Bylow Hill
IN THREE PARTS. PART TWO.
V.
ARTHUR and Isabel were married in their own little church of All Angels, at the far end of the old street.
“I cal’late,” said a rustic member of the vestry, “th’ never was as pretty a weddin’ so simple, nor as simple a weddin’ so pretty! ” Because he said it to Leonard Byington he ended with a manly laugh, for by the anxious glance of his spectacled daughter he knew he had slipped somewhere in his English. But when he heard Leonard and Ruth, in greeting the bride’s mother, jointly repeat the sentiment as their own, he was, for a moment, nearly as happy as Mrs. Morris.
“Such a pity Godfrey had to be away! ” said Mrs. Morris. It was the only pity she chose to emphasize. Godfrey was on distant seas. The northbound mid-afternoon express bore away the bridal pair for a week’s absence.
“Too short,” said a friend or so whom Leonard fell in with as he came from the railway station, and Leonard admitted that Arthur was badly in need of rest.
At sunset Ruth came out of her gate and stood to welcome her brother’s tardy return. Both brightly smiled ; neither spoke. When he gave her a letter with a foreign stamp her face lighted gratefully, but still without words she put it under her belt. Then they joined hands, and he asked, “Where’s father? ”
“Inside, on the lounge, ” she replied. Her lips fell into their far-away smile, to which she added this time a murmur as of reverie, and Leonard said almost as musingly, “Come, take a short turn.”
They moved on to the Winslow gate, and entered the garden by a path which brought them to a point midway between the old cottage and the larger house. There it crossed under an arch transecting an arbor that extended from a side door of the one dwelling to a like one of the other ; and the brother and sister had just passed this embowered spot, and were stepping down a winding descent by which the path sought the old mill pond, when behind them they observed two women pass athwart their track by way of the arbor, and Ruth smiled and murmured again. The crossing pair were Mrs. Morris and Sarah Stebbens, the Winslows’ lifelong housekeeper, deeply immersed in arranging for Isabel to become lady of the larger house, while her mother, with a single young maidservant, was to remain mistress of the cottage.
The deep pond to whose edge Leonard and Ruth presently came was a narrow piece of clear water held in between Bylow Hill and the loftier cliff beyond by an old stone dam, long unused. Rude ledges of sombre rock underlay its depths, and lined and shelved its sides. Broad beeches and dark hemlocks overhung it. At every turn it mirrored back the slanting forms of the white and the yellow birch, or slept under green mantles of lily pads. It bore a haunted air even in the floweriest days of the year, when every bird of the wood thrilled it with his songs, and it gave to the entire region the gravest as well as richest note among all its harmonies. Down the whole way to it some one long gone had gardened with so wise a hand that later negligence had only made the wild loveliness of this inmost refuge more affluent and impassioned.
At one point, where the hemlocks hung farthest and lowest over the pool, and the foot sank deep in a velvet of green mosses, a solid ledge of dark rock shelved inward from the top of the bank and down through the flood to a depth cavernous and black. Here, brought from time to time by the Byington and Winslow playmates, lay a number of mossy stones rounded by primeval floods, — some large enough for seats, some small ; and here, where Ruth had last sat with Godfrey, she now came with her brother.
The habitual fewness of Leonard’s words was a thing she prized beyond count. It made Mrs. Morris nervous, drained her mind’s treasury, and sent her conversational powers borrowing and begging ; Isabel it awed ; Arthur it tantalized ; to Godfrey it was an appetizing drollery ; but to Ruth it was dearer and clearer than all spoken eloquence. The same trait in her, only less marked, was as satisfying to him, and from one rare utterance to another their thoughts moved like consorted ships from light to light along a home coast. A motion, a glance, a gleam, a shade, told its tale, as across leagues of silence a shred of smoke may tell one dweller in the wilderness the way or want of another. Such converse may have been a mere phase of the New Englander’s passion for economy, or only the survival of a primitive spiritual commerce which most of us have lost through the easier use of speech and print ; but the sister took calm delight in it, and it bound the two to each other as though it were itself a sort of goodness or greatness. “They have it of their mother, ” the old General sometimes said to himself.
There were moments, too, when their intercourse was still more subtle, and now they sat without exchange of glance or gesture, silent as chess players, looking up the narrow water into a sunset exquisite in the delicacy of its silvery plumes, fleeces pink and dusk, and illimitable distances of palest green seen through fan rays of white light shot down from one dark, unthreatening cloud.
“Leonard,” at length said the sister, as if she had studied every possibility on the board before touching the chosen piece, “ couldn’t you go away for a time? ”
And with deliberate readiness the other gentle voice replied, “I don’t think I ’d better.”
While they spoke their gaze rested on the changing beauties of pool and sky, and after the brief inquiry and response it still remained, though the inner glow of their mutual love and worship deepened and warmed as did the colors of the heavens and of the glassing waters. The brother knew full well Ruth’s poignant sense of his distresses ; and to her his mute tongue and unbent head were a sister’s convincement that he would endure them in a manner wholly faithful to every one of the loved hands that had lain under his the evening Godfrey had said good-by.
