“It is just a year ago to-day,
Betty, that you nearly killed me by announcing your
determination to go into politics—or whatever
you choose to call it. I put down the date.
A great deal has happened since then—poor
dear Jack! And I often think of that unfortunate
creature, too. But you and I are here in this
same room, and I wonder if you are glad or sorry that
you entered upon this eccentric course.”
“I have no regrets,” said
Betty, smiling. “And I don’t think
you have. You like every man that comes here,
and while they are talking to you forget that you
ever had an ache. As for me—no, I have
no regrets, not one. I am glad.”
“Well, I will admit that they
are much better than I thought. I must say I
never saw a finer set of men than those at your dinner,
and I felt proud of my country, although I was nervous
once or twice. I almost love Mr. Burleigh; so
I refrain from further criticism. But, Betty,
there is one thing I feel I must say—”
She hesitated and readjusted her cushions
nervously. Betty looked at her inquiringly, and
experienced a slight chill. She stood up suddenly
and put her foot on the fender.
“It is this,” continued
Mrs. Madison, hurriedly. “I think you are
too much with Senator North. He was here constantly
before you left Washington, and of course I know you
boated with him a great deal last summer. Since
your return he has been here several times, and you
treat him with twice the attention with which you treat
any other man. Of course I can understand the
attraction which a man with a brain like that must
have for you, but there is something more important
to be considered. You have been the most noticeable
girl in Washington for years—in our set—and
now that you have branched out in this extraordinary
manner and are even going to have a salon, you’ll
quickly be the most conspicuous in the other set.
Mr. North is easily the most conspicuous figure in
the Senate—a half dozen of your new friends,
including that Speaker, have told me so—and
if this friendship keeps on people will talk, as sure
as fate. There is no harm done yet—I
sounded Sally Carter—but there will be.
That sort of gossip grows gradually and surely; it
is not like a great scandal that blazes up and out
and that people get tired of; they will get into the
habit of believing all sorts of dreadful things, and
they never will acquire the habit of disbelieving
them.”
Betty made no reply. She stood staring into the
fire.
“It would have been more difficult
for me to say such a thing to you a year ago; but
you seem a good deal older, somehow. I suppose
it is being so much with men old enough to be your
father, and talking constantly about things that give
me the nightmare to think of. And of course you
have had two terrible shocks. But you are so buoyant
I hope you will get over all that in time. Wouldn’t
you like to go to the Riviera, and then to London
for the season?”
“And desert my salon?”
asked Betty, lightly. “You forget this is
the long term. I am praying that summer will
come late, so that you can stay on. It never
had occurred to me that any one would notice my friendship
with Mr. North. I hope they will do nothing so
silly as to comment on it.”
“Well, they will, if you are
not very careful. And there is no position in
the world so unenviable as that of a girl who gets
herself talked about with a married man. Men
lose interest in her and raise their eyebrows at the
clubs when her name is mentioned, and women gradually
drop her. Money and position will cover up a good
many indiscretions in a married woman or a widow,
but the world always has demanded that a girl shall
be immaculate; and if she permits Society to think
she is not, it punishes her for violating one of its
pet standards. Mr. North can be nothing to you.
The day is sure to come when you will want to marry.
No woman is really satisfied in any other state.”
Betty turned and looked squarely at
her mother, who had lost even the semblance of nervousness
in her deep maternal anxiety.
“Do you believe that I love Mr. North?”
“Yes, I do. And I know
that he loves you. There is no mistaking the
way a man turns to a woman every time she begins to
speak. But on that score I have no fears.
I know that you not only must have the high principles
of the women of your race, but that you are too much
a woman-of-the-world to enter upon a liaison,
which would mean constant lying, fear, blackmail by
servants, and general wretchedness. And I have
perfect faith in him. Even a scoundrel will hesitate
a long while before he makes himself responsible for
the future of a girl in your position, and Mr. North
is not a scoundrel but an honourable gentleman.
