glanced furtively at his face and then
-moved a few steps toward the house.
-
-“I wonder if you really want me to tell you?” he mused.
-
-“Tell me what?” she asked uneasily.
-
-“Why I want to keep it.”
-
-“I don’t think I am――especially interested,” she answered coldly. “Are
-you going to return it?”
-
-“Maybe; in a moment. You don’t want to hear the reason?”
-
-“I――Oh, well, what is the reason?” she asked impatiently.
-
-“A very simple one. As a handkerchief merely it doesn’t attract me
-especially. I have seen more beautiful ones, I think――――”
-
-“Well!” she gasped.
-
-“My desire to keep it arises from the simple fact that it is yours,
-Clytie.”
-
-She strove to meet his gaze with one exhibiting the proper amount of
-haughty resentment. But the attempt was a failure. After the first
-glance her eyes fell, the blood crept into her face and she turned
-quickly away.
-
-“May I keep it, please?” he asked softly.
-
-She went swiftly up the little slope under the trees.
-
-“Clytie!” he called. She paused, without turning, to listen.
-
-“May I keep it?”
-
-Clytie dropped her head and passed quickly from sight.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
-VII.
-
-
-Ethan stretched his arms, chastely clad in striped blue and white
-madras, yawned expansively, kicked his legs loose from the sheet in
-which they were entangled, and awoke; awoke to find the sunlight
-dancing across the room and making radiant blurs of his brushes on the
-old mahogany bureau; awoke to find a robin fervently launching his
-brief ballad in through the window from the branches just outside;
-awoke to find himself in a new and very wonderful world, a world
-populated by a girl with violet eyes, a reiterating robin, and himself!
-
-[Illustration]
-
-He was in love!
-
-Knowledge of the fact came to him with a heart-clutching abruptness.
-He had gone to sleep last night without premonition; he awoke now to
-a startling illumination of mind. Whence had the tidings come? From
-the dancing sunlight streaming across the old boards? From the scented
-breeze that stirred the leaves out there? From the perfervid gossip
-of the swelling throat? Who could tell? And yet there it was, that
-knowledge, as real as the green summer earth awaiting him, as much a
-part of his life as the breath he drew!
-
-He lay for a long while with his hands clasped under his head and
-gazed out into the beautiful green and golden and azure world, with a
-happy smile on his face, thinking new and ineffable thoughts. It is a
-glorious thing to find oneself really, wholly in love for the first
-time, glorious, wonderful, absorbing....
-
-[Illustration]
-
-The robin ceased his pæan and was silent, with his head cocked
-attentively. Perhaps his ears were better than yours or mine and he
-heard a song sweeter and more triumphant than any of his own, for after
-a moment of listening he spread his wings and floated down across
-sunlit spaces to the orchard.
-
-I wonder if the safety razor was not invented for the man in love.
-Certain it is that Ethan could never have used any other sort this
-morning. At times, driven by a mad impatience to be out and away, he
-shaved frantically, as though he feared that Nature would roll up
-her landscape and be gone ere he could reach it; at times he stood
-motionless, gazing unseeingly at the tip of his nose reflected in the
-old mirror. Now he whistled blithely, only to stop in the middle of
-a note and relapse into a silent gravity. In short, he exhibited all
-the symptoms, mental and physical, usually accompanying his disease;
-temperature increased, pulse at once full and fluttering, respiration
-erratic, pupils of the eyes slightly dilated, mind apparently affected.
-
-He dressed with unusual care, bewailing the fact that his choice of
-garments was limited to two suits. Neither blue serge nor gray homespun
-seemed fitted for the occasion; his heart hankered after purple and
-fine linen. But at last he was dressed and was hurrying down the
-creaking staircase to a late breakfast. Forty minutes later he was
-floating amidst the lilies of Arcady.
-
- * * * * *
-
-That line of stars, dear reader, is the typographic equivalent of
-three wasted hours in the life of Ethan Parmley,――three empty unhappy
-hours spent in and about a silly old puddle smelling like an apothecary
-shop (I am using his own language now) with only a trio of idiotic
-swans to talk to. The Nymph of the Violet Eyes came not.
-
-And yet he saw her that day, after all; caught a fleeting glimpse of
-her that at once assuaged and sharpened his hunger. He was on the porch
-of the Inn after dinner smoking, morosely, when a smart trap swept by
-from the direction of The Larches. It contained a coachman and two
-ladies. One of the ladies had violet eyes, though, as her head was
-turned away from him and partly hidden by a white parasol, he could not
-have proved it at the moment. As for the other, he couldn’t have said
-whether she was young or old, fair or dark. The pair of glistening,
-well-groomed bays left Ethan scant time for observation. In a twinkling
-the carriage and its precious burden were gone. And although he never
-left the porch for more than a minute at a time all the rest of that
-interminable summer afternoon he found no reward. There were other
-roads leading to The Larches.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-The evening mail brought him a note from Vincent Graves:
-
- “Farrell showed up here Monday with the car and your note. I
- tried to find out from him what you were up to, but he either
- didn’t know or exercised a discretion I never credited him
- with. I hope it is nothing more than sunstroke; folks have been
- known to recover from that with their minds almost as good as
- new. Anyhow, I am coming over in a few days to see for myself.
- I know all about mythology――accent on the _myth_. But look
- here, no poaching on my preserves! I finished third yesterday
- on time-allowance; would have done better if I hadn’t carried
- away my jib at the outer mark. No wind to speak of. Can’t
- you come on for Saturday’s race? We’ve had the car out once
- or twice. There’s something wrong with it. Farrell has it in
- hospital to-day. My compliments to her, but tell her I need you
- here.
-
- “Yours,
-
- “_Vincent_.”
-
-After supper Ethan drew a chair to the open window of his room, set the
-lamp precariously on the bureau where the light would fall upon the
-portfolio in his lap, and replied to Vincent:
-
- “My dear Vincent (he wrote), life moves sweetly in Arcadia.
- Clytie, she who beside her blossom-starred pool has so long
- gazed, enamored, upon the fiery Apollo, now hearkens to the
- wooing tones of green-garlanded Vertumnus. No more she fills
- the leafy hollow with her tears and soft reproaches, but
- reclined where shading branches defy the sun god’s fiercest
- rays, she smiles betimes upon Vertumnus. And he, bathing his
- heart in the warm blue pools of her eyes, forgets and forswears
- the too-coy Pomona. So, friend, runs the drama of Clytie the
- dawn-eyed Nymph of the Lotus Pool; of Apollo, radiant and
- unapproachable Lord of the Sun; and of Vertumnus, humble and
- enamored God of the Seasons. Friend, for love of me, petition
- fair Venus to aid my cause!
-
- “And now Jove be with you! The night wind steals sweetly
- through Arcadia’s moonlit glades and bears to my nostrils the
- heart-stirring fragrance of lily and of lotus. It is Clytie’s
- breath upon my cheek. Ah, my friend, I weep for you that you
- can never know the love of a god for a nymph in Arcady! May
- Somnus, gentlest of the gods, send thee sweet dreams. Farewell.
-
- “VERTUMNUS.”
-
- “And now, having read this over, I see clearly that it is
- beyond your understanding, my friend, and so it may be that it
- will never reach your eyes.”
-
-It never did.
-
-
-
-
-VIII.
-
-
-It sometimes rains even in Arcady.
-
-When Ethan arose the next morning he found that Apollo was taking a
-rest and that Jupiter was having things all his own way. At the foot
-of the orchard the little river was foaming and boiling with puny
-ferocity. The grass was beaten and drenched and the foliage was adrip.
-But in the shelter of the elm outside the window a robin chirped
-cheerfully, thinking doubtless of gustatory joys to come.
-
-“Well, you’re taking it philosophically, my friend,” muttered Ethan,
-“and I might as well follow your example, even though I have a soul
-above fat worms. It’s got to stop sometime, and I might as well make
-the best of it meanwhile. Still,” he added ruefully, “a whole day in
-this ramshackle old ark doesn’t appeal to me much.”
-
-He dressed leisurely, ate breakfast slowly, and afterward sought to
-kill time with a book by a window in the tap-room. The volume, a
-paper-clad novel left by some former guest, answered well enough. It
-is doubtful if he could have given undivided attention to the most
-engrossing story ever written. The rain, streaking down the tiny panes,
-caught strange hues from the old glass and the light from the crackling
-logs in the fire-place. Sometimes they were green like tender new apple
-leaves in May, sometimes blue like rain-drenched violets, like――no, not
-like but, rather, reminiscent of, certain eyes! Ah, there was food for
-thought! The novel was turned face-downward on his knee, the cigarette
-drooped thoughtfully from the corner of his mouth and his hands went
-deep into his pockets. Those eyes! Rain-drenched violets? By jove,
-yes! No simile, no comparison could be better! Rain-drenched violets
-touched by the yellow light of the sun stealing back through gray
-clouds! Rather an elaborate description, he thought with a smile at his
-sentimentalism. The smile deepened as he recalled the infinitesimal
-blue circle under the left eye, a little blue vein showing with
-charming distinctness against the warm pallor of the skin like a vein
-in soft-toned marble. It was a little thing to recall, little in all
-ways, but it seemed to him a veritable triumph of the memory! By half
-closing his eyes he could almost see it.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-_Slam!_
-
-The paper-covered novel fell to the floor and lay fluttering its leaves
-in helpless appeal. He rescued it and sought his place again, smiling
-with real amusement over his foolishness.
-
-“I’m certainly behaving like an idiot,” he thought. “I never knew
-being in love was so――so deuced unsettling. First thing I know, if
-I don’t keep a pretty steady hand on the reins, I’ll be writing
-poetry or roaming around the place cutting hearts and initials in the
-tree-trunks! H’m; let me see now; where was I? Ah, here we have it!
-
-[Illustration]
-
-“‘Garrison laid the diamond trinket gently back on the desk and puffed
-slowly at his cigar. Presently he turned with disconcerting abruptness
-to Mrs. Staniford. “There is no possibility of mistake?” he asked.
-“None,” was the firm reply. “You could swear to the identity of this
-jewel in court?” “Yes.” Garrison whipped a small round, black object
-from his pocket and settled it against his eye. Then he took up the
-trinket again and bent over it closely. “My dear madam,” he said
-softly, “if you did that you would be making a grave mistake.” “What
-do you mean?” she cried fiercely. “I mean,” was the smiling response,
-“that this is not one of your jewels,――unless――――” “Well?” she
-prompted impatiently. “Unless, my dear madam, you wear paste!” A sharp
-involuntary exclamation of surprise startled them. They turned quickly.
-Lord Burslem was crossing the library with white, set face.’
-
-“Pshaw! I knew all along the things were paste,” sighed Ethan.
