The hours of the Hatchard Memorial
librarian were from three to five; and Charity Royall’s
sense of duty usually kept her at her desk until nearly
half-past four.
But she had never perceived that any
practical advantage thereby accrued either to North
Dormer or to herself; and she had no scruple in decreeing,
when it suited her, that the library should close an
hour earlier. A few minutes after Mr. Harney’s
departure she formed this decision, put away her lace,
fastened the shutters, and turned the key in the door
of the temple of knowledge.
The street upon which she emerged
was still empty: and after glancing up and down
it she began to walk toward her house. But instead
of entering she passed on, turned into a field-path
and mounted to a pasture on the hillside. She
let down the bars of the gate, followed a trail along
the crumbling wall of the pasture, and walked on till
she reached a knoll where a clump of larches shook
out their fresh tassels to the wind. There she
lay down on the slope, tossed off her hat and hid her
face in the grass.
She was blind and insensible to many
things, and dimly knew it; but to all that was light
and air, perfume and colour, every drop of blood in
her responded. She loved the roughness of the
dry mountain grass under her palms, the smell of the
thyme into which she crushed her face, the fingering
of the wind in her hair and through her cotton blouse,
and the creak of the larches as they swayed to it.
She often climbed up the hill and
lay there alone for the mere pleasure of feeling the
wind and of rubbing her cheeks in the grass. Generally
at such times she did not think of anything, but lay
immersed in an inarticulate well-being. Today
the sense of well-being was intensified by her joy
at escaping from the library. She liked well enough
to have a friend drop in and talk to her when she
was on duty, but she hated to be bothered about books.
How could she remember where they were, when they
were so seldom asked for? Orma Fry occasionally
took out a novel, and her brother Ben was fond of
what he called “jography,” and of books
relating to trade and bookkeeping; but no one else
asked for anything except, at intervals, “Uncle
Tom’s Cabin,” or “Opening of a Chestnut
Burr,” or Longfellow. She had these under
her hand, and could have found them in the dark; but
unexpected demands came so rarely that they exasperated
her like an injustice….
She had liked the young man’s
looks, and his short-sighted eyes, and his odd way
of speaking, that was abrupt yet soft, just as his
hands were sun-burnt and sinewy, yet with smooth nails
like a woman’s. His hair was sunburnt-looking
too, or rather the colour of bracken after frost; his
eyes grey, with the appealing look of the shortsighted,
his smile shy yet confident, as if he knew lots of
things she had never dreamed of, and yet wouldn’t
for the world have had her feel his superiority.
But she did feel it, and liked the feeling; for it
was new to her. Poor and ignorant as she was,
and knew herself to be—humblest of the humble
even in North Dormer, where to come from the Mountain
was the worst disgrace—yet in her narrow
world she had always ruled. It was partly, of
course, owing to the fact that lawyer Royall was “the
biggest man in North Dormer”; so much too big
for it, in fact, that outsiders, who didn’t
know, always wondered how it held him. In spite
of everything—and in spite even of Miss
Hatchard—lawyer Royall ruled in North Dormer;
and Charity ruled in lawyer Royall’s house.
She had never put it to herself in those terms; but
she knew her power, knew what it was made of, and
hated it. Confusedly, the young man in the library
had made her feel for the first time what might be
the sweetness of dependence.
She sat up, brushed the bits of grass
from her hair, and looked down on the house where
she held sway. It stood just below her, cheerless
and untended, its faded red front divided from the
road by a “yard” with a path bordered
by gooseberry bushes, a stone well overgrown with
traveller’s joy, and a sickly Crimson Rambler
tied to a fan-shaped support, which Mr. Royall had
once brought up from Hepburn to please her. Behind
the house a bit of uneven ground with clothes-lines
strung across it stretched up to a dry wall, and beyond
the wall a patch of corn and a few rows of potatoes
strayed vaguely into the adjoining wilderness of rock
and fern.
