Work, incessant and of savage ardor,
now filled Banneker’s life. Once more he
immersed himself in it as assuagement to the emptiness
of long days and the yearning of longer nights.
For, in the three months since Delavan Eyre’s
death, Banneker had seen Io but once, and then very
briefly. Instead of subduing her loveliness, the
mourning garb enhanced and enriched it, like a jet
setting to a glowing jewel. More irresistibly
than ever she was
“............ that Lady Beauty in whose praise
The voice and hand shake still”—­
but there was something about her
withdrawn, aloof of spirit, which he dared not override
or even challenge. She spoke briefly of Eyre,
without any pretense of great sorrow, dwelling with
a kindled eye on that which she had found admirable
in him; his high and steadfast courage through atrocious
suffering until darkness settled down on his mind.
Her own plans were definite; she was going away with
the elder Mrs. Eyre to a rest resort. Of The
Patriot and its progress she talked with interest,
but her questions were general and did not touch upon
the matter of the surrendered editorial. Was
she purposely avoiding it or had it passed from her
mind in the stress of more personal events? Banneker
would have liked to know, but deemed it better not
to ask. Once he tried to elicit from her some
indication of when she would marry him; but from this
decision she exhibited a covert and inexplicable shrinking.
This he might attribute, if he chose, to that innate
and sound formalism which would always lead her to
observe the rules of the game; if from no special
respect for them as such, then out of deference to
the prejudices of others. Nevertheless, he experienced
a gnawing uncertainty, amounting to a half-confessed
dread.
Yet, at the moment of parting, she
came to his arms, clung to him, gave him her lips
passionately, longingly; bade him write, for his letters
would be all that there was to keep life radiant for
her….
Through some perverse kink in his
mental processes, he found it difficult to write to
Io, in the succeeding weeks and months, during which
she devotedly accompanied the failing Mrs. Eyre from
rest cure to sanitarium, about his work on The Patriot.
That interplay of interest between them in his editorial
plans and purposes, which had so stimulated and inspired
him, was checked. The mutual current had ceased
to flash; at least, so he felt. Had the wretched
affair of his forfeited promise in the matter of the
strike announcement destroyed one bond between them?
Even were this true, there were other bonds, of the
spirit and therefore irrefragable, to hold her to
him; thus he comforted his anxious hopes.
Because their community of interest
in his work had lapsed, Banneker found the savor oozing
out of his toil. Monotony sang its dispiriting
drone in his ears. He flung himself into polo
with reawakened vim, and roused the hopes of The Retreat
for the coming season, until an unlucky spill broke
two ribs and dislocated a shoulder. Restless in
the physical idleness of his mending days, he took
to drifting about in the whirls and ripples and backwaters
of the city life, out of which wanderings grew a new
series of the “Vagrancies,” more quaint
and delicate and trenchant than the originals because
done with a pen under perfected mastery, without losing
anything of the earlier simplicity and sympathy.
In this work, Banneker found relief; and in Io’s
delight in it, a reflected joy that lent fresh impetus
to his special genius. The Great Gaines enthusiastically
accepted the new sketches for his magazine.
Whatever ebbing of fervor from his
daily task Banneker might feel, his public was conscious
of no change for the worse. Letters of commendation,
objection, denunciation, and hysteria, most convincing
evidence of an editor’s sway over the public
mind, increased weekly. So, also, did the circulation
of The Patriot, and its advertising revenue.
Its course in the garment strike had satisfied the
heavy local advertisers of its responsibility and
repentance for sins past; they testified, by material
support, to their appreciation. Banneker’s
strongly pro-labor editorials they read with the mental
commentary that probably The Patriot had to do that
kind of thing to hold its circulation; but it could
be depended upon to be “right” when the
pinch came. Marrineal would see to that.
Since the episode of the killed proof,
Marrineal had pursued a hands-off policy with regard
to the editorial page. The labor editorials suited
him admirably. They were daily winning back to
the paper the support of Marrineal’s pet “common
people” who had been alienated by its course
in the strike, for McClintick and other leaders had
been sedulously spreading the story of the rejected
strikers’ advertisement. But, it appeared,
Marrineal’s estimate of the public’s memory
was correct: “They never remember.”
