The Lake at last—a sheet
of shining metal brooded over by drooping trees.
Charity and Harney had secured a boat and, getting
away from the wharves and the refreshment-booths,
they drifted idly along, hugging the shadow of the
shore. Where the sun struck the water its shafts
flamed back blindingly at the heat-veiled sky; and
the least shade was black by contrast. The Lake
was so smooth that the reflection of the trees on
its edge seemed enamelled on a solid surface; but gradually,
as the sun declined, the water grew transparent, and
Charity, leaning over, plunged her fascinated gaze
into depths so clear that she saw the inverted tree-tops
interwoven with the green growths of the bottom.
They rounded a point at the farther
end of the Lake, and entering an inlet pushed their
bow against a protruding tree-trunk. A green veil
of willows overhung them. Beyond the trees, wheat-fields
sparkled in the sun; and all along the horizon the
clear hills throbbed with light. Charity leaned
back in the stern, and Harney unshipped the oars and
lay in the bottom of the boat without speaking.
Ever since their meeting at the Creston
pool he had been subject to these brooding silences,
which were as different as possible from the pauses
when they ceased to speak because words were needless.
At such times his face wore the expression she had
seen on it when she had looked in at him from the
darkness and again there came over her a sense of
the mysterious distance between them; but usually his
fits of abstraction were followed by bursts of gaiety
that chased away the shadow before it chilled her.
She was still thinking of the ten
dollars he had handed to the driver of the run-about.
It had given them twenty minutes of pleasure, and it
seemed unimaginable that anyone should be able to buy
amusement at that rate. With ten dollars he might
have bought her an engagement ring; she knew that
Mrs. Tom Fry’s, which came from Springfield,
and had a diamond in it, had cost only eight seventy-five.
But she did not know why the thought had occurred
to her. Harney would never buy her an engagement
ring: they were friends and comrades, but no more.
He had been perfectly fair to her: he had never
said a word to mislead her. She wondered what
the girl was like whose hand was waiting for his ring….
Boats were beginning to thicken on
the Lake and the clang of incessantly arriving trolleys
announced the return of the crowds from the ball-field.
The shadows lengthened across the pearl-grey water
and two white clouds near the sun were turning golden.
On the opposite shore men were hammering hastily at
a wooden scaffolding in a field. Charity asked
what it was for.
“Why, the fireworks. I
suppose there’ll be a big show.” Harney
looked at her and a smile crept into his moody eyes.
“Have you never seen any good fireworks?”
“Miss Hatchard always sends
up lovely rockets on the Fourth,” she answered
doubtfully.
“Oh——”
his contempt was unbounded. “I mean a big
performance like this, illuminated boats, and all
the rest.”
She flushed at the picture. “Do
they send them up from the Lake, too?”
“Rather. Didn’t you
notice that big raft we passed? It’s wonderful
to see the rockets completing their orbits down under
one’s feet.” She said nothing, and
he put the oars into the rowlocks. “If we
stay we’d better go and pick up something to
eat.”
“But how can we get back afterwards?”
she ventured, feeling it would break her heart if
she missed it.
He consulted a time-table, found a
ten o’clock train and reassured her. “The
moon rises so late that it will be dark by eight, and
we’ll have over an hour of it.”
Twilight fell, and lights began to
show along the shore. The trolleys roaring out
from Nettleton became great luminous serpents coiling
in and out among the trees. The wooden eating-houses
at the Lake’s edge danced with lanterns, and
the dusk echoed with laughter and shouts and the clumsy
splashing of oars.
Harney and Charity had found a table
in the corner of a balcony built over the Lake, and
were patiently awaiting an unattainable chowder.
Close under them the water lapped the piles, agitated
by the evolutions of a little white steamboat trellised
with coloured globes which was to run passengers up
and down the Lake. It was already black with them
as it sheered off on its first trip.
Suddenly Charity heard a woman’s
laugh behind her. The sound was familiar, and
she turned to look. A band of showily dressed
girls and dapper young men wearing badges of secret
societies, with new straw hats tilted far back on
their square-clipped hair, had invaded the balcony
and were loudly clamouring for a table. The girl
in the lead was the one who had laughed. She
wore a large hat with a long white feather, and from
under its brim her painted eyes looked at Charity with
amused recognition.
