THE SOLACE OF TRAVEL—THE BOATS OF THE SEA
To the untravelled, territory other
than their own familiar heath is invariably fascinating.
Next to love, it is the one thing which solaces and
delights. Things new are too important to be
neglected, and mind, which is a mere reflection of
sensory impressions, succumbs to the flood of objects.
Thus lovers are forgotten, sorrows laid aside, death
hidden from view. There is a world of accumulated
feeling back of the trite dramatic expression—“I
am going away.”
As Carrie looked out upon the flying
scenery she almost forgot that she had been tricked
into this long journey against her will and that she
was without the necessary apparel for travelling.
She quite forgot Hurstwood’s presence at times,
and looked away to homely farmhouses and cosey cottages
in villages with wondering eyes. It was an interesting
world to her. Her life had just begun.
She did not feel herself defeated at all. Neither
was she blasted in hope. The great city held
much. Possibly she would come out of bondage
into freedom—who knows? Perhaps she
would be happy. These thoughts raised her above
the level of erring. She was saved in that she
was hopeful.
The following morning the train pulled
safely into Montreal and they stepped down, Hurstwood
glad to be out of danger, Carrie wondering at the
novel atmosphere of the northern city. Long
before, Hurstwood had been here, and now he remembered
the name of the hotel at which he had stopped.
As they came out of the main entrance of the depot
he heard it called anew by a busman.
“We’ll go right up and get rooms,”
he said.
At the clerk’s office Hurstwood
swung the register about while the clerk came forward.
He was thinking what name he would put down.
With the latter before him he found no time for hesitation.
A name he had seen out of the car window came swiftly
to him. It was pleasing enough. With an
easy hand he wrote, “G. W. Murdock and
wife.” It was the largest concession to
necessity he felt like making. His initials he
could not spare.
When they were shown their room Carrie
saw at once that he had secured her a lovely chamber.
“You have a bath there,”
said he. “Now you can clean up when you
get ready.”
Carrie went over and looked out the
window, while Hurstwood looked at himself in the glass.
He felt dusty and unclean. He had no trunk,
no change of linen, not even a hair-brush.
“I’ll ring for soap and
towels,” he said, “and send you up a hair-brush.
Then you can bathe and get ready for breakfast.
I’ll go for a shave and come back and get you,
and then we’ll go out and look for some clothes
for you.”
He smiled good-naturedly as he said this.
“All right,” said Carrie.
She sat down in one of the rocking-chairs,
while Hurstwood waited for the boy, who soon knocked.
“Soap, towels, and a pitcher of ice-water.”
“Yes, sir.”
“I’ll go now,” he
said to Carrie, coming toward her and holding out
his hands, but she did not move to take them.
“You’re not mad at me, are you?”
he asked softly.
“Oh, no!” she answered, rather indifferently.
“Don’t you care for me at all?”
She made no answer, but looked steadily toward the
window.
“Don’t you think you could
love me a little?” he pleaded, taking one of
her hands, which she endeavoured to draw away.
“You once said you did.”
“What made you deceive me so?” asked Carrie.
“I couldn’t help it,” he said, “I
wanted you too much.”
“You didn’t have any right
to want me,” she answered, striking cleanly
home.
“Oh, well, Carrie,” he
answered, “here I am. It’s too late
now. Won’t you try and care for me a little?”
He looked rather worsted in thought as he stood before
her.
She shook her head negatively.
“Let me start all over again. Be my wife
from to-day on.”
Carrie rose up as if to step away,
he holding her hand. Now he slipped his arm
about her and she struggled, but in vain. He
held her quite close. Instantly there flamed
up in his body the all compelling desire. His
affection took an ardent form.
“Let me go,” said Carrie, who was folded
close to him.
“Won’t you love me?” he said.
“Won’t you be mine from now on?”
Carrie had never been ill-disposed
toward him. Only a moment before she had been
listening with some complacency, remembering her old
affection for him. He was so handsome, so daring!
Now, however, this feeling had changed
to one of opposition, which rose feebly. It
mastered her for a moment, and then, held close as
she was, began to wane. Something else in her
spoke. This man, to whose bosom she was being
pressed, was strong; he was passionate, he loved her,
and she was alone. If she did not turn to him—accept
of his love—where else might she go?
Her resistance half dissolved in the flood of his
strong feeling.