Indeed, it was clear that to go away — unless he honestly felt too weak to remain — would be unfair to almost every person, every interest, concerned ; and such a step was but second choice in Ruth’s mind, conditioned solely on any unreadiness he might have uprightly to bear the burden brought upon him by — well, after all, by his own too confident miscalculations in the game of hearts. To him, such flight signified the indeterminate continuance of his sister’s maiden singleness, and a like prolongation of her lover’s galling suspense. To Ruth, it stood not only for the loss of her brother, but for the narrowing of their father’s already narrowed life, — a narrowing which might come to mean a shortening as well ; and it meant also the leaving of Isabel and Arthur to their mistake and to their unskillfulness slowly and patiently to work out its cure. To go away were, for him, to consent to be the one broken string on a noble but difficult instrument. These thoughts, and many more like them, passed to and fro, out through the abstracted eyes of the one, across to the fading clouds, and back through the abstracted eyes and into the responding heart of the other.
At length the sister rose. “I must go to father, ” she said.
The brother stood up. Their eyes exchanged a gentle gaze and tenderly contracted. “I will come presently,” he replied, and was turning toward the water, when he paused, threw a hand toward the steep wood across the pool, and silently bade her listen. The note he had remotely heard was rare on Bylow Hill since the town had come in below, and one of the errands which oftenest brought the hill’s dwellers to this nook in solitary pairs was to hearken for that voice of unearthly rapture, — a rapture above all melancholy and beyond all mirth, — the call of the hermit thrush.
Now the waiting seemed in vain. The brother’s hand sank ; the sister turned, and soon he saw her pass from view among the boughs as she wound up the rambling path toward the three homes. At the top she halted, still longing to hear at his side that marvelous wood-note, and was just starting on once more, when from the same quarter as before it came again, with new and fervent clearness. With noiseless foot she sprang back down the bendings of the path, having no other thought but to find her brother standing as she had left him, a rapt hearer of the heavenly strain. She reached the spot, but found no hearkening or standing form. The young man’s stalwart frame lay prone on the green bank, where he had thrown himself the moment she had left his sight, and his face was buried in the deep moss.
The stir of her swift coming reached his ear barely in time for him, as she choked down a cry that had all but escaped her, to turn upon his back, meet her glance, and drive the agony from his face with a languorous smile. The melting song pervaded the air, but neither of them lifted a noting finger. Leonard rose to his feet. Ruth gave him a hand, and then its fellow, and as he pressed them together she said, “I wish you would go away for a time.”
He dropped one of her hands, and keeping the other, started slowly homeward ; and it was not until they had climbed half the ascent that, with his most remote yet boyish smile, he replied, “I don’t think I’d better.”
VI.
August, September, October, November, — so passed the year in gorgeous recession over Bylow Hill. Among their dismantled trees the three homes stood unveiled to the town on the meadows, and to travelers who looked from train windows while crossing the river bridge. To those who inquired whose they were there was always some one more than ready to give names and details, and to tell how perfect a bond ever had been — how beautiful a fellowship was yet, now — up there.
Sevenfold they called it, although one of the seven was away, namely, Lieutenant Godfrey Winslow, of the navy, famed for his splendid behavior in the late so-and-so affair. That stately house at the right, they said, was his home what brief times the sea was not. There lived, it would be added, his younger brother, so rapidly coming into note, — the eccentric but gifted rector of All Angels ; whose great success in the heart of a Congregational community was due hardly more to his high talents than to the combined winsomeness and practical sympathies of his beautiful bride, or to the resourceful wisdom and zeal of his churchwarden, Leonard Byington.
“ Any relation to Byington your new political leader in these parts ? ”
“Same man,” the answer would be ; and there the narrator was sure to fall into a glowing tribute to the ideal companionship existing between the rector, his bride, the young district attorney, and Ruth Byington. What made this intimacy the more interesting was, in the eyes of a growing number of observers, that, as they said, “Arthur Winslow was not always an affable man, and was much more rarely a happy one.”
Behind and above this popular verdict was that of the old street behind and above the town, — a sort of revised version, a higher criticism. If the young rector, this old street explained, oftener looked anxious than complacent, so in their time, most likely, did St. Paul and St. Peter. If he was not always affable, why, neither are volcanoes ; the man was all molten metal within. Anyhow, he filled his church to the doors. Coaching parties of the vastly rich made the town their Sunday stopping place purely to hear him ; not so much because the boldness of his speculations kept his bishop frightened as because he always fused those speculations on, white-hot, to the daily issues of private and public life, in a way to make pampered ladies hold their breath, and men of the world their brows. Such a man, to whom the least sin seemed black and bottomless, yet who appeared to know by experience the soul’s every throe in the foulest crimes, was not going to show his joys on the surface in quips and smiles. “You should have heard, ” said the old street, “ his sermon to husbands and wives! His own bride turned pale. He turned pale himself.”
It was wonder enough that even the bride could be happy, at such an altitude, so to speak ; immersing herself utterly, as she did, in the interests that devoured him. All Angels forgot his gloom in the radiance of her charms, — the sweet genuineness of her formal pieties, the tender glow and universality of her sympathies, the witchery of her ever ready, never too ready playfulness.
It was captivating to see how instantly and entirely she had fitted herself into a partnership so exacting ; though it was pitiful to note, on second glance, how the tint and contour of her cheek were losing their perfection, and her eyes were showing those rapid alternations of languor and vivacity which storytellers call a “hunted look.” Yet, oh yes, she was happy ; the pair were happy. It was as a pair that they were happiest. Else, said the old street, they could not keep up the old WinslowByington alliance so beautifully.
