That night, as usual, they said good-bye
at the wood’s edge.
Harney was to leave the next morning
early. He asked Charity to say nothing of their
plans till his return, and, strangely even to herself,
she was glad of the postponement. A leaden weight
of shame hung on her, benumbing every other sensation,
and she bade him good-bye with hardly a sign of emotion.
His reiterated promises to return seemed almost wounding.
She had no doubt that he intended to come back; her
doubts were far deeper and less definable.
Since the fanciful vision of the future
that had flitted through her imagination at their
first meeting she had hardly ever thought of his marrying
her. She had not had to put the thought from her
mind; it had not been there. If ever she looked
ahead she felt instinctively that the gulf between
them was too deep, and that the bridge their passion
had flung across it was as insubstantial as a rainbow.
But she seldom looked ahead; each day was so rich
that it absorbed her…. Now her first feeling
was that everything would be different, and that she
herself would be a different being to Harney.
Instead of remaining separate and absolute, she would
be compared with other people, and unknown things
would be expected of her. She was too proud to
be afraid, but the freedom of her spirit drooped….
Harney had not fixed any date for
his return; he had said he would have to look about
first, and settle things. He had promised to write
as soon as there was anything definite to say, and
had left her his address, and asked her to write also.
But the address frightened her. It was in New
York, at a club with a long name in Fifth Avenue:
it seemed to raise an insurmountable barrier between
them. Once or twice, in the first days, she got
out a sheet of paper, and sat looking at it, and trying
to think what to say; but she had the feeling that
her letter would never reach its destination.
She had never written to anyone farther away than
Hepburn.
Harney’s first letter came after
he had been gone about ten days. It was tender
but grave, and bore no resemblance to the gay little
notes he had sent her by the freckled boy from Creston
River. He spoke positively of his intention of
coming back, but named no date, and reminded Charity
of their agreement that their plans should not be
divulged till he had had time to “settle things.”
When that would be he could not yet foresee; but she
could count on his returning as soon as the way was
clear.
She read the letter with a strange
sense of its coming from immeasurable distances and
having lost most of its meaning on the way; and in
reply she sent him a coloured postcard of Creston
Falls, on which she wrote: “With love from
Charity.” She felt the pitiful inadequacy
of this, and understood, with a sense of despair,
that in her inability to express herself she must
give him an impression of coldness and reluctance;
but she could not help it. She could not forget
that he had never spoken to her of marriage till Mr.
Royall had forced the word from his lips; though she
had not had the strength to shake off the spell that
bound her to him she had lost all spontaneity of feeling,
and seemed to herself to be passively awaiting a fate
she could not avert.
She had not seen Mr. Royall on her
return to the red house. The morning after her
parting from Harney, when she came down from her room,
Verena told her that her guardian had gone off to
Worcester and Portland. It was the time of year
when he usually reported to the insurance agencies
he represented, and there was nothing unusual in his
departure except its suddenness. She thought
little about him, except to be glad he was not there….
She kept to herself for the first
days, while North Dormer was recovering from its brief
plunge into publicity, and the subsiding agitation
left her unnoticed. But the faithful Ally could
not be long avoided. For the first few days after
the close of the Old Home Week festivities Charity
escaped her by roaming the hills all day when she
was not at her post in the library; but after that
a period of rain set in, and one pouring afternoon,
Ally, sure that she would find her friend indoors,
came around to the red house with her sewing.
The two girls sat upstairs in Charity’s
room. Charity, her idle hands in her lap, was
sunk in a kind of leaden dream, through which she was
only half-conscious of Ally, who sat opposite her
in a low rush-bottomed chair, her work pinned to her
knee, and her thin lips pursed up as she bent above
it.
“It was my idea running a ribbon
through the gauging,” she said proudly, drawing
back to contemplate the blouse she was trimming.
“It’s for Miss Balch: she was awfully
pleased.” She paused and then added, with
a queer tremor in her piping voice: “I
darsn’t have told her I got the idea from one
I saw on Julia.”
Charity raised her eyes listlessly.
“Do you still see Julia sometimes?”
