Since her reinstatement in Miss Hatchard’s
favour Charity had not dared to curtail by a moment
her hours of attendance at the library. She even
made a point of arriving before the time, and showed
a laudable indignation when the youngest Targatt girl,
who had been engaged to help in the cleaning and rearranging
of the books, came trailing in late and neglected
her task to peer through the window at the Sollas boy.
Nevertheless, “library days” seemed more
than ever irksome to Charity after her vivid hours
of liberty; and she would have found it hard to set
a good example to her subordinate if Lucius Harney
had not been commissioned, before Miss Hatchard’s
departure, to examine with the local carpenter the
best means of ventilating the “Memorial.”
He was careful to prosecute this inquiry
on the days when the library was open to the public;
and Charity was therefore sure of spending part of
the afternoon in his company. The Targatt girl’s
presence, and the risk of being interrupted by some
passer-by suddenly smitten with a thirst for letters,
restricted their intercourse to the exchange of commonplaces;
but there was a fascination to Charity in the contrast
between these public civilities and their secret intimacy.
The day after their drive to the brown
house was “library day,” and she sat at
her desk working at the revised catalogue, while the
Targatt girl, one eye on the window, chanted out the
titles of a pile of books. Charity’s thoughts
were far away, in the dismal house by the swamp, and
under the twilight sky during the long drive home,
when Lucius Harney had consoled her with endearing
words. That day, for the first time since he
had been boarding with them, he had failed to appear
as usual at the midday meal. No message had come
to explain his absence, and Mr. Royall, who was more
than usually taciturn, had betrayed no surprise, and
made no comment. In itself this indifference was
not particularly significant, for Mr. Royall, in common
with most of his fellow-citizens, had a way of accepting
events passively, as if he had long since come to
the conclusion that no one who lived in North Dormer
could hope to modify them. But to Charity, in
the reaction from her mood of passionate exaltation,
there was something disquieting in his silence.
It was almost as if Lucius Harney had never had a
part in their lives: Mr. Royall’s imperturbable
indifference seemed to relegate him to the domain
of unreality.
As she sat at work, she tried to shake
off her disappointment at Harney’s non-appearing.
Some trifling incident had probably kept him from
joining them at midday; but she was sure he must be
eager to see her again, and that he would not want
to wait till they met at supper, between Mr. Royall
and Verena. She was wondering what his first words
would be, and trying to devise a way of getting rid
of the Targatt girl before he came, when she heard
steps outside, and he walked up the path with Mr.
Miles.
The clergyman from Hepburn seldom
came to North Dormer except when he drove over to
officiate at the old white church which, by an unusual
chance, happened to belong to the Episcopal communion.
He was a brisk affable man, eager to make the most
of the fact that a little nucleus of “church-people”
had survived in the sectarian wilderness, and resolved
to undermine the influence of the ginger-bread-coloured
Baptist chapel at the other end of the village; but
he was kept busy by parochial work at Hepburn, where
there were paper-mills and saloons, and it was not
often that he could spare time for North Dormer.
Charity, who went to the white church
(like all the best people in North Dormer), admired
Mr. Miles, and had even, during the memorable trip
to Nettleton, imagined herself married to a man who
had such a straight nose and such a beautiful way
of speaking, and who lived in a brown-stone rectory
covered with Virginia creeper. It had been a shock
to discover that the privilege was already enjoyed
by a lady with crimped hair and a large baby; but
the arrival of Lucius Harney had long since banished
Mr. Miles from Charity’s dreams, and as he walked
up the path at Harney’s side she saw him as
he really was: a fat middle-aged man with a baldness
showing under his clerical hat, and spectacles on
his Grecian nose. She wondered what had called
him to North Dormer on a weekday, and felt a little
hurt that Harney should have brought him to the library.
It presently appeared that his presence
there was due to Miss Hatchard. He had been spending
a few days at Springfield, to fill a friend’s
pulpit, and had been consulted by Miss Hatchard as
to young Harney’s plan for ventilating the “Memorial.”
To lay hands on the Hatchard ark was a grave matter,
and Miss Hatchard, always full of scruples about her
scruples (it was Harney’s phrase), wished to
have Mr. Miles’s opinion before deciding.
“I couldn’t,” Mr.
Miles explained, “quite make out from your cousin
what changes you wanted to make, and as the other
trustees did not understand either I thought I had
better drive over and take a look—though
I’m sure,” he added, turning his friendly
spectacles on the young man, “that no one could
be more competent—but of course this spot
has its peculiar sanctity!”
“I hope a little fresh air won’t
desecrate it,” Harney laughingly rejoined; and
they walked to the other end of the library while he
set forth his idea to the Rector.