She found him lifting her head and
looking into her eyes. What magnetism there
was she could never know. His many sins, however,
were for the moment all forgotten.
He pressed her closer and kissed her,
and she felt that further opposition was useless.
“Will you marry me?” she asked, forgetting
how.
“This very day,” he said, with all delight.
Now the hall-boy pounded on the door
and he released his hold upon her regretfully.
“You get ready now, will you,” he said,
“at once?”
“Yes,” she answered.
“I’ll be back in three-quarters of an
hour.”
Carrie, flushed and excited, moved away as he admitted
the boy.
Below stairs, he halted in the lobby
to look for a barber shop. For the moment, he
was in fine feather. His recent victory over
Carrie seemed to atone for much he had endured during
the last few days. Life seemed worth fighting
for. This eastward flight from all things customary
and attached seemed as if it might have happiness
in store. The storm showed a rainbow at the end
of which might be a pot of gold.
He was about to cross to a little
red-and-white striped bar which was fastened up beside
a door when a voice greeted him familiarly.
Instantly his heart sank. “Why, hello,
George, old man!” said the voice. “What
are you doing down here?”
Hurstwood was already confronted,
and recognised his friend Kenny, the stock-broker.
“Just attending to a little
private matter,” he answered, his mind working
like a key-board of a telephone station. This
man evidently did not know—he had not read
the papers.
“Well, it seems strange to see
you way up here,” said Mr. Kenny genially.
“Stopping here?”
“Yes,” said Hurstwood
uneasily, thinking of his handwriting on the register.
“Going to be in town long?”
“No, only a day or so.”
“Is that so? Had your breakfast?”
“Yes,” said Hurstwood,
lying blandly. “I’m just going for
a shave.”
“Won’t you come have a drink?”
“Not until afterwards,”
said the ex-manager. “I’ll see you
later. Are you stopping here?”
“Yes,” said Mr. Kenny,
and then, turning the word again added: “How
are things out in Chicago?”
“About the same as usual,”
said Hurstwood, smiling genially.
“Wife with you?”
“No.”
“Well, I must see more of you
to-day. I’m just going in here for breakfast.
Come in when you’re through.”
“I will,” said Hurstwood,
moving away. The whole conversation was a trial
to him. It seemed to add complications with very
word. This man called up a thousand memories.
He represented everything he had left. Chicago,
his wife, the elegant resort— all these
were in his greeting and inquiries. And here
he was in this same hotel expecting to confer with
him, unquestionably waiting to have a good time with
him. All at once the Chicago papers would arrive.
The local papers would have accounts in them this
very day. He forgot his triumph with Carrie in
the possibility of soon being known for what he was,
in this man’s eyes, a safe-breaker. He
could have groaned as he went into the barber shop.
He decided to escape and seek a more secluded hotel.
Accordingly, when he came out he was
glad to see the lobby clear, and hastened toward the
stairs. He would get Carrie and go out by the
ladies’ entrance. They would have breakfast
in some more inconspicuous place.
Across the lobby, however, another
individual was surveying him. He was of a commonplace
Irish type, small of stature, cheaply dressed, and
with a head that seemed a smaller edition of some
huge ward politician’s. This individual
had been evidently talking with the clerk, but now
he surveyed the ex-manager keenly.
Hurstwood felt the long-range examination
and recognised the type. Instinctively he felt
that the man was a detective—that he was
being watched. He hurried across, pretending
not to notice, but in his mind was a world of thoughts.
What would happen now? What could these people
do? He began to trouble concerning the extradition
laws. He did not understand them absolutely.
Perhaps he could be arrested. Oh, if Carrie
should find out! Montreal was too warm for him.
He began to long to be out of it.
Carrie had bathed and was waiting
when he arrived. She looked refreshed—more
delightful than ever, but reserved. Since he
had gone she had resumed somewhat of her cold attitude
towards him. Love was not blazing in her heart.
He felt it, and his troubles seemed increased.
He could not take her in his arms; he did not even
try. Something about her forbade it. In
part his opinion was the result of his own experiences
and reflections below stairs.
“You’re ready, are you?” he said
kindly.
“Yes,” she answered.
“We’ll go out for breakfast.
This place down here doesn’t appeal to me very
much.”
“All right,” said Carrie.