Ally reddened, as if the allusion
had escaped her unintentionally. “Oh, it
was a long time ago I seen her with those gaugings….”
Silence fell again, and Ally presently
continued: “Miss Balch left me a whole
lot of things to do over this time.”
“Why—has she gone?”
Charity inquired with an inner start of apprehension.
“Didn’t you know?
She went off the morning after they had the celebration
at Hamblin. I seen her drive by early with Mr.
Harney.”
There was another silence, measured
by the steady tick of the rain against the window,
and, at intervals, by the snipping sound of Ally’s
scissors.
Ally gave a meditative laugh.
“Do you know what she told me before she went
away? She told me she was going to send for me
to come over to Springfield and make some things for
her wedding.”
Charity again lifted her heavy lids
and stared at Ally’s pale pointed face, which
moved to and fro above her moving fingers.
“Is she going to get married?”
Ally let the blouse sink to her knee,
and sat gazing at it. Her lips seemed suddenly
dry, and she moistened them a little with her tongue.
“Why, I presume so… from what
she said…. Didn’t you know?”
“Why should I know?”
Ally did not answer. She bent
above the blouse, and began picking out a basting
thread with the point of the scissors.
“Why should I know?” Charity repeated
harshly.
“I didn’t know but what… folks here
say she’s engaged to Mr. Harney.”
Charity stood up with a laugh, and
stretched her arms lazily above her head.
“If all the people got married
that folks say are going to you’d have your
time full making wedding-dresses,” she said ironically.
“Why—don’t you believe it?”
Ally ventured.
“It would not make it true if I did—nor
prevent it if I didn’t.”
“That’s so…. I
only know I seen her crying the night of the party
because her dress didn’t set right. That
was why she wouldn’t dance any….”
Charity stood absently gazing down
at the lacy garment on Ally’s knee. Abruptly
she stooped and snatched it up.
“Well, I guess she won’t
dance in this either,” she said with sudden
violence; and grasping the blouse in her strong young
hands she tore it in two and flung the tattered bits
to the floor.
“Oh, Charity——”
Ally cried, springing up. For a long interval
the two girls faced each other across the ruined garment.
Ally burst into tears.
“Oh, what’ll I say to
her? What’ll I do? It was real lace!”
she wailed between her piping sobs.
Charity glared at her unrelentingly.
“You’d oughtn’t to have brought it
here,” she said, breathing quickly. “I
hate other people’s clothes—it’s
just as if they was there themselves.” The
two stared at each other again over this avowal, till
Charity brought out, in a gasp of anguish: “Oh,
go—go—go—or I’ll
hate you too….”
When Ally left her, she fell sobbing across her bed.
The long storm was followed by a north-west
gale, and when it was over, the hills took on their
first umber tints, the sky grew more densely blue,
and the big white clouds lay against the hills like
snow-banks. The first crisp maple-leaves began
to spin across Miss Hatchard’s lawn, and the
Virginia creeper on the Memorial splashed the white
porch with scarlet. It was a golden triumphant
September. Day by day the flame of the Virginia
creeper spread to the hillsides in wider waves of carmine
and crimson, the larches glowed like the thin yellow
halo about a fire, the maples blazed and smouldered,
and the black hemlocks turned to indigo against the
incandescence of the forest.
The nights were cold, with a dry glitter
of stars so high up that they seemed smaller and more
vivid. Sometimes, as Charity lay sleepless on
her bed through the long hours, she felt as though
she were bound to those wheeling fires and swinging
with them around the great black vault. At night
she planned many things… it was then she wrote to
Harney. But the letters were never put on paper,
for she did not know how to express what she wanted
to tell him. So she waited. Since her talk
with Ally she had felt sure that Harney was engaged
to Annabel Balch, and that the process of “settling
things” would involve the breaking of this tie.
