THE HAUNTED VISION.
GRADUALLY the mind of Irene
attained clearness of perception as to duty, and a
firmness of will that led her to act in obedience to
what reason and religion taught her was right.
The leading idea which Mrs. Everet endeavored to keep
before her was this: that no happiness is possible,
except in some work that removes self-consciousness
and fills our minds with an interest in the well-being
of others. While Rose was at Ivy Cliff, Irene
acted with her, and was sustained by her love and
companionship. After her marriage and removal
to New York, Irene was left to stand alone, and this
tried her strength. It was feeble. The sickness
and death of her father drew her back again into herself,
and for a time extinguished all interest in what was
on the outside. To awaken a new and higher life
was the aim of her friend, and she never wearied in
her generous efforts. During this winter plans
were matured for active usefulness in the old spheres,
and Mrs. Everet promised to pass as much time in the
next summer with her father as possible, so as to
act with Irene in the development of these schemes.
The first warm days of summer found
Irene back again in her home at Ivy Cliff. Her
visit in New York had been prolonged far beyond the
limit assigned to it in the beginning, but Rose would
not consent to an earlier return. This winter
of daily life with Mrs. Everet, in the unreserved
intercourse of home, was of great use to Irene.
Affliction had mellowed all the harder portions of
her disposition, which the trouble and experiences
of the past few years could not reach with their softening
influences. There was good soil in her mind,
well prepared, and the sower failed not in the work
of scattering good seed upon it with a liberal hand—seed
that felt soon a quickening life and swelled in the
delight of coming germination.
It is not our purpose to record the
history of Irene during the years of her discipline
at Ivy Cliff, where she lived, nun-like, for the larger
part of her time. She had useful work there, and
in its faithful performance peace came to her troubled
soul. Three or four times every year she paid
a visit to Rose, and spent on each occasion from one
to three or four weeks. It could not but happen
that in these visits congenial friendship would be
made, and tender remembrances go back with her into
the seclusion of her country home, to remain as sweet
companions in her hours of loneliness.
It was something remarkable that,
during the six or seven years which followed Irene’s
separation from her husband, she had never seen him.
He was still a resident of New York, and well known
as a rapidly advancing member of the bar. Occasionally
his name met her eyes in the newspapers, as connected
with some important suit; but, beyond this, his life
was to her a dead letter. He might be married
again, for all she knew to the contrary. But she
never dwelt on that thought; its intrusion always
disturbed her, and that profoundly.
And how was it with Hartley Emerson?
Had he again tried the experiment which once so signally
failed? No; he had not ventured upon the sea
whose depths held the richest vessel he had freighted
in life. Visions of loveliness had floated before
him, and he had been lured by them, a few times, out
of his beaten path. But he carried in his memory
a picture that, when his eyes turned inward, held
their gaze so fixedly that all other images grew dim
or unlovely. And so, with a sigh, he would turn
again to the old way and move on as before.
But the past was irrevocable.
“And shall I,” he began to say to himself,
“for this one great error of my youth—this
blind mistake—pass a desolate and fruitless
life?”
Oftener and oftener the question was
repeated in his thoughts, until it found answer in
an emphatic No! Then he looked around with a new
interest, and went more into society. Soon one
fair face came more frequently before the eyes of
his mind than any other face. He saw it as he
sat in his law-office, saw it on the page of his book
as he read in the evening, lying over the printed
words and hiding from his thoughts their meaning;
saw it in dreams. The face haunted him.
How long was this since that fatal night of discord
and separation? Ten years. So long?
Yes, so long. Ten weary years had made their
record upon his book of life and upon hers. Ten
weary years! The discipline of this time had
not worked on either any moral deterioration.
Both were yet sound to the core, and both were building
up characters based on the broad foundations of virtue.