Banneker’s skillful and vehement preachments
against Wall Street, money domination of the masses,
and the like, went far to wipe out the inherent anti-labor
record of the paper and its owner. Hardly a day
passed that some working-man’s union or club
did not pass resolutions of confidence and esteem
for Tertius C. Marrineal and The Patriot. It
amused Marrineal almost as much as it gratified him.
As a political asset it was invaluable. His one
cause of complaint against the editorial page was
that it would not attack Judge Enderby, except on
general political or economic principles. And
the forte of The Patriot in attack did not consist
in polite and amenable forensics. Its readers
were accustomed to the methods of the prize-ring rather
than the debating platform. However, Marrineal
made up for his editorial writer’s lukewarmness,
by the vigor of his own attacks upon Enderby.
For, by early summer, it became evident that the nomination
(and probable election) lay between these two opponents.
Enderby was organizing a strong campaign. So
competent and unbiased an observer of political events
as Russell Edmonds, now on The Sphere, believed that
Marrineal would be beaten. Shrewd, notwithstanding
his egotism, Marrineal entertained a growing dread
of this outcome himself. Through roundabout channels,
he let his chief editorial writer understand that,
when the final onset was timed, The Patriot’s
editorial page would be expected to lead the charge
with the “spear that knows no brother.”
Banneker would appreciate that his own interests,
almost as much as his chief’s, were committed
to the overthrow of Willis Enderby.
It was not a happy time for the Editor of The Patriot.
Happiness promised for the near future,
however. Wearied of chasing a phantom hope of
health from spot to spot, the elder Mrs. Eyre had
finally elected to settle down for the summer at her
Westchester place. For obvious reasons, Io did
not wish Banneker to come there. But she would
plan to see him in town. Only, they must be very
discreet; perhaps even to the extent of having a third
person dine with them, her half-brother Archie, or
Esther Forbes. Any one, any time, anywhere, Banneker
wrote back, provided only he could see her again!
The day that she came to town, having
arranged to meet Banneker for dinner with Esther,
fate struck from another and unexpected quarter.
Such was Banneker’s appearance when he came forward
to greet her that Io cried out involuntarily, asking
if he were ill.
“I’m not,”
he answered briefly. Then, with a forced smile
of appeal to the third member, “Do you mind,
Esther, if I talk to Io on a private matter?”
“Go as near as you like,”
returned that understanding young person promptly.
“I’m consumed with a desire to converse
with Elsie Maitland, who is dining in that very farthest
corner. Back in an hour.”
“It’s Camilla Van Arsdale,”
said Banneker as the girl left.
“You’ve heard from her?”
“From Mindle who looks after
my shack there. He says she’s very ill.
I’ve got to go out there at once.”
“Oh, Ban!”
“I know, dearest, and after
all these endless weeks of separation. But you
wouldn’t have me do otherwise. Would you?”
“Of course not,” she said
indignantly. “When do you start?”
“At midnight.”
“And your work?”
“I’ll send my stuff in by wire.”
“How long?”
“I can’t tell until I get there.”
“Ban, you mustn’t go,” she said
with a changed tone.
“Not go? To Miss Camilla? There’s
nothing—”
“I’ll go.”
“You!”
“Why not? If she’s
seriously ill, she needs a woman, not a man with her.”
“But—but, Io, you don’t even
like her.”
“Heaven give you understanding,
Ban,” she retorted with a bewitching pretext
of enforced patience. “She’s a woman,
and she was good to me in my trouble. And if
that weren’t enough, she’s your friend
whom you love.”
“I oughtn’t to let you,” he hesitated.
“You’ve got to let me.
I’d go, anyway. Get Esther back. She
must help me pack. Get me a drawing-room if you
can. If not, I’ll take your berth.”
“You’re going to leave to-night?”
