Betty had invited Senator Burleigh
to dinner on Saturday, that he might feel free to
call elsewhere on Sunday. At four o’clock,
when Mrs. Madison had retired for her nap, she commanded
Jack Emory to take Harriet for a long walk and a long
ride on the cable cars, and to stop for Sally Carter.
No one else was likely to call, and she retired to
her boudoir, a three-cornered room in an angle between
the parlor and library, to await Senator North.
The boudoir was a room that any man
might look forward to after a hard day on Capitol
Hill. Its easychairs were very soft and deep,
its rugs were rosy and delicate, and the walls and
windows and doors were hung with one of those old
French silk stuffs with a design of royal conventionality
and uniformly old rose in colour. All of Betty’s
own books were there, her piano, several handsome
pieces of carved oak, and a unique collection of ivory.
Betty had banished the former girlish simplicity of
this room a few days after her introduction to the
Montgomery house. She had imagined herself greeting
Senator North in it many times, and had received no
other man within its now sacred walls.
She wore a white cloth gown today
and a blue ribbon in her hair. There was also
a touch of blue at the neck, to make her throat look
the whiter. Otherwise, the long closely fitting
gown was without ornament as far down as the hem,
which was lightly embroidered in white. She looked
tall and lithe, but her figure was round, and did not
sway like a reed that a strong wind would beat to
the ground, as Harriet’s did. Although
that possible descendant of African kings possessed
the black splendour of eyes and hair and a marble
regularity of feature, Betty was the more beautiful
woman of the two; for her colour filled and warmed
the eye, she seemed typical of womanhood in its highest
development, and she was a chosen receptacle of enchantment.
Moreover, she was more modern and original, and as
healthy as had been the fashion for the past generation,
Harriet looked like an old Roman coin come to life,
with a blight on her soul and little blood in her thin
body. It was not in Betty’s nature to fear
any woman, much less to experience petty jealousy,
but it was not without satisfaction she reflected
that she and Harriet would hardly attract the same
sort of man. Jack was doing his duty nobly, and
he liked vivacious women who amused him, poor soul!
As for Senator Burleigh, he had said politely that
she was handsome but looked delicate, and then unquestionably
dismissed her from his mind. He and Betty had
talked politics on the previous evening until Mrs.
Madison had slipped off to bed an hour earlier than
usual.
Betty dismissed them all from her
mind and glanced at the clock. It was half-past
four. She thrust the poker between the glowing
logs, and the flames leaped and sent a quivering glow
through the charming room. Betty leaned back
in her chair and closed her eyes, almost holding her
breath that she might hear the advancing step of the
butler the sooner. In what seemed to her exactly
thirty minutes she looked at the clock again.
It was twenty-five minutes to five. She nestled
down, assuring herself that nobody could be expected
to come on the moment, but this time she did not close
her eyes; she watched the clock.
And the joy imperceptibly died out
of her; the hands travelled inexorably round to ten
minutes to five; she remembered that she had not seen
Senator North since Wednesday, and that in four days
a busy legislator might easily forget the existence
of every woman he knew, except perhaps of the woman
he loved. Within her seemed to rise a tide of
bitter memories, the memories of all those women who
had sat and waited through dreary hours for man’s
uncertain coming. She shivered and drew close
to the fire and covered her face with her hands.
Her heart ached for the helpless misery of her sex.
But she sprang suddenly to her feet.
The butler was coming down the hall. A moment
later he had ushered in Senator North, and Betty forgot
the misery of the world, forgot it so completely that
there was no violent reaction; she was merely what
she had been at half-past four, full of pleasurable
excitement held down and watched over by the instinct
of caution.
“I must apologize humbly for
being late,” he said, “but on Sunday I
always sit with my wife until she falls asleep, and
to-day she was nearly an hour later than usual.
What a room to come into out of a biting wind!
Thank heaven I was able to get here.”
Betty thought of the sister and cousin
she had turned out into the cruel afternoon, and then
looked at Senator North deep in the chair where she
had so often imagined him, and forgot their existence.
This was her hour—her first, at least—and
visions of pneumonia and possible consumption should
not mar it. She sat opposite him in a straight
dark high-backed chair, and she was quite aware that
she made a delightful picture.
“Well?” he asked.
“What of your visit and its consequences?”
Betty told the story; and her description
of the dilapidated parsonage at the head of the miserable
village, the group of silent women about the coffin
in the dark room, and her interview with her melancholy
relative was as dramatic as she had felt at the time.