Mr. Miles had greeted the two girls
with his usual friendliness, but Charity saw that
he was occupied with other things, and she presently
became aware, by the scraps of conversation drifting
over to her, that he was still under the charm of
his visit to Springfield, which appeared to have been
full of agreeable incidents.
“Ah, the Coopersons… yes,
you know them, of course,” she heard. “That’s
a fine old house! And Ned Cooperson has collected
some really remarkable impressionist pictures….”
The names he cited were unknown to Charity. “Yes;
yes; the Schaefer quartette played at Lyric Hall on
Saturday evening; and on Monday I had the privilege
of hearing them again at the Towers. Beautifully
done… Bach and Beethoven… a lawn-party first…
I saw Miss Balch several times, by the way… looking
extremely handsome….”
Charity dropped her pencil and forgot
to listen to the Targatt girl’s sing-song.
Why had Mr. Miles suddenly brought up Annabel Balch’s
name?
“Oh, really?” she heard
Harney rejoin; and, raising his stick, he pursued:
“You see, my plan is to move these shelves away,
and open a round window in this wall, on the axis
of the one under the pediment.”
“I suppose she’ll be coming
up here later to stay with Miss Hatchard?” Mr.
Miles went on, following on his train of thought; then,
spinning about and tilting his head back: “Yes,
yes, I see—I understand: that will
give a draught without materially altering the look
of things. I can see no objection.”
The discussion went on for some minutes,
and gradually the two men moved back toward the desk.
Mr. Miles stopped again and looked thoughtfully at
Charity. “Aren’t you a little pale,
my dear? Not overworking? Mr. Harney tells
me you and Mamie are giving the library a thorough
overhauling.” He was always careful to
remember his parishioners’ Christian names,
and at the right moment he bent his benignant spectacles
on the Targatt girl.
Then he turned to Charity. “Don’t
take things hard, my dear; don’t take things
hard. Come down and see Mrs. Miles and me some
day at Hepburn,” he said, pressing her hand
and waving a farewell to Mamie Targatt. He went
out of the library, and Harney followed him.
Charity thought she detected a look
of constraint in Harney’s eyes. She fancied
he did not want to be alone with her; and with a sudden
pang she wondered if he repented the tender things
he had said to her the night before. His words
had been more fraternal than lover-like; but she had
lost their exact sense in the caressing warmth of his
voice. He had made her feel that the fact of
her being a waif from the Mountain was only another
reason for holding her close and soothing her with
consolatory murmurs; and when the drive was over,
and she got out of the buggy, tired, cold, and aching
with emotion, she stepped as if the ground were a
sunlit wave and she the spray on its crest.
Why, then, had his manner suddenly
changed, and why did he leave the library with Mr.
Miles? Her restless imagination fastened on the
name of Annabel Balch: from the moment it had
been mentioned she fancied that Harney’s expression
had altered. Annabel Balch at a garden-party at
Springfield, looking “extremely handsome”...
perhaps Mr. Miles had seen her there at the very moment
when Charity and Harney were sitting in the Hyatts’
hovel, between a drunkard and a half-witted old woman!
Charity did not know exactly what a garden-party was,
but her glimpse of the flower-edged lawns of Nettleton
helped her to visualize the scene, and envious recollections
of the “old things” which Miss Balch avowedly
“wore out” when she came to North Dormer
made it only too easy to picture her in her splendour.
Charity understood what associations the name must
have called up, and felt the uselessness of struggling
against the unseen influences in Harney’s life.
When she came down from her room for
supper he was not there; and while she waited in the
porch she recalled the tone in which Mr. Royall had
commented the day before on their early start.
Mr. Royall sat at her side, his chair tilted back,
his broad black boots with side-elastics resting against
the lower bar of the railings. His rumpled grey
hair stood up above his forehead like the crest of
an angry bird, and the leather-brown of his veined
cheeks was blotched with red. Charity knew that
those red spots were the signs of a coming explosion.
Suddenly he said: “Where’s
supper? Has Verena Marsh slipped up again on
her soda-biscuits?”
Charity threw a startled glance at
him. “I presume she’s waiting for
Mr. Harney.”
“Mr. Harney, is she? She’d
better dish up, then. He ain’t coming.”
He stood up, walked to the door, and called out, in
the pitch necessary to penetrate the old woman’s
tympanum: “Get along with the supper, Verena.”
Charity was trembling with apprehension.
Something had happened—she was sure of
it now—and Mr. Royall knew what it was.
But not for the world would she have gratified him
by showing her anxiety. She took her usual place,
and he seated himself opposite, and poured out a strong
cup of tea before passing her the tea-pot. Verena
brought some scrambled eggs, and he piled his plate
with them. “Ain’t you going to take
any?” he asked. Charity roused herself
and began to eat.
