Betty went very often to the Senate
Gallery in these days, for it was the only place where
one might have relief from the eternal subject of
Cuba. Although the House broke loose under cover
of the Diplomatic and Consular Appropriation Bill
when it was in the Committee of the Whole and free
of the Speaker’s iron hand, and raged for two
days with the vehemence of long-repressed passion,
the Senate permitted only an occasional spurt from
its warlike members, and pursued its even way with
the important bills before it. But at teas, dinners,
luncheons, and receptions people chattered with amiability
or in suavity about the hostile demonstrations at
Havana against Americans, the Spanish Minister’s
letter, Spain’s demand for the recall of Consul-General
Lee, the dying reconcentrados, the exploits of the
insurgents, and the general possibilities of war.
The old Madison house, which had ignored politics
for half a century, vibrated with polite excitement
on Thursday evenings. About a hundred people
came to these receptions, which finished with a supper,
and it was understood that the free expression of
opinion should be the rule; consequently several repressed
members of both Houses delivered impromptu speeches,
in the guise of toasts, before that select audience;
much to the amusement of Senator North and the Speaker
of the House. Burleigh’s was really impassioned
and brilliant; and Armstrong’s, if woolly in
its phrasing and Populistic in its length, was sufficiently
entertaining.
As for Mrs. Madison, she became imbued
with the fear that war would be declared in her house.
Two Cabinet ministers had been added to the salon,
and what they in conjunction with the colossal Speaker
and Senators North and Ward might accomplish if they
cared to try, was appalling to contemplate. She
begged Betty to adjourn the salon till peace
had come again.
But to this Betty would not hearken.
It was the sun of her week, through whose heavy clouds
flickered the pale stars of distractions for which
she was beginning to care little. One of life’s
compensations is that there is always something ahead,
some trifling event of interest or pleasure upon which
one may fix one’s eye and endeavour to forget
the dreary tissue of monotony and commonplace between.
Betty found herself acquiring the habit of casting
her eye over the day as soon as she awoke in the morning,
and if nothing distracting presented itself, she planned
for something as well as she could.
She endeavoured to introduce the pleasant
English custom of asking a few congenial spirits to
come for a cup of afternoon tea. These little
informal reunions are among the most delightful episodes
of London life, and if established as a custom in
Washington would be like the greenest of oases in
the whirling breathless sandstorms of that social
Sahara. But even Betty Madison, strong as she
was both in position and personality, met with but
a moderate success. When women have from six
to twenty-five calls to pay every afternoon of the
season, with at least one tea a day besides, they
have little time or inclination for pleasant informalities.
Doubtless Miss Madison’s friends felt that they
should be relieved of the additional tax. Even
the women of the fashionable set, which includes some
of the Old Washingtonians and many newer comers of
equally high degree, and which ignores the official
set, preserve the same ridiculous fashion of calling
in person six days in the week instead of merely leaving
cards as in older and more civilized communities.
In London, society has learned to combine the maximum
of pleasure with the minimum of work. Washington
society is its antithesis; and although many of the
most brilliant men in America are in its official
set, and the brightest and most charming women in
its fashionable as well as political set, they are,
through the exigencies of the old social structure,
of little use to each other. Betty occasionally
managed to capture three or four people who talked
delightfully when they felt they had time to indulge
in consecutive sentences, but as a rule people came
on her reception day only, and many of them walked
in at one door of her drawing-room and out at the
other.
The debate in the Senate on the payment
of bonds interested her deeply, for she knew that
it meant days of uneasiness for Senator North, who
rarely was absent from his seat. His brief speech
on the subject was the finest she had heard him make,
and although it was bitter and sarcastic while he
was arraigning the adherents of the resolution to
pay the government debt in silver, he became impersonal
and almost impassioned as he argued in behalf of national
honesty.
Betty never had seen him so close
to excitement, and she wondered if he found it a relief
to speak out on any subject. But if he ever thought
of her down there he made no sign, for he neither raised
his eyes to the gallery nor did he pay her a second
visit in her select but conspicuous precinct.
The resolution passed the Senate,
and on that evening Senator North called at the Madison
house. It was two weeks since he had called before,
and although he had come to her evenings and they had
met at several dinners, they had not attempted conversation.
The Montgomery’s and Carters
had dined at the house, and all were in the parlour
when he arrived. After a few minutes he was able
to talk apart with Betty. They moved gradually
toward the end of the room and sat down on a small
sofa.
“I am glad you came to-night,”
she said. “It was my impulse to go to you
when I heard how the vote had gone.”
