“Now!” exclaimed Sally
Carter, who was sobbing hysterically, “I hope
they will impeach the President if he delays any longer
with the Maine report and if he doesn’t
send a warlike message on top of it. After that
speech I don’t see why Congress should wait for
him at all.”
It was the seventeenth of March, and
she and Betty were driving home from the Capitol after
listening to the Senator from Vermont on the situation
in Cuba,—to that cold, bare, sober statement
of the result of personal investigation, which produced
a far deeper and more historical impression than all
the impassioned rhetoric which had rent the air since
the agitation began. He appeared to have no feeling
on the matter, no personal bias; he told what he had
seen, and he had seen misery, starvation, and wholesale
death. He blamed the Spaniards no more than the
insurgents, but two hundred thousand people were the
victims of both; and the bold yet careful etching he
made of the Cuban drama burnt itself into the brains
of the forty-six Senators present and of the eight
hundred people in the galleries.
“I cannot bring myself to think
that death is the worst of all evils,” said
Betty, “and I do not think that we have any right
to go to war with Spain, no matter what she chooses
to do with her own. Besides, she is thoroughly
frightened now, and I believe would rectify her mistakes
in an even greater measure than she has already tried
to do, if the President were given time to handle
her with tact and diplomacy. If the country would
give him a chance to save her pride, war could be
averted.”
“You are heartless! Don’t
argue with me. I hate argument when my emotions
feel as if they had dynamite in them. I could
sit down on the floor of the Senate and scream until
war was declared. I hate Senator North.
He never moved a muscle of his face during that entire
terrible recital. He hardly looked interested.
He is a heartless brute.”
“He is not heartless. He
fears everlasting complications if we go to war with
Spain, the expenditure of hundreds of millions, as
one result of those complications, and danger to the
Constitution. The statesman thinks of his own
country first—”
“I won’t listen!
I won’t! I won’t! Oh, I never
thought I could get so excited about anything.
I believe I’m going to have nervous prostration
and I sha’n’t see you again till war is
declared. So there!”
The carriage stopped at her house,
and she jumped out and ran up the steps. She
kept her word, and it was weeks before Betty saw her
to speak to again.
“If intelligent people get into
that condition,” thought Betty, “what
can be expected of the fools? And the fools are
more dangerous in the United States than elsewhere,
because they are just bright enough to think that
they know more than the Almighty ever knew in His best
days.”
A few days later she was crossing
Statuary Hall on her way back from the House Gallery;
whither she had gone during an Executive Session of
the Senate, when she met Senator North. His face
illuminated as he saw her, and they both turned spontaneously
and went to a bench behind the immortal ones of the
Republic, who in dust and marble were happier than
their inheritors to-day.
“I am thinking of coming down
here to live, renting a Committee Room,” said
Betty. “It is the only place where I do
not have my opinion asked and where I do not quarrel
with my friends. Molly is sure I shall be taken
for a lobbyist, and if people were not too absorbed
to notice me, I think I should engage a companion;
but as it is, I believe I am safe enough. I have
had this simple brown serge made, on purpose.”
“There is not the least danger
of your motives being misconstrued, and the Capitol
is swarming with women, all the time. They seem
to regard it as a sort of National Theatre, where
the most exciting denouement may take place any minute.
I fancy they have come from all over the country for
the satisfaction of being able to say, for the rest
of their lives, that they were in at the death.
The poor Capitol has become a sort of asylum for wandering
lunatics.”
Betty laughed. “I feel
calmer here than anywhere else, especially now that
Molly has gone over to the Cubans since the publication
of that speech. I suspect it has made a good
many other converts. I didn’t think the
tide of excitement in the country could rise any higher,
but it appears to have needed that last straw.
Have you any hope left?”
“None whatever. The politicians
in both parties are rushing the President off his
feet and inflaming the country at the same time.