To the truth of this general outline the three homes’ domestics, dominated by Sarah Stebbens, certified with cordial and loyal brevity. Yet when Ruth wrote Godfrey how well things were going, there lurked between her bright lines one or two irrepressible meanings that locked his jaws till they creaked. In fact, both his brother and hers were ailing. Both carried a jaded, almost a broken look, and Arthur was taking things to make him eat and sleep ; while Leonard had daily accepted more and more of the young rector’s complicating cares, until he had really become the parish’s chief burden-bearer.
“No,” he said to his father, “Arthur carries his whole work manfully on his own shoulders.”
“But, my son,” replied the old General, “don’t you see you ’re carrying Arthur ? ”
“No, I shan’t do that,” dryly responded the son ; but Ruth saw a change on his brow as on that of a guide who fears he has missed the path.
The four young friends spent many delightful evenings together in the Winslow house, with Mrs. Morris and the General on one side at cribbage. Ruth had frequent happy laughs, observing Isabel’s gift for making Leonard talk. It gave her a new joy in both of them to have the lovely hostess draw him out, out, out, on every matter in the wide arena to which he so vitally belonged ; eliciting a flow of speech so animated that only afterward did one notice how dumb as any tree on Bylow Hill he had been in regard to himself.
“They are bow and violin,” said Arthur to Ruth, with his dark, unsmiling face so free from resentment that she gratefully wondered at him, and was presently ashamed to find herself asking her own mind if he was growing too subtle for her.
On these occasions Isabel was wont to court Ruth’s counsel concerning her wifely part in Arthur’s work, thus often getting Leonard’s as well. Sometimes she impeached his masculine view of things, in her old skirmishing way. Then she would turn rose-color once more and mirthfully sigh, while Ruth laughed and wished for Godfrey, and Mrs. Morris breathed soft ho-ho’s from the cribbage board. So came the Thanksgiving season, with black ice on the mill pond, where the four skated hand in hand. Then the piling snows stopped the skating with a white Christmas, the old year sank to rest, the new rose up, and Bylow Hill, under its bare elms and with the pine-crested ridge at its back, sat in the cold sunshine like a white sea bird with its head in its down. And when the nights were frigid and clear, its ruddy lights of lamp and hearth seemed to answer the downward gaze of the stars in silent gratitude for conditions of happiness strangely perfect for this imperfect world, and the town marveled at the young rector’s grasp of his subject when his text was, “The heart knoweth his own bitterness. ” But on a day in early spring, when every one was in the thick of all the year’s tasks and cares, there came to Leonard this letter: —
LEONARD BYINGTON, ESQUIRE :
SIR, — I find myself compelled to ask that you consider your acquaintanceship with my wife at an end. Doubtless this request will give you more relief than surprise. The visible waste of your frame and the loss of her exquisite bloom are proof enough that both you and she have long been in daily dread of a far worse visitation. It is not worse, because I know how sentimental your impotent and conscienceplagued interchanges of affection have been. I shall permit and assist you to keep this matter a secret. To let it be known would instantly wreck your own career, and would blast at a breath the fortunes of our church and of every one of both our kindreds. I will therefore not at this time require you to resign your church office, or to break off those business intimacies with me which, though no longer founded in personal esteem, are vital to interests that common decency must move you to shield from new peril.
I ask for no repair of the inextinguishable wrong you have done me. I only ask you not to fancy that I am to be beguiled by arguments or denials or moved by threats, or that one word I here write is founded on conjecture or inference. Groveling at my feet, in sobs of shame and with prayers for pardon, Isabel has told me all. Has told me all, Leonard Byington, my once trusted friend. Now, though prostrated on her bed, she rejoices in the double forgiveness of her husband and her priest, blessing him for deliverance from the misleadings of one who — great God! must I write it ? — might at last have dragged her into crime. It is her request, as it is my command, that you darken our threshold no more, and that as far as practicable you keep yourself from her sight.
Faithfully,
ARTHUR WINSLOW.
With his swivel chair overturned behind him, the young lawyer stood at the desk of his inner office, read this letter through at headlong speed, turned it again, and re-read it, slowly, searchingly, from his own name to its writer’s. Then, readjusting his chair, he stepped to a door, asked a clerk in the outer office to order his cutter, turned back, and was closing his desk, when his partner came to him.
“Byington, are you ill? ” asked the fatherly man.
“No ; I’m only going out on some business. I ’ll be back about ” — He looked at his watch.
“Byington, don’t go. You’re ill. You don’t realize how ill you are. If you go at all, go home, and let me send some one with you. Why, your hand is as cold ” —
“I’m all right, ” said the young man, freeing his hand and smiling with white lips. He took his hat and passed out.
Meanwhile Isabel lay on her bed, too overwhelmed to rise. In his room adjoining, with doors locked, Arthur paced the floor. He had spent the first half of the night in an agonizing interview with his wife, and the second half in writing and rewriting the letter to Leonard. Now Isabel noticed the cessation of his steps. In the door between them the key turned ; then the door opened, and he stood, haggard and disheveled, gazing on her. She sat up in the bed, wan, tear-spent, her glorious hair falling over the embroideries of her nightdress.
“Arthur, dear, I am sorry for every angry word I have spoken. But the things I have denied I must deny forever. If you should wait till doomsday, I could confess no more. I have never harbored one throb of unworthy or unsafe regard toward any man in this wide world. For me to say differently would be to lie in God’s own face. I have had great happiness of Leonard’s companionship, and I have been proud to be myself a proof that a man and a woman can be close, dear, daily friends without being lovers or kin, and earth be only more like heaven for it, to them and all theirs. If Leonard has confessed one word more than that for me, — or even for himself, Arthur, dearest, — he has lost his reason. It’s a frightful explanation, but I find no other.
