It was Saturday morning. Betty
arose at four, brewed herself a cup of coffee over
a spirit lamp, and ate several biscuit with it.
She hoped Senator North would take the same precaution.
Healthy animals when hungry cannot take much interest
in each other.
She dressed herself in airy white
with a blue ribbon in her hair. There was no
necessity for a hat at that hour in the morning, but
she took a white organdie one down to the boat and
put it under a seat, lest she be late in returning
and the sun freckling.
It was faintly dawn as she pulled
out into the middle of the lake and rowed toward its
northern end. Even the trailing thickets on the
water’s edge looked black, and the dark forest
rising on every side seemed to whisper of old deeds
of war and heroism, the bravery and the treachery
of Indian tribes, the mortal jealousies of French and
English. Every inch of ground about her was historical.
These forests had resounded for years with the ugly
sounds of battle, and more than once with the shrieks
of women and children. To-day the woodpecker
tapped, the bluejay cried in those depths unaffrighted;
the singing of a mountain stream, the roar of a distant
waterfall alone lifted a louder voice to the eternal
whisper of the pines. The forest looked calmly
down upon this flower of a civilization which no man
in its first experience of man would have ventured
to forecast, skimming the water to keep tryst with
one whose ancestors had hewn a rougher wilderness
than this down to a market-place that their inheritor
might win the higher honours of the great Republic
to come.
But Betty was not thinking of the
honours he had won. She was wondering if by so
much as a glance he would betray that he cared a little
for her. Or did he care? In her thought he
had been as full of love as herself. But reality
was waiting for her there in the forest, —reality
after three months of uninterrupted imaginings.
Perhaps he merely found her agreeable and amusing.
But the idea did not start a tear. The uncertainty
of his affections and the certainty that she was about
to see him again were alike thrilling and gladdening.
Pleasurable excitement possessed her, and her hands
would have trembled but for their tight grip on the
oars.
He stood watching her as she rowed
toward him, and she was sure that she made a charming
picture out on that great dark lake below the pines.
The forest rose almost straight behind him, but she
knew the winding paths which made ascent easy, and
many a dry leafy platform where one might sit.
A hundred times she had imagined herself in that forest
with him; its dim vast solitude had become almost his
permanent setting in her fancy. But as the boat
grazed the shore, she said hurriedly,—
“Get in and let us float about.
I am sure it is cold in there. I am so glad to
see you again.” As her hands were occupied,
he took the seat in the stern at once, and she pulled
out a few yards, then crossed her oars.
“You see, I have obeyed orders,”
he said, smiling. “Fortunately, I am an
early riser, particularly in the country.”
“I thought the change would
do you good. It must be hot in Washington.”
“It is frightful.”
He looked as well as usual, however,
and his thin grey clothes became his spare though
thickset figure. He was smiling humorously into
Betty’s eyes, but his own were impenetrable.
They might harbour the delight of a lover at a precious
opportunity, or the amusement of a man of the world.
But there was no doubt that he was glad to see her
and that he appreciated the picture she made.
“I hope I never may see you
in anything but white again,” he said.
“You are a gracious vision to conjure up on stifling
afternoons in the Senate.”
Betty did not want to talk about herself.
“Tell me the news,” she said. “How
is that Tariff Bill going?”
“A story has just leaked out
that a stormy scene occurred in the Ways and Means
Committee Room between our friend Montgomery and two
members of the Committee whose names I won’t
mention. He openly accused them of accepting
bribes from certain Trusts. It even is reported
that they came to blows, but that is probably an exaggeration.
We have had our sensation also. One of our fire-eaters
accused—– at the top of his voice—the
entire Senate of bribery and corruption. He is
new and will think better of us in time. Meanwhile
he would amuse us if such things did not affect the
dignity of the Senate with the outside world.
Unfortunately we are obliged to accept whomsoever the
people select to represent them, and can only possess
our souls in patience till time and the Senate tone
the raw ones down.”
“Is he representative, that
man? And those hysterical members of the House,
whose speeches make me wonder if humour is really a
national quality?”
