North Dormer’s celebration naturally
included the villages attached to its township, and
the festivities were to radiate over the whole group,
from Dormer and the two Crestons to Hamblin, the lonely
hamlet on the north slope of the Mountain where the
first snow always fell. On the third day there
were speeches and ceremonies at Creston and Creston
River; on the fourth the principal performers were
to be driven in buck-boards to Dormer and Hamblin.
It was on the fourth day that Charity
returned for the first time to the little house.
She had not seen Harney alone since they had parted
at the wood’s edge the night before the celebrations
began. In the interval she had passed through
many moods, but for the moment the terror which had
seized her in the Town Hall had faded to the edge of
consciousness. She had fainted because the hall
was stiflingly hot, and because the speakers had gone
on and on…. Several other people had been affected
by the heat, and had had to leave before the exercises
were over. There had been thunder in the air
all the afternoon, and everyone said afterward that
something ought to have been done to ventilate the
hall….
At the dance that evening—where
she had gone reluctantly, and only because she feared
to stay away, she had sprung back into instant reassurance.
As soon as she entered she had seen Harney waiting
for her, and he had come up with kind gay eyes, and
swept her off in a waltz. Her feet were full
of music, and though her only training had been with
the village youths she had no difficulty in tuning
her steps to his. As they circled about the floor
all her vain fears dropped from her, and she even
forgot that she was probably dancing in Annabel Balch’s
slippers.
When the waltz was over Harney, with
a last hand-clasp, left her to meet Miss Hatchard
and Miss Balch, who were just entering. Charity
had a moment of anguish as Miss Balch appeared; but
it did not last. The triumphant fact of her own
greater beauty, and of Harney’s sense of it,
swept her apprehensions aside. Miss Balch, in
an unbecoming dress, looked sallow and pinched, and
Charity fancied there was a worried expression in
her pale-lashed eyes. She took a seat near Miss
Hatchard and it was presently apparent that she did
not mean to dance. Charity did not dance often
either. Harney explained to her that Miss Hatchard
had begged him to give each of the other girls a turn;
but he went through the form of asking Charity’s
permission each time he led one out, and that gave
her a sense of secret triumph even completer than
when she was whirling about the room with him.
She was thinking of all this as she
waited for him in the deserted house. The late
afternoon was sultry, and she had tossed aside her
hat and stretched herself at full length on the Mexican
blanket because it was cooler indoors than under the
trees. She lay with her arms folded beneath her
head, gazing out at the shaggy shoulder of the Mountain.
The sky behind it was full of the splintered glories
of the descending sun, and before long she expected
to hear Harney’s bicycle-bell in the lane.
He had bicycled to Hamblin, instead of driving there
with his cousin and her friends, so that he might
be able to make his escape earlier and stop on the
way back at the deserted house, which was on the road
to Hamblin. They had smiled together at the joke
of hearing the crowded buck-boards roll by on the
return, while they lay close in their hiding above
the road. Such childish triumphs still gave her
a sense of reckless security.
Nevertheless she had not wholly forgotten
the vision of fear that had opened before her in the
Town Hall. The sense of lastingness was gone
from her and every moment with Harney would now be
ringed with doubt.
The Mountain was turning purple against
a fiery sunset from which it seemed to be divided
by a knife-edge of quivering light; and above this
wall of flame the whole sky was a pure pale green,
like some cold mountain lake in shadow. Charity
lay gazing up at it, and watching for the first white
star….
Her eyes were still fixed on the upper
reaches of the sky when she became aware that a shadow
had flitted across the glory-flooded room: it
must have been Harney passing the window against the
sunset…. She half raised herself, and then
dropped back on her folded arms. The combs had
slipped from her hair, and it trailed in a rough dark
rope across her breast. She lay quite still,
a sleepy smile on her lips, her indolent lids half
shut. There was a fumbling at the padlock and
she called out: “Have you slipped the chain?”
The door opened, and Mr. Royall walked into the room.
She started up, sitting back against
the cushions, and they looked at each other without
speaking. Then Mr. Royall closed the door-latch
and advanced a few steps.
Charity jumped to her feet. “What
have you come for?” she stammered.
The last glare of the sunset was on
her guardian’s face, which looked ash-coloured
in the yellow radiance.
“Because I knew you were here,” he answered
simply.
She had become conscious of the hair
hanging loose across her breast, and it seemed as
though she could not speak to him till she had set
herself in order. She groped for her comb, and
tried to fasten up the coil. Mr. Royall silently
watched her.
“Charity,” he said, “he’ll
be here in a minute. Let me talk to you first.”
“You’ve got no right to
talk to me. I can do what I please.”
“Yes. What is it you mean to do?”
“I needn’t answer that, or anything else.”
He had glanced away, and stood looking
curiously about the illuminated room. Purple
asters and red maple-leaves filled the jar on the table;
on a shelf against the wall stood a lamp, the kettle,
a little pile of cups and saucers. The canvas
chairs were grouped about the table.
“So this is where you meet,” he said.
His tone was quiet and controlled,
and the fact disconcerted her. She had been ready
to give him violence for violence, but this calm acceptance
of things as they were left her without a weapon.
“See here, Charity—you’re
always telling me I’ve got no rights over you.
There might be two ways of looking at that—but
I ain’t going to argue it. All I know is
I raised you as good as I could, and meant fairly
by you always except once, for a bad half-hour.
There’s no justice in weighing that half-hour
against the rest, and you know it. If you hadn’t,
you wouldn’t have gone on living under my roof.