“I knew it,” he replied,
“and if I could have come straight up here to
the old room, I should have hung up the vote with my
overcoat in the hall.”
He looked harassed, and his eyes,
while they had lost nothing of their magnetic power,
were less calmly penetrating than usual. They
looked as if their fires had been unloosed more than
once of late and were under indifferent control.
“You will not come to that room again!”
“No. And I soon shall cease to come here
at all except on Thursdays.”
“You almost have done that now.
I think I get more satisfaction watching you from
the gallery than anything else. You look very
calm and senatorial, and you always are standing some
one in a corner who is trying to make a speech.”
“I am relieved to know that
I do not inspire the amazement of my colleagues.
It is a long while since I have felt calm and senatorial,
however. But these are days for alertness of mind,
and even the most distracting of women must be shut
up in her cupboard and forgotten for a few hours every
day.”
“I think I rather like that.”
“Of course you do. A woman
always likes a strong lover. And you have plenty
of revenge, if you did but know.”
“I know,” she said; and
as she raised her eyes and looked at him steadily,
he believed her.
“Tell me at least that you miss
coming to that room—I want to hear you
say it.”
“Good God!”
Betty caught her breath. But
when women feel fire between their fingers and are
reckless before the swift approach of a greater wretchedness
than that possessing them, they are merciless to themselves
and the man.
“Can you stay away?” she whispered.
“Can you?”
“It is the one thing I can do.”
“Do you realize what you are
saying?—that you have put me aside for
ever? Are you willing to admit that it is all
over? How am I to live on and on and on?
Can you fancy me alone next summer in the Adirondacks—”
“Hush! Hush! Do you
wish me to come? Answer me honestly, without any
feminine subterfuge.”
“No, I do not.”
“And I should not come if you did, for I know
the price we both should pay better than you do, and
only complete happiness could justify such a step.
You and I could find happiness in marriage only—we
both demand too much! But I also know that the
higher faculties of the mind do not always prevail,
and I shall not see you alone again.”
She pushed him further. “You
take this philosophically because you have loved before
and recovered. You feel sure that no love lasts.”
“When a man loves as I love
you, he has no past. There are no experiences
alive in his memory to help him to philosophy.
With the entire world the last love is the only love.
As for myself, I shall not love again and I shall
not recover.”
“I wore white because I knew
you would come tonight,” she said softly.
“Yes, and you would torment
me if I went down on my knees and begged for mercy.”
“Senator,” said Montgomery,
approaching them. “I suppose it is some
satisfaction to you to know that that resolution cannot
pass the House.”
“I hope you will make a speech
on the subject that will look well in the Record,”
said North, with some sarcasm.
Montgomery laughed. “That
is a good suggestion. I wonder if some of our
orators ever read themselves over in cold blood.
The back numbers of the Record ought to be a solemn
warning.”
“Unfortunately most people don’t
know when they have made fools of themselves; that
is one reason the world grows wise so slowly.
I don’t doubt your speech will look well.
You’ve been remarkably sane for a young man
of enthusiasms. Reserve some of your logic, however,
for the greater conflict that is coming. The
pressure on the President is becoming very severe,
and the worst of it is that a great part of it comes
from Congressmen of his own party.”
“One of our Populists has christened
these ‘kickers’ ’the reconcentrados;’
which is not bad, as there is said to be a kickers’
caucus in process of organization. But if the
pressure on the President is severe, it is equally
so on us, and I suppose the ‘kickers’
are those who have one knob too few in their backbones.
Some, however, have got the war bee inside their skulls
instead of in their hats, and will be fit subjects
for a lunatic asylum if the thing doesn’t end
soon, one way or another. And they reiterate and
reiterate that they don’t want war, when they
know that any determined step we can take is bound
to lead to it. I have no patience with them.
They either are fools or are trying to keep on both
sides of the fence at once.”
“Politics are very complicated,”
said Senator North, dryly.
“How do you and Mary manage
to live in the same house?” asked Betty.
“She is all for war.”
“Oh, I think she rather likes
the opportunity to argue. And she is so divided
between the desire for me to be a good American and
the desire that England shall have an excuse to hug
us that she could not get into a temper over it if
she tried. She has made no attempt to influence
my course. Heaven knows how much money I’ve
been made to disburse in behalf of the reconcentrados,
but I like women to be tender-hearted and would not
harden them for the sake of a few dollars, even were
they dumped in Havana Harbor—By the way,
I wonder if the Maine is all right down there?