Leonard Byington is not wicked, and if he were he would n’t be so in a dastard’s way. Never since the day I first plighted my faith to you, dear heart, has he given me one sign of a lover’s love. Oh, Arthur, I do love my husband! This night has proved it to me as I never knew it before ; and if you will only believe me and go back to Leonard, I believe he can tear the mask off of this horrible mystery.”
Arthur turned, and once more locked the door. His wife flamed red and hearkened, and the light footfall which had tortured her for hours began again. Suddenly she left the bed and hurried to dress. At the mirror, with her hair lifted on her hands, she paused and again hearkened. Sleigh bells stopped at the front door. Now some one was let in down there, and now, at her husband’s room, Giles, his English man of all work, announced Mr. Byington. “Yes, sir, but ’e says if you can’t come down ’e will ’ave to come up, sir.”
VII.
As Arthur entered the library Leonard came from its farther end, and they halted on opposite sides of a large table. Arthur was flushed and looked fearfully spent. Leonard was pale.
“I have your letter, Arthur.”
The rector bowed.
He gave a start, but tried to conceal a gleam of triumph. Leonard ignored it and spoke on : “A gentleman, Arthur, — I mean any one trying to be a whole gentleman, — is a very helpless creature, nowadays, in matters of this sort.” He looked formidable, and as he lightly grasped a chair at his side it seemed about to become a weapon. “The old thing once called satisfaction,” he continued, “is something one can no longer either ask or offer, in any form. He can neither rail, nor strike, nor spellbind, nor challenge, nor lampoon, nor prosecute.”
“Nearly as helpless as a clergyman, ” said Arthur,
“Almost, ” replied the visitor, “No, there is no more satisfaction in any of those things, for him, than if he were all a clergyman is supposed to be. There is none even in saying this, to you, here, now, and I ’m not here to say it. Neither am I here to vindicate myself — no, nor yet Isabel —with professions or arguments to you. I might as well argue with a forest fire.”
“ Quite as well. What are you here for ? ”
“Be patient and I 'll tell you. I ’m trying to be so with you.”
“You — trying ” —
“Stop that nonsense, Arthur. Ah me, Arthur Winslow, I have no wish to humiliate you. Through the loyalty of your wife’s pure heart, whatever humiliates you must humiliate her. Oh, I could wish her in her shroud and coffin rather than have her suffer the humiliation you have prepared for yourself, and for her through you.”
Arthur showed a thrill of alarm. “Do you propose to go down to public shame, and drag us all with you ? ”
“No, nor to let you, if I can prevent you. Arthur, you have allowed a base jealousy gradually to persuade you, in the face of every contrary evidence, that your fair young wife has lost her loyalty, and your nearest friend the commonest honesty, in a clandestine love. Under the goadings of that passion you foully guessed, you heartlessly accused, you brazenly lied. Isabel has confessed nothing to you, and I know by your lies to me how pusillanimously you must have been lying to her. Had your guess been right, I should not have known you were only guessing, and your successful iniquity would have remained hidden from everybody but yourself — I still do you the honor to believe you would have realized it. Now the vital question is, do you realize it, and will you undo it ? ”
Arthur was deadly pale ; his pointing finger trembled. “ Leave ” — he choked— “leave this house.”
Leonard turned scarlet, but his tone sank low. “Arthur, I don’t believe your soul is rotten. If I did, I should not be such a knave or such a fool as to make any treaty with you that would leave you in your pulpit one Sabbath Day.”
“ What do you — what do you mean by that ? ”
“ I mean that such a treaty would be foul faith to everybody.”
“So, then, you do propose one common shipwreck for us all ? ”
“Quite the contrary. To trust the fortunes of our loved ones to any treaty with a rotten soul would indeed be to launch them upon a stormy sea in a rotten boat. But I do not believe your soul is so. I believe it is sound, — still sound, though on fire ; and so, to help you quench its burning, I give you my pledge to be from this day a stranger to your sweet wife. And now will you do something for me, to prove that your soul is sound and is going to stay sound ? It shall be the least I can ask in good faith to the world we live in.”
“What is it?” asked Arthur, with no capitulation in face or voice.
“I want you to make to her a full retraction and explanation of every falsehood you have uttered to her or to me in this matter.” Leonard was pale again ; Arthur burned red a moment, and then turned paler than Leonard.
“You fiend!” gasped the husband. “I am to exalt you, and abase myself, to her ? ”
“No. No, Arthur. Women are strange ; every chance is that in her eyes I shall be abased.” The speaker went whiter than ever. “But be that as it may, you shall have lifted your soul out of the mire. You must do it, Arthur ; don’t you see you must?”
Arthur sank into the chair at his side. He seemed to have guessed what Leonard was keeping unsaid. A cold moisture stood on his brow. Yet—
“ I will die before I will do it, ” he said.
Leonard drew forth the letter, and then his watch. “Arthur Winslow, I give you five minutes. If you don’t make me that promise in that time, I shall show this letter to your bishop. ”
The rector sat clenching his fingers and spreading them again, and staring at the table. A bead of sweat, then a second, and then a third started down his forehead. Presently he clutched the board, drew himself to his feet, and turned to leave the chair, but fell across its arms, slid heavily from them, and with one rude thump, and then another, lay unconscious on the floor.