The tone with which Mr. Royall had
said “He’s not coming” seemed to
her full of an ominous satisfaction. She saw
that he had suddenly begun to hate Lucius Harney,
and guessed herself to be the cause of this change
of feeling. But she had no means of finding out
whether some act of hostility on his part had made
the young man stay away, or whether he simply wished
to avoid seeing her again after their drive back from
the brown house. She ate her supper with a studied
show of indifference, but she knew that Mr. Royall
was watching her and that her agitation did not escape
him.
After supper she went up to her room.
She heard Mr. Royall cross the passage, and presently
the sounds below her window showed that he had returned
to the porch. She seated herself on her bed and
began to struggle against the desire to go down and
ask him what had happened. “I’d rather
die than do it,” she muttered to herself.
With a word he could have relieved her uncertainty:
but never would she gratify him by saying it.
She rose and leaned out of the window.
The twilight had deepened into night, and she watched
the frail curve of the young moon dropping to the
edge of the hills. Through the darkness she saw
one or two figures moving down the road; but the evening
was too cold for loitering, and presently the strollers
disappeared. Lamps were beginning to show here
and there in the windows. A bar of light brought
out the whiteness of a clump of lilies in the Hawes’s
yard: and farther down the street Carrick Fry’s
Rochester lamp cast its bold illumination on the rustic
flower-tub in the middle of his grass-plot.
For a long time she continued to lean
in the window. But a fever of unrest consumed
her, and finally she went downstairs, took her hat
from its hook, and swung out of the house. Mr.
Royall sat in the porch, Verena beside him, her old
hands crossed on her patched skirt. As Charity
went down the steps Mr. Royall called after her:
“Where you going?” She could easily have
answered: “To Orma’s,” or “Down
to the Targatts’”; and either answer might
have been true, for she had no purpose. But she
swept on in silence, determined not to recognize his
right to question her.
At the gate she paused and looked
up and down the road. The darkness drew her,
and she thought of climbing the hill and plunging into
the depths of the larch-wood above the pasture.
Then she glanced irresolutely along the street, and
as she did so a gleam appeared through the spruces
at Miss Hatchard’s gate. Lucius Harney was
there, then—he had not gone down to Hepburn
with Mr. Miles, as she had at first imagined.
But where had he taken his evening meal, and what had
caused him to stay away from Mr. Royall’s?
The light was positive proof of his presence, for
Miss Hatchard’s servants were away on a holiday,
and her farmer’s wife came only in the mornings,
to make the young man’s bed and prepare his
coffee. Beside that lamp he was doubtless sitting
at this moment. To know the truth Charity had
only to walk half the length of the village, and knock
at the lighted window. She hesitated a minute
or two longer, and then turned toward Miss Hatchard’s.
She walked quickly, straining her
eyes to detect anyone who might be coming along the
street; and before reaching the Frys’ she crossed
over to avoid the light from their window. Whenever
she was unhappy she felt herself at bay against a
pitiless world, and a kind of animal secretiveness
possessed her. But the street was empty, and she
passed unnoticed through the gate and up the path
to the house. Its white front glimmered indistinctly
through the trees, showing only one oblong of light
on the lower floor. She had supposed that the
lamp was in Miss Hatchard’s sitting-room; but
she now saw that it shone through a window at the
farther corner of the house. She did not know
the room to which this window belonged, and she paused
under the trees, checked by a sense of strangeness.
Then she moved on, treading softly on the short grass,
and keeping so close to the house that whoever was
in the room, even if roused by her approach, would
not be able to see her.
The window opened on a narrow verandah
with a trellised arch. She leaned close to the
trellis, and parting the sprays of clematis that covered
it looked into a corner of the room. She saw
the foot of a mahogany bed, an engraving on the wall,
a wash-stand on which a towel had been tossed, and
one end of the green-covered table which held the lamp.
Half of the lampshade projected into her field of
vision, and just under it two smooth sunburnt hands,
one holding a pencil and the other a ruler, were moving
to and fro over a drawing-board.
Her heart jumped and then stood still.
He was there, a few feet away; and while her soul
was tossing on seas of woe he had been quietly sitting
at his drawing-board. The sight of those two hands,
moving with their usual skill and precision, woke
her out of her dream. Her eyes were opened to
the disproportion between what she had felt and the
cause of her agitation; and she was turning away from
the window when one hand abruptly pushed aside the
drawing-board and the other flung down the pencil.
Charity had often noticed Harney’s
loving care of his drawings, and the neatness and
method with which he carried on and concluded each
task. The impatient sweeping aside of the drawing-board
seemed to reveal a new mood. The gesture suggested
sudden discouragement, or distaste for his work and
she wondered if he too were agitated by secret perplexities.
Her impulse of flight was checked; she stepped up on
the verandah and looked into the room.
Harney had put his elbows on the table
and was resting his chin on his locked hands.