They went out, and at the corner the
commonplace Irish individual was standing, eyeing
him. Hurstwood could scarcely refrain from showing
that he knew of this chap’s presence. The
insolence in the fellow’s eye was galling.
Still they passed, and he explained to Carrie concerning
the city. Another restaurant was not long in
showing itself, and here they entered.
“What a queer town this is,”
said Carrie, who marvelled at it solely because it
was not like Chicago.
“It Isn’t as lively as
Chicago,” said Hurstwood. “Don’t
you like it?”
“No,” said Carrie, whose
feelings were already localised in the great Western
city.
“Well, it isn’t as interesting,”
said Hurstwood.
“What’s here?” asked
Carrie, wondering at his choosing to visit this town.
“Nothing much,” returned
Hurstwood. “It’s quite a resort.
There’s some pretty scenery about here.”
Carrie listened, but with a feeling
of unrest. There was much about her situation
which destroyed the possibility of appreciation.
“We won’t stay here long,”
said Hurstwood, who was now really glad to note her
dissatisfaction. “You pick out your clothes
as soon as breakfast is over and we’ll run down
to New York soon. You’ll like that.
It’s a lot more like a city than any place
outside Chicago.”
He was really planning to slip out
and away. He would see what these detectives
would do—what move his employers at Chicago
would make—then he would slip away—down
to New York, where it was easy to hide. He knew
enough about that city to know that its mysteries
and possibilities of mystification were infinite.
The more he thought, however, the
more wretched his situation became. He saw that
getting here did not exactly clear up the ground.
The firm would probably employ detectives to watch
him— Pinkerton men or agents of Mooney
and Boland. They might arrest him the moment
he tried to leave Canada. So he might be compelled
to remain here months, and in what a state!
Back at the hotel Hurstwood was anxious
and yet fearful to see the morning papers. He
wanted to know how far the news of his criminal deed
had spread. So he told Carrie he would be up
in a few moments, and went to secure and scan the
dailies. No familiar or suspicious faces were
about, and yet he did not like reading in the lobby,
so he sought the main parlour on the floor above and,
seated by a window there, looked them over. Very
little was given to his crime, but it was there, several
“sticks” in all, among all the riffraff
of telegraphed murders, accidents, marriages, and
other news. He wished, half sadly, that he could
undo it all. Every moment of his time in this
far-off abode of safety but added to his feeling that
he had made a great mistake. There could have
been an easier way out if he had only known.
He left the papers before going to
the room, thinking thus to keep them out of the hands
of Carrie.
“Well, how are you feeling?”
he asked of her. She was engaged in looking
out of the window.
“Oh, all right,” she answered.
He came over, and was about to begin
a conversation with her, when a knock came at their
door.
“Maybe it’s one of my parcels,”
said Carrie.
Hurstwood opened the door, outside
of which stood the individual whom he had so thoroughly
suspected.
“You’re Mr. Hurstwood,
are you?” said the latter, with a volume of
affected shrewdness and assurance.
“Yes,” said Hurstwood
calmly. He knew the type so thoroughly that
some of his old familiar indifference to it returned.
Such men as these were of the lowest stratum welcomed
at the resort. He stepped out and closed the
door.
“Well, you know what I am here
for, don’t you?” said the man confidentially.
“I can guess,” said Hurstwood softly.
“Well, do you intend to try and keep the money?”
“That’s my affair,” said Hurstwood
grimly.
“You can’t do it, you
know,” said the detective, eyeing him coolly.
“Look here, my man,” said
Hurstwood authoritatively, “you don’t
understand anything about this case, and I can’t
explain to you. Whatever I intend to do I’ll
do without advice from the outside. You’ll
have to excuse me.” “Well, now, there’s
no use of your talking that way,” said the man,
“when you’re in the hands of the police.
We can make a lot of trouble for you if we want to.
You’re not registered right in this house,
you haven’t got your wife with you, and the
newspapers don’t know you’re here yet.
You might as well be reasonable.”
“What do you want to know?” asked Hurstwood.
“Whether you’re going to send back that
money or not.”
Hurstwood paused and studied the floor.
“There’s no use explaining
to you about this,” he said at last. “There’s
no use of your asking me. I’m no fool,
you know. I know just what you can do and what
you can’t. You can create a lot of trouble
if you want to. I know that all right, but it
won’t help you to get the money. Now, I’ve
made up my mind what to do. I’ve already
written Fitzgerald and Moy, so there’s nothing
I can say. You wait until you hear more from
them.”