-“Singleton is Mrs. Staniford’s son by a former marriage and she has
-pinched the stones and given them to him to get him out of a scrape,
-something to do with that lachrymose Miss Deene, maybe; at least,
-something she knows about. Laurence is as innocent as the untrodden
-snow, or whatever the correct simile is, and if I keep on to the last
-chapter I’ll find out that fact. But I prefer to believe him guilty. He
-wore a gardenia in his buttonhole, and that settles it. I can’t stand
-for a man who wears gardenias. I insist that he is guilty.”
-
-He tossed the book half-way across the room, arose, stretched his long
-arms above his head and stared out of the window. The rain was falling
-straight down from the dark sky in a manner that would doubtless have
-pleased Isaac Newton greatly, showing as it did so perfectly the
-attraction of gravitation. The drops were of immense size, and when one
-struck the window pane it spread itself out into a very pool before
-it trickled down to the sash. Ethan watched for awhile, then yawned,
-glanced at his watch and lounged in to dinner.
-
-About three o’clock the sky lightened somewhat and the torrential
-downpour gave way to a quiet drizzle. He donned a raincoat and sought
-the road. It was not bad walking, for the surface was well drained, and
-he had put three-quarters of a mile behind him before he had considered
-either distance or destination. Then, looking around and finding the
-highway lined on the right by an ornamental iron fence through which
-shrubs thrust their wet leaves, he smiled and shrugged his shoulders.
-
-“I didn’t mean to come here,” he said to himself, “but now that I’m
-here I might as well go on and tantalize myself with a look at the
-house.”
-
-Another minute brought him to a broad gate, flanked by high stone
-pillars. A well-kept drive-way swept curving back to a large white
-house, a house a little too pretentious to entirely please Ethan.
-On one side,――the side, as he knew, nearest the lotus pool,――an
-uncovered porch jutted out, and from this steps led to a white pergola.
-The latter was a recent addition and as yet the grapevines had not
-succeeded wholly in covering its nakedness. From one of the windows on
-the lower floor of the house a dull orange glow emanated.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-“They’ve got a fire there,” said Ethan, “and she’s sitting in front of
-it. Wish I was!”
-
-He settled the collar of his raincoat closer about his neck to keep out
-the drops, and sighed.
-
-“You know,” he went on then, somewhat defiantly, addressing himself
-apparently to the residence, “there’s no reason why I shouldn’t walk
-right up the drive, ring the bell and ask for――for Mr. Devereux. I’ve
-got the best excuse in the world. And once inside it would be odd if I
-didn’t see Her. I’ve half a mind to do it! Only――perhaps she’d rather I
-wouldn’t. And――I won’t.”
-
-He took a final survey of the premises and turned away with another
-sigh. Before he had reached the Inn the clouds had broken in the south
-and a little wind was shaking the raindrops from the leaves along the
-road.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-“A good sailing breeze,” he thought. “And, by the bye, this is
-Saturday. I ought to be at Stillhaven helping Vin win that race. I
-suppose I’ve disappointed him. However, a fellow can’t be in two places
-at once; he ought to know that.”
-
-
-
-
-IX.
-
-
-The little breeze had held all night, and this morning the trees and
-shrubs were quite dry again, but looking better for their bath. It was
-Sunday, and as the canoe floated into the harbor of the lotus pool a
-distant church bell was ringing. Perhaps, he told himself with a sudden
-sinking of the heart, he was doomed to another day without sight of
-Clytie; for it might be that the family would drive to church. But the
-first fair look about him dispelled his forebodings. She was standing
-at the border of the pool throwing crumbs of bread to the swans. She
-saw him at almost the same moment and smiled.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-“Don’t come any nearer, please,” she said. “You’ll scare them.”
-
-He dipped his paddle obediently and sat silent in the rocking craft
-until the last crumb had been distributed and she had brushed the
-crumbs from her outstretched hands. Stooping, she picked a book from
-the grass and faced him.
-
-[Illustration: SHE WAS THROWING CRUMBS OF BREAD TO THE SWANS.]
-
-“May I come ashore?” he asked.
-
-“You are already trespassing dreadfully,” she objected.
-
-“‘In for a penny, in for a pound,’” he replied, sending the canoe
-forward. “‘Might as well be hanged for a sheep as a lamb.’ And if I
-could think of any other proverbs applicable to the matter I’d quote
-them.” He jumped out and pulled the bow of the canoe onto the turf.
-
-“You won’t mind, however, if I decline to stay and be hung with you?”
-she asked.
-
-“On the contrary, I should mind very much. In fact, I demand that you
-remain and go bail for me in case I’m apprehended.”
-
-“I fear I couldn’t afford it,” she answered.
-
-“Doubtless your word would serve,” he said. “Perhaps, if you told them
-the excellent character I bear, you might get me off scot-free.”
-
-“But I don’t think I know enough about your character.”
-
-“There’s something in that,” he allowed. “Perhaps you had better
-observe me closely for the next hour or two. One can learn a great deal
-about another person’s character by observation.”
-
-“How can I do that if I go to church?”
-
-“You can’t. That’s one reason why you’re not going to church.”
-
-“Oh! And――are there other reasons?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“Perhaps you had better give a few of them. I don’t think the first one
-is especially convincing.”
-
-“Well, another one is that I haven’t seen you for three days.”
-
-She shook her head gravely.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-“Go on, please.”
-
-“Not good enough? Well, then, another reason is that you haven’t seen
-me for three days.”
-
-She laughed amusedly.
-
-“Worse and worse,” she said.
-
-“I didn’t think you’d care much for that argument,” he responded
-cheerfully. “It was somewhat in the nature of an experiment, you see.
-But the real unanswerable reason is this: I have missed seeing you
-very much, I have been very dull, you are naturally kind-hearted and
-would not unnecessarily cause pain or disappointment, and I beg of you
-to give me a few moments of your cheerful society! Is that――better?”
-
-“I don’t particularly care for it.”
-
-“Miss Devereux――――”
-
-“What have I told you?” she warned.
-
-“I beg pardon! But――now, really, please let me call you by a Christian
-name! I――I’d like to graduate from mythology.”
-
-“I don’t think it would be proper for you to call me by my Christian
-name,” she answered demurely.
-
-“A Christian name, I said,” he answered patiently. “Tell me why you
-don’t want me to address you as Miss Devereux, please.”
-
-“Because――――” She stopped and dropped her gaze. “We’ve never been
-properly introduced, have we?”
-
-“True! Allow me, pray! Miss Devereux, may I present Mr. Parmley? Mr.
-Parmley, Miss Devereux!” He stepped forward, smiling politely and
-murmuring his pleasure, and ere she knew what was happening he was
-shaking hands with her. “Awfully glad to meet you, Miss Devereux!” he
-assured her cordially.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-She backed away, striving to draw her hand from his, and laughing
-merrily.
-
-“Is that what you call a proper introduction?” she asked.
-
-“Well, it’s the best I could do under the circumstances,” Ethan
-answered. “Having no mutual acquaintances handy, you see――――”
-
-“Don’t you think――you might let go now?” she asked, her laughter dying
-down to a nervous smile.
-
-“Let go?” he echoed questioningly.
-
-“Please! You have my hand!”
-
-He looked down at it in mild surprise; then into her face.
-
-“Isn’t that the strangest thing? I was never so surprised――――!”
-
-“But――Mr. Parmley, please let go,” she begged.
-
-“You don’t mean to say that I still have it?” He tried to seem at ease
-and to speak carelessly, but his heart was pounding as though striving
-to do the Anvil Chorus all by itself, and his voice wasn’t quite steady.
-
-“I do,” she answered coldly, biting her lip a little. A disk of red
-burned in each cheek. Her eyes were fixed on his imprisoning hand.
-“Besides, you are hurting me,” she added, falling back upon the fib
-which is a woman’s last resource in such a quandary. But he shook his
-head soberly.
-
-“Pardon me, but that’s impossible. You will observe that my hand is
-quite loose about yours. Accuse me of unlawful detention, if you wish,
-but not of cruelty.”
-
-“But――but it is my hand,” she protested faintly.
-
-“Well, that is nothing to boast of,” he replied smiling somewhat
-tremulously. She had kept her eyes from him all along and he was
-determined to see them before he gave up. “Look at mine; it’s twice as
-big!”
-
-The brown lashes fluttered for an instant and Ethan nerved himself for
-the shock of looking into those violet eyes. He didn’t know what was
-going to happen, he assured himself in a sudden delicious panic, and
-he didn’t much care. Probably he would do something awfully rude,
-something that would frighten and anger her, something for which she
-would never forgive him! Perhaps the sudden trembling of his hand about
-hers warned her, for the lashes lay still again. A moment of silence
-followed, during which Ethan’s heart threatened to choke him. Then all
-at once the little warm hand ceased tugging and lay limp and inert in
-his. She turned her head and looked toward the trees and the shade.
-
-“If we are going to hold hands for any length of time,” she remarked
-coolly, “perhaps we had better sit down and be comfortable.”
-
-Ethan released her instantly, while a wave of burning color swept
-across his face. He felt terribly small and ridiculous! He realized
-that he had taken it for granted that she had been experiencing
-emotions similar to his own, and instead of that she had been only
-bored and――and exasperated! He followed her laggingly up the slope,
-savagely calling himself names and meditating a retirement in such
-order as was still possible. She seated herself comfortably on the
-grass with her back against the smooth round trunk of a maple and
-patted down her skirts. Then she glanced up at him calmly.
-
-“Do you realize,” she asked, “that you have made me late for church?”
-
-He was grateful for that ready change of subject and piqued that she
-should be so little disconcerted. His own heart was still dancing.
-
-“I am an humble instrument of Providence,” he answered as lightly as he
-could, dropping to the ground at a respectful distance from the tips
-of her small shoes.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-“That sounds a little sacrilegious,” she said. “Besides――_humble_?”
-
-“Humble, yes,” he answered. “I can’t think of a better word, unless it
-is ‘abashed.’”
-
-“But why do you call yourself an instrument of Providence? Because you
-live there?”
-
-“‘That sounds a little sacrilegious,’” he quoted. “I meant that if you
-had gone to church you would have made yourself very warm and possibly
-returned with a headache. I have saved you from that.”
-
-“Thank you! But of course if it hadn’t been for the introduction I
-couldn’t have stayed!”
-
-“That is understood,” he responded with becoming gravity. She smiled
-across as though amused by some thought, and Ethan felt vaguely
-uncomfortable.
-
-“It’s possible,” she said thoughtfully, “that you might have found a
-mutual acquaintance after all to perform the ceremony for you.”