Moreover he knows that a scandal would ruin him in
his Puritanical State; and he adores his sons, who
are prouder of him than if he were ten Presidents.
But the world can talk and continue to talk, and to
act as viciously about an imprudent friendship as about
a liaison, for it has no means of proving anything
and likes to believe the worst. Now, I shan’t
say any more. You are capable of doing your own
thinking. Only do think—please.”
Betty nodded to her mother, and went to her boudoir
and sat there for hours. Nothing could have put
the ugly practical side of her romance so precisely
before her as her mother’s black and white statement,
full of the little colloquial phrases with which an
un-ambitious world expresses itself. Even for
him, Betty reflected, she could not endure vulgar
gossip, and wondered how any high-bred woman could
for any man.
“For what else does civilization
mean,” she thought, “if those of us that
have its highest advantages are not wiser and more
fastidious than the mob? And unless a woman is
ready to go and live in a cave, she cannot be happy
in the loss of the world’s regard, for it can
make her uncomfortable in quite a thousand little
ways. Expediency is the root of all morality.
It is stupid to be unmoral, and that is the long and
the short of it. I would marry him to-morrow if
I had to cook for him, if he were dishonoured by his
country, if he were smitten suddenly with ill-health
and never could walk again. I am willing to go
through life alone for his sake, even without seeing
him, and after he is dead and gone. I love him
absolutely, and if there is another world I must meet
him there. But I am not willing to become a social
pariah on his account.”
She never had permitted her mind to
linger on the practical aspect of a different relationship,
to admit that such a chapter was possible outside
of her imagination, but she did so now, deliberately.
She knew that what her mother had intimated was true,
that the happiness to be got out of it would amount
to very little, and that the day would come when she
would say that it was not worth the price. There
were many times when she was not capable of reasoning
coldly on this question, but she had been listening
for two hours to Senator French on the restriction
of immigration, and felt all intellect.
Her mind turned to Harriet. There
was a creature foredoomed to destruction by the forces
within her, struggling in vain, assisted and guarded
in vain. Should she, with her inheritance of kindly
forces within and without, deliberately readjust her
manifest lines into a likeness of Harriet Walker’s?
And she knew that even if she hoodwinked the world,
the miserable deception of it all, the nervous terrors,
not only would wear love down, but shatter her ideals
of herself and him. She would be infinitely more
miserable than now.
It relieved her to have thought that
phase out, and she put it aside. But the other?
Must she give him up? What pleasure could she
find in sitting here with him if her mother’s
apprehensive mind did not leave the room for a moment?
What pleasure if a vulgar world were whispering?
She reflected with some bitterness that one danger
was receding. He had not entered this room since
the day of her return. Although he had called
several times, he had come in the evening, when she
always sat with her mother, or in the morning, when
Mrs. Madison again was sure to be present. She
knew that he dared not come here, and that it was
more than likely he never would call at the old hour
again.
She realized these two facts suddenly
and vividly; her mind worked with a brutal frankness
at times. She began to cry heavily, the tears
raining on her intellectual mood and obliterating it.
If she were not to see him alone again, she might
as well ask him to come to the house on Thursday evenings
only, and to show her no attention in public; if she
could not have the old hours again, she wanted nothing
less. And she wanted them passionately; those
hours came back to her with a poignancy of happiness
in memory that the present had not revealed, and the
thought that they had gone for ever filled her with
a suffocating anguish that was as complete as it was
sudden. She implored him under her breath to
come to her, then prayed that he would not….
She became conscious that she was
in a mood to take any step, were he here, rather than
lose him; and the mood terrified her. Would the
time come when this intolerable pain would kill every
inheritance in her brain, its empire the more absolute
because it made passion itself insignificant in the
more terrible want of the heart? If it did, she
would marry Burleigh. She made up her mind instantly.
She would fight as long as she could, for she passionately
desired to live her life alone with the idea of this
man; but if she were not strong enough, she would
marry and bury herself in the West. Nothing but
an irrevocable step would affect a permanent mental
attitude, and Burleigh would give her little time
for thought.