“Of course. What would
you suppose?” She gave him her lustrous smile.
“I’ll love it,” she said softly,
“because it’s partly for you.”
The rest of the evening was consumed
for Banneker in writing and wiring, arranging reservations
through his influence with a local railroad official
whom he pried loose from a rubber of bridge at his
club; while Io and Esther, dinnerless except for a
hasty box of sandwiches, were back in Westchester
packing and explaining to Mrs. Eyre. When the
three reconvened in Io’s drawing-room the traveler
was prepared for an indefinite stay.
“If her condition is critical
I’ll wire for you,” promised lo.
“Otherwise you mustn’t come.”
With that he must make shift to be
content; that and a swift clasp of her arms, a clinging
pressure of her lips, and her soft “Good-bye.
Oh, good-bye! Love me every minute while I’m
gone,” before the tactful Esther Forbes, somewhat
miscast in the temporary role of Propriety, returned
from a conversation with the porter to say that they
really must get off that very instant or be carried
westward to the eternal scandal of society which would
not understand a triangular elopement.
Loneliness no longer beset Banneker,
even though Io was farther separated from him than
before in the unimportant reckoning of geographical
miles; for now she was on his errand. He held
her by the continuous thought of a vital common interest.
In place of the former bereavement of spirit was a
new and consuming anxiety for Camilla Van Arsdale.
Io’s first telegram from Manzanita went far to
appease that. Miss Van Arsdale had suffered a
severe shock, but was now on the road to recovery:
Io would stay indefinitely: there was no reason
for Banneker’s coming out for the present:
in fact, the patient definitely prohibited it:
letter followed.
The letter, when it came, forced a
cry, as of physical pain, from Banneker’s throat.
Camilla Van Arsdale was going blind. Some obscure
reflex of the heart trouble had affected the blood
supply of the eyes, and the shock of discovering this
had reacted upon the heart. There was no immediate
danger; but neither was there ultimate hope of restored
vision. So much the eminent oculist whom Io had
brought from Angelica City told her.
Your first thought (wrote Io) will
be to come out here at once. Don’t.
It will be much better for you to wait until she needs
you more; until you can spend two or three weeks or
a month with her. Now I can help her through
the days by reading to her and walking with her.
You don’t know how happy it makes me to be here
where I first knew you, to live over every event of
those days. Your movable shack is almost as it
used to be, though there is no absurd steel boat outside
for me to stumble into.
Would you believe it; the new station-agent
has a Sears-Roebuck catalogue! I borrowed it
of him to read. What, oh, what should a sensible
person—yes, I am a sensible person, Ban,
outside of my love for you—and I’d
scorn to be sensible about that—Where was
I? Oh, yes; what should a sensible person find
in these simple words “Two horse-power, reliable
and smooth-running, economical of gasoline,”
and so on, to make her want to cry? Ban, send
me a copy of “The Voices.”
He sent her “The Undying Voices”
and other books to read, and long, impassioned letters,
and other letters to be read to Camilla Van Arsdale
whose waning vision must be spared in every possible
way.
Hour after hour (wrote Io) she sits
at the piano and makes her wonderful music, and tries
to write it down. There I can be of very little
help to her. Then she will go back into her room
and lie on the big couch near the window where the
young, low pines brush the wall, with Cousin Billy’s
photograph in her hands, and be so deathly quiet that
I sometimes get frightened and creep up to the door
to peer in and be sure that she is all right.
To-day when I looked in at the door I heard her say,
quite softly to herself: “I shall die without
seeing his face again.” I had to hold my
breath and run out into the forest. Ban, I didn’t
know that it was in me to cry so—not since
that night on the train when I left you…. This
all seems so wicked and wrong and—yes—wasteful.
Think of what these two splendid people could be to
each other! She craves him so, Ban; just the
sound of his voice, a word from him; but she won’t
break her own word. Sometimes I think I shall
do it. Write me all you can about him, Ban, and
send papers: all the political matter. You
can’t imagine what it is to her only to hear
about him.