Sincere sympathizers with Cuba, like Burleigh, are
holding their peace until the President shall have
declared himself, but there is very little patriotism
amongst politicians desirous of re-election. If
Spain was a quick-thinking nation and was not stultified
by a mulish obstinacy for which the word ‘pride’
is a euphemism, or if the President could hypnotize
the country for six months, all would be well, but
I do not look for a miracle. I have done all I
can. I have persuaded my own State to keep quiet,
and that has lessened the pressure a little; and I
have persuaded no less than eight of our bellicose
members to say nothing on the floor of the Senate until
the President has sent in his message,—that
delay is necessary if we are to meet war with any
sort of preparation. That is all I can do, for
I don’t care to speak on the subject again,
to bring it up in the Senate until it no longer can
be held down. But I have said a good deal in
the lobby.”
“I suspect you have! Do
you mind all the talk about your being unpatriotic,
and that sort of thing? I cried for an hour the
other day over an article in a New York paper, headed
‘A Traitor,’ and saying the most hideous
things about you.”
“I didn’t read it.
And don’t spoil your eyes over anything sensational
American newspapers may say of anybody; let them alone
and read the few decent ones. For a public man
to worry over such assaults would be a stupid waste
of his mental energy; for if he is in the right he
consoles himself with the reflection that the traitor
of to-day is the patriot of to-morrow. But let
politics go to the winds for a little. Tell me
something about yourself. I have started no less
than four times to go to see you—at half-past
six in the afternoon—and turned back.”
“I go there and sit almost every
afternoon. This excitement has been a godsend.
If the world had been pursuing its even way during
the last two months, I don’t know what would
have happened to me. What am I to do when it
is over?” she broke out, for they were almost
secluded. “The more I think of the future
the more hopeless it seems. If there is war,
I’ll go as a nurse—”
“You will do nothing of the
sort. Promise me that—instantly.
There will be trained nurses without end, and you
would run the risk of fever for nothing. Promise
me.”
“But I must do something.
I have hours that you cannot imagine. Ordinarily
I keep up very well, for I have character enough to
make the best of life, whatever happens; but one can
control one’s heart with one’s will just
so long and no longer. When the world is quiet
and I am alone at night, if I don’t go to sleep
at once—it is terrible! Do you think
I should be afraid of death? If I have got to
go through life with this terrible ache in my heart,
in my whole body —for when I cry my very
fingers cramp—I’d a thousand times
rather go to Cuba and have done with it.”
For a moment he only stared at her.
Then he parted his lips as if to speak, but closed
them again so firmly that Betty wondered what he was
holding back. But his eyes, although they had
flashed for a moment and burned still, told her nothing.
He did not speak for fully a minute. Then he
said,—
“Death can be met with fortitude
by any strong brain, but not a lifetime of miserable
invalidism. If you contracted fever down there,
you might get rid of it in several years and you might
not. Meanwhile,” he added, smiling, “you
would become yellow and wrinkled. So promise
me at once that you will not go.”
“I swear it!” she said
with an attempt at gayety. “Not even for
you will I get yellow and wrinkled—and
I adore you! Tell me,” she went on rapidly
and with little further attempt at self-control; “what
shall I do next? Shall I go abroad? There
is no distraction in castles and cathedrals and crooked
streets; they must be enjoyed when one is idle and
tranquil. I’m tired of pictures. I
suppose I’ve seen about twenty miles of them
in my life. As for the old masters they give me
nightmares. There is nothing left but society,
and I don’t like foreigners and should find
little novelty in England—and many reminders!
The future appalls me. I cannot face it.
Am I inconsiderate to talk like this when you are
so worried? Sometimes I feel that I have no right
to be even sensible of my individuality when a whole
nation is convulsed; it seems almost absurd that there
are hundreds of thousands of tragedies within the
great one—but there are! There are!
And the war will bring oblivion to only those to whom
it brings death.”
She stopped, panting, after the torrent
of words. His hand had closed about her arm,
and he was bending close above her. His face had
flushed deeply, and once more he opened his lips as
if to speak, but did not. Betty shook suddenly.
Was the word he would not utter “Wait”?