-
-“Oh, I dare say; one usually can if one hunts long enough. It’s a
-common enough process, and not especially difficult. For instance, I
-ask, ‘You are acquainted in Boston, Miss Dev――Miss Unknown!’ You reply
-‘Slightly, Mr. Parmley.’ ‘Perhaps you know the Smiths?’ ‘Smith, Smith?
-N――no, I don’t think so. Are they friends of the Joneses?’ ‘I dare
-say; I’ve never met the Joneses. Come to think of it, though, there
-were some Joneses visiting the Robinsons at Nahant last summer; he is
-a banker, I think; there were two daughters and a son just entering
-college,’ ‘Oh, were you at Nahant?’ you inquire. ‘Then perhaps you
-met the Browns there?’ ‘Yes.’ ‘Really? Isn’t that jolly? Did you know
-Gwendolin?’ ‘Well, rather!’ I reply in a tone insinuating that it
-was rather desperate while it lasted. ‘Isn’t that odd?’ you exclaim.
-‘Yes, funny how small the world is, isn’t it?’ I remark with startling
-originality. Then we’re acquainted. Yes, it’s simplicity itself.”
-
-“It certainly sounds so!” she laughed. “Let us try it!”
-
-“Very well.”
-
-She frowned intently for a moment, then,
-
-“Are you acquainted in Stillhaven, Mr. Parmley?” she asked.
-
-“Why, yes,” he answered, in surprise.
-
-“Then perhaps you know the――the Penniwells?”
-
-“Sorry to say I don’t,” he replied, laughing.
-
-“No? They live in the next house to the hotel.”
-
-“Hotel? Ah, I think I’ve met the Hotels! Was there a son about my age,
-with――――”
-
-“Don’t be absurd!” she laughed. “We’ll never get on if you don’t go by
-the rules.”
-
-“I thought I was,” he answered.
-
-“Let me see! Oh, yes, the Graveses, do you know them?”
-
-“Why, yes; do you?” he answered interestedly.
-
-“I’ve met them.”
-
-“Vincent is a great friend of mine,” he said eagerly. “I was on my way
-to visit them for a while when――when I stopped here.”
-
-“Really?” she cried. “How small the world is, after all!”
-
-They laughed together. Then,
-
-“And you know Vin?” he asked.
-
-“Yes, I――I’ve met him,” she replied. Her tone hinted of embarrassment.
-
-“Oh!” said Ethan thoughtfully. Had he discovered the explanation of
-Vincent’s puzzling warning? Was the girl before him the “preserves”
-referred to by his friend? Ethan’s heart sank for a moment. Nonsense!
-She had plainly implied that she knew him only slightly, in which case
-she didn’t belong any more to Vin than to him. “You don’t know him very
-well, then?” he questioned anxiously.
-
-“Aren’t you a――well, just a weeny bit inquisitive?” she asked smilingly.
-
-“It may sound so,” he acknowledged, “but, you see, it means a good deal
-to me; it’s rather important.”
-
-[Illustration]
-
-“Important?” she repeated wonderingly.
-
-“Yes, you see――――” But of course he couldn’t explain why it was
-important. So he floundered helplessly a moment. “Yes――that is――well,
-they are very good friends of mine, Vin especially, and――”
-
-“Oh, you feared perhaps I wasn’t a proper person for them to know?”
-
-“Good heaven, no!”
-
-“Then I don’t see――――!”
-
-“I don’t blame you,” he said discouragedly. “Really, I was only talking
-nonsense. I――I thought that if you knew them well, and I knew them
-well, then we――we might know each other well!”
-
-She gazed at him sorrowfully a moment. Then she shook her head
-disappointedly.
-
-“No,” she said, “no, that wasn’t at all what you meant. I suppose even
-studying for the law has its effect.”
-
-He laughed embarrassedly.
-
-“May I see what you are reading?” he asked.
-
-She lifted the volume from her lap, gravely took a folded handkerchief
-from between the leaves where it had been doing duty as a mark, and
-handed him the book.
-
-“I’m sorry you can’t trust me,” he laughed.
-
-“So am I,” was the regretful response. “It is terrible to have a friend
-both a――a prevaricator and a――a――a――――”
-
-“Embezzler,” he suggested helpfully. “Yes, it is bad. ‘Love Sonnets
-from the Portuguese,’” he continued, reading the title. “May I ask if
-you were going to take this to church with you?”
-
-“I hadn’t thought of it. I suppose, like most men, you consider them
-silly and sentimental,” she challenged.
-
-He shook his head.
-
-“Sweet and sentimental, rather,” he replied.
-
-“You could hardly be expected to care for them, I suppose,” she said.
-“Your tastes, if I recollect aright, run rather toward ‘The Ingoldsby
-Legends’!”
-
-“That is indeed unkind,” he murmured sorrowfully. “No, I am very fond
-of these, this one especially; if it were not Sunday I would read it.”
-
-“What has Sunday got to do with it?” she asked.
-
-“Perhaps nothing,” was the reply. “I dare say it is only my Puritanism
-cropping out. You know we New Englanders find it very difficult
-to reconcile pleasure with religion. I can fancy the ghost of my
-great-great-great-grandfather, in sugar-loaf hat and with beruffed
-neck, standing over there in the shadows, holding his hands aloft in
-holy horror at the sight of me sitting here on Sunday morning with a
-volume of love-poems in my hands.”
-
-“What nonsense!” she cried indignantly. “Isn’t love just as holy as――as
-anything? Isn’t――――” She stopped abruptly and Ethan, lifting his head,
-found her gazing toward him with something almost like horror in her
-wide eyes.
-
-“What is it?” he cried anxiously.
-
-She shook her head and dropped her gaze to the hands folded on her
-knees.
-
-“Nothing,” she said very quietly. She laughed softly, uncertainly.
-“Will you give me my book, please?” she asked.
-
-“Of course,” he answered, still puzzled. Then, as he started to hand it
-to her, it opened at the fly-leaf and he drew it back. “Laura Frances
-Devereux,” he read aloud. He smiled quizzically as he returned the
-volume.
-
-“That proves nothing,” she replied defiantly. “I――I might have borrowed
-it.”
-
-“True, circumstantial evidence is not absolutely conclusive,
-unless――unless there is a good deal of it!”
-
-“You may think what you choose,” she answered lightly. She looked at
-her watch and prepared to rise. This time Ethan was ready. She gave him
-her hand and he helped her to her feet. The hand drew itself gently but
-determinedly out of his and he let it go without a struggle.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-“Must you go?” he asked.
-
-She nodded. Then she laughed.
-
-“If you only knew what trouble I have getting here you’d appreciate――――”
-She broke off, reddening a little.
-
-“I do appreciate,” he said earnestly. “And I thank you very much for
-your kindness this morning to a very undeserving chap. I――do you know,
-Miss Devereux, I came within an ace of calling at The Larches yesterday
-afternoon?”
-
-She looked up quickly.
-
-“Yes, I went for a walk in the afternoon and found myself at the gate
-over there. I could see that you had a fire in the library and――――”
-
-“But how did you know it was the library?” she asked.
-
-“Why――er――wasn’t it? I supposed it was. Anyhow, it looked dreadfully
-tempting. I pictured you sitting in front of it, and I very nearly paid
-a call.”
-
-“I’m glad you didn’t,” she breathed.
-
-“Why?”
-
-“Because――why, you don’t know me!”
-
-“I should have asked for your father and introduced myself.”
-
-“Well, you certainly don’t lack assurance!” she gasped.
-
-“It would have been all right,” he assured her cheerfully.
-
-“You wouldn’t have found him, though,” she said dryly.
-
-“Then I would have asked for Mrs. Devereux, and, failing her, Miss
-Devereux. You see, yesterday I was a bit desperate,” he added smilingly.
-
-“Desperate! I should say foolhardy!”
-
-“Why? Because I wanted to see you? Look here, please; why shouldn’t I
-call on you at the house? As I’ve told you, I’m fairly respectable.
-And――and I want to see you――more often! I suppose it sounds dreadfully
-cheeky,” he went on softly, “but I want you to like me, and it doesn’t
-seem to me that I get a fair show.”
-
-The color came and went in her cheeks and the violets were hidden from
-him.
-
-“It certainly does sound――cheeky, as you call it,” she said after a
-moment, rather unsteadily. “Considering that you have seen me but four
-times.”
-
-“Five, if you please. Besides, I don’t see that that matters. In fact,
-I rather think the mischief was done the first time!”
-
-He captured her hand and for a moment it only fluttered in his grasp.
-Then it tried for liberty, but unsuccessfully. A moment passed, and,
-
-“Are you making love to me, Mr. Parmley?” she asked, with a little
-amused laugh. It was like a cold douche, but he resisted his first
-impulse to release her.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-“Yes, I am,” he answered stoutly. “That’s just what I’m doing! And I’m
-going to keep on doing it until I’m convinced that there’s no hope for
-me. Please don’t struggle,” he continued, capturing her other hand
-also. “I’ll let you go in just a moment. Maybe I’m behaving a good deal
-like a bully, but I’m head-over-heels in love with you, Laura, and――――”
-
-“No, no! Please!” she cried, with a little catch in her voice.
-
-“What――what have I done?” he asked anxiously.
-
-“I――You mustn’t call me that!”
-
-“Very well, I won’t――yet. But I think of you as Laura――――”
-
-“I don’t want you to!”
-
-“Then I’ll try not to,” he answered gently. “But――couldn’t you make me
-very happy by telling me that I’ve got a chance with you, dear? Just
-the ghost of a chance?”
-
-The bowed head shook negatively.
-
-“You won’t? Or――you can’t?”
-
-“I――I won’t,” she whispered.
-
-He uttered a cry and strove to draw her toward him, but she resisted
-with all her strength.
-
-“Please! _Please!_” she gasped.
-
-“I’ll――try not to,” he said ruefully. “But I may call at the house?
-You’ll let me do that, won’t you?”
-
-“I――suppose so,” she murmured faintly.
-
-“To-day?” he cried. “To-morrow?”
-
-“No, no! Wait, please; let me think.” She raised a pair of troubled
-eyes to his for an instant. “I must see you again first. I have
-something to tell you; something which may make a difference.
-Perhaps――perhaps you won’t want to see me again――then!”
-
-He laughed disdainfully.
-
-“Try me! And when will you tell me this――this wonderful news? To-morrow
-morning? Here?”
-
-She nodded and strove to release her hands. After a moment of
-indecision he let them go. She stood before him motionless an instant.
-Then she raised her head slowly and he saw that her eyes were wet. With
-an inarticulate cry of pain and longing he started forward, but she
-held a hand against him.
-
-“Please!” she said again, imploringly. His outstretched arms dropped
-to his sides. “If I shouldn’t come――to-morrow――――” she began.