Charity could not recall her first
sight of the house. She had been told that she
was ill of a fever when she was brought down from the
Mountain; and she could only remember waking one day
in a cot at the foot of Mrs. Royall’s bed, and
opening her eyes on the cold neatness of the room that
was afterward to be hers.
Mrs. Royall died seven or eight years
later; and by that time Charity had taken the measure
of most things about her. She knew that Mrs.
Royall was sad and timid and weak; she knew that lawyer
Royall was harsh and violent, and still weaker.
She knew that she had been christened Charity (in
the white church at the other end of the village) to
commemorate Mr. Royall’s disinterestedness in
“bringing her down,” and to keep alive
in her a becoming sense of her dependence; she knew
that Mr. Royall was her guardian, but that he had
not legally adopted her, though everybody spoke of
her as Charity Royall; and she knew why he had come
back to live at North Dormer, instead of practising
at Nettleton, where he had begun his legal career.
After Mrs. Royall’s death there
was some talk of sending her to a boarding-school.
Miss Hatchard suggested it, and had a long conference
with Mr. Royall, who, in pursuance of her plan, departed
one day for Starkfield to visit the institution she
recommended. He came back the next night with
a black face; worse, Charity observed, than she had
ever seen him; and by that time she had had some experience.
When she asked him how soon she was
to start he answered shortly, “You ain’t
going,” and shut himself up in the room he called
his office; and the next day the lady who kept the
school at Starkfield wrote that “under the circumstances”
she was afraid she could not make room just then for
another pupil.
Charity was disappointed; but she
understood. It wasn’t the temptations of
Starkfield that had been Mr. Royall’s undoing;
it was the thought of losing her. He was a dreadfully
“lonesome” man; she had made that out
because she was so “lonesome” herself.
He and she, face to face in that sad house, had sounded
the depths of isolation; and though she felt no particular
affection for him, and not the slightest gratitude,
she pitied him because she was conscious that he was
superior to the people about him, and that she was
the only being between him and solitude. Therefore,
when Miss Hatchard sent for her a day or two later,
to talk of a school at Nettleton, and to say that
this time a friend of hers would “make the necessary
arrangements,” Charity cut her short with the
announcement that she had decided not to leave North
Dormer.
Miss Hatchard reasoned with her kindly,
but to no purpose; she simply repeated: “I
guess Mr. Royall’s too lonesome.”
Miss Hatchard blinked perplexedly
behind her eye-glasses. Her long frail face was
full of puzzled wrinkles, and she leant forward, resting
her hands on the arms of her mahogany armchair, with
the evident desire to say something that ought to
be said.
“The feeling does you credit, my dear.”
She looked about the pale walls of
her sitting-room, seeking counsel of ancestral daguerreotypes
and didactic samplers; but they seemed to make utterance
more difficult.
“The fact is, it’s not
only—not only because of the advantages.
There are other reasons. You’re too young
to understand——”
“Oh, no, I ain’t,”
said Charity harshly; and Miss Hatchard blushed to
the roots of her blonde cap. But she must have
felt a vague relief at having her explanation cut
short, for she concluded, again invoking the daguerreotypes:
“Of course I shall always do what I can for you;
and in case… in case… you know you can always
come to me….”
Lawyer Royall was waiting for Charity
in the porch when she returned from this visit.
He had shaved, and brushed his black coat, and looked
a magnificent monument of a man; at such moments she
really admired him.
“Well,” he said, “is it settled?”
“Yes, it’s settled. I ain’t
going.”
“Not to the Nettleton school?”
“Not anywhere.”
He cleared his throat and asked sternly: “Why?”
“I’d rather not,”
she said, swinging past him on her way to her room.
It was the following week that he brought her up the
Crimson Rambler and its fan from Hepburn. He
had never given her anything before.
The next outstanding incident of her
life had happened two years later, when she was seventeen.
