Betty had organized a picnic for the
following day, inviting several acquaintances from
the hotel; and they all drove to a favourite spot
in the forest. Mrs. Madison’s maid had charge
of many cushions, and disposed her tiny mistress—who
looked like a wood fairy in lilac mull—comfortably
on a bed of pine needles. Major Carter felt young
once more as he grilled steaks at a camp-fire, and
Harriet enchanted him with her rapt attention while
his memory rioted in deeds of war.
Senator Burleigh had never appeared
so well, Betty thought. There was an out-of-door
atmosphere about him at any time; no doubt he had been
a mighty wind in the Senate more than once during the
stormy passage of the Tariff Bill; but with all out-doors
around him he looked nothing less than a mountain
king. His large well-knit frame, full of strength
and energy, was at its triumphant best in outing tweeds
and Scotch stockings; his fair handsome face was boyish,
despite its almost fierce determination, as he pranced
about, intoxicated with the mountain air.
“If you ever had spent one summer
in Washington, you would understand,” he said
to Betty. “This is where I’d like
to spend the rest of my life. I’d like
to think I’d never see a city or the inside
of a house again.”
“Then you’d probably hew
down the forest, which would be a loss to the State:
you would have to do something with your superfluous
energy. And what would you do with your brain?
Mere reading, when your arm ached from chopping, never
would content you.”
“No, that is the worst of civilization.
It either produces discontented savages like myself
or goes too far and turns the whole body into brain.
I have managed to get a sort of steam-engine into my
head which gives me little rest and would wear out
my body if I didn’t happen to have the constitution
of a buffalo. But I doubt if I shall be what
North is, sixteen years hence. That man is the
best example of equilibrium I have ever seen.
His mental activity is enormous, but his control over
himself is so absolute that he never wastes an ounce
of force. I’ve seen him look as fresh at
the end of a long day of debate as he was when he
got on his feet. He never lets go of himself
for a moment.”
That was the only time Betty heard
Senator North’s name mentioned during Burleigh’s
visit, for the younger man was much more interested
in himself and the object of his holiday.
“I think if it hadn’t
been for this Extra Session I should have followed
you to California,” he said abruptly. “I
didn’t know how much I depended for my entire
happiness upon my frequent visits to your house until
I came back after the short vacation and found you
gone.”
“It would have been jolly to
have had you in California. But you must feel
that your time has not been thrown away. Are you
satisfied with the Tariff Bill?”
“I liked it fairly well as we
re-wrote it, but I don’t expect to care much
about it after it comes out of conference. But
there are no politics in the Adirondacks, and when
a weary Senator is looking at a woman in a pale green
muslin—”
“You look anything but weary.
I expect you will tramp over half the Adirondacks
before you go back. And I am sure you will eat
one of those beefsteaks. Come, they are ready.”
But although she managed to seat him
between Sally Carter and an extremely pretty girl,
he was at her side again the moment the gay party
began to split into couples.
“Will you come for a walk?”
he asked. “I do want to roam about on the
old trails the Indians made, and to get away from these
hideous emblems of modern civilization—sailor
hats. Thank heaven you don’t wear a sailor
hat.”
Betty shot a peremptory glance at
Sally Carter, who nodded and started to follow with
a small dark attache who had pursued herself and her
million for five determined years. He was titled
if not noble, a clever operator of a small brain,
and a high-priest of teas. He knew the personnel
of Washington Society so thoroughly that he never had
been known to waste a solitary moment on a portion-less
girl, and he had successfully cultivated every art
that could commend him to the imperious favourites
of fortune. Betty Madison had disposed of him
in short order, but Miss Carter, although she refused
him periodically, allowed him to hang on, for he amused
her and read her favourite authors. They had
not walked far when he seized the picturesque opportunity
to press his suit, and Miss Carter, while scolding
him soundly, forgot the rapid walkers in front.
Betty, as she tramped along beside
the large swinging presence the forest seemed to embrace
as its own, wondered why she did not love him, wondered
if she should, had she never met the other man.
