The ice was on the lake this time,
although it was melting rapidly, but the sun shone
all day. She had to wear her furs in the woods,
but the greens had never looked so vivid and fresh,
and save for an occasional woodchopper and her own
servants, there was not a soul to be met in that high
solitude. The hotel across the lake would not
open for a month. Even the birds still lingered
in the South.
After she had been alone for two days
she wondered why, when in trouble before, she had
not turned instinctively to solitude in the forest.
It is only the shallow mind that dislikes and fears
the lonely places of Nature: the intellect, no
matter what vapours may be sent up from the heart,
finds not only solace in retirement, but another form
of that companionship of the ego which the deeply religious
find in retreat. The intellectual may lack the
supreme self-satisfaction of the religious, but they
find a keen pleasure in being able to make the very
most of the results of years of consistent effort.
Betty, whether alone by a roaring
fire of pine cones in the living-room, or wandering
along the edge of the lake in the cold brilliant sunshine,
or in the more mysterious depths of the forest, listening
to the silence or watching the drops of light fall
through the matted treetops, felt more at peace with
the world than she had done since her fatal embarkation
on the political sea. She put the memory of Harriet
Walker, insistent at first, impatiently aside, and
in a day or two that shadow crept back to its grave.
For a few days her mind, in its grateful
repose, hesitated to grapple with the question which
had sent her to the mountains; and on one of them,
while thinking idly on the great political questions
which had magnetized so much of her thought during
the past year, the inspiration for which she had so
often longed shot up from the concentrated results
of thinking and experience, and revealed in what manner
she could be of service to her country. This was,
whatever her personal life, to gather about her, once
a week, as many bright boys of her own condition as
she could find, and interest and educate them in the
principles of patriotic statesmanship. With her
own burning interest in the subject and her personal
fascination, she could accomplish far more than any
weary professor could do.
She had come up to these fastnesses
to decide the future happiness of one or two of three
people, and she felt sober enough; but for almost
a week she wished that she could live here alone for
the rest of her life: she believed that in time
she would be serenely content. She had the largest
capacity for human happiness, but she guessed that
the imagination could be so trained that when far
from worldly conditions it could create a world of
its own, and would shrink more and more from the practical
realities. For Imagination has the instinct of
a nun in its depths and loves the cloister of a picturesque
solitude. It is a Fool’s Paradise, but
not inferior to the one which mortals are at liberty
to enter and ruin.
But Betty could not live here alone,
she could not ignore her responsibilities in any such
primitive fashion; and so long as her heart was alive
it would make battle for real and tangible happiness.
She had a question to decide which
involved not only the heart but the mind: if
she made a mistake now, she would be at odds with her
higher faculties for the rest of her life. She
dreaded the sophistry which sat on either side of
the subject; and it was a question whether the very
strength of her impulse toward the man she had loved
for a year was not the strongest argument in its favour.
But she had given her word to another
man, and she had the high and almost fanatical sense
of honour of the Southern race. On the other
hand, she had a practical modern brain, and during
the last year she had been living in close contact
with much hard common-sense. She had imagination,
and she knew that she already had made Burleigh suffer
deeply, and had it in her power to raise that suffering
to acuteness; and if that buoyant nature were soured,
a useful career might be seriously impaired.
On the other hand, she had made a greater man more
miserable still, and while he was finding life black
enough she had rushed into the camp of the enemy;
and his capacity for suffering was far deeper and
more enduring than that of the younger man.
She tried to put herself as much aside
from the question as possible, but she had her rights
and they made themselves heard. She knew, had
known at once, that she had outraged all she held most
dear, in engaging herself to one man when she loved
another, and she had begun to wonder—in
irresistible flashes—before the news had
come which sent her to the mountains, if she should
falter at the last moment. But breeding has carried
many a woman over the ploughshares of life, and her
mind was probably strong enough to go on to the inevitable
without theatric climax. At the same time the
idea of marriage with one man when she loved another
was abhorrent; that it was particularly so since marriage
with the other had become possible, she understood
perfectly. And although she continued to reason
and to argue, she had a lurking suspicion that while
she might be strong enough to conquer a desire she
might not be able to conquer a physical revolt, and
that it would rout her standards and decide the issue.
She had made up her mind that she
would hesitate for a month and no longer, and she
also had determined that she would decide the question
for herself and throw none of the responsibility on
Senator North; she felt the impulse to write to him
impersonally more than once. (Perhaps her sense of
humour also restrained her.) She wondered if it were
one year or twenty years since she had gone to him
for advice; and she knew that whichever way she decided,
the desire for his good opinion would have something
to do with it.
There are only a certain number of
arguments in any brain, and after they have been reiterated
a sufficient number of times they pall. From
argument Betty lapsed naturally into meditation, and
the subject of these meditations, tender, regretful,
and impassioned, was one man only; and Burleigh had
no place in them. Occasionally she forced him
into her mind, but he seemed as anxious to get out
as she was to drive him; and after the ice melted
and she was able to spend hours on the lake, and rest
under spreading oaks, where she had only to shut her
eyes to imagine herself companioned, she felt herself
unfaithful if she cast a solitary thought to Burleigh.