He had taken off his coat and waistcoat, and unbuttoned
the low collar of his flannel shirt; she saw the vigorous
lines of his young throat, and the root of the muscles
where they joined the chest. He sat staring straight
ahead of him, a look of weariness and self-disgust
on his face: it was almost as if he had been gazing
at a distorted reflection of his own features.
For a moment Charity looked at him with a kind of
terror, as if he had been a stranger under familiar
lineaments; then she glanced past him and saw on the
floor an open portmanteau half full of clothes.
She understood that he was preparing to leave, and
that he had probably decided to go without seeing her.
She saw that the decision, from whatever cause it
was taken, had disturbed him deeply; and she immediately
concluded that his change of plan was due to some
surreptitious interference of Mr. Royall’s.
All her old resentments and rebellions flamed up,
confusedly mingled with the yearning roused by Harney’s
nearness. Only a few hours earlier she had felt
secure in his comprehending pity; now she was flung
back on herself, doubly alone after that moment of
communion.
Harney was still unaware of her presence.
He sat without moving, moodily staring before him
at the same spot in the wall-paper. He had not
even had the energy to finish his packing, and his
clothes and papers lay on the floor about the portmanteau.
Presently he unlocked his clasped hands and stood
up; and Charity, drawing back hastily, sank down on
the step of the verandah. The night was so dark
that there was not much chance of his seeing her unless
he opened the window and before that she would have
time to slip away and be lost in the shadow of the
trees. He stood for a minute or two looking around
the room with the same expression of self-disgust,
as if he hated himself and everything about him; then
he sat down again at the table, drew a few more strokes,
and threw his pencil aside. Finally he walked
across the floor, kicking the portmanteau out of his
way, and lay down on the bed, folding his arms under
his head, and staring up morosely at the ceiling.
Just so, Charity had seen him at her side on the grass
or the pine-needles, his eyes fixed on the sky, and
pleasure flashing over his face like the flickers
of sun the branches shed on it. But now the face
was so changed that she hardly knew it; and grief
at his grief gathered in her throat, rose to her eyes
and ran over.
She continued to crouch on the steps,
holding her breath and stiffening herself into complete
immobility. One motion of her hand, one tap on
the pane, and she could picture the sudden change in
his face. In every pulse of her rigid body she
was aware of the welcome his eyes and lips would give
her; but something kept her from moving. It was
not the fear of any sanction, human or heavenly; she
had never in her life been afraid. It was simply
that she had suddenly understood what would happen
if she went in. It was the thing that did happen
between young men and girls, and that North Dormer
ignored in public and snickered over on the sly.
It was what Miss Hatchard was still ignorant of, but
every girl of Charity’s class knew about before
she left school. It was what had happened to
Ally Hawes’s sister Julia, and had ended in her
going to Nettleton, and in people’s never mentioning
her name.
It did not, of course, always end
so sensationally; nor, perhaps, on the whole, so untragically.
Charity had always suspected that the shunned Julia’s
fate might have its compensations. There were
others, worse endings that the village knew of, mean,
miserable, unconfessed; other lives that went on drearily,
without visible change, in the same cramped setting
of hypocrisy. But these were not the reasons that
held her back. Since the day before, she had
known exactly what she would feel if Harney should
take her in his arms: the melting of palm into
palm and mouth on mouth, and the long flame burning
her from head to foot. But mixed with this feeling
was another: the wondering pride in his liking
for her, the startled softness that his sympathy had
put into her heart. Sometimes, when her youth
flushed up in her, she had imagined yielding like
other girls to furtive caresses in the twilight; but
she could not so cheapen herself to Harney. She
did not know why he was going; but since he was going
she felt she must do nothing to deface the image of
her that he carried away. If he wanted her he
must seek her: he must not be surprised into
taking her as girls like Julia Hawes were taken….
No sound came from the sleeping village,
and in the deep darkness of the garden she heard now
and then a secret rustle of branches, as though some
night-bird brushed them. Once a footfall passed
the gate, and she shrank back into her corner; but
the steps died away and left a profounder quiet.
Her eyes were still on Harney’s tormented face:
she felt she could not move till he moved. But
she was beginning to grow numb from her constrained
position, and at times her thoughts were so indistinct
that she seemed to be held there only by a vague weight
of weariness.
A long time passed in this strange
vigil. Harney still lay on the bed, motionless
and with fixed eyes, as though following his vision
to its bitter end. At last he stirred and changed
his attitude slightly, and Charity’s heart began
to tremble. But he only flung out his arms and
sank back into his former position. With a deep
sigh he tossed the hair from his forehead; then his
whole body relaxed, his head turned sideways on the
pillow, and she saw that he had fallen asleep.
The sweet expression came back to his lips, and the
haggardness faded from his face, leaving it as fresh
as a boy’s.
She rose and crept away.