In the Ormsby household father and
daughter sat in the darkness on the veranda.
After Laura Ormsby’s encounter with McGregor
there had been another talk between her and David.
Now she had gone on a visit to her home-town in Wisconsin
and father and daughter sat together.
To his wife David had talked pointedly
of Margaret’s affair. “It is not
a matter of good sense,” he had said; “one
can not pretend there is a prospect of happiness in
such an affair. The man is no fool and may some
day be a big man but it will not be the kind of bigness
that will bring either happiness or contentment to
a woman like Margaret. He may end his life in
jail.”
* * * *
*
McGregor and Edith walked up the gravel
walk and stood by the front door of the Ormsby house.
From the darkness on the veranda came the hearty voice
of David. “Come and sit out here,”
he said.
McGregor stood silently waiting.
Edith clung to his arm. Margaret got up and coming
forward stood looking at them. With a jump at
her heart she sensed the crisis suggested by the presence
of these two people. Her voice trembled with
alarm. “Come in,” she said, turning
and leading the way into the house.
The man and woman followed Margaret.
At the door McGregor stopped and called to David.
“We want you in here with us,” he said
harshly.
In the drawing room the four people
waited. The great chandelier threw its light
down upon them. In her chair Edith sat and looked
at the floor.
“I’ve made a mistake,”
said McGregor. “I’ve been going on
and on making a mistake.” He turned to
Margaret. “We didn’t count on something
here. There is Edith. She isn’t what
we thought.”
Edith said nothing. The weary
stoop stayed in her shoulders. She felt that
if McGregor had brought her to the house and to this
woman he loved to seal their parting she would sit
quietly until that was over and then go on to the
loneliness she believed must be her portion.
To Margaret the coming of the man
and woman was a portent of evil. She also was
silent, expecting a shock. When her lover spoke
she also looked at the floor. To herself she
was saying, “He is going to take himself away
and marry this other woman. I must be prepared
to hear him say that.” In the doorway stood
David. “He is going to give me back Margaret,”
he thought, and his heart danced with happiness.
McGregor walked across the room and
stood looking at the two women. His blue eyes
were cold and filled with intense curiosity concerning
them and himself. He wanted to test them and to
test himself. “If I am clear-headed now
I shall go on with the dream,” he thought.
“If I fail in this I shall fail in everything.”
Turning he took hold of the sleeve of David’s
coat and pulled him across the room so that the two
men stood together. Then he looked hard at Margaret.
As he talked to her he continued to stand thus with
his hand on her father’s arm. The action
caught David’s fancy and a thrill of admiration
ran through him. “Here is a man,”
he told himself.
“You thought Edith was ready
to see us get married. Well she was. She
is now and you see what it has done to her,”
said McGregor.
The daughter of the ploughmaker started
to speak. Her face was chalky white. McGregor
threw up his hands.
“Wait,” he said, “a
man and woman can’t live together for years and
then part like two men friends. Something gets
into them to prevent. They find they love each
other. I’ve found out that though I want
you, I love Edith. She loves me. Look at
her.”
Margaret half arose from her chair.
McGregor went on. Into his voice came the harsh
quality that made men fear and follow him. “Oh,
we’ll be married, Margaret and I,” he
said; “her beauty has won me. I follow
beauty. I want beautiful children. That is
my right.”
He turned to Edith and stood staring at her.
“You and I could never have
the feeling Margaret and I had when we looked into
each other’s eyes. We ached with it—each
wanting the other. You are made to endure.
You would get over anything and be cheerful after
a while. You know that—don’t
you?”
The eyes of Edith came up level with his own.
“Yes I know,” she said.
Margaret Ormsby jumped up from her chair, her eyes
swimming.
“Stop,” she cried.
“I do not want you. I would never marry
you now. You belong to her. You are Edith’s.”
McGregor’s voice became soft and quiet.
“Oh, I know,” he said;
“I know! I know! But I want children.
Look at Edith. Do you think she could bear children
to me?”
A change came over Edith Carson.
Her eyes hardened and her shoulders straightened.
“That’s for me to say,”
she cried, springing forward and clutching his arm.
“That is between me and God. If you intend
to marry me come now and do it. I was not afraid
to give you up and I’m not afraid that I shall
die bearing children.”
Dropping McGregor’s arm Edith
ran across the room and stood before Margaret.
“How do you know you are more beautiful or can
bear more beautiful children?” she demanded.
“What do you mean by beauty anyway? I deny
your beauty.” She turned to McGregor.
“Look,” she cried, “she does not
stand the test.”
Pride swept over the woman that had
come to life within the body of the little milliner.
With calm eyes she stared at the people in the room
and when she looked again toward Margaret there was
a challenge in her voice.
“Beauty has to endure,”
she said swiftly. “It has to be daring.
It has to outlive long years of life and many defeats.”
A hard look came into her eyes as she challenged the
daughter of wealth. “I had the courage
to be defeated and I have the courage to take what
I want,” she said. “Have you that
courage? If you have take this man. You want
him and so do I. Take his arm and walk away with him.
Do it now, here before my eyes.”
Margaret shook her head. Her
body trembled and her eyes looked wildly about.
She turned to David Ormsby. “I did not know
that life could be like this,” she said.
“Why didn’t you tell me? She is right.
I am afraid.”
A light came into McGregor’s
eyes and he turned quickly about. “I see,”
he said, looking sharply at Edith, “you have
also your purpose.” Turning again he looked
into the eyes of David.
“There is something to be decided
here. It is perhaps the supreme test of a man’s
life. One struggles to keep a thought in mind,
to be impersonal, to see that life has a purpose outside
his own purpose. You have perhaps made that struggle.
You see I’m making it now. I’m going
to take Edith and go back to work.”
At the door McGregor stopped and put
out his hand to David who took it and looked at the
big lawyer respectfully.
“I’m glad to see you go,” said the
ploughmaker briefly.
“I’m glad to be going,”
said McGregor, understanding that there was nothing
but relief and honest antagonism in the voice and in
the mind of David Ormsby.