At the end of the month she was not
tired of solitude, but she was tired of her intellectual
attitude. She was human first and mental afterward;
and she wanted nothing on earth but to be the wife
of the man whom she had loved for a lifetime in a
year. The moment she formulated this wish, hesitation
fled and she could not wind up her engagement with
Burleigh rapidly enough. Her letter, however,
was very sweet and apologetic, and it was also very
honest. She knew that unless she told him she
loved another man and intended to marry him, he would
take the next train for the Adirondacks and plead his
cause in person. His reply was characteristic.
“Very well,” it ran.
“I do not pretend to say I was not prepared after
your last letter from New York. And although I
could not guess your motive in accepting me, I knew
that you did not love me. But if I am not overwhelmed
with surprise, the pain is no easier on that account,
and will not be until the grass has had time to grow
over it a little. And at least it is a relief
to know the worst. Of course I forgive you.
I doubt if any man could feel bitterly toward you.
You compel too much love for that.
“Don’t worry about me.
I have work enough to do—a State to talk
sense into and a nation to which to devote my poor
energies. My brain such as it is will be constantly
occupied, which is the next best good a man can have.”
ROBERT
BURLEIGH.
Betty wrote him four pages of enthusiastic
friendliness in reply, and paid him the compliment
of postponing her letter to Senator North until the
following day.
But on that day she rose with the
feeling that the sun never would set.
She was as brief as possible, for
she knew that he hated long letters. Nevertheless,
she conveyed an exact impression of her weeks of deliberation
and analysis.
“I want you to understand,”
she went on, “that my only wish when I came
here for solitary thought was to do the right thing,
irrespective of my own wishes in the matter.
But it seems to me there is exactly as much to be
said on one side as on the other, and it all comes
to this: right or wrong, I have decided for you
because I love you; and if you no longer can admire
me, if you think that I have violated my sense of
honour, then at least I shall marry no one else.
B. M.”
And as her imagination was strong
she did allow herself to be tortured by doubts during
the three days that elapsed before she heard from
him. She had hoped he would telegraph, but he
did not, and her imagination and her common-sense
had a long and indecisive argument which threatened
ultimate depression. On the third night, however,
a messenger from the hotel opposite brought her a
note from Senator North.
“I don’t know that your
mental exercise has done you any harm,” he had
written, “but it certainly was thrown away.
You have too much common-sense and too thorough a
capacity for loving to do anything so foolish or so
outrageous as to marry the wrong man. If you had
followed a romantic impulse—induced by
nervous excitement—and married him the
day you learned that your word might be put to too
severe a test, you would have been miserable, and
so would Burleigh. A mistaken sense of duty has
been the cause of quite one fourth of the unhappiness
of mankind, and few have been so bigoted as not to
acknowledge this when too late. And a broken
engagement is a small injustice to a man compared
to a lifetime with an unloving wife. Burleigh
is unhappy now, but it is no lack of admiration which
prompts me to say that if he had married you he would
have been unhappier still. You could do nothing
by halves.
“Formalities with us would be
an affectation unworthy of either, and I have come
to you at once. I knew that you would send for
me, but I preferred to wait until you wrote that your
engagement was broken. What I felt when I received
your note announcing it, I leave to your imagination,
and I forgot it as quickly as possible. I understood
perfectly, but you exaggerated the dangers; for my
love for you is so great and so absorbing, so complete
in all its parts, that nothing but marriage would
satisfy me. I should have preferred a memory to
a failure.
“If your mother were with you,
I should go over to-night. But I shall wait for
you at five to-morrow morning where you were in the
habit of letting me board your boat. And the
day will not be long enough! R. N.”
Betty slept little that night, but
felt no lack of freshness the next morning when she
rose shortly after four. A broken night meant
little to her now, and happiness would have stimulated
every faculty if she had not slept for a week.
She rowed swiftly across the lake.
It was almost June now, and the warmth of summer was
in the air, the paler greens among the grim old trees
of the forest. The birds had come from the South
and were singing to the accompaniment of the pines,
the roar of distant cataracts; and yet the world seemed
still. The stars were white and faint; the moon
was tangled in a treetop on the highest peak.
He might have been the only man awake
as he stood with the forest behind him, and she recalled
her fancy that although her horizon was thick with
flying mist his figure stood there, immovable, always.
He looked as if he had not moved since he stood there
last, but the mist was gone.
As he stepped into the boat, she moved
back that he might take the oars.
“I have on a white frock, and
a blue ribbon in my hair,” she said nervously,
but smiling, “else I could not have forgotten
that a year has come and gone.”
He too was smiling. “I
think it is the only year we ever shall want to forget,”
he said. And he rowed up the lake.
THE END.