Her first rage of jealousy over, she felt no fear
on this score. She was still sure that Harney
would come back, and she was equally sure that, for
the moment at least, it was she whom he loved and
not Miss Balch. Yet the girl, no less, remained
a rival, since she represented all the things that
Charity felt herself most incapable of understanding
or achieving. Annabel Balch was, if not the girl
Harney ought to marry, at least the kind of girl it
would be natural for him to marry. Charity had
never been able to picture herself as his wife; had
never been able to arrest the vision and follow it
out in its daily consequences; but she could perfectly
imagine Annabel Balch in that relation to him.
The more she thought of these things
the more the sense of fatality weighed on her:
she felt the uselessness of struggling against the
circumstances. She had never known how to adapt
herself; she could only break and tear and destroy.
The scene with Ally had left her stricken with shame
at her own childish savagery. What would Harney
have thought if he had witnessed it? But when
she turned the incident over in her puzzled mind she
could not imagine what a civilized person would have
done in her place. She felt herself too unequally
pitted against unknown forces….
At length this feeling moved her to
sudden action. She took a sheet of letter paper
from Mr. Royall’s office, and sitting by the
kitchen lamp, one night after Verena had gone to bed,
began her first letter to Harney. It was very
short:
I want you should marry Annabel Balch
if you promised to. I think maybe you were afraid
I’d feel too bad about it. I feel I’d
rather you acted right. Your loving Charity.
She posted the letter early the next
morning, and for a few days her heart felt strangely
light. Then she began to wonder why she received
no answer.
One day as she sat alone in the library
pondering these things the walls of books began to
spin around her, and the rosewood desk to rock under
her elbows. The dizziness was followed by a wave
of nausea like that she had felt on the day of the
exercises in the Town Hall. But the Town Hall
had been crowded and stiflingly hot, and the library
was empty, and so chilly that she had kept on her
jacket. Five minutes before she had felt perfectly
well; and now it seemed as if she were going to die.
The bit of lace at which she still languidly worked
dropped from her fingers, and the steel crochet hook
clattered to the floor. She pressed her temples
hard between her damp hands, steadying herself against
the desk while the wave of sickness swept over her.
Little by little it subsided, and after a few minutes
she stood up, shaken and terrified, groped for her
hat, and stumbled out into the air. But the whole
sunlit autumn whirled, reeled and roared around her
as she dragged herself along the interminable length
of the road home.
As she approached the red house she
saw a buggy standing at the door, and her heart gave
a leap. But it was only Mr. Royall who got out,
his travelling-bag in hand. He saw her coming,
and waited in the porch. She was conscious that
he was looking at her intently, as if there was something
strange in her appearance, and she threw back her head
with a desperate effort at ease. Their eyes met,
and she said: “You back?” as if nothing
had happened, and he answered: “Yes, I’m
back,” and walked in ahead of her, pushing open
the door of his office. She climbed to her room,
every step of the stairs holding her fast as if her
feet were lined with glue.
Two days later, she descended from
the train at Nettleton, and walked out of the station
into the dusty square. The brief interval of cold
weather was over, and the day was as soft, and almost
as hot, as when she and Harney had emerged on the
same scene on the Fourth of July. In the square
the same broken-down hacks and carry-alls stood drawn
up in a despondent line, and the lank horses with
fly-nets over their withers swayed their heads drearily
to and fro. She recognized the staring signs
over the eating-houses and billiard saloons, and the
long lines of wires on lofty poles tapering down the
main street to the park at its other end. Taking
the way the wires pointed, she went on hastily, with
bent head, till she reached a wide transverse street
with a brick building at the corner. She crossed
this street and glanced furtively up at the front
of the brick building; then she returned, and entered
a door opening on a flight of steep brass-rimmed stairs.
On the second landing she rang a bell, and a mulatto
girl with a bushy head and a frilled apron let her
into a hall where a stuffed fox on his hind legs proffered
a brass card-tray to visitors. At the back of
the hall was a glazed door marked: “Office.”
After waiting a few minutes in a handsomely furnished
room, with plush sofas surmounted by large gold-framed
photographs of showy young women, Charity was shown
into the office….
When she came out of the glazed door
Dr. Merkle followed, and led her into another room,
smaller, and still more crowded with plush and gold
frames. Dr. Merkle was a plump woman with small
bright eyes, an immense mass of black hair coming
down low on her forehead, and unnaturally white and
even teeth. She wore a rich black dress, with
gold chains and charms hanging from her bosom.