“They are only too representative,
unfortunately, but they are more hysterical than the
average because they have the opportunity their constituents
lack, of shouting in public. The House is America
let loose. When a former private citizen belonging
to the party out of power gets on his feet in it,
he develops a species of hysteria for which there
is no parallel in history. He seems to think that
the louder he shouts and the more bad rhetoric he
uses, the less will his party feel the stings of defeat.
Some of them tone down and become conscientious and
admirable legislators, but these are the few of natural
largeness of mind. Party spirit, a magnificent
thing at its best, warps and withers the little brain
in the party out of power. But politics are out
of place in this wilderness. There should be
redskins and bows and arrows on all sides of us.
I used to revel in Cooper’s yarns, but I suppose
you never have read them.”
Betty shook her head. “When
can you come up here to stay?”
“Probably not for a month yet.
There will be a good deal more wrangling before the
bill goes through. I don’t like it in its
present shape and don’t expect to in its ultimate;
neither do a good many of us. But I shall vote
for it, because the country needs a high tariff, and
anything will be better than nothing for the present.
Later, the whole matter will be reopened and war waged
on the Trusts.”
“Sally says they have bought up the atmosphere.”
“They may be said to have bought
up several climates. I have spent a great many
hours puzzling over that question, for they have put
an end to the old days when young men could go into
business with the hope of a progressive future.
Now they are swallowed up at once, depersonalized,
and the whole matter is one of the great questions
affecting the future development of the Republic.”
He was not looking at Betty; he was
staring out on the lake. His eyes and mouth were
hard again; he looked like a mere intellect, nothing
more.
As Betty watched him, she experienced
a sudden desire to put him back on the pedestal he
had occupied in the first days of their acquaintance,
and to worship him as an ideal and forget him as a
man. That had been a period of intellectual days
and quiet nights. And as he looked now, he seemed
to ask no more of any woman.
But in a moment he had turned to her
again with the smile and the peculiar concentration
of gaze which made women forget he was a statesman.
“Not another word of politics,”
he said. “I did not get up at four in the
morning to meet the most charming woman in America
and talk politics. Do you know that it is over
three months since I saw you last?”
“You left Washington, so, naturally, I left
it too.”
“I wonder, how much you mean?
If I were to judge you by myself—Your few
notes were very interesting. Did you enjoy California?”
“California was made to enjoy,
but I felt very much alone in it.”
“Of course you did. Nature
is a wicked old matchmaker. You have felt quite
as lonely up here since your return.”
“Yes, I have! But I have
had a good deal to occupy my mind. Sally terrified
me by asserting that Harriet and my cousin Jack Emory
were in love with each other.”
“Who is Harriet?”
“Oh, you have forgotten!
And you made me take her into the bosom of my family.”
“Oh—yes; I had forgotten
her name. I hope she is not making trouble for
you.”
“She admitted that she loves
him, but insists that he does not love her, and I
don’t think he does.”
“Probably not. I should
as soon think of falling in love with a weeping figure
on a tombstone.”
“What kind of women do you fall
in love with?” asked Betty, irresistibly.
She was sure of herself now. The passions of women
are often calmed by the presence of their lover.
Passion is so largely mental in them that it reaches
heights in the imagination that reality seldom justifies
and mere propinquity quells. For this reason they
often are recklessly unfair to men, who are made on
simpler lines.
They had floated under the spreading
arms of a thicket on the water’s edge, and she
was a brilliant white figure in the gloom.
“I have no recipe,” he
said, smiling. “Certainly not with the women
that weep, poor things!” Betty wondered what
his personal attitude was to the tears of twenty years.
She knew from Sally that Mrs. North had long attacks
of depression. But his mind had been occupied;
that meant almost everything. And his heart?
“Do you love anybody now?”
she broke out. “Is there a woman in your
life? Some one who makes you happy?”
The smile left his lips. It was
too much to say that it had been in his eyes, but
they changed also.
“There is no woman in my life,
as you put it. Why do you ask?”
“Because I want to know.”
They regarded each other squarely.
In a moment he said deliberately: “The
greatest happiness that I have had in the past few
months has been my friendship with you. If I
were free, I should make love to you. If you
will have the truth, I can conceive of no happiness
so great as to be your husband. I have caught
myself dreaming of it—and over and over
again. But as it is I am not going to make love
to you. When the strain becomes too great, I
shall leave you. Until then—Ah, don’t!”
