The Ultimate Sacrifice
She stared at him, as the blow fell,
and then her glance turned slowly to Caroline who
had uttered a sharp cry and sunk into a chair.
“Help me, Ruth,” she implored
pitifully. “No other person in the world
can help me but you!”
“Do you see that,” asked
Ruth quietly of John Mark, “and still it doesn’t
move you?”
“Not a hairbreadth, my dear.”
“But isn’t it absurd?
Suppose I have my freedom, and I tell the police that
in this house a girl against her will—”
“Tush, my dear! You really
do not know me at all. Do you think they can
reach me? She may be a hundred miles away before
you have spoken ten words to the authorities.”
“But I warn you that all your
holds on her are broken. She knows that you have
no holds over her brother. She knows that Ronicky
Doone has broken them all—that Jerry is
free of you!”
“Ronicky Doone,” said
Mark, his face turning gray, “is a talented man.
No doubt of it; his is a very peculiar and incisive
talent, I admit. But, though he has broken all
the old holds, there are ways of finding new ones.
If you leave now, I can even promise you, my dear,
that, before the next day dawns, the very soul of
Caroline will be a pawn in my hands. Do you doubt
it? Such an exquisitely tender, such a delicate
soul as Caroline, can you doubt that I can form invisible
bonds which will hold her even when she is a thousand
miles away from me? Tush, my dear; think again,
and you will think better of my ability.”
“Suppose,” Ruth said, “I were to
offer to stay?”
He bowed. “You tempt me,
with such overwhelming generosity, to become even
more generous myself and set her free at once.
But, alas, I am essentially a practical man.
If you will stay with me, Ruth, if you marry me at
once, why, then indeed this girl is as free as the
wind. Otherwise I should be a fool. You
see, my dear, I love you so that I must have you by
fair means or foul, but I cannot put any chain upon
you except your own word. I confess it, you see,
even before this poor girl, if she is capable of understanding,
which I doubt. But speak again—do
you make the offer?”
She hesitated, and he went on:
“Be careful. I have had you once, and I
have lost you, it seems. If I have you again there
is no power in you—no power between earth
and heaven to take you from me a second time.
Give yourself to me with a word, and I shall make you
mine forever. Then Caroline shall go free—free
as the wind—to her lover, my dear, who
is waiting.”
He made no step toward her, and he
kept his voice smooth and clear. Had he done
otherwise he knew that she would have shrunk.
She looked to him, she looked to Caroline Smith.
The latter had suddenly raised her head and thrown
out her hands, with an unutterable appeal in her eyes.
At that mute appeal Ruth Tolliver surrendered.
“It’s enough,” she
said. “I think there would be no place for
me after all. What could I do in the world except
what you’ve taught me to do? No, let Caroline
go freely, and I give my—”
“Stop!”
He checked her with his raised hand,
and his eyes blazed and glittered in the dead whiteness
of his face. “Don’t give me your word,
my dear. I don’t want that chain to bind
you. There might come a time when some power
arose strong enough to threaten to take you from me.
Then I want to show you that I don’t need your
promise. I can hold you for myself. Only
come to me and tell me simply that you will be mine
if you can. Will you do that?”
She crossed the room slowly and stood
before him. “I will do that,” she
said faintly, half closing her eyes. She had come
so close that, if he willed, he could have taken her
in his arms. She nerved herself against it; then
she felt her hand taken, raised and touched lightly
against trembling lips. When she stepped back
she knew that the decisive moment of her life had
been passed.
“You are free to go,”
said John Mark to Caroline. “Therefore don’t
wait. Go at once.”
“Ruth!” whispered the girl.
Ruth Tolliver turned away, and the
movement brought Caroline beside her, with a cry of
pain. “Is it what I think?” she asked.
“Are you making the sacrifice all for me?
You don’t really care for him, Ruth, and—”
“Caroline!” broke in John Mark.
She turned at the command of that
familiar voice, as if she had been struck with a whip.
He had raised the curtain of the front window beside
the door and was pointing up and across the street.
“I see the window of Gregg’s
room,” he said. “A light has just
appeared in it. I suppose he is waiting.
But, if you wish to go, your time is short—very
short!”
An infinite threat was behind the
calmness of the voice. She could only say to
Ruth: “I’ll never forget.”
Then she fled down the hall and through the door,
and the two within heard the sharp patter of her heels,
as she ran down to the street.
It was freedom for Caroline, and Ruth,
lifting her eyes, looked into the face of the man
she was to marry. She could have held out, she
felt, had it not been for the sound of those departing
footsteps, running so blithely toward a lifetime of
happiness. Even as it was she made herself hold
out. Then a vague astonishment came to clear her
mind. There was no joy in the face of John Mark,
only a deep and settled pain.
“You see,” he said, with
a smile of anguish, “I have done it. I have
bought the thing I love, and that, you know, is the
last and deepest damnation. If another man had
told me that I was capable of such a thing, I’d
have killed him on the spot. But now I have done
it!”
“I think I’ll go up to
my room,” she answered, her eyes on the floor.
She made herself raise them to his. “Unless
you wish to talk to me longer?”
She saw him shudder.
“If you can help it,”
he said, “don’t make me see the brand I
have put on you. Don’t, for Heaven’s
sake, cringe to me if you can help it.”
“Very well,” she said.
He struck his clenched hand against
his face. “It’s the price,”
he declared through his teeth, “and I accept
it.” He spoke more to himself than to her,
and then directly: “Will you let me walk
up with you?”
“Yes.”
He took her passive arm. They
went slowly, slowly up the stairs, for at each landing
it seemed her strength gave out, and she had to pause
for a brief rest; when she paused he spoke with difficulty,
but with his heart in every word.
“You remember the old Greek
fable, Ruth? The story about all the pains and
torments which flew out of Pandora’s box, and
how Hope came out last—that blessed Hope—and
healed the wounds? Here, a moment after the blow
has fallen, I am hoping again like a fool. I am
hoping that I shall teach you to forget; or, if I
cannot teach you to forget, than I shall even make
you glad of what you have done tonight.”
The door closed on her, and she was
alone. Raising her head she found she was looking
straight across the street to the lighted windows of
the rooms of Ronicky Doone and Bill Gregg. While
she watched she saw the silhouette of a man and woman
running to each other, saw them clasped in each other’s
arms. Ruth dropped to her knees and buried her
face in her hands.