-
-“But you’ve promised!”
-
-“I know.” She nodded assent. “But――but if I shouldn’t――――”
-
-“But you will!” he cried. “I shall be here, dear! Don’t fail me! If you
-don’t come I’ll go to the house!”
-
-“Then I must,” she said with a little smile. “And now――――” She went to
-him and placed her hands on his shoulders and felt him tremble under
-her touch. She raised her eyes, violets darkened and dewy with unshed
-tears, to his. “Will you do one thing for me?”
-
-[Illustration: SHE WENT TO HIM AND PLACED HER HANDS ON HIS SHOULDERS.]
-
-His eyes answered.
-
-“Then, please,――” she dropped her head in sudden shame――“kiss me
-once――and let me go.”
-
-His arms closed about her hungrily, but she held back.
-
-“Promise!” she whispered “Promise to let me go!”
-
-“Yes,” he groaned, “I promise.”
-
-For an instant he was looking far, far down into dim, wonderful violet
-depths....
-
-Then he was alone. He turned unseeingly toward the canoe and trod upon
-the book which lay forgotten on the grass. Stooping, he rescued it and
-dropped it into his pocket.
-
-“I’m getting to be an awful thief!” he murmured tremulously.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
-X.
-
-
-A glorious golden afternoon, a scintillant silvery night, and
-then――Dawn’s pink finger-tips aquiver on the edges of the hills and
-the bursting forth of a new day to the exultant overture of Nature’s
-orchestra.
-
-Ethan looked forth from the open window on to the most beautiful sight
-given to the eyes of mortals,――the fresh, sparkling morning world
-of summer seen through the magnifying lenses of love. The orchard
-was fresh and vivid with the tender greens of sun-shot leaves and
-grass, and dark and cool with pools of pleasant shadow. Dew-gems
-shimmered under the caressing breeze and the tips of the spreading,
-reaching branches nodded and whispered together. Beyond, the little
-silver-voiced river laughed amongst its shallows and flashed in
-the sunlight. From the marshland came the happy gurgle of a flock
-of red-winged blackbirds, while fainter, yet sweet and clear, the
-light-hearted tinkle of the bobolink floated across from the rising
-meadows. Sleek, well-conditioned robins balanced amidst the apple-trees
-and sang contentedly between groomings of their red waistcoats. And
-louder, clearer, gladder sang Ethan’s heart.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-Dear reader, have you ever been young and in love on a summer morning?
-Do you recollect how intoxicating was the soft, sweet breeze that
-entered through the open window? How like liquid gold the sunshine
-spread across the sill and dripped upon the floor? How every bird-note
-was but a different rendering of the one sweet name? How eager and
-impatient you were to be out in the good green world and how loth to
-cease your dreaming long enough to dress? What a vastly important thing
-was the selection of a tie or a ribbon? I hope that you remember these
-things if you have forgotten all else!
-
-The lotus pool never glowed more brilliantly, never sparkled more
-radiantly than it did this morning. It was not difficult to imagine
-that those floating cups held the colors into which Nature dipped her
-brushes ere she painted the summer flowers. The lazy, luxury-loving
-swans were dozing in the sunlight on their tiny island. The cascade
-plashed and tinkled over moss and stone. The fringing trees blew
-welcome shade upon the grassy sides of the little basin. And Ethan,
-lifting his dripping paddle as the canoe rippled its way across
-the mirror-like surface, drew a deep breath of the scented air and
-experienced a sudden bewildering joy of life, an almost paganish
-exultation. It seemed to him this morning that the world and he drew
-breath together.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-It was early when he floated into Arcady and there were no violet eyes
-to greet him. But his impatience was soothed by the happiness which
-remembrance gave him. He dreamed there in the sunshine, lighting a
-cigarette now and then and letting it burn itself out unnoticed between
-his fingers. White clouds floated across the blue sky and across the
-surface of the pool. Dragon-flies, their metallic-lustred wings ablaze,
-darted and turned. Birds sang and insects buzzed, the breeze gossiped
-to the leaves and the moments passed. When he finally awoke fully from
-his dreaming and looked wonderingly at his watch the morning was almost
-gone. He turned disappointed eyes toward the brief vista afforded by
-the jealous trees. No glimpse of white drapery rewarded him. She had
-said that she might not come. Why? Vaguely troubled, he propelled the
-canoe to the bank and stepped out. Under the shade of the willow made
-forever sacred by their meetings he threw himself down and waited while
-the long hand of his watch crept laggingly half-way around the dial.
-But patience had flown, and when the time he had set himself had passed
-he jumped to his feet and set off up the lawn under the trees.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-Presently the corner of the white pergola sprang into view. Then the
-trees thinned away and he was looking across an open, sun-bathed
-stretch of lawn at the gleaming house. And as he looked, himself a
-scarcely noticeable figure against the green shadows of the grove,
-the front veranda of the house became suddenly peopled with a girl in
-a white frock and a man in gray flannels. They came together through
-the doorway and paused side by side at the top of the steps. Even at
-that distance Ethan recognized them only too well. The man had taken
-the girl’s hand and was speaking to her. Ethan watched for an instant
-only, yet in that instant he saw with a sudden sinking of the heart how
-the girl’s head, the sunlight aglint on the brown hair, lifted itself
-with a little gesture of intimate happiness to her companion. Then, in
-a sickening panic lest he might see more, Ethan turned quickly and
-plunged back into the shadows.
-
-All the way back to the Inn, with every stroke and lift of the paddle,
-a refrain hammered ceaselessly at his brain: “No poaching on my
-preserves! No poaching on my preserves!” What an ass he had been not to
-understand! He hated Vincent as he had never hated anyone in his life,
-realizing all the while the absolute injustice of it. Why hadn’t he
-guessed from Vincent’s note how the land lay? He might have known that
-Vincent could have referred to no one but Her. But why couldn’t the
-fool have come out honestly and told him? A week ago, even three days
-ago would have been time! Then, in the next moment, he knew that that
-was not so, that it had always been too late, always since that first
-meeting! Yet why, if she were Vincent’s, had she allowed him to love
-her? Why had she virtually acknowledged her love for him? Why――――
-
-[Illustration]
-
-He remembered that kiss with a sudden choking, clutching sensation
-at his throat. Had she meant nothing by that? Nothing? No, she had
-meant all, everything that he had hoped! She did love him, and neither
-Vincent Graves nor anyone else could have her! But that exultation was
-short-lived. What she had meant was of little moment; she belonged to
-Vincent by promise if by naught else, and Vincent was his friend.
-
-Things were suddenly greatly simplified. His tangled thoughts smoothed
-themselves out and he gave a sigh that was partly of relief. At least
-his duty was plain. “No poaching on my preserves!” He had only to heed
-that warning and take himself out of the way. That thought steadied
-him down and his pulses ceased their deafening pounding. It wouldn’t
-be easy, that duty! He knew that well enough, although at this moment
-he was viewing it almost calmly. When the present excitement passed he
-would find it hard going!
-
-The prospect of facing Vincent troubled him more than anything else
-as he drew the canoe from the water and laid it on its rack under the
-trees. Vincent was probably even now awaiting him up there on the
-porch. For a moment he thought of taking the canoe again and stealing
-off up the stream for a ways and then walking across to the station
-and taking the train for――anywhere out of all this! But it would be a
-sneaking, cowardly thing to do. Besides, sooner or later Vincent and
-he must meet, and as well now as any time. He lighted a cigarette with
-fingers that trembled a little and walked up through the orchard.
-
-As he had expected, Vincent Graves was awaiting him on the porch. He
-was a tall, dark, fine-looking fellow, with a deep, pleasant voice and
-a remarkable, careless ease of manner; just the sort of a chap, Ethan
-told himself, that any sensible girl would fall in love with. Vincent
-did not see him for a moment, and in that moment Ethan had opportunity
-to study his friend with a new interest, view him from a novel point.
-But he found he could not be coldly critical; Vincent was Vincent,
-wholly admirable and lovable; and Ethan’s heart warmed under a sudden
-inrush of affection as he went forward with outstretched hand.
-
-“Hello, Vin!” he said.
-
-Vincent swung about, seized the hand and grasped it warmly.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-“Why, you old chump!” he responded, smiling broadly. “Aren’t you
-ashamed to look me in the eye? What have you been doing with yourself?
-How’s mythology?”
-
-“When did you come up?” asked Ethan, echoing the smile.
-
-“This morning. Stopped at――――” He looked at Ethan with a quick lowering
-of the eyebrows. “Look here, what’s the matter with you? You have
-the cheerful, care-free countenance of a gentleman strolling to the
-gallows! Been ill?”
-
-“Ill?” laughed Ethan. “Certainly not; never felt better in my life.”
-
-“If you felt any better you’d scream, eh? Well, you’ve been up to
-something, Ethan, and you can lie yourself black in the face for all I
-care. You’re going back with me this evening; that’s settled. I came
-over in your machine and for a wonder it didn’t even spring a leak. I
-left it at The Larches,” he went on in response to Ethan’s questioning
-survey of the driveway and stable-yard. “I stopped there and made a
-call.” He paused, smiling mysteriously.
-
-“Oh,” said Ethan.
-
-“Yes, I――look here, let’s take a walk. What time is it? What? Oh,
-dinner be blowed! Come on, I want to talk a bit. Hang it, Eth, I’ll
-have to talk or bust up like one of your tires!”
-
-“All right,” answered Ethan, without enthusiasm. “Smoke?”
-
-Vincent accepted a cigarette and when they had lighted up they passed
-down the steps and along the road, under the arching elms, Vincent’s
-hand on his friend’s shoulder.
-
-“It’s largely your fault, old chap,” he said presently. He chuckled to
-himself a moment before continuing. “You see, I got uneasy about your
-sudden and mysterious affection for this rural paradise. I’ve never
-heard you enthuse about it before; in fact I remember several violently
-disparaging remarks on the subject of Riverdell. So when you wrote
-that you were stopping here a while to study mythology I got scared.
-Understand?”
-
-“Perfectly! What are you jawing about?”
-
-“Lord, you’re dense! I’ll explain in words of one――――”
-
-“Thanks.”
-
-[Illustration]
-
-“You see, Eth, you’re a very captivating beggar; you have a wonderful
-way with the fair sex. For instance, there was that girl at college――――”
-
-“Cut it out,” growled Ethan.
-
-“Still touchy? Well, I wasn’t taking any chances. Being interested over
-this way myself I thought I’d better take a run over and look after
-things. Thought maybe you were making love to my girl; poaching, you
-know. Couldn’t have blamed you, old chap, for she’s just about the
-swellest thing you ever saw.”