Steadily that face grew into a more
living distinctness, haunting his daily thoughts and
nightly visions. Then new life-pulses began to
throb in his heart; new emotions to tremble over its
long calm surface; new warmth to flow, spring-like,
into the indurated soil. This face, which had
begun thus to dwell with him, was the face of a maiden,
beautiful to look upon. He had met her often during
a year, and from the beginning of their acquaintance
she had interested him. If he erred not, the
interest was mutual. prom all points of view he now
commenced studying her character. Having made
one mistake, he was fearful and guarded. Better
go on a lonely man to the end of life than again have
his love-freighted bark buried in mid-ocean.
At last, Emerson was satisfied.
He had found the sweet being whose life could blend
in eternal oneness with his own; and it only remained
for him to say to her in words what she had read as
plainly as written language in his eyes. So far
as she was concerned, no impediment existed.
We will not say that she was ripe enough in soul to
wed with this man, who had passed through experiences
of a kind that always develop the character broadly
and deeply. No, for such was not the case.
She was too young and inexperienced to understand
him; too narrow in her range of thought; too much a
child. But something in her beautiful, innocent,
sweet young face had won his heart; and in the weakness
of passion, not in the manly strength of a deep love,
he had bowed down to a shrine at which he could never
worship and be satisfied.
But even strong men are weak in woman’s
toils, and Hartley Emerson was a captive.
There was to be a pleasure-party on
one of the steamers that cut the bright waters of
the fair Hudson, and Emerson and the maiden, whose
face was now his daily companion, were to be of the
number. He felt that the time had come for him
to speak if he meant to speak at all—to
say what was in his thought, or turn aside and let
another woo and win the lovely being imagination had
already pictured as the sweet companion of his future
home. The night that preceded this excursion
was a sleepless one for Hartley Emerson. Questions
and doubts, scarcely defined in his thoughts before,
pressed themselves upon him and demanded a solution.
The past came up with a vividness not experienced
for years. In states of semi-consciousness—half-sleeping,
half-waking—there returned to him such
life-like realizations of events long ago recorded
in his memory, and covered over with the dust of time,
that he started from them to full wakefulness, with
a heart throbbing in wild tumult. Once there
was presented so vivid a picture of Irene that for
some moments he was unable to satisfy himself that
all these ten years of loneliness were not a dream.
He saw her as she stood before him on that ever-to-be-remembered
night and said, “I go!” Let us turn
back and read the record of her appearance as he saw
her then and now:
“She had raised her eyes from
the floor, and turned them full upon her husband.
Her face was not so pale. Warmth had come back
to the delicate skin, flushing it with beauty.
She did not stand before him an impersonation of anger,
dislike or rebellion. There was not a repulsively
attitude or expression. No flashing of the eyes,
nor even the cold, diamond glitter seen a little while
before. Slowly turning away, she left the room.
But to her husband she seemed still standing there,
a lovely vision. There had fallen, in that instant
of time, a sunbeam, which fixed the image upon his
memory in imperishable colors.”
Emerson groaned as he fell back upon
his pillow and shut his eyes. What would he not
then have given for one full draught of Lethe’s
fabled waters.
Morning came at last, its bright beams
dispersing the shadows of night; and with it came
back the warmth of his new passion and his purpose
on that day, if the opportunity came, to end all doubt,
by offering the maiden his hand—we do not
say heart, for of that he was not the full possessor.
The day opened charmingly, and the
pleasure-party were on the wing betimes. Emerson
felt a sense of exhilaration as the steamer passed
out from her moorings and glided with easy grace along
the city front. He stood upon her deck with a
maiden’s hand resting on his arm, the touch
of which, though light as the pressure of a flower,
was felt with strange distinctness. The shadows
of the night, which had brooded so darkly over his
spirit, were gone, and only a dim remembrance of the
gloom remained. Onward the steamer glided, sweeping
by the crowded line of buildings and moving grandly
along, through palisades of rock on one side and picturesque
landscapes on the other, until bolder scenery stretched
away and mountain barriers raised themselves against
the blue horizon.
There was a large number of passengers
on board, scattered over the decks or lingering in
the cabins, as inclination prompted. The observer
of faces and character had field enough for study;
but Hartley Emerson was not inclined to read in the
book of character on this occasion. One subject
occupied his thoughts to the exclusion of all others.
