For a few days Betty was almost happy
again. She had come so close to the nucleus of
love that it had warmed her veins and intoxicated her
brain. Imagination for a brief moment had given
place to reality, and if she felt wiser and older
still than after her five months of meditation on
the events of the summer, she felt less sober.
One great desire of the past year had been fulfilled,
and its memory sparkled in her brain, and her heart
was lighter. It had been hours before she had
ceased to feel the pressure of his arms.
She wondered how she could have been
so weak as to think of marrying Burleigh in self-defence,
and she punished him by an indifference of manner
which approached frigidity; until one of the evening
journals copied a bitter attack upon him from the
leading newspaper of his State, when she relented
and permitted him to console himself in her presence.
And although, as the weeks passed and she saw Senator
North from the gallery of the Senate only, or for
a few impersonal moments in the crowd, and the elixir
in her veins lost its strength, still she felt that
life was sufferable once more. She had endeavoured
to put Mrs. North from her mind, but more than once
she caught herself wishing that some one would mention
her name. Nobody did in those excited days, and
Betty had no means of learning whether her sudden
good health had been final or temporary. Sally
Carter did not allude to her again. When she
and Betty met, it was to wrangle on the Cuban question,
for Miss Carter was all for war.
And then one day the newsboys shrieked
in the streets that the Maine had been blown
up in Havana Harbor.
For a few days Congress held its peace,
and the country showed a praiseworthy attempt to believe
in the theory of accident or to wait for full proof
of Spanish treachery. The Maine was blown
up on Tuesday, and on Thursday night at the Madisons’
the subject almost was avoided; it was the most peaceful
salon Betty had held.
But it was merely the calm before
the storm. The fever was still in the country’s
blood, which began to flow freely to the brain again
as soon as the shock was over. The press could
not let pass the most glorious opportunity in its
history for head-lines; there were more mass meetings
than even the press could grapple with, and all the
latent oratorical ability in the country burst into
flower. It seemed to Betty when she rose in the
night and leaned out of her window that she could
hear the roar of the great national storm.
And it rose and swelled and left the
old landmarks behind it. The memory of the gales
of the past year, with the intervals of doubt and
rest, was insignificant beside this volume of fury
pouring out of every State, to concentrate at last,
fierce, unreasoning, and irresistible, about the White
House and Capitol Hill. It was not long before
the great quiet village on the Potomac seemed to epitomize
the terrible mood of the country it represented, and
the country had made up its mind long before the report
of the Maine Court of Inquiry came in. The cry
no longer was for the suffering Cuban, but for revenge.
The Senate held down its “kickers” with
an iron hand, but one or two of the inferior men managed
to shout across the Chamber to their constituents.
Senator North scarcely left his seat. Burleigh
told Betty that he should not allude to the subject
in the Senate until after the Court of Inquiry’s
report, but then, whatever the result, he should speak
and ask for war. Betty argued with him by the
hour, and although he discussed the matter from every
side, it was evident that he did it merely for the
pleasure of talking to her and that she could not
shake his resolution for a moment. It was time
for the United States to put an end to the barbarous
state of affairs a few miles from her shores, and
that was the end of it. He admitted the patriotism
of Senator North’s attitude, but contended that
the United States would be more dishonoured if she
disregarded this terrible appeal to her humanity.
When Betty accused him of short-sightedness, he replied
that a foretold result required a straight line of
succession, and that when great events thickened the
line of succession was anything but straight; therefore
ultimates could not be foretold. He admitted
that Senator North had proved himself possessed of
the faculty of what Herbert Spencer calls representativeness
more than once, but men as wise and calm in their
judgment had been mistaken before. But he and
others of his standing were preserving the dignity
of the Senate, and that was something.