Her hands were large and smooth, and quick in all
their movements; and she smelt of musk and carbolic
acid.
She smiled on Charity with all her
faultless teeth. “Sit down, my dear.
Wouldn’t you like a little drop of something
to pick you up?... No…. Well, just lay
back a minute then…. There’s nothing to
be done just yet; but in about a month, if you’ll
step round again… I could take you right into
my own house for two or three days, and there wouldn’t
be a mite of trouble. Mercy me! The next
time you’ll know better’n to fret like
this….”
Charity gazed at her with widening
eyes. This woman with the false hair, the false
teeth, the false murderous smile—what was
she offering her but immunity from some unthinkable
crime? Charity, till then, had been conscious
only of a vague self-disgust and a frightening physical
distress; now, of a sudden, there came to her the grave
surprise of motherhood. She had come to this
dreadful place because she knew of no other way of
making sure that she was not mistaken about her state;
and the woman had taken her for a miserable creature
like Julia…. The thought was so horrible that
she sprang up, white and shaking, one of her great
rushes of anger sweeping over her.
Dr. Merkle, still smiling, also rose.
“Why do you run off in such a hurry? You
can stretch out right here on my sofa….”
She paused, and her smile grew more motherly.
“Afterwards—if there’s been
any talk at home, and you want to get away for a while…
I have a lady friend in Boston who’s looking
for a companion… you’re the very one to suit
her, my dear….”
Charity had reached the door.
“I don’t want to stay. I don’t
want to come back here,” she stammered, her
hand on the knob; but with a swift movement, Dr. Merkle
edged her from the threshold.
“Oh, very well. Five dollars, please.”
Charity looked helplessly at the doctor’s
tight lips and rigid face. Her last savings had
gone in repaying Ally for the cost of Miss Balch’s
ruined blouse, and she had had to borrow four dollars
from her friend to pay for her railway ticket and
cover the doctor’s fee. It had never occurred
to her that medical advice could cost more than two
dollars.
“I didn’t know…
I haven’t got that much…” she faltered,
bursting into tears.
Dr. Merkle gave a short laugh which
did not show her teeth, and inquired with concision
if Charity supposed she ran the establishment for her
own amusement? She leaned her firm shoulders
against the door as she spoke, like a grim gaoler
making terms with her captive.
“You say you’ll come round
and settle later? I’ve heard that pretty
often too. Give me your address, and if you can’t
pay me I’ll send the bill to your folks….
What? I can’t understand what you say….
That don’t suit you either? My, you’re
pretty particular for a girl that ain’t got
enough to settle her own bills….” She
paused, and fixed her eyes on the brooch with a blue
stone that Charity had pinned to her blouse.
“Ain’t you ashamed to
talk that way to a lady that’s got to earn her
living, when you go about with jewellery like that
on you?... It ain’t in my line, and I do
it only as a favour… but if you’re a mind to
leave that brooch as a pledge, I don’t say no….
Yes, of course, you can get it back when you bring
me my money….”
On the way home, she felt an immense
and unexpected quietude. It had been horrible
to have to leave Harney’s gift in the woman’s
hands, but even at that price the news she brought
away had not been too dearly bought. She sat
with half-closed eyes as the train rushed through the
familiar landscape; and now the memories of her former
journey, instead of flying before her like dead leaves,
seemed to be ripening in her blood like sleeping grain.
She would never again know what it was to feel herself
alone. Everything seemed to have grown suddenly
clear and simple. She no longer had any difficulty
in picturing herself as Harney’s wife now that
she was the mother of his child; and compared to her
sovereign right Annabel Balch’s claim seemed
no more than a girl’s sentimental fancy.
That evening, at the gate of the red
house, she found Ally waiting in the dusk. “I
was down at the post-office just as they were closing
up, and Will Targatt said there was a letter for you,
so I brought it.”