“Say! if this ain’t like
Old Home Week,” she remarked to the girl at her
elbow; and giggles and glances passed between them.
Charity knew at once that the girl with the white
feather was Julia Hawes. She had lost her freshness,
and the paint under her eyes made her face seem thinner;
but her lips had the same lovely curve, and the same
cold mocking smile, as if there were some secret absurdity
in the person she was looking at, and she had instantly
detected it.
Charity flushed to the forehead and
looked away. She felt herself humiliated by Julia’s
sneer, and vexed that the mockery of such a creature
should affect her. She trembled lest Harney should
notice that the noisy troop had recognized her; but
they found no table free, and passed on tumultuously.
Presently there was a soft rush through
the air and a shower of silver fell from the blue
evening sky. In another direction, pale Roman
candles shot up singly through the trees, and a fire-haired
rocket swept the horizon like a portent. Between
these intermittent flashes the velvet curtains of
the darkness were descending, and in the intervals
of eclipse the voices of the crowds seemed to sink
to smothered murmurs.
Charity and Harney, dispossessed by
newcomers, were at length obliged to give up their
table and struggle through the throng about the boat-landings.
For a while there seemed no escape from the tide of
late arrivals; but finally Harney secured the last
two places on the stand from which the more privileged
were to see the fireworks. The seats were at
the end of a row, one above the other. Charity
had taken off her hat to have an uninterrupted view;
and whenever she leaned back to follow the curve of
some dishevelled rocket she could feel Harney’s
knees against her head.
After a while the scattered fireworks
ceased. A longer interval of darkness followed,
and then the whole night broke into flower. From
every point of the horizon, gold and silver arches
sprang up and crossed each other, sky-orchards broke
into blossom, shed their flaming petals and hung their
branches with golden fruit; and all the while the air
was filled with a soft supernatural hum, as though
great birds were building their nests in those invisible
tree-tops.
Now and then there came a lull, and
a wave of moonlight swept the Lake. In a flash
it revealed hundreds of boats, steel-dark against lustrous
ripples; then it withdrew as if with a furling of vast
translucent wings. Charity’s heart throbbed
with delight. It was as if all the latent beauty
of things had been unveiled to her. She could
not imagine that the world held anything more wonderful;
but near her she heard someone say, “You wait
till you see the set piece,” and instantly her
hopes took a fresh flight. At last, just as it
was beginning to seem as though the whole arch of
the sky were one great lid pressed against her dazzled
eye-balls, and striking out of them continuous jets
of jewelled light, the velvet darkness settled down
again, and a murmur of expectation ran through the
crowd.
“Now—now!”
the same voice said excitedly; and Charity, grasping
the hat on her knee, crushed it tight in the effort
to restrain her rapture.
For a moment the night seemed to grow
more impenetrably black; then a great picture stood
out against it like a constellation. It was surmounted
by a golden scroll bearing the inscription, “Washington
crossing the Delaware,” and across a flood of
motionless golden ripples the National Hero passed,
erect, solemn and gigantic, standing with folded arms
in the stern of a slowly moving golden boat.
A long “Oh-h-h” burst
from the spectators: the stand creaked and shook
with their blissful trepidations. “Oh-h-h,”
Charity gasped: she had forgotten where she was,
had at last forgotten even Harney’s nearness.
She seemed to have been caught up into the stars….
The picture vanished and darkness
came down. In the obscurity she felt her head
clasped by two hands: her face was drawn backward,
and Harney’s lips were pressed on hers.
With sudden vehemence he wound his arms about her,
holding her head against his breast while she gave
him back his kisses. An unknown Harney had revealed
himself, a Harney who dominated her and yet over whom
she felt herself possessed of a new mysterious power.