Lawyer Royall, who hated to go to Nettleton, had been
called there in connection with a case. He still
exercised his profession, though litigation languished
in North Dormer and its outlying hamlets; and for
once he had had an opportunity that he could not afford
to refuse. He spent three days in Nettleton, won
his case, and came back in high good-humour.
It was a rare mood with him, and manifested itself
on this occasion by his talking impressively at the
supper-table of the “rousing welcome” his
old friends had given him. He wound up confidentially:
“I was a damn fool ever to leave Nettleton.
It was Mrs. Royall that made me do it.”
Charity immediately perceived that
something bitter had happened to him, and that he
was trying to talk down the recollection. She
went up to bed early, leaving him seated in moody
thought, his elbows propped on the worn oilcloth of
the supper table. On the way up she had extracted
from his overcoat pocket the key of the cupboard where
the bottle of whiskey was kept.
She was awakened by a rattling at
her door and jumped out of bed. She heard Mr.
Royall’s voice, low and peremptory, and opened
the door, fearing an accident. No other thought
had occurred to her; but when she saw him in the doorway,
a ray from the autumn moon falling on his discomposed
face, she understood.
For a moment they looked at each other
in silence; then, as he put his foot across the threshold,
she stretched out her arm and stopped him.
“You go right back from here,”
she said, in a shrill voice that startled her; “you
ain’t going to have that key tonight.”
“Charity, let me in. I
don’t want the key. I’m a lonesome
man,” he began, in the deep voice that sometimes
moved her.
Her heart gave a startled plunge,
but she continued to hold him back contemptuously.
“Well, I guess you made a mistake, then.
This ain’t your wife’s room any longer.”
She was not frightened, she simply
felt a deep disgust; and perhaps he divined it or
read it in her face, for after staring at her a moment
he drew back and turned slowly away from the door.
With her ear to her keyhole she heard him feel his
way down the dark stairs, and toward the kitchen;
and she listened for the crash of the cupboard panel,
but instead she heard him, after an interval, unlock
the door of the house, and his heavy steps came to
her through the silence as he walked down the path.
She crept to the window and saw his bent figure striding
up the road in the moonlight. Then a belated
sense of fear came to her with the consciousness of
victory, and she slipped into bed, cold to the bone.
A day or two later poor Eudora Skeff,
who for twenty years had been the custodian of the
Hatchard library, died suddenly of pneumonia; and the
day after the funeral Charity went to see Miss Hatchard,
and asked to be appointed librarian. The request
seemed to surprise Miss Hatchard: she evidently
questioned the new candidate’s qualifications.
“Why, I don’t know, my
dear. Aren’t you rather too young?”
she hesitated.
“I want to earn some money,” Charity merely
answered.
“Doesn’t Mr. Royall give
you all you require? No one is rich in North
Dormer.”
“I want to earn money enough to get away.”
“To get away?” Miss Hatchard’s
puzzled wrinkles deepened, and there was a distressful
pause. “You want to leave Mr. Royall?”
“Yes: or I want another
woman in the house with me,” said Charity resolutely.
Miss Hatchard clasped her nervous
hands about the arms of her chair. Her eyes invoked
the faded countenances on the wall, and after a faint
cough of indecision she brought out: “The…
the housework’s too hard for you, I suppose?”
Charity’s heart grew cold.
She understood that Miss Hatchard had no help to give
her and that she would have to fight her way out of
her difficulty alone. A deeper sense of isolation
overcame her; she felt incalculably old. “She’s
got to be talked to like a baby,” she thought,
with a feeling of compassion for Miss Hatchard’s
long immaturity. “Yes, that’s it,”
she said aloud. “The housework’s too
hard for me: I’ve been coughing a good
deal this fall.”