-
-“So you came up to head me off, eh?” inquired Ethan uninterestedly.
-
-“Exactly. And found to my surprise that you hadn’t been near the honey.
-You don’t know what you’ve missed, Eth. They’re awfully nice folks, the
-whole push; and they’d have been tickled to death to have you call. Why
-didn’t you?”
-
-“Consideration for your future happiness, Vin,” answered the other
-calmly.
-
-“And you haven’t been near the place?”
-
-“I got as far as the gate one day when taking a walk.”
-
-“Well, will you tell me what in blazes you’ve been doing here for the
-last week?”
-
-“No.”
-
-Vincent studied him silently a moment.
-
-“All right, old chap; I don’t want to be rudely inquisitive.”
-
-“You’re not; only don’t bother your head about me. I’m off to-day,
-anyhow.”
-
-“Yes, you’re coming with me. The mater made me swear by the graves of
-my ancestors that I’d fetch you back. And I’ve also promised to bring
-you to dinner to-night at the Devereuxs’.”
-
-“Sorry, Vin.”
-
-“You won’t?”
-
-“You’ve guessed it.”
-
-“Why not? Look here, I want you to meet Laura!”
-
-Ethan winced.
-
-“That’s nice of you, Vin, but really I can’t. I’ve simply got to be
-in Boston this evening. Tell them, please, that I’m very sorry, will
-you? And that I hope to have the pleasure some other time. Make it all
-right, like a good chap.”
-
-“Well. But you’re coming over to Stillhaven later, aren’t you?”
-
-“Maybe; perhaps in a week or two.”
-
-“That’s rotten! Look here, Eth, can’t I get in on this? I don’t know
-what’s up, and I won’t ask, but if I can help you any way――――”
-
-“Of course, old man. If you could I’d say so. But there isn’t anything
-wrong. I’ll explain later. It’s all right.”
-
-“Doubt it. But you know best, I dare say.”
-
-They turned by mutual consent and strolled back toward the Inn.
-Presently Vincent broke the silence again.
-
-“By the way, I haven’t told you quite all, Eth; I’m engaged.”
-
-“The deuce you are!” Ethan simulated intense surprise.
-
-“Yep!” Vincent grinned triumphantly.
-
-“Who to, you idiot?”
-
-“Why, haven’t I told you? To Laura Devereux. They’re the folks I’ve
-been talking about. They have The Larches. You knew that!”
-
-“Yes, but――when did it happen?”
-
-“About an hour or so ago. I didn’t mean to do it to-day, but――hang
-it, Eth, I just simply had to! She’s the best girl in the world, old
-chap, and the prettiest too. I want you to see her. When you do you’ll
-understand. I told her about you and she wants me to bring you up
-to-night.”
-
-“I hope you’ll be mighty happy, Vin.” They shook hands there in
-the empty road very gravely in spite of their smiling faces. “And
-congratulate her, too, old man. You’re rather a good sort――at times.
-And of course I’ll get you to take me to see her just as soon as I come
-back. I’ll have to get on the good side of her so she’ll let me come
-and see you once in a while when you’re married. When’s it to be?”
-
-[Illustration]
-
-“Don’t be an ass!” grunted Vincent. “As for when, well, we haven’t
-settled that yet. Maybe it won’t be until Spring; I fancy she would
-rather wait until then. And I ought to get things fixed up a bit first,
-too,” he added vaguely.
-
-“Oh, it won’t take you long to burn a few letters and photographs,”
-answered Ethan flippantly.
-
-“Go to the deuce! Do we eat now?”
-
-After dinner they sat together on the porch until such time as Vincent
-thought he might venture to return to The Larches, and Ethan listened
-patiently and with attempted enthusiasm to his friend’s mild ravings.
-Vincent was ludicrously happy.
-
-“It’s all so darned funny!” he kept repeating. “A few hours ago I was
-scared to death for fear she wouldn’t have me, and now――――”
-
-“And now you’re a goner,” finished Ethan.
-
-“Laugh if you want to,” replied Vincent happily. “I expected you would.
-I thought you’d cut up worse than you have, old chap. My time will
-come!”
-
-“When it does, you let me know,” scoffed Ethan.
-
-“Look here, I wish you’d give up this Boston business and go along with
-me to-night, Eth. I――there’s a reason.”
-
-“Nonsense, you’re beyond reason. Besides, I can’t give it up, Vin.
-Sorry; wish I could.”
-
-“Oh, go to blazes! You could if you wanted to. Look here, I lay you any
-odds you like that you’ve been caught yourself! You’ve met some girl
-here and she’s gone home and you’re tagging after! You ought to have
-more pride, Eth!”
-
-“I dare say, Mr. Solomon. By the way, I don’t want to hurry you, but
-it’s nearly half after two, and――――”
-
-“The deuce it is!” Vincent leaped to his feet and Ethan laughed loudly
-and cruelly. Vincent viewed him in amazement a moment and then joined.
-
-“Talk about tagging!” chuckled Ethan.
-
-“You haven’t seen her, you old scoffer,” responded his friend.
-
-At a little after three Ethan tossed his luggage into the car, climbed
-in beside the unruffled Farrell and swung the big blue monster toward
-Boston. And while it ate up the long miles Ethan, his hands on the
-wheel, scowled miserably ahead and honestly strove to forget that he
-had ever stumbled into Arcady.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
-XI.
-
-
-A few days later Ethan walked into the office of the law firm in
-Providence, hung his hat on a hook in the closet and blandly inquired
-for his desk. The members of the firm discussed it later in the privacy
-of the inner office.
-
-“Looks as though he might be in earnest, anyway,” suggested the senior.
-“Apparently not afraid of work, eh?”
-
-“Something funny about it,” replied the junior, who was a bit of a
-pessimist. “It isn’t like a fellow of his sort to give up his summer
-and buckle down to reading law in July.” He shook his head with
-misgivings. “It won’t last, mark my word.”
-
-But it did. Business was slack throughout the hot weather and Ethan
-had plenty of time for reading; and he made the most of it. Several
-letters came from Vincent reminding him of his promise and urging
-him to come down to Stillhaven for a while. But always Ethan pleaded
-press of duties, until Vincent, whose own law shingle had been hanging
-out for a year and who had yet to find business pressing, felt more
-convinced than ever that his friend had, to use his own expression,
-“come a cropper somehow!”
-
-[Illustration]
-
-In September Vincent ran down and spent Sunday. Ethan didn’t press him
-to come again, for his conversation was not of a sort calculated to
-reconcile a disappointed lover to his lot. The Devereuxs were still at
-Riverdell, but were returning to their Boston apartments the last of
-the month.
-
-“She hasn’t forgiven you for not calling,” warned Vincent, “and you’ll
-have to eat dirt when you do see her, old chap.”
-
-Ethan expressed entire willingness to grovel, but flatly refused to
-set a date for the proceedings. Vincent departed somewhat huffed, and
-for some time there was a perceptible coolness between them. Ethan
-regretted it, but he wasn’t ready yet to trust himself in the rôle of
-Vincent’s friend.
-
-His first vacation since he had gone to work came early in October.
-Then a letter from a real estate agent who had the renting of his
-property made a journey to Riverdell advisable. He left Providence,
-with Farrell, in the car one Friday morning, intending to stay in
-Riverdell over Saturday, and at two o’clock swung the machine in
-through the big gate of The Larches. It had been a glorious brisk day,
-they had made record time and Ethan’s spirits had been high. But now,
-as they rumbled slowly up the circling driveway, old memories were
-asserting themselves and buoyancy gave place to depression. The maples
-were aflame in the afternoon sunlight, the Virginia creeper about the
-porches was radiantly crimson, and along the gleaming white pergola
-bunches of purple grapes were still aglow. But for all this The Larches
-had a lonesome look. The windows on the lower floor were shuttered and
-told eloquently of desertion.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-Ethan’s summons at the bell went unanswered for a time. Then footsteps
-sounded on the marble tiles inside and the big door swung open,
-revealing a comfortably stout, double-chinned woman who wiped her
-damp, red hands on her blue calico apron.
-
-“Why, Mr. Ethan!” she exclaimed.
-
-“Yes, it’s I, Mrs. Billings,” he replied. “Farrell, take the car around
-to the stable and I’ll have William open up for you.”
-
-[Illustration]
-
-He stepped into the dimly lighted hall, already filled with the chill
-of approaching winter, and looked about him. Everything was apparently
-the same in spite of its recent occupancy. The house had been rented
-furnished, and plainly the Devereuxs had been satisfied to leave things
-as they had found them. He took off his coat and tossed it on to the
-big old-fashioned mahogany couch. Mrs. Billings, the housekeeper, was
-still chattering volubly.
-
-“If we’d known you was coming, sir, we’d have had the blinds open and
-the fires lighted.”
-
-“Never mind,” answered Ethan. “Have your husband build a fire in the
-library and in my room. I shan’t be here beyond Sunday morning. You
-can give me my meals in the library. I had a letter from Stearns a day
-or so ago telling me that the Devereuxs had left and asking whether
-I wanted to rent for the winter. I don’t believe I do. I don’t think
-I shall rent again at all. Well how have you been, you and that
-good-for-nothing husband of yours?”
-
-“Nicely, sir, for myself, thank you. And Jonas, he isn’t one of the
-complaining sort, sir, but he do have the rheumatism something awful in
-wet weather. And how has your health been, Mr. Ethan?”
-
-“I’ve been frightfully healthy, thank you. Where’s your husband?”
-
-“I’ll call him, sir, at once. He’s out somewheres on the grounds, sir.
-And I’ll have a fire lit in no time, sir. He’ll be very pleased to see
-you, sir, will Jonas.” She stopped at the end of the hall and sank her
-voice to a hoarse whisper. “I fear he’s getting old and failing, Mr.
-Ethan,” she said despondently. “It――it’s his head sir.”
-
-“Eh?”
-
-“Yes, sir. Along in June it was, Mr. Ethan, or maybe early in the month
-following, sir, that he came in quite excited like and wild, saying as
-he had seen you with his own eyes over toward the grove there. Yes,
-sir. ‘Jonas,’ says I, ‘it’s the sun.’ ‘No, ’taint,’ says he. ‘I saw him
-with my own eyes,’ says he, ‘a-standing under the trees. And when I
-looked again he was gone,’ he says. It gave me quite a shock, sir, as
-you might say.”
-
-[Illustration]
-
-“Naturally. And since then you have observed no other symptoms?”
-
-“No, sir, not particular, but he do seem a heap fonder of his victuals
-than he used to, and I’ve heard tell as that’s a sure sign of a failing
-intellect, Mr. Ethan.”
-
-“In the case of your victuals, Mrs. Billings,” replied Ethan, “I’d say
-it was an indication of wisdom.”
