It was not in the room known at the
red house as Mr. Royall’s “office”
that he received his infrequent clients. Professional
dignity and masculine independence made it necessary
that he should have a real office, under a different
roof; and his standing as the only lawyer of North
Dormer required that the roof should be the same as
that which sheltered the Town Hall and the post-office.
It was his habit to walk to this office
twice a day, morning and afternoon. It was on
the ground floor of the building, with a separate
entrance, and a weathered name-plate on the door.
Before going in he stepped in to the post-office for
his mail—usually an empty ceremony—said
a word or two to the town-clerk, who sat across the
passage in idle state, and then went over to the store
on the opposite corner, where Carrick Fry, the storekeeper,
always kept a chair for him, and where he was sure
to find one or two selectmen leaning on the long counter,
in an atmosphere of rope, leather, tar and coffee-beans.
Mr. Royall, though monosyllabic at home, was not averse,
in certain moods, to imparting his views to his fellow-townsmen;
perhaps, also, he was unwilling that his rare clients
should surprise him sitting, clerkless and unoccupied,
in his dusty office. At any rate, his hours there
were not much longer or more regular than Charity’s
at the library; the rest of the time he spent either
at the store or in driving about the country on business
connected with the insurance companies that he represented,
or in sitting at home reading Bancroft’s History
of the United States and the speeches of Daniel Webster.
Since the day when Charity had told
him that she wished to succeed to Eudora Skeff’s
post their relations had undefinably but definitely
changed. Lawyer Royall had kept his word.
He had obtained the place for her at the cost of considerable
maneuvering, as she guessed from the number of rival
candidates, and from the acerbity with which two of
them, Orma Fry and the eldest Targatt girl, treated
her for nearly a year afterward. And he had engaged
Verena Marsh to come up from Creston and do the cooking.
Verena was a poor old widow, doddering and shiftless:
Charity suspected that she came for her keep.
Mr. Royall was too close a man to give a dollar a
day to a smart girl when he could get a deaf pauper
for nothing. But at any rate, Verena was there,
in the attic just over Charity, and the fact that
she was deaf did not greatly trouble the young girl.
Charity knew that what had happened
on that hateful night would not happen again.
She understood that, profoundly as she had despised
Mr. Royall ever since, he despised himself still more
profoundly. If she had asked for a woman in the
house it was far less for her own defense than for
his humiliation. She needed no one to defend her:
his humbled pride was her surest protection.
He had never spoken a word of excuse or extenuation;
the incident was as if it had never been. Yet
its consequences were latent in every word that he
and she exchanged, in every glance they instinctively
turned from each other. Nothing now would ever
shake her rule in the red house.
On the night of her meeting with Miss
Hatchard’s cousin Charity lay in bed, her bare
arms clasped under her rough head, and continued to
think of him. She supposed that he meant to spend
some time in North Dormer. He had said he was
looking up the old houses in the neighbourhood; and
though she was not very clear as to his purpose, or
as to why anyone should look for old houses, when
they lay in wait for one on every roadside, she understood
that he needed the help of books, and resolved to
hunt up the next day the volume she had failed to find,
and any others that seemed related to the subject.
Never had her ignorance of life and
literature so weighed on her as in reliving the short
scene of her discomfiture. “It’s no
use trying to be anything in this place,” she
muttered to her pillow; and she shrivelled at the
vision of vague metropolises, shining super-Nettletons,
where girls in better clothes than Belle Balch’s
talked fluently of architecture to young men with
hands like Lucius Harney’s. Then she remembered
his sudden pause when he had come close to the desk
and had his first look at her. The sight had
made him forget what he was going to say; she recalled
the change in his face, and jumping up she ran over
the bare boards to her washstand, found the matches,
lit a candle, and lifted it to the square of looking-glass
on the white-washed wall. Her small face, usually
so darkly pale, glowed like a rose in the faint orb
of light, and under her rumpled hair her eyes seemed
deeper and larger than by day. Perhaps after
all it was a mistake to wish they were blue.
A clumsy band and button fastened her unbleached night-gown
about the throat. She undid it, freed her thin
shoulders, and saw herself a bride in low-necked satin,
walking down an aisle with Lucius Harney. He would
kiss her as they left the church…. She put down
the candle and covered her face with her hands as
if to imprison the kiss. At that moment she heard
Mr. Royall’s step as he came up the stairs to
bed, and a fierce revulsion of feeling swept over
her. Until then she had merely despised him;
now deep hatred of him filled her heart. He became
to her a horrible old man….
The next day, when Mr. Royall came
back to dinner, they faced each other in silence as
usual. Verena’s presence at the table was
an excuse for their not talking, though her deafness
would have permitted the freest interchange of confidences.