So Banneker had clippings collected,
wrote a little daily political bulletin for Io; even
went out of his way editorially to pay an occasional
handsome tribute to Judge Enderby’s personal
character, whilst adducing cogent reasons why, as
the “Wall Street and traction candidate,”
he should be defeated. But his personal opinion,
expressed for the behoof of his correspondents in
Manzanita, was that he probably could not be defeated;
that his brilliant and aggressive campaign was forcing
Marrineal to a defensive and losing fight.
“It is a great asset in politics,”
wrote Banneker to Miss Camilla, “to have nothing
to hide or explain. If we’re going to be
licked, there is no man in the world whom I’d
as gladly have win as Judge Enderby.”
All this, of course, in the manner
of one having interesting political news of no special
import to the receiver of the news, to deliver; and
quite without suggestion of any knowledge regarding
her personal concern in the matter.
But between the lines of Io’s
letters, full of womanly pity for Camilla Van Arsdale,
of resentment for her thwarted and hopeless longing,
Banneker thought to discern a crystallizing resolution.
It would be so like Io’s imperious temper to
take the decision into her own hands, to bring about
a meeting between the long-sundered lovers, to cast
into the lonely and valiant woman’s darkening
life one brief and splendid glow of warmth and radiance.
For to Io, a summons for Willis Enderby to come would
be no more than a defiance of the conventions.
She knew nothing of the ruinous vengeance awaiting
any breach of faith on his part, at the hands of a
virulent and embittered wife; she did not even know
that his coming would be a specific breach of faith,
for Banneker, withheld by his promise of secrecy to
Russell Edmonds, had never told her. Nor had
he betrayed to her the espionage under which Enderby
constantly moved; he shrank, naturally, from adding
so ignoble an item to the weight of disrepute under
which The Patriot already lay, in her mind. Sooner
or later he must face the question from her of why
he had not resigned rather than put his honor in pawn
to the baser uses of the newspaper and its owner’s
ambitions. To that question there could be no
answer. He could not throw the onus of it upon
her, by revealing to her that the necessity of protecting
her name against the befoulment of The Searchlight
was the compelling motive of his passivity. That
was not within Banneker’s code.
What, meantime, should be his course?
Should he write and warn Io about Enderby? Could
he make himself explicable without explaining too much?
After all, what right had he to assume that she would
gratuitously intermeddle in the disastrous fates of
others? A rigorous respect for the rights of
privacy was written into the rules of the game as she
played it. He argued, with logic irrefutable as
it was unconvincing, that this alone ought to stay
her hand; yet he knew, by the power of their own yearning,
one for the other, that in the great cause of love,
whether for themselves or for Camilla Van Arsdale and
Willis Enderby, she would resistlessly follow the
impulse born and matured of her own passion.
Had she not once before denied love … and to what
end of suffering and bitter enlightenment and long
waiting not yet ended! Yes; she would send for
Willis Enderby.
Thus, with the insight of love, he
read the heart of the loved one. Self-interest
lifted its specious voice now, in contravention.
If she did send, and if Judge Enderby went to Camilla
Van Arsdale, as Banneker knew surely that he would,
and if Ely Ives’s spies discovered it, the way
was made plain and peaceful for Banneker. For,
in that case, the blunderbuss of blackmail would be
held to Enderby’s head: he must, perforce,
retire from the race on whatever pretext he might devise,
under threat of a scandal which, in any case, would
drive him out of public life. Marrineal would
be nominated, probably elected; control of The Patriot
would pass into Banneker’s hands; The Searchlight
would thus be held at bay until he and Io were married,
for he could not really doubt that she would marry
him, even though there lay between them an unexplained
doubt and a seeming betrayal; and he could remould
the distorted and debased policies of The Patriot
to his heart’s desire of an honest newspaper
fearlessly presenting and supporting truth as he saw
it.