-
-The housekeeper bridled and beamed.
-
-“But, really,” continued Ethan, smiling, “I wouldn’t worry about
-Billings. The fact is, I was down here for a day or so about the time
-you speak of.”
-
-“Here, sir? And you never came to see us, sir?”
-
-“There――er――there were reasons, Mrs. Billings. And now how about that
-fire? And send your husband out to unlock the carriage house, please.”
-
-“Yes, sir, directly, sir. And Jonas really saw you, Mr. Ethan, same as
-he said he did?”
-
-“I think it more than likely, Mrs. Billings.”
-
-“Well, that’s a great load off my mind, sir. Softening of the brain do
-be so unfortunate!”
-
-Later, just at dusk, Ethan emerged from the library on to the broad
-cement-paved porch at the side of the house. Pausing to light a
-cigarette, he passed down the stone steps to the pergola and traversed
-its length. Fallen leaves rustled softly under his feet and the purple
-clusters showed the effects of the frost. Once out of the arbor, his
-steps led him almost unconsciously across the open lawn, russet now
-and streaked with the long sombre shadows of the trees. He found
-himself swayed by two desires; one to see the lotus pool again, the
-other to avoid it. He went on through the twilight grove, filled with
-a gentle――I had almost said pleasant――sadness. Underfoot the ground
-was carpeted with the red leaves of the maples. Here and there a white
-birch stood like a pale gold flame in the dying sunlight. The dark
-green larches alone held themselves unchanged.
-
-The pool was sadly different. Yellowing lily-pads floated upon the
-surface, but no blossoms caught the slanting rays of the sun. Ethan sat
-down under the willow, took his knees into his arms and puffed blue
-smoke-wreaths into the amber light. Presently a shadow presence came
-and sat beside him. The presence had violet eyes and red, red lips that
-smiled wistfully. He didn’t turn his head, for he knew that if he did
-he would find himself again alone. And presently they talked.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-“You were very cruel,” he said sadly.
-
-“I didn’t mean to be,” she answered.
-
-“No, I don’t think you did. You――you just didn’t think, I suppose. It
-was all a bit of good fun with you. But――it played the deuce with me.”
-
-“Did it?” she asked regretfully.
-
-“But I’m not blaming you――now,” he went on. “I did at first. It seemed
-needlessly cruel and heartless. But I understand now that it was all
-my fault. You see, dear, I took it for granted, I thought, that
-you――cared――the way I did. It was my silly conceit.”
-
-He thought he heard a little sob beside him, but he resisted the
-temptation to turn and look.
-
-“If only there hadn’t been that kiss,” he continued dreamily.
-“That――I’ve never quite understood that. Sometimes――I dare say it’s my
-conceit again――but sometimes I can’t help thinking that you did care――a
-little――just then! That is the hardest to forgive, dear,――and forget,
-that kiss. If it wasn’t for the memory of that I think I could stand it
-better. Why did you do it? _Why?_”
-
-There was no answer save the sighing of a little breeze which crept
-down the slope in a floating shower of dead leaves.
-
-“Ah, but I want to know!” he insisted doggedly. “Was it just in fun?
-Was it merely in pity? It couldn’t have been, I tell you! You never
-kissed me like that for pity, dear! There was love in your eyes,
-sweetheart; I saw it; fathoms deep in that purple twilight! Love, do
-you hear? You can’t deny it, you can’t! And you trembled in my arms!
-Why did you do it?” he asked sharply.
-
-He turned impetuously,――and sighed. He was all alone. The presence had
-fled.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-He tossed aside the dead cigarette in his hand and shivered. The breeze
-was growing as the day passed, a chill October breeze laden with the
-heavy, melancholy aroma of dying leaves. He arose and retraced his
-steps to the house.
-
-
-
-
-XII.
-
-
-Ethan drank the last drop of excellent black coffee in the tiny cup and
-swung his chair about so that he faced the cheerfully crackling logs
-in the library fire-place. He had enjoyed his dinner, and he began to
-feel delightfully restful and drowsy. The day spent in the open air,
-with the wind rushing past him, the hearty repast and now the dancing
-flames were all having their natural effect. He reached lazily for his
-cigarette case, his gaze travelling idly over the high mantel above
-him. Then his hand had dropped from his pocket and he was on his feet,
-peering intently at a small photograph tucked half out of sight behind
-one of the old Liverpool pitchers which flanked the clock. A moment
-after he had it in his hands and was bending over it in the glare of
-the light from the chandelier.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-It was evidently an amateur production, but it was good for all that.
-And Ethan was troubling his head not at all as to its origin or its
-merits or defects. It was sufficient for him that it showed a small,
-graceful figure in white against a background of foliage, and that the
-eyes which looked straight into his from under the waving hair with
-its golden fillet were Hers. It was Clytie. One hand rested softly on
-a flower-clustered spray of azalea, one bare sandaled foot gleamed
-forth from under the straight white folds of the peplum and the lips
-were parted in a little startled smile. Ethan devoured it eagerly while
-his heart glowed and ached at once. He remembered telling her that he
-would like to see those pictures, and remembered her laughing response:
-“I’m afraid you never will!” And now he was looking at one of them
-after all! And he was still looking when the gardener entered with the
-replenished wood-basket.
-
-“Where did this come from, Billings?” Ethan asked carelessly.
-
-Billings set down his burden and crossed to the table. He was a small
-man, well toward sixty, with his weather-beaten face shrivelled into
-innumerable tiny, kindly wrinkles. In spite of his years, however, he
-showed no signs of the mental degeneration which his wife had feared.
-He came and looked near-sightedly at the card which Ethan held out.
-
-“Why, sir, Lizzie came across that in one of the upstair rooms when
-she was cleaning up after the folks went away and she put it on the
-mantel here, thinking maybe it was valuable and they’d send back for
-it.”
-
-“I see.” Ethan laid it on the table, his eyes still upon it. “I don’t
-think they’ll want it. Doubtless Miss Devereux has plenty more.”
-
-“Yes, sir; they took a good many, sir, between them.”
-
-“They? Oh, she had a friend with her?”
-
-“Yes, sir. Miss Hoyt. I remember when they was taking those, sir. It
-was early in the summer, soon after they came. The young ladies they
-dressed themselves up in those queer things――sort o’ like sheets, they
-was, sir――” the gardener’s voice became faintly apologetic, as though
-he had not quite approved of such doings――“and went out on the lawn one
-forenoon. They got me to cut away a bit of the branches, sir, right
-here.” Billings indicated the upper left-hand corner of the picture.
-“She said she had to have more light. It wasn’t much, sir; just a few
-old twigs; no harm done, sir.”
-
-“Of course not. It was――Miss Devereux asked you?”
-
-“Yes, sir; Miss Laura they called her. A very pleasant young lady, sir.”
-
-“Very pleasant, Billings,” assented Ethan with a sigh.
-
-“You know her, then, sir?”
-
-“I――hardly that; I’ve met her.”
-
-“Yes, sir.” Billings turned toward the fire. “Shall I drop another log
-on, sir?”
-
-“No, I shall be going to bed very shortly.”
-
-“Very well, sir.” Billings mended the fire, replaced the tongs and
-stood carefully erect again, chuckling reminiscently. Then finding
-Ethan’s eyes on him questioningly he said: “she took me, sir, too, with
-her camery.”
-
-“Really? I should like to see the picture.”
-
-“Thank you, sir. It’s in the kitchen. Shall I fetch it? Lizzie says
-it’s a very speakin’ likeness, sir, excepting that I was sort o’ took
-by surprise, so to say, and had no time to spruce up.”
-
-“Yes, bring it in by all means.”
-
-The gardener hurried away and Ethan turned again to the picture. When
-Billings returned Ethan said carelessly:
-
-“By the way, if your wife asks about this you can tell her I
-have――er――taken charge of it. Ah, this is the picture, eh? Why, I’d
-call that excellent, Billings, excellent! Truly, a very speaking
-likeness. You say Miss Devereux took this?”
-
-[Illustration]
-
-“Yes, sir, the same day they was taking the others, sir. I had lopped
-off the branches and was standin’ by watching, sir, and after she had
-taken that one there, sir, she said to me: ‘Billings, would you mind if
-I took’――――”
-
-“Not after she’d taken this, Billings,” interrupted Ethan, in the
-interests of accuracy. “She didn’t take this one, of course.”
-
-“I beg pardon, Mr. Ethan?”
-
-“Never mind. I only said you didn’t mean that it was after she had
-taken this one; it was another one you meant.”
-
-“Oh, no, sir, it was that very one, sir. I had just lopped off the
-branches――――”
-
-“You don’t mean that she took her own picture, surely?” asked Ethan
-with a smile.
-
-“No, sir.”
-
-“Exactly.”
-
-“It was that one you have there, sir, she took.”
-
-“This one? Now, look here, Billings, let’s get this straightened out
-while we’re at it. Do you mean that Miss Devereux――mind, I’m talking of
-_Miss Devereux_――do you mean that Miss Devereux took this photograph I
-have in my hands?”
-
-“Yes, sir, that’s the one. I had just lopped――――”
-
-“Never mind the lopping,” interrupted Ethan with smiling impatience.
-“But tell me how she did it.”
-
-“Why, sir, she stood her camery up a little ways off, sir; it had three
-little legs onto it, sir; and she pressed a little rubber ball, and
-the camery went ‘click,’ sir, like that, sir,――‘click!’ and――――”
-
-“Yes, yes, but――now look here, how far off was the camera from――from
-this place, where you had lopped the branches?”
-
-“About twenty feet, sir, maybe.”
-
-“Well, will you kindly, tell me how Miss Devereux managed to squeeze
-the little rubber ball and get into the picture at the same time?”
-
-“Sir?”
-
-“What I mean is,” answered Ethan patiently, “how could she have been
-here――” tapping the photograph he held――“and at the camera the same
-instant?”
-
-That was evidently a poser. Billings scratched the back of his head
-dubiously. Finally,
-
-“But she wasn’t there, sir!” he explained.
-
-“Wasn’t where? At the camera?”
-
-“Yes, sir; I mean no, sir. She wasn’t there!” He pointed at the picture.
-
-“Wasn’t here!” exclaimed Ethan. “Then how――hang it, man, but here’s her
-picture!”
-
-“Beg pardon, Mr. Ethan?” Billings looked both pained and puzzled, and
-shot a quick look of inquiry at the dinner table.
-
-“I say here’s her picture, you idiot!” repeated Ethan.
-
-“Whose picture, sir?”
-
-“Why, Miss Devereux’s!”
-
-“No, sir.”
-
-“What do you mean by ‘no, sir?’ I say――――”
-
-A light broke upon Mr. Billings.