Ally held out the letter, looking
at Charity with piercing sympathy. Since the
scene of the torn blouse there had been a new and fearful
admiration in the eyes she bent on her friend.
Charity snatched the letter with a
laugh. “Oh, thank you—good-night,”
she called out over her shoulder as she ran up the
path. If she had lingered a moment she knew she
would have had Ally at her heels.
She hurried upstairs and felt her
way into her dark room. Her hands trembled as
she groped for the matches and lit her candle, and
the flap of the envelope was so closely stuck that
she had to find her scissors and slit it open.
At length she read:
DEAR CHARITY:
I have your letter, and it touches
me more than I can say. Won’t you trust
me, in return, to do my best? There are things
it is hard to explain, much less to justify; but your
generosity makes everything easier. All I can
do now is to thank you from my soul for understanding.
Your telling me that you wanted me to do right has
helped me beyond expression. If ever there is
a hope of realizing what we dreamed of you will see
me back on the instant; and I haven’t yet lost
that hope.
She read the letter with a rush; then
she went over and over it, each time more slowly and
painstakingly. It was so beautifully expressed
that she found it almost as difficult to understand
as the gentleman’s explanation of the Bible
pictures at Nettleton; but gradually she became aware
that the gist of its meaning lay in the last few words.
“If ever there is a hope of realizing what we
dreamed of…”
But then he wasn’t even sure
of that? She understood now that every word and
every reticence was an avowal of Annabel Balch’s
prior claim. It was true that he was engaged
to her, and that he had not yet found a way of breaking
his engagement.
As she read the letter over Charity
understood what it must have cost him to write it.
He was not trying to evade an importunate claim; he
was honestly and contritely struggling between opposing
duties. She did not even reproach him in her
thoughts for having concealed from her that he was
not free: she could not see anything more reprehensible
in his conduct than in her own. From the first
she had needed him more than he had wanted her, and
the power that had swept them together had been as
far beyond resistance as a great gale loosening the
leaves of the forest…. Only, there stood between
them, fixed and upright in the general upheaval, the
indestructible figure of Annabel Balch….
Face to face with his admission of
the fact, she sat staring at the letter. A cold
tremor ran over her, and the hard sobs struggled up
into her throat and shook her from head to foot.
For a while she was caught and tossed on great waves
of anguish that left her hardly conscious of anything
but the blind struggle against their assaults.
Then, little by little, she began to relive, with
a dreadful poignancy, each separate stage of her poor
romance. Foolish things she had said came back
to her, gay answers Harney had made, his first kiss
in the darkness between the fireworks, their choosing
the blue brooch together, the way he had teased her
about the letters she had dropped in her flight from
the evangelist. All these memories, and a thousand
others, hummed through her brain till his nearness
grew so vivid that she felt his fingers in her hair,
and his warm breath on her cheek as he bent her head
back like a flower. These things were hers; they
had passed into her blood, and become a part of her,
they were building the child in her womb; it was impossible
to tear asunder strands of life so interwoven.
The conviction gradually strengthened
her, and she began to form in her mind the first words
of the letter she meant to write to Harney. She
wanted to write it at once, and with feverish hands
she began to rummage in her drawer for a sheet of
letter paper. But there was none left; she must
go downstairs to get it. She had a superstitious
feeling that the letter must be written on the instant,
that setting down her secret in words would bring
her reassurance and safety; and taking up her candle
she went down to Mr. Royall’s office.
At that hour she was not likely to
find him there: he had probably had his supper
and walked over to Carrick Fry’s. She pushed
open the door of the unlit room, and the light of
her lifted candle fell on his figure, seated in the
darkness in his high-backed chair. His arms lay
along the arms of the chair, and his head was bent
a little; but he lifted it quickly as Charity entered.
She started back as their eyes met, remembering that
her own were red with weeping, and that her face was
livid with the fatigue and emotion of her journey.
But it was too late to escape, and she stood and looked
at him in silence.
He had risen from his chair, and came
toward her with outstretched hands. The gesture
was so unexpected that she let him take her hands in
his and they stood thus, without speaking, till Mr.
Royall said gravely: “Charity—was
you looking for me?”