She noted the immediate effect of
this suggestion. Miss Hatchard paled at the memory
of poor Eudora’s taking-off, and promised to
do what she could. But of course there were people
she must consult: the clergyman, the selectmen
of North Dormer, and a distant Hatchard relative at
Springfield. “If you’d only gone to
school!” she sighed. She followed Charity
to the door, and there, in the security of the threshold,
said with a glance of evasive appeal: “I
know Mr. Royall is… trying at times; but his wife
bore with him; and you must always remember, Charity,
that it was Mr. Royall who brought you down from the
Mountain.” Charity went home and opened
the door of Mr. Royall’s “office.”
He was sitting there by the stove reading Daniel Webster’s
speeches. They had met at meals during the five
days that had elapsed since he had come to her door,
and she had walked at his side at Eudora’s funeral;
but they had not spoken a word to each other.
He glanced up in surprise as she entered,
and she noticed that he was unshaved, and that he
looked unusually old; but as she had always thought
of him as an old man the change in his appearance did
not move her. She told him she had been to see
Miss Hatchard, and with what object. She saw
that he was astonished; but he made no comment.
“I told her the housework was
too hard for me, and I wanted to earn the money to
pay for a hired girl. But I ain’t going
to pay for her: you’ve got to. I want
to have some money of my own.”
Mr. Royall’s bushy black eyebrows
were drawn together in a frown, and he sat drumming
with ink-stained nails on the edge of his desk.
“What do you want to earn money for?”
he asked.
“So’s to get away when I want to.”
“Why do you want to get away?”
Her contempt flashed out. “Do
you suppose anybody’d stay at North Dormer if
they could help it? You wouldn’t, folks
say!”
With lowered head he asked: “Where’d
you go to?”
“Anywhere where I can earn my
living. I’ll try here first, and if I can’t
do it here I’ll go somewhere else. I’ll
go up the Mountain if I have to.” She paused
on this threat, and saw that it had taken effect.
“I want you should get Miss Hatchard and the
selectmen to take me at the library: and I want
a woman here in the house with me,” she repeated.
Mr. Royall had grown exceedingly pale.
When she ended he stood up ponderously, leaning against
the desk; and for a second or two they looked at each
other.
“See here,” he said at
length as though utterance were difficult, “there’s
something I’ve been wanting to say to you; I’d
ought to have said it before. I want you to marry
me.”
The girl still stared at him without
moving. “I want you to marry me,”
he repeated, clearing his throat. “The minister’ll
be up here next Sunday and we can fix it up then.
Or I’ll drive you down to Hepburn to the Justice,
and get it done there. I’ll do whatever
you say.” His eyes fell under the merciless
stare she continued to fix on him, and he shifted
his weight uneasily from one foot to the other.
As he stood there before her, unwieldy, shabby, disordered,
the purple veins distorting the hands he pressed against
the desk, and his long orator’s jaw trembling
with the effort of his avowal, he seemed like a hideous
parody of the fatherly old man she had always known.
“Marry you? Me?”
she burst out with a scornful laugh. “Was
that what you came to ask me the other night?
What’s come over you, I wonder? How long
is it since you’ve looked at yourself in the
glass?” She straightened herself, insolently
conscious of her youth and strength. “I
suppose you think it would be cheaper to marry me
than to keep a hired girl. Everybody knows you’re
the closest man in Eagle County; but I guess you’re
not going to get your mending done for you that way
twice.”
Mr. Royall did not move while she
spoke. His face was ash-coloured and his black
eyebrows quivered as though the blaze of her scorn
had blinded him. When she ceased he held up his
hand.
“That’ll do—that’ll
about do,” he said. He turned to the door
and took his hat from the hat-peg. On the threshold
he paused. “People ain’t been fair
to me—from the first they ain’t been
fair to me,” he said. Then he went out.
A few days later North Dormer learned
with surprise that Charity had been appointed librarian
of the Hatchard Memorial at a salary of eight dollars
a month, and that old Verena Marsh, from the Creston
Almshouse, was coming to live at lawyer Royall’s
and do the cooking.