All the time he had been talking he
had been moving away from the door, down the corridor,
out of the hearing of Carrie. They were now
near the end where the corridor opened into the large
general parlour.
“You won’t give it up?” said the
man.
The words irritated Hurstwood greatly.
Hot blood poured into his brain. Many thoughts
formulated themselves. He was no thief.
He didn’t want the money. If he could only
explain to Fitzgerald and Moy, maybe it would be all
right again.
“See here,” he said, “there’s
no use my talking about this at all. I respect
your power all right, but I’ll have to deal with
the people who know.”
“Well, you can’t get out
of Canada with it,” said the man.
“I don’t want to get out,”
said Hurstwood. “When I get ready there’ll
be nothing to stop me for.”
He turned back, and the detective
watched him closely. It seemed an intolerable
thing. Still he went on and into the room.
“Who was it?” asked Carrie.
“A friend of mine from Chicago.”
The whole of this conversation was
such a shock that, coming as it did after all the
other worry of the past week, it sufficed to induce
a deep gloom and moral revulsion in Hurstwood.
What hurt him most was the fact that he was being
pursued as a thief. He began to see the nature
of that social injustice which sees but one side—often
but a single point in a long tragedy. All the
newspapers noted but one thing, his taking the money.
How and wherefore were but indifferently dealt with.
All the complications which led up to it were unknown.
He was accused without being understood.
Sitting in his room with Carrie the
same day, he decided to send the money back.
He would write Fitzgerald and Moy, explain all, and
then send it by express. Maybe they would forgive
him. Perhaps they would ask him back. He
would make good the false statement he had made about
writing them. Then he would leave this peculiar
town.
For an hour he thought over this plausible
statement of the tangle. He wanted to tell them
about his wife, but couldn’t. He finally
narrowed it down to an assertion that he was light-headed
from entertaining friends, had found the safe open,
and having gone so far as to take the money out, had
accidentally closed it. This act he regretted
very much. He was sorry he had put them to so
much trouble. He would undo what he could by
sending the money back—the major portion
of it. The remainder he would pay up as soon
as he could. Was there any possibility of his
being restored? This he only hinted at.
The troubled state of the man’s
mind may be judged by the very construction of this
letter. For the nonce he forgot what a painful
thing it would be to resume his old place, even if
it were given him. He forgot that he had severed
himself from the past as by a sword, and that if he
did manage to in some way reunite himself with it,
the jagged line of separation and reunion would always
show. He was always forgetting something—
his wife, Carrie, his need of money, present situation,
or something—and so did not reason clearly.
Nevertheless, he sent the letter, waiting a reply
before sending the money.
Meanwhile, he accepted his present
situation with Carrie, getting what joy out of it
he could.
Out came the sun by noon, and poured
a golden flood through their open windows. Sparrows
were twittering. There were laughter and song
in the air. Hurstwood could not keep his eyes
from Carrie. She seemed the one ray of sunshine
in all his trouble. Oh, if she would only love
him wholly—only throw her arms around him
in the blissful spirit in which he had seen her in
the little park in Chicago—how happy he
would be! It would repay him; it would show him
that he had not lost all. He would not care.
“Carrie,” he said, getting
up once and coming over to her, “are you going
to stay with me from now on?”
She looked at him quizzically, but
melted with sympathy as the value of the look upon
his face forced itself upon her. It was love
now, keen and strong—love enhanced by difficulty
and worry. She could not help smiling.
“Let me be everything to you
from now on,” he said. “Don’t
make me worry any more. I’ll be true to
you. We’ll go to New York and get a nice
flat. I’ll go into business again, and
we’ll be happy. Won’t you be mine?”
Carrie listened quite solemnly.
There was no great passion in her, but the drift
of things and this man’s proximity created a
semblance of affection. She felt rather sorry
for him—a sorrow born of what had only
recently been a great admiration. True love
she had never felt for him. She would have known
as much if she could have analysed her feelings, but
this thing which she now felt aroused by his great
feeling broke down the barriers between them.
“You’ll stay with me, won’t you?”
he asked.
“Yes,” she said, nodding her head.
He gathered her to himself, imprinting
kisses upon her lips and cheeks.
“You must marry me, though,” she said.
“I’ll get a license to-day,” he
answered.