Leonard sprang round the table, but when he would have lifted the fallen head it was in the arms of Isabel, and her dilated eyes were on him in a look of passionate aversion. “ Ring! ” she cried. “ Ring for Sarah, and go! No ! stop! don’t ring! he’s coming to ! Only go! go quickly and forever ! Say not a word, — oh, not a word! I heard it all! Despise me too, for I listened at the door! Oh, my husband! Arthur, — look at me, Arthur. Look, Arthur : it’s your Isabel. Oh, Arthur, my husband, my husband! ”
Martin Kelly, pious Irishman and outdoor factotum of the Byington place, paused from the last snow - shoveling of the season to reply to a wandering salesman of fruit trees : “Mr. Airthur Winslow or Mr. Linnard Boyington, — naw, sor! ye can see nayther the wan nor th’other, whatsomiver! How can ye see thim, moy graciouz! whin ’t is two weeks since the two o’ thim was tuck the same noight wid the pneumonias, boy gorra! and the both of thim has thim on the loongs! ”
The nursery agent asked how it had happened so.
“ Hawh! ask yer grandmother! All ye can say is they was roipe to catch the maladee, whatsomiver! Ye cannot always tell how ’t is catched, and whin ye cannot tell, moy graciouz! ye have got the wurrst koind! ”
The two sick men recovered very nearly at the same time. One day, when Leonard had read all his accumulated mail and had seen three or four men officially in his bedchamber, he told Ruth that a certain criminal case which had been waiting for his recovery would take him to the county seat, and would keep him there many days, probably weeks, except for brief visits to his office and yet briefer moments at home. Ruth gave him a look of tender approval, laid a hand in his, and bent into the evening fire her far-off smile. Thus, and only thus, he knew she had divined what had befallen.
A day or two afterward Mrs. Morris brought him a note from Arthur. He wrote an answer while she stayed, and while Ruth listened elatedly to her sprightly account of how well Isabel still bore the burden of nursing a most loving but most nervous husband. The missive from Arthur was a short but complete and propitiative acknowledgment of his error and frailty. It offered no change in the agreement as to Isabel, but it professed a high yet humble resolve to fall no more, and it ended with a manly offer to resign his pulpit, and even to lay aside his sacred calling, if Leonard retained any belief in the moral necessity of his so doing. Leonard’s reply was a very brief exhortation to his friend to put away all thought of resigning, and to take up his work again with the zeal with which he had first entered upon it.
Mrs. Morris went away refreshed, and left the Byingtons equally so. Her buoyancy had been as prettily restrained, her sympathies as sweet, her dimple as unconscious, her belief in everybody’s wit and wisdom except her own as genuine, and her timid dissimulations as kindly meant and as transparent as ever. Yet there was an unspoken compassion for her when she was gone ; for in the parting words with which she playfully vaunted her ignorance of the correspondence she was bearing, it was clear, even to the General, that behind that small ignorance she had a larger knowledge, — a fact that made her dainty cheerfulness seem very brave.
VIII.
The freshets swept down the valleys, the myriad yellow twigs of the brookside willows turned green, a cheery piping rose from the ponds, the last gleam of snow passed from the farthest hills, the bluebird sang, the harrow followed the plough, Ruth’s crocuses shone above the greening sod, and down by the old mill pool and on the steep hillside beyond it she and Isabel gathered arbutus, anemones, and the yellow violet. Then through the thickening greenery the dogwood shone like belated drifts, the flashing warblers passed into the north, the bobolink had arrived, the robin was already overeating, the whole chorus of birds that had come to nest and stay broke forth, and it was summer.
Leonard was back in his own town, enriched with new esteem from the public and from the men of his profession. The noted case was won, a victory for the peace and dignity of the state, due wholly, it was said, to the energy and sagacity of the young district attorney. A murder had been so cunningly done that suspicion could fasten nowhere until Byington laid his finger upon a man of so unspotted a name that no one else had had the mental courage to point to him. Through a long and masterly untangling of contradictions the state’s counsel had so unanswerably proved him guilty that he had confessed without waiting for the jury’s verdict.
“Yes,” said many, “it was a great stroke, Leonard’s management of that thing.” And not a few added that it had made him an older man, — “that or something. ” Those who were of his politics, and even some who were not, stopped him in Main Street and State Street to “shake,” and to say, without too much care for logical sequence, how soon, in their opinion, he would be the commonwealth’s “favorite son.”
“My dear Mrs. Morris,” said the General, “ every town has at least one. ” But even Mrs. Morris could see the father’s faith through the old soldier’s satire.
On the other hand, things were going ill with the little church of All Angels. Arthur kept his people as tensely strung as ever, but he no longer drew from them the chords of aspiration and enterprise. It was a sad disenchantment, and none the less so because no one seemed to know what the matter was. One darkly guessed he was writing a book, and the vestryman who had praised the lovely simplicity of the wedding lucidly explained that the young rector had “lost his grip.”
At times there were flashes of recovery. One Sabbath the whole congregation came out under his benediction uplifted by his word that “loving is living. ” “The more we love, ” they quoted him on their various ways home, “ the more we live. The deeper we love, the deeper we live. The more selfishly or unselfishly, the higher, the broader, the purer, the wiser, we love, the more selfishly or unselfishly, the higher, the broader, the purer, the wiser, we live! ” The rector’s gentle wife was visibly and ever so prettily rejoiced. True, but hardly the whole truth. In her mother’s cottage her smiles were almost sad, and when she had crossed the garden and got into her own room she dropped upon her bed and wept. Yet she quickly ceased, and put on again a brave serenity, for a very tender reason which forbade such risks.