Seems to me the fact of your doing that gives me some
sort of a right; the right to try and keep you out
of trouble. I’m not asking you to consider
any other.”
She listened in silence, and then
gave a slight laugh. “Better wait till
I’m in trouble,” she said. He paused
a moment, as if weighing her words. “Is
that all your answer?”
“Yes, that’s all.”
“Well—I’ll wait.”
He turned away slowly, but as he did
so the thing she had been waiting for happened; the
door opened again and Harney entered.
He stopped short with a face of astonishment,
and then, quickly controlling himself, went up to
Mr. Royall with a frank look.
“Have you come to see me, sir?”
he said coolly, throwing his cap on the table with
an air of proprietorship.
Mr. Royall again looked slowly about
the room; then his eyes turned to the young man.
“Is this your house?” he inquired.
Harney laughed: “Well—as
much as it’s anybody’s. I come here
to sketch occasionally.”
“And to receive Miss Royall’s visits?”
“When she does me the honour——”
“Is this the home you propose to bring her to
when you get married?”
There was an immense and oppressive
silence. Charity, quivering with anger, started
forward, and then stood silent, too humbled for speech.
Harney’s eyes had dropped under the old man’s
gaze; but he raised them presently, and looking steadily
at Mr. Royall, said: “Miss Royall is not
a child. Isn’t it rather absurd to talk
of her as if she were? I believe she considers
herself free to come and go as she pleases, without
any questions from anyone.” He paused and
added: “I’m ready to answer any she
wishes to ask me.”
Mr. Royall turned to her. “Ask
him when he’s going to marry you, then——”
There was another silence, and he laughed in his turn—a
broken laugh, with a scraping sound in it. “You
darsn’t!” he shouted out with sudden passion.
He went close up to Charity, his right arm lifted,
not in menace but in tragic exhortation.
“You darsn’t, and you
know it—and you know why!” He swung
back again upon the young man. “And you
know why you ain’t asked her to marry you, and
why you don’t mean to. It’s because
you hadn’t need to; nor any other man either.
I’m the only one that was fool enough not to
know that; and I guess nobody’ll repeat my mistake—not
in Eagle County, anyhow. They all know what she
is, and what she came from. They all know her
mother was a woman of the town from Nettleton, that
followed one of those Mountain fellows up to his place
and lived there with him like a heathen. I saw
her there sixteen years ago, when I went to bring this
child down. I went to save her from the kind of
life her mother was leading—but I’d
better have left her in the kennel she came from….”
He paused and stared darkly at the two young people,
and out beyond them, at the menacing Mountain with
its rim of fire; then he sat down beside the table
on which they had so often spread their rustic supper,
and covered his face with his hands. Harney leaned
in the window, a frown on his face: he was twirling
between his fingers a small package that dangled from
a loop of string…. Charity heard Mr. Royall
draw a hard breath or two, and his shoulders shook
a little. Presently he stood up and walked across
the room. He did not look again at the young
people: they saw him feel his way to the door
and fumble for the latch; and then he went out into
the darkness.
After he had gone there was a long
silence. Charity waited for Harney to speak;
but he seemed at first not to find anything to say.
At length he broke out irrelevantly: “I
wonder how he found out?”
She made no answer and he tossed down
the package he had been holding, and went up to her.
“I’m so sorry, dear…
that this should have happened….”
She threw her head back proudly.
“I ain’t ever been sorry—not
a minute!”
“No.”
She waited to be caught into his arms,
but he turned away from her irresolutely. The
last glow was gone from behind the Mountain.
Everything in the room had turned grey and indistinct,
and an autumnal dampness crept up from the hollow
below the orchard, laying its cold touch on their
flushed faces. Harney walked the length of the
room, and then turned back and sat down at the table.
“Come,” he said imperiously.
She sat down beside him, and he untied
the string about the package and spread out a pile
of sandwiches.
“I stole them from the love-feast
at Hamblin,” he said with a laugh, pushing them
over to her. She laughed too, and took one, and
began to eat.
“Didn’t you make the tea?”
“No,” she said. “I forgot——”
“Oh, well—it’s
too late to boil the water now.” He said
nothing more, and sitting opposite to each other they
went on silently eating the sandwiches. Darkness
had descended in the little room, and Harney’s
face was a dim blur to Charity. Suddenly he leaned
across the table and laid his hand on hers.
“I shall have to go off for
a while—a month or two, perhaps—to
arrange some things; and then I’ll come back…
and we’ll get married.”
His voice seemed like a stranger’s:
nothing was left in it of the vibrations she knew.
Her hand lay inertly under his, and she left it there,
and raised her head, trying to answer him. But
the words died in her throat. They sat motionless,
in their attitude of confident endearment, as if some
strange death had surprised them. At length Harney
sprang to his feet with a slight shiver. “God!
it’s damp—we couldn’t have
come here much longer.” He went to the shelf,
took down a tin candle-stick and lit the candle; then
he propped an unhinged shutter against the empty window-frame
and put the candle on the table. It threw a queer
shadow on his frowning forehead, and made the smile
on his lips a grimace.
“But it’s been good, though,
hasn’t it, Charity?... What’s the
matter—why do you stand there staring at
me? Haven’t the days here been good?”
He went up to her and caught her to his breast.
“And there’ll be others—lots
of others… jollier… even jollier… won’t
there, darling?”
He turned her head back, feeling for
the curve of her throat below the ear, and kissing
here there, and on the hair and eyes and lips.
She clung to him desperately, and as he drew her to
his knees on the couch she felt as if they were being
sucked down together into some bottomless abyss.