She freed herself abruptly and fell
back. “Me? No——”
She set down the candle on his desk. “I
wanted some letter-paper, that’s all.”
His face contracted, and the bushy brows jutted forward
over his eyes. Without answering he opened the
drawer of the desk, took out a sheet of paper and
an envelope, and pushed them toward her. “Do
you want a stamp too?” he asked.
She nodded, and he gave her the stamp.
As he did so she felt that he was looking at her intently,
and she knew that the candle light flickering up on
her white face must be distorting her swollen features
and exaggerating the dark rings about her eyes.
She snatched up the paper, her reassurance dissolving
under his pitiless gaze, in which she seemed to read
the grim perception of her state, and the ironic recollection
of the day when, in that very room, he had offered
to compel Harney to marry her. His look seemed
to say that he knew she had taken the paper to write
to her lover, who had left her as he had warned her
she would be left. She remembered the scorn with
which she had turned from him that day, and knew,
if he guessed the truth, what a list of old scores
it must settle. She turned and fled upstairs;
but when she got back to her room all the words that
had been waiting had vanished….
If she could have gone to Harney it
would have been different; she would only have had
to show herself to let his memories speak for her.
But she had no money left, and there was no one from
whom she could have borrowed enough for such a journey.
There was nothing to do but to write, and await his
reply. For a long time she sat bent above the
blank page; but she found nothing to say that really
expressed what she was feeling….
Harney had written that she had made
it easier for him, and she was glad it was so; she
did not want to make things hard. She knew she
had it in her power to do that; she held his fate
in her hands. All she had to do was to tell him
the truth; but that was the very fact that held her
back…. Her five minutes face to face with Mr.
Royall had stripped her of her last illusion, and
brought her back to North Dormer’s point of
view. Distinctly and pitilessly there rose before
her the fate of the girl who was married “to
make things right.” She had seen too many
village love-stories end in that way. Poor Rose
Coles’s miserable marriage was of the number;
and what good had come of it for her or for Halston
Skeff? They had hated each other from the day
the minister married them; and whenever old Mrs. Skeff
had a fancy to humiliate her daughter-in-law she had
only to say: “Who’d ever think the
baby’s only two? And for a seven months’
child—ain’t it a wonder what a size
he is?” North Dormer had treasures of indulgence
for brands in the burning, but only derision for those
who succeeded in getting snatched from it; and Charity
had always understood Julia Hawes’s refusal to
be snatched….
Only—was there no alternative
but Julia’s? Her soul recoiled from the
vision of the white-faced woman among the plush sofas
and gilt frames. In the established order of
things as she knew them she saw no place for her individual
adventure….
She sat in her chair without undressing
till faint grey streaks began to divide the black
slats of the shutters. Then she stood up and pushed
them open, letting in the light. The coming of
a new day brought a sharper consciousness of ineluctable
reality, and with it a sense of the need of action.
She looked at herself in the glass, and saw her face,
white in the autumn dawn, with pinched cheeks and dark-ringed
eyes, and all the marks of her state that she herself
would never have noticed, but that Dr. Merkle’s
diagnosis had made plain to her. She could not
hope that those signs would escape the watchful village;
even before her figure lost its shape she knew her
face would betray her.
Leaning from her window she looked
out on the dark and empty scene; the ashen houses
with shuttered windows, the grey road climbing the
slope to the hemlock belt above the cemetery, and
the heavy mass of the Mountain black against a rainy
sky. To the east a space of light was broadening
above the forest; but over that also the clouds hung.
Slowly her gaze travelled across the fields to the
rugged curve of the hills. She had looked out
so often on that lifeless circle, and wondered if anything
could ever happen to anyone who was enclosed in it….
Almost without conscious thought her
decision had been reached; as her eyes had followed
the circle of the hills her mind had also travelled
the old round. She supposed it was something in
her blood that made the Mountain the only answer to
her questioning, the inevitable escape from all that
hemmed her in and beset her. At any rate it began
to loom against the rainy dawn; and the longer she
looked at it the more clearly she understood that
now at last she was really going there.