But the crowd was beginning to move,
and he had to release her. “Come,”
he said in a confused voice. He scrambled over
the side of the stand, and holding up his arm caught
her as she sprang to the ground. He passed his
arm about her waist, steadying her against the descending
rush of people; and she clung to him, speechless,
exultant, as if all the crowding and confusion about
them were a mere vain stirring of the air.
“Come,” he repeated, “we
must try to make the trolley.” He drew her
along, and she followed, still in her dream. They
walked as if they were one, so isolated in ecstasy
that the people jostling them on every side seemed
impalpable. But when they reached the terminus
the illuminated trolley was already clanging on its
way, its platforms black with passengers. The
cars waiting behind it were as thickly packed; and
the throng about the terminus was so dense that it
seemed hopeless to struggle for a place.
“Last trip up the Lake,”
a megaphone bellowed from the wharf; and the lights
of the little steam-boat came dancing out of the darkness.
“No use waiting here; shall
we run up the Lake?” Harney suggested.
They pushed their way back to the
edge of the water just as the gang-plank lowered from
the white side of the boat. The electric light
at the end of the wharf flashed full on the descending
passengers, and among them Charity caught sight of
Julia Hawes, her white feather askew, and the face
under it flushed with coarse laughter. As she
stepped from the gang-plank she stopped short, her
dark-ringed eyes darting malice.
“Hullo, Charity Royall!”
she called out; and then, looking back over her shoulder:
“Didn’t I tell you it was a family party?
Here’s grandpa’s little daughter come
to take him home!”
A snigger ran through the group; and
then, towering above them, and steadying himself by
the hand-rail in a desperate effort at erectness,
Mr. Royall stepped stiffly ashore. Like the young
men of the party, he wore a secret society emblem
in the buttonhole of his black frock-coat. His
head was covered by a new Panama hat, and his narrow
black tie, half undone, dangled down on his rumpled
shirt-front. His face, a livid brown, with red
blotches of anger and lips sunken in like an old man’s,
was a lamentable ruin in the searching glare.
He was just behind Julia Hawes, and
had one hand on her arm; but as he left the gang-plank
he freed himself, and moved a step or two away from
his companions. He had seen Charity at once, and
his glance passed slowly from her to Harney, whose
arm was still about her. He stood staring at
them, and trying to master the senile quiver of his
lips; then he drew himself up with the tremulous majesty
of drunkenness, and stretched out his arm.
“You whore—you damn—bare-headed
whore, you!” he enunciated slowly.
There was a scream of tipsy laughter
from the party, and Charity involuntarily put her
hands to her head. She remembered that her hat
had fallen from her lap when she jumped up to leave
the stand; and suddenly she had a vision of herself,
hatless, dishevelled, with a man’s arm about
her, confronting that drunken crew, headed by her guardian’s
pitiable figure. The picture filled her with shame.
She had known since childhood about Mr. Royall’s
“habits”: had seen him, as she went
up to bed, sitting morosely in his office, a bottle
at his elbow; or coming home, heavy and quarrelsome,
from his business expeditions to Hepburn or Springfield;
but the idea of his associating himself publicly with
a band of disreputable girls and bar-room loafers
was new and dreadful to her.
“Oh——”
she said in a gasp of misery; and releasing herself
from Harney’s arm she went straight up to Mr.
Royall.
“You come home with me—you
come right home with me,” she said in a low
stern voice, as if she had not heard his apostrophe;
and one of the girls called out: “Say,
how many fellers does she want?”
There was another laugh, followed
by a pause of curiosity, during which Mr. Royall continued
to glare at Charity. At length his twitching
lips parted. “I said, ‘You—damn—whore!’”
he repeated with precision, steadying himself on Julia’s
shoulder.
Laughs and jeers were beginning to
spring up from the circle of people beyond their group;
and a voice called out from the gangway: “Now,
then, step lively there—all ABOARD!”
The pressure of approaching and departing passengers
forced the actors in the rapid scene apart, and pushed
them back into the throng. Charity found herself
clinging to Harney’s arm and sobbing desperately.
Mr. Royall had disappeared, and in the distance she
heard the receding sound of Julia’s laugh.
The boat, laden to the taffrail, was
puffing away on her last trip.