A bunch of the church’s best men got together and agreed that all Arthur needed was rest ; that this bright moment was the right one in which to offer him a vacation ; that his physician should flatly order him to take it ; and that Byington should arrange the matter. Leonard accepted the task, the physician spoke with startling flatness, and the whole kind plot worked well. Arthur consented to go away up into the hills, beyond all the jar of the busy world’s unrest. Isabel was to go with him, and they were to sojourn at some point where she would still be within prompt reach of medical skill, yet from which he could make long jaunts into the absolute wilds.
Mrs. Morris was far from well when they left, and the day afterward she was seriously ill. That night Ruth sat up with her, and the next day she was worse, yet begged that no telegram be sent to her daughter. At the close of the day there came a letter from Isabel. It said that Arthur, “already a new man,” would start the next morning at dawn for a three days’ trip into the wilderness. He went ; and he had not been three hours gone when Isabel received a dispatch calling her to her mother. The only day train would leave in a few minutes, and she had the fortune to catch it. Ruth met her at the station with the blessed word “better.” They went up from the town in Ruth’s carriage, Martin Kelly driving, who let it be known that though the doctor’s name, “moy graciouz! ” were signed to the telegram seven times over, the actual painstaker and sender was “Linnard Boyington, whatsomiver. ”
Still Ruth called it the doctor’s telegram, and said it made no difference who sent it ; but she saw Isabel was disturbed. “ Well, Martin, doctor will have to wait on himself to-morrow ; Leonard will be out of town.”
That evening, alone with her brother, she said, “But I thought you were to be out of town to-morrow.”
“No,” he replied, “I don’t think I ’d better.”
Another day passed, another came, and Mrs. Morris was still in danger. Isabel wrote Arthur that she would be with him the moment the peril was over, if he needed her ; but if he did not, she would stay on for her mother’s fuller recovery. Her letter had barely gone when she received a penciled line brought in to the mountain hotel by a chance messenger and sent on to her, saying he would be out on his tramp five days instead of three. On the fifth day she telegraphed that her mother was getting well so fast that she would come, now, at his word. The next morning she betrayed to Ruth a glad sense of relief as she showed her a dispatch from Arthur, which read : “Going on another trip to-morrow. Stay till I write.”
Ruth repeated it to her father and brother at their noonday meal. Leonard made no comment, but the General asked pleasantly, “Is she certain he won’t come in on this evening’s express ? ” He was discerning more than any one wanted him to. However, at dusk came the train, took water at the tank, stopped at the station, and passed on, and Arthur did not appear.
“Well, I’ll go to bed,” blithely spoke the General. “I’m not so old as I have been, but I ’m tired after writing that letter this afternoon — to Godfrey. Good-night.” So he gave fair notice that he had moved in this matter, himself.
“I did n’t know father had received a letter from Godfrey, ” said Ruth, shading her face from the lamp, and lifting to Leonard a smile which implied that it would have been but fair for him to have told her.
“ It came the day before Arthur went away, ” said Leonard, and Ruth reluctantly chose a new topic.
They rarely had an evening together thus, and with a soft rain falling at the open windows they sat and talked on many themes in what was to them a very talkative way. When something brought up the subject of the late noted trial, Ruth asked her brother how he had first come to suspect so unsuspected a man.
His reply was tardy. “Partly,” he said, and mused while he spoke, “because I am so unsuspected a man myself.” He looked up with a smile, half play, half pain. “I know what an unsuspected man is capable of — under pressure.”
The questioner looked on him with fond faith, and then, dropping her eyes to her needlework, said, “That was n’t all that prompted you, was it ? ”
“No,” replied the brother, again musing. “I had noticed the singular value of wanton guesswork.”
“I thought so,” said the sister. Her needle flagged and stopped, and each knew the other’s mind was on the implacable divinations of one morbid soul.
Leonard leaned and fingered the needlework, — a worsted slipper, too small for most men, too large for most women. “Is that for him? ”
“Yes,” apologized Ruth ; “it’s the thing every clergyman has to incur. But I ’m only doing it to help Isabel out ; she has the other.”
The evening went quickly. When Leonard had let down the window sashes and lowered the shades, Ruth, standing by the lamp as if to shade its light, said, “I ’ll not go for a moment or two yet.” She sent him an ardent smile across the room and turned to a desk.
IX.
Ruth wrote to her lover. Her father’s keeping secret his receipt of Godfrey’s letter until he had mailed its answer could mean only that the answer was for him to come home. His talk of being tired by the writing of it was a purely expletive irony, for he had written with the brevity of an old soldier to a young sailor ; but he had written that trouble was impending, that its source was Arthur, and that the last hope of removing it lay with him, Godfrey. A line from her, pursuing after this message, would be one steamer behind it all the way, but it would reach the far wanderer before any leave would permit him to start homeward.
So, now, what should she write ? If her father had discerned so much more than he had let any one know he had discerned, how about others ? How about the kind whose chief joy is ruthless guesswork ? That need of haste was one she had overlooked. Wise father! And yet — haste itself is such a hazardous thing! Ah, if Arthur had come in on that evening express, what to write were an easier question. The minutes sped by ; her pen overhung the paper with the opening sentence unfinished, and every moment the thought she kept putting away came back : “Leonard! Leonard! Godfrey’s summons should go to him from Leonard ; and it should flash under the seas, not crawl across them ! ” Hark ! She rose and glided to the door through which her brother had gone. There she was startled by the sight of him speeding cautiously down the stair.