All this at no price of treachery;
merely by leaving matters which were, in fact, no
concern of his, to the arbitrament of whatever fates
might concern themselves with such troublous matters;
it was just a matter of minding his own business and
assuming that Io Eyre would do likewise. So argued
self-interest, plausible, persuasive. He went
to bed with the argument still unsettled, and, because
it seethed in his mind, reached out to his reading-stand
to cool his brain with the limpid philosophies of
Stevenson’s “Virginibus Puerisque.”
“The cruellest lies are often
told in silence,” he read—the very
letters of the words seemed to scorch his eyes with
prophetic fires. “A man may have sat in
a room for hours and not opened his teeth and yet
come out of that room a disloyal friend or a vile calumniator.
And how many loves have perished, because from—”
Banneker sprang from his bed, shaking.
He dressed himself, consulted his watch, wrote a brief,
urgent line to Io, after ’phoning for a taxi;
carried it to the station himself, assured, though
only by a few minutes’ margin, of getting it
into the latest Western mail, returned to bed and
slept heavily and dreamlessly…. Not over the
bodies of a loved friend and an honored foe would
Errol Banneker climb to a place of safety for Io and
triumph for himself.
Mail takes four days to reach Manzanita from New York.
Through the hot months The House With
Three Eyes had kept its hospitable orbs darkened of
Saturday nights. Therefore, Banneker was free
to spend his week-ends at The Retreat, and his Friday
and Saturday mail were forwarded to the nearest country
post-office, whither he sent for it, or picked it
up on his way back to town. It was on Saturday
evening that he received the letter from Io, saying
that she had written to Willis Enderby to come on
to Manzanita and let the eyes, for which he had filled
life’s whole horizon since first they met his,
look on him once more before darkness shut down on
them forever. Her letter had crossed Banneker’s.
“I know that he will come,”
she wrote. “He must come. It would
be too cruel … and I know his heart.”
Eight-thirty-six in the evening!
And Io’s letter to Enderby must have reached
him in New York that morning. He would be taking
the fast train for the West leaving at eleven.
Banneker sent in a call on the long-distance ’phone
for Judge Enderby’s house. The twelve-minute
wait was interminable to his grilling impatience.
At length the placid tones of Judge Enderby’s
man responded. Yes; the Judge was there.
No; he couldn’t be disturbed on any account;
very much occupied.
“This is Mr. Banneker.
I must speak to him for just a moment. It’s
vital.”
“Very sorry, sir,” responded
the unmoved voice. “But Judge Enderby’s
orders was absloot. Not to be disturbed on any
account.”
“Tell him that Mr. Banneker
has something of the utmost importance to say to him
before he leaves.”
“Sorry, sir. It’d be as much as my
place is worth.”
Raging, Banneker nevertheless managed
to control himself. “He is leaving on a
trip to-night, is he not?”
After some hesitation the voice replied
austerely: “I believe he is, sir.
Good-bye.”
Banneker cursed Judge Enderby for
a fool of rigid methods. It would be his own
fault. Let him go to his destruction, then.
He, Banneker, had done all that was possible.
He sank into a sort of lethargy, brooding over the
fateful obstacles which had obstructed him in his
self-sacrificing pursuit of the right, as against his
own dearest interests. He might telegraph Io;
but to what purpose? An idea flashed upon him;
why not telegraph Enderby at his home? He composed
message after message; tore them up as saying too
much or too little; ultimately devised one that seemed
to be sufficient, and hurried to his car, to take
it in to the local operator. When he reached the
village office it was closed. He hurried to the
home of the operator. Out. After two false
trails, he located the man at a church sociable, and
got the message off. It was then nearly ten o’clock.
He had wasted precious moments in brooding. Well,
he had done all and more than could have been asked
of him, let the event be what it would.
His night was a succession of forebodings,
dreamed or half-wakeful. Spent and dispirited,
he rose at an hour quite out of accord with the habits
of The Retreat, sped his car to New York, and put his
inquiry to Judge Enderby’s man.
Yes; the telegram had arrived.
In time? No; it was delivered twenty minutes
after the Judge had left for his train.