She has the city under her guns, and they know it—”
“Oh, for heaven’s sake,
don’t suggest any new horrors,” said Senator
North, rising. “Besides, the Spaniards are
not in the final stages of idiocy. It would be
like the New York Journal to blow up the Maine,
as it seems to have reached that stage of hysteria
which betokens desperation; but the ship is safe as
far as the Spaniards are concerned.”
Lady Mary rose to go; and Betty, who
was informal with her friends, went out into the hall
with her instead of ringing for a servant. Senator
North remained in the parlor for a few moments to say
good-night to Mrs. Madison and the Carters, and Betty,
although the Montgomerys did not linger, waited for
him to come out. There was nothing to reflect
the light in the dark walls of the large square hall,
and it always was shadowy, and provocative to lovers
at any time.
When he entered it, he looked at her
for a moment without speaking, and did not approach
her.
“You might be the ghost of another
Betty Madison—in that white gown,”
he said. “Was there not a famous one in
the days of 1812, and did she not love a British officer—or
something of that sort?”
“They parted here in this hall—and
she lived on and died of old age. Such is life.
I sleep in her bed, where, I suppose, she suffered
much as I do.”
She came forward and pushed her hand
into his. “I am not a ghost,” she
said.
He too believed it to be their last
meeting alone, and he raised her hand to his lips
and held it there.
“I wish we could have stayed
on and on in the Adirondacks,” she said unsteadily.
“Everything seemed to go well with us there.”
“People in mid-ocean usually
are happy and irresponsible. They would not be
if it were anything but an intermediate state.
But it is enough to know that on land our troubles
are waiting for us.”
She shivered and drew closer to him.
The dangerous fire in her eyes faded.
“Mine are becoming very great,”
she said. “All I can do is to distract
my mind, to fill up my time.”
“And I can do nothing to help
you! That is the tragedy of a love like ours:
the more a man loves a woman he cannot marry the more
he must make her suffer—either way; it
is simply a choice of methods, and if he really loves
her he chooses the least complicated.”
“It is bad enough.”
Her eyes filled for the first time
in his presence since the morning of Harriet’s
death, but her mental temper was very different, and
she looked at him steadily through her tears.
“I cannot help you,”
she said. “That is the hardest part.
You are harassed in many ways, and you are dreading
the bitterness of a greater defeat than today.
I could be so much to you—so much.
And I can be nothing. By that time you will have
ceased to come here. I know that you mean not
to come again after to-night, except when the house
is full of company.”
He began to answer, but stopped.
She felt his heart against her arm, and his lips burnt
her hand, his eyes her own.
“Listen,” she said rapidly,
“if war should be declared I shall be in the
gallery to hear it. I will come straight home
and shut myself up in my boudoir—for hours—to
be with you in a way—Shall I? Will—
would it mean anything to you?”
“Of course it would!”
His face was fully unmasked, and she
moved abruptly to it as to a magnet. In another
moment they were in the more certain seclusion of
the vestibule, and she was in his arms. They clung
together with a passion which despair with ironic
compensation made perfect, and their first kiss which
was to be their last expressed for a moment the longing
of the year of their love and of the years that were
to come. That such a moment ever could end was
so incredible that when Betty suddenly found herself
alone she looked about in every direction for him,
and then the blood rushed through her in a tide of
impotent fury.
It was this blind rage that enabled
her to go back to the parlor and keep up until the
Carters went home a few moments later, and her mother
had gone to bed. Then she went to her boudoir
and locked herself in.
How she got through that night without
sending him an imperious summons she never knew, unless
it were that she found some measure of relief in a
letter she wrote to him. If she could not see
him, he was still her lover, her only intimate friend,
and her confessor. She promised not to write
again, but she demanded what help he could give her.
She sent the letter in the morning,
and he replied at once:—
I know. Do you think it was necessary
to tell me? Do you suppose my mind left you for
a moment last night, and that I know and love you so
little that I failed to imagine and understand in a
single particular? If I were less of a man and
more of a god, I should go to you and give you the
help you need, but I am only strong enough to keep
away from you. Not in thought, however,—if
that is any help.
We shall meet in public and speak
together. I have no desire to forget you nor
that you should forget me. We neither of us shall
forget, but we shall live and endure, as the strongest
of us always do. You tell me that you are tormented
by the thought that you have added to my trials.
Remember that all other trials sink into insignificance
beside this, and yet that this greatest that has come
to me in a long life is glorified by the fact of its
existence. And if it is almost a relief to know
that I shall not see you alone again, it is a satisfaction
and a joy to remember that I have kissed you.
R.N.