There could be no doubt that a word struggled for utterance,
and that he held it back. If he did not, Betty
felt that her love would turn cold. For a great
love may be killed by a sudden blow, and there is
always some one thing that will kill the greatest.
But she wished that his brain would flash its message
to hers.
The silence between them became so
intense and the strain on her eyes so intolerable
that she dropped her head and fumbled with her muff.
She dared not speak, dared not divert his mind.
He was too much the master of his own fate.
“Don’t ever hesitate to
speak out through consideration for me, my dear,”
he said. “The only relief we both have is
to speak our thoughts occasionally. And you can
tell me nothing of yourself that I do not know already.
I never forget that you are tormented. But Time
will help you. The future which looms with a
few dull and insupportable Facts is crowded with small
details which consume both time and thought, and it
is full of little unexpected pleasures. War is
very diverting. One’s attitude to a war
after the first few shocks is as to a great military
drama. If by a miracle ours should be averted,
then go to England, where you will have men at least
to talk to. When plans for the future are futile,
live in the present and be careful to make no mistake.
It is the only philosophy for those who are not in
the favour of Circumstance. I am going now.
Bend your ear closer. I have had so little opportunity
to be tender with you, and I have thought of that
as much as of anything else.”
Betty inclined her head eagerly, and
he whispered to her for a moment, then left her.
For a few moments she did not move.
The buoyancy of her nature was still considerable,
and his last words had thrilled her and made her almost
as happy as if he would return in an hour. She
rose finally and walked across the hall, her inclination
divided between the Senate Gallery where she might
look at him, and her boudoir where she might fling
herself on her divan and think of him. As she
was moving along slowly, seeing no one, her arm was
caught by a bony hand, and a familiar drawl smote
her ear.
“Laws, Miss Madison, have you
gone blind all of a sudden? But you look as if
you had two stars in your eyes.”
“How do you do, Mrs. Mudd?
These are times to make anybody absent-minded.”
“Well, I guess! We’re
gettin’ there and no mistake. Now look quick,
Miss Madison—there’s my husband, the
one that’s just got up off that bench.
He’s been talkin’ to a constituent.”
Betty glanced across the Hall with
some interest: she occasionally had doubted the
reality of George Washington Mudd. A tall stout
man in a loose black overcoat, a black slouch hat,
and a big cotton umbrella under his arm, was stalking
across the Hall with his head in the air, as if to
sniff at the marble effigies of the great. Betty
felt young again and gave a delighted laugh.
“Why, I didn’t know there
really was anything like that!” she cried.
“I thought—”
“Well, I guess I’d like
to know what you mean,” exclaimed an infuriate
voice; and Betty, turning to Mrs. Mudd’s dark
red face, recovered herself instantly.
“I mean that your husband belongs
to a type that our dramatists have thought worthy
of preservation and of exercising their finest art
upon. I often give writers credit for more creative
ability than they possess, for I always am seeing
some one in real life whose entire type I had supposed
had come straight out of their genius. Take yourself,
for instance. If I had not met you outside of
a book, I should have thought you a triumph of imagination.”
“Well—thanks,”
drawled Mrs. Mudd, mollified though doubtful.
“I don’t claim that George is handsome,
but he’s the smartest man in our district and
he’ll make the House sit up yet.”
She giggled and rolled her eyes. “He was
downright jealous because I came home from the reception
and raved over the President,” she announced.
“Oh, my!”
“Perhaps he’s a Populist,” suggested
Betty.
“Not much he ain’t. He’s a
good Democrat with Silver principles.”
“Well, I’m glad you’re happy.
Good-afternoon.”
“I love the greatest man in
America and she loves George Washington Mudd,”
thought Betty, as she walked down the corridor.
“Mortals die, but love is imperishable.
A half-century hence and where will the love that
dwells in every fibre of me now, have gone? Will
it be dust with my dust, or vigorous with eternal
youth in some poor girl who never heard my name?”
And then she went home to her boudoir.