Betty, who had dropped her head when
he began to speak, had raised it slowly, and her face
concealed nothing.
“I, too, love you,” she
said in a moment. “I love you, love you,
love you. If you knew what a relief it is to
say it. That is the reason I would not go up
into the forest with you just now. I was afraid.
I have been with you there too often!”
For the first time she saw the muscles
of his face relax, and she covered her face with her
hands. “I shouldn’t have told you,”
she whispered, “I shouldn’t have told
you. I have made it harder. You will go
away at once.”
He did not speak for some minutes. Then he said,—
“Can you do without what we have?”
“Oh, no!” she said passionately.
“Oh, no! No!”
“Nor can I—without
the hope and the prospect of an occasional hour with
you, of the sympathy and understanding which has grown
up between us. I have conquered myself many times,
relinquished many hopes, and I think and believe that
my self-control is as great as a man’s can be.
I shall not let myself go with you unless you tempt
me beyond endurance; for as I said before, if I find
that I am not strong enough, I shall leave you.
You are a beautiful and seductive woman, and your
power if you chose to exert it would madden any man.
Will you forget it? Will you help me?”
She dropped her hands. “Yes,”
she said, “I’d rather suffer anything;
I’d rather make myself over than do without you.
And I couldn’t! I couldn’t!
Every least thing that happens, I want to go straight
to you about it. I know that trouble is ahead,
although I haven’t admitted it before.
I want you in every way! in every way! And I can’t
even have you in that. I never will speak like
this again, but I’d like you to know. If
you love me, you must know how terrible it is.
I am not a child. I am twenty-seven years old.”
“I know,” he replied;
and for a few moments he said no more, but looked
down into the water. “I am not a believer
in people parting because they can’t have everything,”
he continued finally. “It is only the very
young who do that. They take the thing tragically;
passion and disappointment trample down common-sense.
If love is the very best thing in life, it is not
the only thing. Every time I have seen you I
have wanted to take you in my arms, and yet I have
enjoyed every moment spent in your presence.
The thought of giving you up is intolerable.
We both are old enough to control ourselves. And
I believe that any habit can be acquired.”
“And will you never take me
in your arms? Have I got to go through life without
that? I must say everything to-day—I
will row out into the middle of the lake if you like,
but I must know that.”
“You can stay here. There
are certain things that no man can say, Betty, even
to the most loved and trusted of women. The only
answer that I can make to your question is, that if
I find I must leave you, I certainly shall take you
in my arms once.”
“Are you sorry I told you I
loved you? Would it be easier if I had not?”
“Probably. But I am not
sorry! Love can give happiness even when one
is denied the expression of it.”
“I never intended to tell you.
I was afraid if I did you would leave me at once.”
“So I should if you were not—you.
But I should think myself a fool if I did not make
an attempt to achieve the second best. I may fail,
but I shall try. And life is made up of compromises.”
“You are more certain of smashing
the Trusts,” she said with the humour which
never bore repression for long. “In dealing
with methodical scoundrels you know at least where
you are. A man and woman never can be too certain
of what five minutes will bring forth. That ends
it. We never will discuss the question again until
it comes up for the last time—if it does.
I do not mean that I shall not tell you again that
I love you, for I shall. I have no desire that
you shall forget it. I mean that we will not
discuss possibilities again, nor give expression to
the passionate regret we both must feel. Is it
a compact?”
“I will keep my part in it.
I promise to be good. I have prided myself on
my intelligence. I am not going to disgrace it
by ruining the only happiness I ever shall have.
I love you, and I will prove it by making your part
as easy as I can, and by giving you all the happiness
I am permitted to give you.”
He leaned toward her for the first
time, but he did not touch her.
“And I promise you this, my
darling,” he said softly: “if you
ever should be in great trouble and should send for
me—as of course you would do—I
will take you in my arms then and forget myself.
Now, change seats with me and I will row you part
of the way home; I shall get out a half-mile from
the hotel. There really was no reason why you
should have made me walk nearly the entire length of
the lake.”
“I had fancied you in this particular
part of the forest, and I wanted to find you here.”
“That is so like a woman,”
he said humorously. “But all of us make
an occasional attempt to realize a dream, I suppose.”