“How?” she asked.
“Under a new name,” he
answered. “I’ll take a new name and
live a new life. From now on I’m Murdock.”
“Oh, don’t take that name,” said
Carrie.
“Why not?” he said.
“I don’t like it.”
“Well, what shall I take?” he asked.
“Oh, anything, only don’t take that.”
He thought a while, still keeping
his arms about her, and then said:
“How would Wheeler do?”
“That’s all right,” said Carrie.
“Well, then, Wheeler,”
he said. “I’ll get the license this
afternoon.”
They were married by a Baptist minister,
the first divine they found convenient.
At last the Chicago firm answered.
It was by Mr. Moy’s dictation. He was
astonished that Hurstwood had done this; very sorry
that it had come about as it had. If the money
were returned, they would not trouble to prosecute
him, as they really bore him no ill-will. As
for his returning, or their restoring him to his former
position, they had not quite decided what the effect
of it would be. They would think it over and
correspond with him later, possibly, after a little
time, and so on.
The sum and substance of it was that
there was no hope, and they wanted the money with
the least trouble possible. Hurstwood read his
doom. He decided to pay $9,500 to the agent whom
they said they would send, keeping $1,300 for his
own use. He telegraphed his acquiescence, explained
to the representative who called at the hotel the
same day, took a certificate of payment, and told
Carrie to pack her trunk. He was slightly depressed
over this newest move at the time he began to make
it, but eventually restored himself. He feared
that even yet he might be seized and taken back, so
he tried to conceal his movements, but it was scarcely
possible. He ordered Carrie’s trunk sent
to the depot, where he had it sent by express to New
York. No one seemed to be observing him, but
he left at night. He was greatly agitated lest
at the first station across the border or at the depot
in New York there should be waiting for him an officer
of the law.
Carrie, ignorant of his theft and
his fears, enjoyed the entry into the latter city
in the morning. The round green hills sentinelling
the broad, expansive bosom of the Hudson held her
attention by their beauty as the train followed the
line of the stream. She had heard of the Hudson
River, the great city of New York, and now she looked
out, filling her mind with the wonder of it.
As the train turned east at Spuyten
Duyvil and followed the east bank of the Harlem River,
Hurstwood nervously called her attention to the fact
that they were on the edge of the city. After
her experience with Chicago, she expected long lines
of cars—a great highway of tracks—and
noted the difference. The sight of a few boats
in the Harlem and more in the East River tickled her
young heart. It was the first sign of the great
sea. Next came a plain street with five-story
brick flats, and then the train plunged into the tunnel.
“Grand Central Station!”
called the trainman, as, after a few minutes of darkness
and smoke, daylight reappeared. Hurstwood arose
and gathered up his small grip. He was screwed
up to the highest tension. With Carrie he waited
at the door and then dismounted. No one approached
him, but he glanced furtively to and fro as he made
for the street entrance. So excited was he that
he forgot all about Carrie, who fell behind, wondering
at his self-absorption. As he passed through
the depot proper the strain reached its climax and
began to wane. All at once he was on the sidewalk,
and none but cabmen hailed him. He heaved a
great breath and turned, remembering Carrie.
“I thought you were going to
run off and leave me,” she said.
“I was trying to remember which
car takes us to the Gilsey,” he answered.
Carrie hardly heard him, so interested
was she in the busy scene.
“How large is New York?” she asked.
“Oh a million or more,” said Hurstwood.
He looked around and hailed a cab,
but he did so in a changed way.
For the first time in years the thought
that he must count these little expenses flashed through
his mind. It was a disagreeable thing.
He decided he would lose no time living
in hotels but would rent a flat. Accordingly
he told Carrie, and she agreed.
“We’ll look to-day, if you want to,”
she said.
Suddenly he thought of his experience
in Montreal. At the more important hotels he
would be certain to meet Chicagoans whom he knew.
He stood up and spoke to the driver.
“Take me to the Belford,”
he said, knowing it to be less frequented by those
whom he knew. Then he sat down.
“Where is the residence part?”
asked Carrie, who did not take the tall five-story
walls on either hand to be the abodes of families.
“Everywhere,” said Hurstwood,
who knew the city fairly well. “There are
no lawns in New York. All these are houses.”
“Well, then, I don’t like
it,” said Carrie, who was coming to have a few
opinions of her own.