But when the meal was over, and Mr. Royall rose from
the table, he looked back at Charity, who had stayed
to help the old woman clear away the dishes.
“I want to speak to you a minute,”
he said; and she followed him across the passage,
wondering.
He seated himself in his black horse-hair
armchair, and she leaned against the window, indifferently.
She was impatient to be gone to the library, to hunt
for the book on North Dormer.
“See here,” he said, “why
ain’t you at the library the days you’re
supposed to be there?”
The question, breaking in on her mood
of blissful abstraction, deprived her of speech, and
she stared at him for a moment without answering.
“Who says I ain’t?”
“There’s been some complaints
made, it appears. Miss Hatchard sent for me this
morning——”
Charity’s smouldering resentment
broke into a blaze. “I know! Orma Fry,
and that toad of a Targatt girl and Ben Fry, like as
not. He’s going round with her. The
low-down sneaks—I always knew they’d
try to have me out! As if anybody ever came to
the library, anyhow!”
“Somebody did yesterday, and you weren’t
there.”
“Yesterday?” she laughed
at her happy recollection. “At what time
wasn’t I there yesterday, I’d like to
know?”
“Round about four o’clock.”
Charity was silent. She had been
so steeped in the dreamy remembrance of young Harney’s
visit that she had forgotten having deserted her post
as soon as he had left the library.
“Who came at four o’clock?”
“Miss Hatchard did.”
“Miss Hatchard? Why, she
ain’t ever been near the place since she’s
been lame. She couldn’t get up the steps
if she tried.”
“She can be helped up, I guess.
She was yesterday, anyhow, by the young fellow that’s
staying with her. He found you there, I understand,
earlier in the afternoon; and he went back and told
Miss Hatchard the books were in bad shape and needed
attending to. She got excited, and had herself
wheeled straight round; and when she got there the
place was locked. So she sent for me, and told
me about that, and about the other complaints.
She claims you’ve neglected things, and that
she’s going to get a trained librarian.”
Charity had not moved while he spoke.
She stood with her head thrown back against the window-frame,
her arms hanging against her sides, and her hands
so tightly clenched that she felt, without knowing
what hurt her, the sharp edge of her nails against
her palms.
Of all Mr. Royall had said she had
retained only the phrase: “He told Miss
Hatchard the books were in bad shape.” What
did she care for the other charges against her?
Malice or truth, she despised them as she despised
her detractors. But that the stranger to whom
she had felt herself so mysteriously drawn should
have betrayed her! That at the very moment when
she had fled up the hillside to think of him more
deliciously he should have been hastening home to denounce
her short-comings! She remembered how, in the
darkness of her room, she had covered her face to
press his imagined kiss closer; and her heart raged
against him for the liberty he had not taken.
“Well, I’ll go,” she said suddenly.
“I’ll go right off.”
“Go where?” She heard the startled note
in Mr. Royall’s voice.
“Why, out of their old library:
straight out, and never set foot in it again.
They needn’t think I’m going to wait round
and let them say they’ve discharged me!”
“Charity—Charity
Royall, you listen——” he began,
getting heavily out of his chair; but she waved him
aside, and walked out of the room.
Upstairs she took the library key
from the place where she always hid it under her pincushion—who
said she wasn’t careful?—put on her
hat, and swept down again and out into the street.
If Mr. Royall heard her go he made no motion to detain
her: his sudden rages probably made him understand
the uselessness of reasoning with hers.
She reached the brick temple, unlocked
the door and entered into the glacial twilight.
“I’m glad I’ll never have to sit
in this old vault again when other folks are out in
the sun!” she said aloud as the familiar chill
took her. She looked with abhorrence at the long
dingy rows of books, the sheep-nosed Minerva on her
black pedestal, and the mild-faced young man in a
high stock whose effigy pined above her desk.
She meant to take out of the drawer her roll of lace
and the library register, and go straight to Miss
Hatchard to announce her resignation. But suddenly
a great desolation overcame her, and she sat down and
laid her face against the desk. Her heart was
ravaged by life’s cruelest discovery: the
first creature who had come toward her out of the
wilderness had brought her anguish instead of joy.
She did not cry; tears came hard to her, and the storms
of her heart spent themselves inwardly. But as
she sat there in her dumb woe she felt her life to
be too desolate, too ugly and intolerable.
“What have I ever done to it,
that it should hurt me so?” she groaned, and
pressed her fists against her lids, which were beginning
to swell with weeping.
“I won’t—I
won’t go there looking like a horror!”
she muttered, springing up and pushing back her hair
as if it stifled her. She opened the drawer,
dragged out the register, and turned toward the door.
As she did so it opened, and the young man from Miss
Hatchard’s came in whistling.