On entering his unlighted room Leonard had moved across it to a front window, where, veiled by the chamber’s dusk, he stood looking out into a night dimly illumined by the overclouded moon. The Winslow house widened palely among its surrounding trees. The servants’ rooms were remote as well as on the farther side, and on the nearer no lamplight shone. A short way down the street a glow came from the Morris cottage. Evidently Isabel was with her mother.
He stood and mused, unconsciously lulled by the cool drip of myriad leaves, and with his mind poised midway between emotion and thought. To yield to emotion would have been to chafe against the bands that knitted his life and hers to every life about them. To yield to thought would have been to think of her as no more to be drawn from these surrounding ties than some animate rainbow-fringed flower of the sea can be torn from its shell without laceration and death. To give thought word would have been to cry, “Oh, truest of womankind, where would this unsuspected man, the Leonard Byington, be, if you were other than you are ? ” Yet the suspense between avoided feeling and avoided thought held him where he stood. So standing, it drifted idly into his mind that yonder arbor must be very wet to-night, and the cinder sidewalk out here much drier. As the thought moved him to draw one step back, the glow from the cottage broadened. Its front door had opened, and Mrs. Morris’s young maid came out with a lantern, followed by Isabel saying last fond words to her mother as the convalescent closed the door. “Goodnight! ” she called back.
In one great wave the young man’s passion rolled over its bounds and brought him to his knees with arms outstretched. “Oh, Isabel! ” he murmured. “ Oh, my God! Oh, Isabel! Isabel! if I had but lost you fairly! ”
The two slight figures came daintily along the wet path in single file : the maid throwing the lantern’s beams hither and yon as she looked back to answer Isabel’s kindly questions ; Isabel one moment half lost in the gloom of the trees, and then so lighted up again from foot to brow that it was easy to see the very lines of her winsome month, ripe for compassion or fortitude, yet wishful as a little child’s.
Her secret observer moaned as he stood erect. The fury of his soul seemed to enhance his stature. He did not speak again, but, “Oh, Isabel! harder to strive against than all the world beside ! ” was the unuttered cry that wrote itself upon his tortured brow, “if your unfair winner would only hold you by fair means! Yet I too was to blame! I too was to blame, and you alone were not! ”
Opposite his window she ceased her light talk with the maid, halted, bent, and scanned something just off the firm path, in the clean, wet sand. The maid turned and flooded her with the light of the lantern just as she impulsively lifted an alarmed glance to Leonard’s window, and as quickly averted it. “ Go on,” she said. “I can walk faster if you can.”
The girl quickened her steps, but had not taken a dozen when Isabel stopped again. “Wait, Minnie. Now you can run back, thank you.” She reached for the lantern.
“I — I thought I was to go all the way, and — and bring the lantern back.”
“No, I ’ll keep the lantern ; but I ’ll stay here and throw the light after you till you get in. Run along.”
Minnie tripped away. As she came where they had first halted, a purposely belated good-night softly overtook her ; and when she looked back, Isabel, as if by inadvertency, sent the lantern’s beam into her eyes. So too much light sent the maid by the spot unenlightened. Leonard drew aside, lest the beam swing next into his window. But the precaution was wasted ; it followed Minnie. Isabel also followed, slowly, a few paces, and then moved obliquely into the roadway and toward the window. Only for a moment the ray swept near, and, lighting up the rain-packed sand close before her, revealed a line of footprints slanting toward her from Leonard’s own gate. As the cottage door shut Minnie in, Isabel, reassured by the brightness of the Byingtons’ lower windows, stopped for a furtive instant, and holding in her hand the fellow of the slipper so lately in Ruth’s, exactly fitted it to one of these tracks. Then, with the lantern on her farther side, she made haste toward the open gateway of the Winslow house. A short space from it she recoiled with a gesture of dismay and self-repression, and her light shone full upon a man. He stepped from the garden, his form tensely lifted, his face aflame with anger. But her small figure straightened, also, and swiftly muffling the lantern in a fold of her skirt, she exclaimed, audibly only to him, though in words clearcut as musical notes, “ Oh, Arthur Winslow, has it come to this ? ”
She arrested his resentful answer by the uplift of a hand, which left the lantern again uncovered. “Inside! In the house! ” she softly cried, starting on. “Not here! Look! those windows! — we ’re in full view of them! ”
Quickly she remuffled the lantern, but not in time to hide his motion as he threw out an arm and pushed her rudely back, while he exclaimed, “ In full view of them, answer me one question! ”
It was then that Leonard went hurriedly downstairs.
“I will answer you nothing! ” murmured the wife, still facing him as she moved round into the garden driveway. “Arthur Winslow, it is you who are on trial, not I! ”
“ I on trial! God, listen to that! ” He sprang after her, gripped her shoulders, and hung over her, snarling, “You two-faced runaway, what have I done but suffer ? ”
She kept the lantern hid. “What have you done ? Oh, my husband, will you hear if I tell you ? You have hung the fates of all of us, living or yet to live, on one thread, — please, dear, don’t bear so heavily on me, —on one poor thread, which the jar of another misstep will surely break. Oh, let us not make it! Come, Arthur, — my husband, — into the house ; maybe we can yet save ourselves and our dear ones. Arthur, you 're hurting me dreadfully. If you press me down that way, you ’ll force me to my knees.”