There had come a period that was full of interest and
fraught with momentous consequences which must extend
through all of his after years. He saw little
but the maiden at his side—thought of little
but his purpose to ask her to walk with him, a soul-companion,
in the journey of life.
During the first hour there was a
constant moving to and fro and the taking up of new
positions by the passengers—a hum and buzz
of conversation—laughing—exclamations—gay
talk and enthusiasm. Then a quieter tone prevailed.
Solitary individuals took places of observation; groups
seated themselves in pleasant circles to chat, and
couples drew away into cabins or retired places, or
continued the promenade.
Among the latter were Emerson and
his companion. Purposely he had drawn the fair
girl away from their party, in order to get the opportunity
he desired. He did not mean to startle her with
an abrupt proposal here, in the very eye of observation,
but to advance toward the object by slow approaches,
marking well the effect of his words, and receding
the moment he saw that, in beginning to comprehend
him, her mind showed repulsion or marked disturbance.
Thus it was with them when the boat
entered the Highlands and swept onward with wind-like
speed. They were in one of the gorgeously furnished
cabins, sitting together on a sofa. There had
been earnest talk, but on some subject of taste.
Gradually Emerson changed the theme and began approaching
the one nearest to his heart. Slight embarrassment
followed; his voice took on a different tone; it was
lower, tenderer, more deliberate and impressive.
He leaned closer, and the maiden did not retire; she
understood him, and was waiting the pleasure of his
speech with heart-throbbings that seemed as if they
must be audible in his ears as well as her own.
The time had come. Everything
was propitious. The words that would have sealed
his fate and hers were on his lips, when, looking up,
he knew not why, but under an impulse of the moment,
he met two calm eyes resting upon him with an expression
that sent the blood leaping back to his heart.
Two calm eyes and a pale, calm face were before him
for a moment; then they vanished in the crowd.
But he knew them, though ten years lay between the
last vision and this.
The words that were on his lips died
unspoken. He could not have uttered them if life
or death hung on the issue. No—no—no.
A dead silence followed.
“Are you ill?” asked his
companion, looking at him anxiously.
“No, oh no,” he replied, trying to rally
himself.
“But you are ill, Mr. Emerson. How pale
your face is!”
“It will pass off in a moment.”
He spoke with an effort to appear self-possessed.
“Let us go on deck,” he added, rising.
“There are a great many people in the cabin,
and the atmosphere is oppressive.”
A dead weight fell upon the maiden’s
heart as she arose and went on deck by the side of
Mr. Emerson. She had noticed his sudden pause
and glance across the cabin at the instant she was
holding her breath for his next words, but did not
observe the object, a sight of which had wrought on
him so remarkable a change. They walked nearly
the entire length of the boat, after getting on deck,
before Mr. Emerson spoke. He then remarked on
the boldness of the scenery and pointed out interesting
localities, but in so absent and preoccupied a way
that his companion listened without replying.
In a little while he managed to get into the neighborhood
of three or four of their party, with whom he left
her, and, moving away, took a position on the upper
deck just over the gangway from which the landings
were made. Here he remained until the boat came
to at a pier on which his feet had stepped lightly
many, many times. Ivy Cliff was only a little
way distant, hidden from view by a belt of forest
trees. The ponderous machinery stood still, the
plunging wheels stopped their muffled roar, and in
the brooding silence that followed three or four persons
stepped on the plank which had been thrown out and
passed to the shore. A single form alone fixed
the eyes of Hartley Emerson. He would have known
it on the instant among a thousand. It was that
of Irene. Her step was slow, like one abstracted
in mind or like one in feeble health. After gaining
the landing, she stood still and turned toward the
boat, when their eyes met again—met, and
held each other, by a spell which neither had power
to break. The fastenings were thrown off, the
engineer rung his bell; there was a clatter of machinery,
a rush of waters and the boat glanced onward.
Then Irene started like one suddenly aroused from
sleep and walked rapidly away.
And thus they met for the first time
after a separation of ten years.