Doubtless, for he possessed all the attributes of the
conquering hero, and she would have excavated the
ideals of her romantic girlhood, brushed and re-cut
their garments, and then deliberately set fire to
her imagination. If the responsive spark had held
sullenly aloof, awaiting its time, she, knowing nothing
of its existence, would soon have ceased to remember
the half-conscious labours of the initial stage of
her affections, and doubtless would have married this
fine specimen of American manhood, and been happy
enough. But the responsive spark had struck,
and illumined the deepest recesses of her heart in
time to burn contempt into any effort of her brain,
now or hereafter. The question did assail her—as
Burleigh talked of his summer outings among the stupendous
mountains of his chosen State— could she
turn to him in time were she suddenly and permanently
separated from the other? She shook her head in
resentment at the treasonable thought; but her brain
had received every advantage of the higher civilization
for twenty-seven years, and worked by itself.
She was young and she had much to give; in consequence,
much to receive. She could find the highest with
one man only, for with him alone would her imagination
do its final work. But Nature is inexorable.
She commands union; and as the years went by and one
memory grew dimmer— who knew? But
the thought gave her a moment of sadness so profound
that she ceased to hear the voice of the man beside
her. She had had moments of deep insight before,
and again she stared down into the depths where so
many women’s agonized memories lie buried.
She suddenly felt a warm clasp round her hand, and
for a second responded to it gratefully, for hers
had turned cold. Then she realized that she was
in the present, and withdrew her hand hurriedly.
“Forgive me,” he said.
“I simply couldn’t help it. I could
in Washington, and I felt that I must wait. But
up here—I want to marry you. You know
that, do you not?”
Betty glanced over her shoulder.
There was to be no interruption. She was mistress
of herself at once.
“I cannot marry you,”
she said. “I almost wish I could, but I
cannot.”
He swung into the middle of the path
and stood still, looking down upon her squarely.
There was nothing of the suppliant in his attitude.
He looked unconquerable.
“I did not expect to win you
in a moment,” he said. “I should not
have expected it if I had waited another year.
I knew from the beginning that it would be hard work,
for if a woman does not love at once it takes a long
time to teach her what love is. I have tried to
make you like me, and I think I have succeeded.
That is all I can hope for now. You have been
surfeited and satiated with admiration, and you regard
all men as having been born to burn incense before
you. I love you for that too. I should hate
a woman who even had it in her to love a man out of
gratitude. You have your world at your feet, and
I want mine at my feet. You have won yours without
effort, for you were born with the crown and sceptre
of fascination, I have to fight for mine. But
the same instinct is in us both, the same possibilities
on different lines. I am not making you the broken
passionate appeal of the usual lover, because so long
as I know you do not love me I could not place myself
at the mercy of emotion—I have no thought
of making a fool of myself. But when I do win
you—then—ah! that will be another
matter.”
She shook her head, but smiling, for
she never had liked and admired him more. She
knew of what passion he was capable, and how absurd
he would have looked if lashed by it while her cool
eyes looked on. His self-control made him magnificent.
“I never shall marry,”
she said, and then laughed, in spite of herself, at
the world-old formula. Burleigh laughed also.
“There isn’t time enough
left before chaos comes again to argue with a woman
a question which means absolutely nothing. I am
going to marry you. I have accomplished everything
big I have ever strived for. I never have wanted
to marry any other woman, and I want to marry you
more than I wanted to become a Senator of the United
States. Nothing could discourage me unless I
thought you loved another man, but so far as I can
see there is no other suitor in the field. You
appear to have refused every proposing man in Washington.
Is there any one on the other side?” he asked
anxiously.
“No one. I have no suitor beside yourself;
but—”
“I don’t understand that
word, any more than I understand the word ‘fail,’”
he said in his rapid truculent tones. Then he
added more gently: “I am afraid you think
I should be a tyrant, but no one would tyrannize over
you, for you are any man’s equal, and he never
would forget it. I could not love a fool.
I want a mate. And I should love you so much
that I never should cease atoning for my fractious
and other unpleasant qualities—”
“You have none! I cannot
do less than tell you I think you are one of the finest
men this country has produced, and that I am as proud
of you as she will be—”
“Let me interrupt you before
you say ‘but.’ That I have won so
high an opinion from you gives me the deepest possible
gratification. But I want much more than that.
Let us go on with our walk. I’ll say no
more at present.”