Still she spoke in undertone and still she muffled the light, while steadily the weight of his arms increased. Suddenly he crowded her to the earth. “Arthur,” she murmured, “Arthur, what are you going to do? Don’t kill me here and now, Arthur ; wait till tomorrow. I have that to pass through to-night which may end my life peaceably in bed ; and if it should, then there will be no infamy on any of us, — on you or our child, living, or on me, dead ; and Godfrey, and Ruth, and mother, and all can be ” —
“ Give me that lantern ! ” He held her with one hand, snatched the light from cover and thrust it into her face. “So this is what you signal him with, is it ? ”
“Oh no, no! Arthur, dear, no ! Before God’s throne, no! ”
He lifted it as high as his arm would go, and with all his force swung it down, crashing and quenched, upon her head.
She gave a gentle sigh and rolled at his feet. Groaning with horror and fright, he lifted her in his arms and bore her to her room and bed. There she presently opened her eyes to find him laving her face and head, moaning, covering them with kisses, and imploring her forgiveness in a thousand hysterical repetitions.
“Hush, dear,” she whispered. “I see how it all happened. Does anybody know? Oh, God be thanked! Don’t let any one find out! It was all a misunderstanding. So many things crowded together to mislead you.”
“Oh yes, so many, many things at once, my treasure! Oh yes, yes! ”
“ Call Sarah, will you, dear ? ”
“Oh, beloved, why should I? You don’t need Sarah for anything.”
“Yes, I need her. I must send her for mother — and Ruth — I promised Ruth ; and you must send Giles for the doctor. My hour is come.”
In the Byington house Ruth and her brother met at the foot of the stairs. “ Leonard, ” she whispered, “ what is it ? Is father ill ? Leonard! Oh, what have you seen ? ”
“ Let me pass ! quick ! ” He would have pressed her aside, but she laid hands on him.
“ What has Arthur done ? ” she asked. “ What is he doing ? ”
“Ruth! Ruth! he is putting her out of his own gate!” The brother put forth both hands to turn the sister from his path, but she twined her arms on his.
“ Leonard! Leonard! for the love of Heaven, let him do it! She has only to go to her mother ; let her go! It ’s the last hope. But she ’d better be dead, and she ’d a hundred times rather be dead, than that Leonard Byington should be her rescuer! Come in here a minute.” Slipping both hands into his she drew him into the lighted room, adding as they went, “In a few minutes I can make some errand to her and find how matters stand ” —
They stumbled over a disordered rug. She fell into a chair ; he sank to his knees, and with his face in her hands he moaned : “ Oh, Ruth! Oh, Ruth! It ’s my fault, after all! I should have gone away at the beginning! ”
Ruth and Arthur met in the Winslow garden drive. “I was just coming for you,” he said excitedly. . . . “Yes, her mother is with her, and ” — a sound of wheels—“here’s Giles, now, off for the doctor.” The servant passed. “Yes, I came by the sunset express. I could n’t stay, with this impending.
. . . No, of course you did n’t see me, for I did n’t go to the station, and so I did n’t pass anywhere near your house. I got off at the tank and came up the hill path. . . . Oh no! I got in before the rain began. Let myself in without seeing any one, and found Isabel was over at her mother’s. So I waited here. . . . No, I have n’t been off the place since I came, but I stepped out so many times into the garden to see if she was coming that I ’m soaking wet.”
They entered the lighted house, and he turned upon her a glance heavy and wavering with falsehood. His tongue ran like a terrified horse : “ Oh — eh — before you go upstairs — Ruth — there’s one thing I’m distressed about. I’ve told Mrs. Morris, and she’s promised to see that the doctor understands it perfectly, — though I shall explain it to him myself the moment he comes. And still I wish you ’d see that he understands, will you ? ”
“What is it? ”
“Why, at last, as I was waiting for Isabel, and saw her coming, I went to meet her. Unfortunately she took me for a stranger, turned to run, and tripped and fell headlong! She somehow got her lantern between the base of a tree and the crown of her head, smashed the lantern, and cut and bruised her head pitifully! ”
To hide her start of distress Ruth moved up the stair; but after a step or two she turned. “ Arthur,why say anything about it, if nothing is asked ? ”
The husband stared at her and turned deadly pale. “Th— that ’s tr— true ! ” he said, with an eager gesture. “I ’ll not mention it. And — Ruth! ” — she was leaving him — “you might s— say the same to Mrs. Morris! ”
She nodded, but would not trust her eyes to meet his. He was right : she had divined his deed. He went loiteringly into the library, and gently closed the door. Then he turned the light low, paced once up and down the room, and all at once slammed himself full length upon a lounge, and lay face up, face down, by turns, writhing and tearing his hair. Soon again he was pacing the floor, and presently was prone once more, and then once more up. Giles, the man, brought the doctor, and Arthur heard him discoursing as the vehicle drew up.
“Yes, sir, quite so ; quite so, sir. And yet I believe, sir, if h-all money and lands was ’eld in common, the ’ole ’uman ryce would be as ’appy as the gentlemen and lydies on Bylow ’Ill!”
The young husband met the physician cheerily, sent him up, and went back to his solitude. An hour passed, and then Sarah Stebbens knocked and leaned in. “Mr. Arthur? Oh! I did n’t see you. All ’s well, and it’s a daughter.”
G. W. Cable.
(To be continued.)
- Copyright, 1902, by G. W. CABLE.↩