-
-“I beg your pardon, Mr. Ethan,” he explained hurriedly. “I see your
-mistake, sir, but you said as how you’d met the young lady, and I
-thought you understood as how that wasn’t her, sir.”
-
-“What? Who?”
-
-“Wasn’t Miss Devereux, sir.”
-
-“Do you mean that this isn’t Miss Devereux here in this picture?” cried
-Ethan.
-
-“Yes, sir; that is, no, sir. That isn’t her, Mr. Ethan.”
-
-“Isn’t――! Then who is it?”
-
-“Miss Hoyt, sir. I thought you under――――”
-
-Ethan took Billings by the arms and forced him into a chair.
-
-“You sit there and answer my questions, Billings,” he commanded
-excitedly. He held the photograph before the gardener’s alarmed face.
-
-“Who is this in the picture?”
-
-“Miss Hoyt, sir, as I was telling you――――”
-
-“Nonsense! You’re mistaken, man! Look close; take it in your hands!
-Don’t answer until you’ve looked at it well. Where are your spectacles?”
-
-“I don’t wear any, sir,” was the dignified reply. “My eyes, Mr. Ethan,
-are just as clear as ever they were, sir. Why, I can see――――”
-
-“Yes, yes, I beg your pardon, Billings, but I have most particular
-reasons for wanting to be certain about this! Now――take a good look at
-it!――now who is she?”
-
-“Miss Hoyt, sir, and if you was to put me in jail the next minute, sir,
-I wouldn’t say different! No, sir, not if my life was depending on it,
-sir!”
-
-[Illustration]
-
-“And it’s not Miss Devereux?”
-
-“No, sir, nor never was! Why, Mr. Ethan, Miss Devereux, as you must
-recall, sir, is quite tall and slim, like――like a young birch,
-sir,――with very dark hair. And Miss Hoyt, sir, as you can see――――”
-
-Ethan planted himself with his back to the fire and lighted a cigarette
-with trembling fingers.
-
-“Billings,” he said softly, “I’ve been a damned fool!”
-
-“Yes――that is, I can’t believe it, sir,” was the respectful answer. But
-Billings’ expression said otherwise.
-
-“Now I want you to tell me all you know about Miss Hoyt,” said Ethan.
-“By the way, what was her first name?”
-
-“Cicely, sir; Miss Cicely Hoyt.”
-
-“Cicely,” repeated Ethan softly. “It just suits her!”
-
-“Beg pardon, sir?”
-
-“Oh, never mind. Where does she live?”
-
-Billings thought in silence a moment.
-
-“Ellington, sir,” he answered triumphantly, evidently pleased at his
-powers of memory.
-
-“Where the deuce is that, though?”
-
-“About the centre of the state, sir, I think.”
-
-“This state, do you mean? Massachusetts?”
-
-“Yes, sir, Massachusetts.”
-
-“And she was a friend of Miss Devereux’s?”
-
-“Yes, sir. I gathered as how they went to school together. And Miss
-Hoyt’s father, sir, died a while back and left her and her mother
-very poorly off, sir. And the young lady is employed in a library at
-Ellington, as I understand it, sir, and her mother is there, too, sir.”
-
-“In the library?”
-
-“No, sir, in Ellington. They used to live in Ohio, I believe.”
-
-Ethan was silent a moment, smoking furiously. Then,
-
-“Tell Farrell to come in here at once, Billings. And I’m much obliged
-for what you’ve told me. Oh, wait, Billings! Throw another log on the
-fire first. I don’t want it to go out; you and I have got lots to talk
-about to-night!”
-
-Farrell came speedily.
-
-“Do you know where Ellington, Massachusetts, is?” asked Ethan.
-
-“Yes, sir.”
-
-“How long a run is it?”
-
-Farrell produced a road map from his coat pocket and bent over it under
-the light.
-
-“Well, Mr. Parmley, I don’t know how the roads are now, sir, but
-supposing they’re in fair condition we’d ought to do it in about two
-and half hours.”
-
-“Then if we left here at seven in the morning we’d get to Ellington by
-noon?”
-
-“Couldn’t help it, sir, barring accidents.”
-
-“There mustn’t be any accidents,” answered Ethan, a bit unreasonably.
-
-“I’ll do my best, sir.”
-
-“Be ready to leave, then, promptly at seven!”
-
-“Very well, sir.”
-
-Farrell went out and as the door closed softly behind him Ethan, the
-photograph in his hands, threw himself into the chair before the fire
-and beamed blissfully at the flames.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
-XIII.
-
-
-The library was filled with the pallid twilight of a rainy day. Since
-early morning the summit of Mount Tom, a dozen miles to the westward,
-had been enveloped in ponderous, leaden clouds, and for two hours past
-the storm, travelling along the Connecticut Valley, had been deluging
-the slopes with autumnal ferocity.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-Through the rain-drenched windows a cold white light entered, flooding
-the stack room with its iron tiers of slumbering volumes, and, here
-at the barrier-like counter, illumining faintly the rebellious brown
-hair of the girl who, with pen in hand, bent over the pile of catalogue
-cards. The library was very still, so still that the sibilation of
-the moving pen sounded portentously loud. Now and then the rustle of
-a turning leaf or the scraping of feet on the floor came from around
-the corner of the arched doorway where sat a solitary occupant of the
-reading room. Save for these two the library was deserted. The hands
-of the clock above the commemorative tablet pointed to a quarter past
-twelve and the stack-boy and the assistant librarian had both gone to
-their luncheons.
-
-A more prolonged scraping of feet, followed by the sound of a moving
-chair, caused the girl at the desk to raise her head and pause at her
-work. A little frown of annoyance gathered and then gave place to a
-smile of humorous resignation as footfalls sounded on the echoing
-silence. From the reading room emerged a tall, thin youth of about
-twenty, a youth with a pale, cadaverous face lighted by a pair of
-patient, contemplative brown eyes which looked strangely incongruous
-and out of place. He carried two books which he laid apologetically on
-the counter.
-
-“Excuse me, Miss Hoyt,” he said gently.
-
-“Yes, Mr. Winkley?” she asked, looking up.
-
-“I am very sorry to trouble you, but could you let me have Burton’s
-Anatomy of Melancholy?”
-
-“Have――What did you say, please?” she asked startledly.
-
-“Burton’s Anatomy of Melancholy, please,” he repeated in his patient
-voice. She turned hurriedly and disappeared into the stack room. Once
-out of sight she leaned against one of the cases and laughed silently
-and hysterically.
-
-“Oh,” she thought, “if he doesn’t stop it and go away I shall have
-to――to――I shall go crazy!”
-
-Presently, with a final gasp, she brushed the back of her hand across
-her eyes and went on down the concrete aisle in search of the volume.
-Out at the counter, the youth, left to himself, watched her while she
-was in sight and then leaned across to peer at the neatly arranged
-cards. She had left her handkerchief beside her work. With a timorous
-glance about him, he reached forward, picked it up and with a quick,
-vehement movement pressed it to his thin, unsmiling lips. He held it so
-a moment, his brown eyes staring widely through the rain-bleared window
-as though beholding visions. Then, as her steps came back toward him,
-he laid the handkerchief again in its place, straightened himself and
-waited.
-
-“Here it is, Mr. Winkley,” she said soberly.
-
-“Thank you. I am sorry to trouble you,” he answered gravely.
-
-“It is only what I am here for,” she answered coldly, taking up her
-pen once more. He remained for an instant looking at the bent head.
-Then, lifting the Anatomy of Melancholy from the counter, he turned and
-walked slowly and quite noiselessly back to his table. But as he went
-the ghost of a sigh trembled across the silence.
-
-The girl raised her head with a despairing glance toward the reading
-room, jabbed her pen viciously into the ink-stand and went on with
-her writing. The clock overhead ticked slowly and softly. The rain
-_swished_ past the windows.
-
-But presently a new sound made itself heard. Dim at first, it grew
-insistently until the girl heard it and again lifted her head and
-listened with a new light in her violet eyes.
-
-_Chug-chug, chug-chug-chug, chug-chug!_
-
-[Illustration]
-
-Automobiles are not common in Ellington, especially after the summer
-colony departs, and the approach of this one brought a tinge of color
-to the soft cheeks and a flutter to the heart of the librarian. So
-often during the past three months she had listened with straining ears
-to the panting of an automobile on the road below! Usually the sound
-had died away again in the distance, and she had told herself, sighing,
-that she was very glad. But to-day the sounds increased every instant.
-The _chug-chug_ was slower now and more labored; the car had left the
-village road and was climbing the circling gravelled drive to the
-library. Every beat brought an answering beat from her heart.
-
-Oh, it was foolish! she told herself angrily. And she didn’t want it
-to happen! She hoped it wouldn’t! Resolutely she began her work again,
-but the noise of the approaching machine seemed to fill the world
-with a tumult of sound. Then, close at hand, the measured _chugs_
-suddenly became hurried and incoherent, as though the intruding monster
-was violently incensed at being stopped. Then――silence, appalling,
-portentous! With white face the girl bent closer to her desk, her
-pen tracing quivering figures and letters. The outer door opened and
-closed again with a muffled jar. She heard the _swish ... swish_ of
-the inner doors as they swung inward and back. Firm footfalls sounded
-on the oaken floor. Very different they were from the soft tread of
-the library habitué, and there was a determined, resolute character to
-them that put the brown-haired librarian in a panic. Oh, how she wished
-that she had fled while there had been time! She no longer doubted; the
-unexpected, which all along had been the expected, had happened; the
-thing which she had feared, and always hoped for, had come to pass. The
-steps came nearer, straight from the doorway, scorning the longer and
-quieter paths provided by the cocoa-fibre matting. The brown head still
-bent over the desk. Then the footsteps stopped. A terrible silence fell
-over the room. There was no help for it.
-
-Slowly, reluctantly the girl raised her head.
-
-
-
-
-XIV.
-
-
-Had they lived in the Age of Stone that meeting might have proved far
-more interesting for purposes of description. As it was, both being
-fairly conventional characters of the Twentieth Century, the affair was
-disappointingly commonplace.
-
-“How do you do, Miss Hoyt?” he asked, smiling calmly and reaching a
-hand across the counter. And,――――
-
-[Illustration]
-
-“Why, Mr. Parmley!” she replied, laying her own hand for an instant in
-his.
-
-A close observer, and both you and I, patient reader, pride ourselves
-upon being such, would have noticed, perhaps, that in spite of the
-commonplace words and the unembarrassed manners, the man’s cheeks
-held an unaccustomed tinge of color and the girl’s face was more than
-ordinarily pale. And could we have enjoyed a physician’s privilege of
-examining the heart-action at that moment we would have straightened
-ourselves up with very knowing smiles.