“I thought I was running from
a nightmare when I left the house,” she concluded,
smiling at him as if to demonstrate that it had left
no shadow in her brain; “but now we both feel
better. She wants a gown of many colours, and
this morning she roused the house at five o’clock
singing camp-meeting hymns. But I think she is
quick and observant, and will soon cease to be in
any danger of betraying herself. But she is a
great responsibility, and I really felt old this morning.”
Senator North laughed. “I
hope she won’t give you any real trouble.
If she does, I shall feel more than half responsible.
But otherwise she will be an interesting study for
you. She is nearly all white; how much of racial
lying, and slothfulness, barbarism, and general incapacity
that black vein of hers contains will give you food
for thought, for she certainly will reveal herself
in the course of a year.”
“You must admit that a nature
like that is a great responsibility.”
“Yes, but she alone can work
through all the contradictions to the light, and she
will do it naturally, under pressure of new experiences,
within and without. Don’t suggest even the
word ‘problem’ to her, and don’t
look upon her as one, yourself. You have put her
in the right conditions. Leave her alone and
Time will do the rest. His work is indubious;
never forget that. Are you going to marry Burleigh?”
he added abruptly.
She answered vehemently, “No!
No!” “I thought not. I know you very
little, so far, but I was willing to deny the report.”
“I often wonder why I don’t
fall in love with him. He really has every quality
I admire. But much as I like him I should not
mind if I knew I never should see him again.
I have thought a good deal about it and I should like
to understand it.”
She looked at him coaxingly, and he
smiled, for he understood women very well; but he
gave her the explanation she desired.
“The reason is simple enough.
The admired qualities, even when they are the component
parts of a personality of one who more or less resembles
a cherished ideal, never yet inspired love. Love
is the result of two responsive sparks coming within
each other’s range of action. Their owners
may be in certain ways unfitted for one another, but
the responsive sparks, rising Nature only knows out
of what combination of elements, fly straight, and
Reason sulks. To put it in another way:
Love is merely the intuitive faculty recognizing in
another being the power to give its own lord happiness.
It is a faculty that is very active in some people,”
he added with a laugh, “and when it is overworked
it often goes wrong, like any other machinery.
That is the reason why men who have loved many women
make a mistake in marrying; the intuitive faculty
is both dulled and coarsened by that time. They
are still susceptible to charm, and that is about
all.”
“Have you loved many women?”
asked Betty, without preamble.
He stood up and turned his back to
the fire. Betty noted again how squarely he planted
himself on his feet. “A few,” he said
bluntly. “Not many. I have not overworked
my intuitive faculty, if that is what you mean.
I was not thinking of myself when I spoke.”
He stared down at her for a few moments,
during which it seemed to Betty that the air vibrated
between them. Her breath began to shorten, and
she dropped her eyes, lest their depths reveal the
spark which was active enough in her.
“Will you play for me?”
he asked. “I lost a little girl a few years
ago who played well, although she was only sixteen.
I have disliked the piano ever since, but I should
like to hear you play.”
She played to him for an hour, with
tenderness, passion, and brilliancy. A gift had
been cultivated by the best masters and hours of patient
study.
When he thanked her and rose to go
and she put her hand in his, her face expressed all
the bright earnestness of genuine friendship; there
was not a sparkle of coquetry in her eyes.
“Will you come in often on your
way home when you are tired and would like to forget
bills and things, and let me play to you? I won’t
talk —you must get so tired of voices!—and
the practice will do me good.”
“Of course I will come.
The pleasantest thing in life is a charming woman’s
face at the close of a busy day. Good-bye.”
When he had gone, Betty got into the
depths of a chair and covered her eyes with her hand.
For the first time she knew out of her own experience
that love means a greater want than the satisfaction
of the eye and mind. She would have given anything
but her inherited ideals of right and wrong if he
had come back and taken her in his arms and kissed
her; and she loved him with adoration that he did not,
that in all probability he never would, that although
he had the great passions which stimulate all great
brains, the inflexible honour which his State had
rewarded and never questioned for thirty-five years
must make short work of struggles with the ordinary
temptations of man.
As soon as a man awakens a woman’s
passions she begins to idealize him and there is no
limit to the virtues he will be made to carry.
But let a man be endowed by Nature with every noble
and elevated attribute she has in her power to bestow,
if he lacks sensuality a woman will see him in the
clear cold light of reason. Betty Madison, having
something of the intuitive faculty, in addition to
that knowledge of man which any girl of twenty-seven
who has had much love offered her must possess, made
fewer mistakes even in the thick of a throbbing brain
than most women make; the great danger she did not
foresee until time had accustomed her somewhat to
the wonder of being able to love at last, and Reason
had resumed her place in a singularly clear and logical
mind.