-
-“I’ve come,” he said, as the soft hand drew itself away from his, “to
-return a book. Is this the right place?”
-
-“Yes,” she replied brightly.
-
-“Thank you. I don’t know very much about libraries; I always avoid them
-as much as possible as being rather too exciting.” He took a small book
-from the pocket of his coat and laid it on the counter. “I’m afraid
-there’s a good deal to pay on it. It’s been out quite a while.”
-
-A tinge of color came into her cheeks as she took the volume. It was a
-copy of “Love Sonnets from the Portuguese.”
-
-“Oh, I’ll let you off,” she answered gayly. “We sometimes remit the
-fines when the excuse is good.”
-
-“Thank you. My excuse is excellent. I only yesterday discovered the
-identity of the loaner.”
-
-“Only yesterday?” she asked carelessly, but with quickening heart.
-
-“To be exact, at about eight o’clock last evening.” He dropped his
-voice and leaned a little further across the barrier. “You see, Miss
-Hoyt, you fooled me very nicely.”
-
-“Excuse me, Mr. Parmley, you fooled yourself. I told you――at least, I
-never said I was Laura Devereux.”
-
-“No, you didn’t, but――I wonder why I was so certain you were! If I
-hadn’t been――――”
-
-“I beg your pardon, Miss Hoyt, but will you please let me have
-Swinburne’s Poems?”
-
-It was the solitary reader. The girl disappeared into the stack
-room, leaving the two men to a furtive and, on one part at least,
-amused examination of each other. The pale youth, however, showed no
-amusement; rather his look expressed suspicion and resentment. Ethan,
-unable longer to encounter that baleful glare without smiling, turned
-his head. Then the librarian came with the desired book.
-
-“Thank you, Miss Hoyt!” said the reader. With a final glance of dawning
-enmity at Ethan he returned to his solitude. Ethan looked inquiringly
-at Cicely.
-
-“He’s perfectly awful!” she replied despairingly. “He stays here hours
-and hours at a time. I don’t believe he ever eats anything. And he
-calls for books incessantly, from Plutarch’s Lives to――to Swinburne! I
-think he is trying to read right through the catalogue. And a while ago
-he came for――what do you think?――The Anatomy of Melancholy!”
-
-Ethan smiled gently.
-
-“I wouldn’t be too hard on him,” he said. “The poor devil is
-head-over-heels in love with you.”
-
-The phrase brought recollections――and a blush.
-
-“Nonsense! He’s just a boy!” she answered.
-
-“Boys sometimes feel pretty deeply――for the while,” he replied. “And
-judging from his present line of reading, I’d say that the while hasn’t
-passed yet.”
-
-“It’s so silly and tiresome!” she said. “He gets terribly on my
-nerves. He――he sighs――in the most heartbreaking way!” She laughed a
-little nervously. Then a moment of silence followed.
-
-“Clytie,” he began,――“I am going to call you that to-day, for I haven’t
-got used to thinking of you as Cicely yet――do you know why I came?”
-
-“To return the book,” she answered smilingly.
-
-“No, not altogether. I came to ask you something.”
-
-“I ought to feel flattered, oughtn’t I? It’s quite a ways here from
-Providence, isn’t it?”
-
-“Supposing we don’t pretend,” he answered gravely. “We’ve gone too
-far to make that possible, don’t you think? And I’ve had a beast of
-a summer,” he added inconsequently. “I thought――do you know what I
-thought, dear?”
-
-“How should I?” she asked weakly.
-
-“I thought you were Laura Devereux, and that day when you didn’t come
-I went for you and saw you and Vincent on the porch. And afterwards
-he told me he was engaged to Miss Devereux, and――don’t you see what
-it meant to me? And yesterday I found out, quite by accident, and――”
-he reached across and seized her hand with a little laugh of sheer
-happiness――“I haven’t slept a wink since! I――I thought I’d never get
-here; the roads were quagmires!”
-
-“Oh, why did you come?” she asked miserably.
-
-“Why? Good Heaven, don’t you know, girl?” He leaned across and she felt
-his lips on the hand still clasped in his.
-
-“Yes, yes, I know,” she cried. “But――you mustn’t love me! You won’t
-when I’ve told you!”
-
-“Try me!” he said softly.
-
-“I’m going to. But――I can’t if you have my hand.”
-
-“If I let it go may I have it again?” he asked playfully.
-
-“You won’t want it,” was the grim answer. “When you know what I am
-really, you――won’t want――ever to see me――again.”
-
-“That’s nonsense,” he answered stoutly. But a qualm of uneasiness
-oppressed him.
-
-She moved away from the counter until she was out of reach of his
-impatient hands.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-“I meant you to fall in love with me,” she said evenly, looking at him
-with wide eyes and white face. “I meant you to propose to me. I wanted
-to――to marry you.”
-
-He reached impetuously toward her with a smothered word of endearment,
-but she held up a hand.
-
-“Wait! You don’t understand! I――I didn’t care for you. I was tired of
-being poor and――and of this!” She swept her glance about the bare and
-silent library. “We used to have money,” she went on, speaking rapidly.
-“We lived in Ohio then, when father was alive. Then I came east to
-college. I met Laura there. We were friends almost at once, although
-she was in the class ahead of me. I never finished, for my father
-died and left us almost without a cent. I left college and Laura’s
-father secured me work here. I studied hard and last year they made me
-librarian. Then mother came east to live here with me. Laura was always
-kind. When my vacation came I went to visit her there at The Larches.
-Then you――I met you.”
-
-She paused and dropped her gaze.
-
-“Yes,” he said softly. “And then?”
-
-“You said you had some property and you――you seemed nice and kind. I
-was so weary of it all. I wanted――oh, you know? I wanted to have money,
-enough to live decently somewhere else than here in this tomb they call
-a town. I didn’t care. I set out to make you――like me. I went back
-there to the pool each day for just that, until――――”
-
-[Illustration]
-
-“Well? Until?” he urged, smiling across at her.
-
-“That is all,” she answered.
-
-“And it was all absolutely mercenary? You never cared for me?”
-
-“I’ve told you,” she answered.
-
-“And――that last day, dear? It was the same? You didn’t care then
-either?”
-
-“Oh, what does it matter what happened afterwards?” she cried
-agitatedly. “It was what I had done, don’t you see? It was the
-meanness, the――the shamefulness of it!”
-
-“Well, but this ‘afterward’? What of that?”
-
-“Nothing,” she answered firmly.
-
-Silence fell for a moment. They looked across at each other steadily,
-she meeting his smile defiantly. Then the color crept up from throat to
-cheeks and her eyes dropped.
-
-“Dear,” he said gently, “I don’t care what happened before that
-‘afterward.’ I loved you from the first moment, but I’m not going to
-resent it if it took you longer to discover my irresistible charms.
-Why, hang it all, I’m proud you should have thought me worth marrying
-even for my money! But ‘afterward,’ dear? When I kissed you? You
-can’t make me believe there was no love then, Cicely. And it is still
-‘afterward,’ and it always will be! Dear, Arcadia is waiting for you.
-The lotus pool is lonely without you. And so am I, Cicely, Cicely dear!”
-
-[Illustration]
-
-“Oh, I knew you would try to forgive me,” she cried miserably. “That is
-why I――didn’t want you to come. Because after awhile you would remember
-and――――”
-
-“Cicely!”
-
-“And you’d hate me!”
-
-“Cicely! Look at me, dear! I want you to――――”
-
-Soft footfalls reached them. The pale youth was approaching, his arms
-laden with books. Ethan bit his lip and fell silent.
-
-“I beg your pardon, Miss Hoyt, but would you mind giving me――――”
-
-Ethan stepped toward him.
-
-“Here,” he said hurriedly, “here’s just what you’re after. It’s no
-trouble at all.” He forced the “Love Sonnets from the Portuguese,”
-into the youth’s hands and turned him gently but firmly away from the
-counter. The youth looked from the book to Ethan.
-
-“How――how did you know?” he stammered resentfully.
-
-“Never mind how, my boy. You’ve got it. Run along.”
-
-After a moment of indecision, of many silent looks of inquiry and dark
-suspicion, the youth trod softly away again. Ethan looked at Cicely
-and they smiled together. Then she sank into her chair at the desk and
-laughed helplessly, and cried a little, too. And Ethan said no word
-until she had pressed the handkerchief to her eyes and turned toward
-him again. Then,
-
-“Will you come back to your lotus pool, O Clytie?” he asked softly.
-
-“Wouldn’t it be rather cold and damp this weather?” she asked with a
-little trembling laugh.
-
-“I am going to have it steam-heated,” he answered gravely. “I was there
-yesterday, Clytie, and it looked very forlorn without you, dear.”
-
-“You were there?” she asked wonderingly.
-
-“Yes. I forgot to tell you, didn’t I? The Larches is mine, dear, and
-the lotus pool shall be yours for life, if you’ll let me come sometimes
-and sit beside you under the trees on the bank. Will you?”
-
-She dropped her eyes.
-
-“Will you?” he repeated.
-
-[Illustration: “WILL YOU?” HE REPEATED.]
-
-She moved nearer, with lowered head, and laid her hands palms up on the
-oaken counter. He took them and drew her toward him. She raised a rosy
-face toward him, the violet eyes darting fearfully toward the reading
-room. Ethan paused and looked thoughtful.
-
-“In nice libraries,” he said, “they have what they call the open
-stacks. Is it so here?”
-
-She shook her head.
-
-“But――there might be exceptions?”
-
-“There might,” she answered softly.
-
-“And do you think the librarian would permit me to be an exception?”
-
-She nodded, blushing and provoking.
-
-He turned, walked to the end of the counter and pushed aside the
-swinging gate. At the door of the stack room he paused.
-
-“I would like,” he said, “to find that book of mythology wherein are
-related the loves of Clytie and Vertumnus. Could you show me where to
-find it?”
-
-She darted a glance toward the entrance to the reading room. Then she
-followed him.
-
-“I believe,” she murmured, as her hand stole into his, “I believe it is
-in the farthest corner.”
-
-Their footfalls died away down the concrete aisle. From the reading
-room came the sound of a softly turned leaf. Then the library was very
-silent.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- Transcriber’s Notes:
-
- ――Text in italics is enclosed by underscores (_italics_).
-
- ――Except for the frontispiece, illustrations have been moved to
- follow the text that they illustrate.
-
- ――Punctuation and spelling inaccuracies were silently corrected.
-
- ――Archaic and variable spelling has been preserved.
-
- ――Variations in hyphenation and compound words have been preserved.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of A Maid in Arcady, by Ralph Henry Barbour
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