I attended Blanche Montgomery through
her slow convalescence, and had many opportunities
for observing her and her mother closely. The
more intimately I knew them the higher did they rise
in my estimation. A purer, sweeter, truer-hearted
girl than Blanche I had never seen. There was
an artlessness and innocence about her but rarely
met with in young ladies of her age. Especially
was she free from that worldliness and levity which
so often mars young maidenhood. Her mind was
well stored and cultivated, and she was beginning
to use her mental treasures in a way that interested
you, and made you listen with pleased attention when
she spoke on even common-place subjects. Her
manners had in them a grace and dignity that was very
attractive. As she advanced towards health her
deportment took on an easy, confiding air, as if she
looked upon me as a true friend. Her smile, whenever
I appeared, broke over her gentle face like a gleam
of sunshine.
Mrs. Montgomery’s manner towards
me was distinguished by the same frankness that marked
her daughter’s deportment. The stately air
that struck me in the beginning I no longer observed.
If it existed, my eyes saw it differently. At
her request, when her mind was sufficiently at ease
about her daughter to busy itself with the common
affairs of life, I brought Judge Bigelow to see her,
and she placed her business matters in his hands.
The judge was very much struck with her person and
manner, and told me the day after his first meeting
with her that she came nearer to his ideal of a lady
than any woman he had ever met; and as for the daughter
she seemed more like a picture he had once seen than
a piece of real flesh and blood. I smiled at
the Judge’s enthusiasm, but did not wonder at
the impression he had received.
Other characters in our story now
claim attention, and we must turn to them. After
Henry Wallingford had gained the mastery over himself:—the
struggle was wild, but brief—he resumed
his office duties as usual, and few noticed any change
in him, except that he withdrew even more than ever
into himself. I met him occasionally, and observed
him closely. In my eyes there was a marked difference
in the aspect of his face. It had an expression
of patient suffering at times—and again
I saw in it a most touching sadness.
The dashing nephew of Judge Bigelow
offered himself to Squire Floyd’s daughter in
about a week after her rejection of Wallingford’s
suit, and was accepted. I became immediately cognizant
of the fact through my wife, who had the news from
Delia’s aunt, Mrs. Dean. A day or two afterwards
I met her in company with young Dewey, and observed
her closely. Alas! In my eyes the work of
moral retrocession had already begun. She was
gay and chatty, and her countenance fresh and blooming.
But I missed something—something the absence
of which awakened a sigh of regret. Ralph was
very lover-like in his deportment, fluttering about
Delia, complimenting her, and showing her many obtrusive
attentions. But eyes that were in the habit of
looking below the surface of things, saw no heart in
it all.
Squire Floyd was delighted with his
daughter’s fine prospects; and he and Judge
Bigelow drew their heads together over the affair in
a cosy and confidential way very pleasant to both
of them. The Judge was eloquent touching his
nephew’s fine qualities and splendid prospects;
and congratulated the Squire, time and again, on his
daughter’s fortunate matrimonial speculation.
He used the word which was significative beyond any
thing that entered his imagination.
A few days after the engagement Ralph
Dewey returned to New York. The wedding-day had
not been fixed; but the marriage, as understood by
all parties, was to take place some time during the
next winter.
From that time I noticed a change
in Delia. She grew silent in company, and had
an absent way about her that contrasted strongly with
her former social disposition. Young people rallied
her in the usual style about her heart being absent
with the beloved one, but I read the signs differently.
It could not but follow, that a soul, endowed like
hers, would have misgivings in view of an alliance
with one like Ralph Dewey. What was there in
him to satisfy a true woman’s yearnings for
conjunction with a kindred nature? Nothing!
He was all outside as to good. A mere selfish,
superficial, speculating man of the world. While
she had a heart capable of the deepest and truest
affection. Would he make the fitting complement
to her life? Alas! No! That were a
thing impossible.
During the few months that preceded
this marriage, I often heard its promise discussed
by my wife and Mrs. Dean, neither of whom had any
strong liking for the young New York merchant.
“It’s my opinion,”
said Mrs. Dean, as she sat with my wife one evening,
about two months after the engagement had taken place,
“that Ralph has more froth than substance about
him. He really talks, sometimes, as if he had
the world in a sling and could toss it up among the
stars. As far as my observation goes, such people
flourish only for a season.”
“If Delia were a child of mine,”
said my good Constance, in her earnest way, “I
would a thousand times rather trust her with Henry
Wallingford than with Ralph Dewey.”
“Yes, and a thousand millions
of times,” responded Mrs. Dean. “He
is a man. You know just what he is, and where
he is. But, as for this splashing nephew of Judge
Bigelow’s—who knows what’s below
the surface? Delia’s father is all taken
up with him, and thinks the match a splendid one.
Sister don’t say much; but I can see that she
has her misgivings. I can talk to you freely,
you know.”
“I don’t think,”
said I, “that Delia has grown more cheerful since
her engagement. Brides expectant ought to feel
as happy as the day is long.”
“More cheerful? Oh, dear,
no! She isn’t the same that she was at
all; but mopes about more than half of her time.
It’s just my opinion—spoken between
friends—that she cares, now, a great deal
more for Henry than she does for Ralph.”
“Do they ever meet?” I inquired.
“Not very often.”
“They have met?”
“Yes, several times.”
“Have you seen them together?”
“Oh, yes.”
“How does she act towards him?”
“Not always the same. Sometimes
she is talkative, and sometimes reserved—sometimes
as gay as a lark, and sometimes sober enough; as if
there were such a weight on her spirits, that she could
not smile without an effort.”
“Does the fact of his presence
make any change in her?” I inquired. “What
I mean is, if she were lively in spirits before he
came in, would she grow serious—or if serious,
grow excited?”
“Oh, yes, it always makes a
change. I’ve known her, after being very
quiet, and hardly having any thing to say, though in
the midst of young company, grow all at once as merry
as a cricket, and laugh and joke in a wild sort of
way. And again, when she has been in one of her
old, pleasant states of mind I have noticed that she
all at once drew back into herself; I could trace
the cause to only this—the presence of
Henry Wallingford. But this doesn’t often
happen, for he rarely shows himself in company.”
“Is there anything noticeable
about Henry when they meet?” I asked.
“Not to an ordinary observer,”
replied Mrs. Dean. “But I look with sharper
eyes than most people. Yes, there is something
noticeable. He always puts himself in her way,
but with a kind of forced, resolute manner, as if
the act were a trial of strength, and involved a stern
heart-discipline. And this I think, is just the
real state of the case. He has deliberately and
resolutely entered upon the work of unwinding from
his heart the cord which love his thrown around it
in so many intertwisted folds. So I read him.
To break it by sudden force, would leave so many unwound
portions behind, that the memory of her might sadden
the whole of his after-life. And so he is learning
to grow indifferent towards her. To search in
her for such things as repel, instead of for those
that charm the heart.”
“A dangerous experiment,”
said my wife, “for one who has loved so deeply.”
“It would be to most men,”
I remarked. “But there is stuff about Henry—the
stuff that strong, persistent, successful men are made
of. If he has begun this work, he will complete
it certainly.”
A few weeks afterwards, I had an opportunity
of seeing them together, and I improved it to observe
them closely. It was in a mixed company at the
house of Judge Bigelow. Wallingford came in rather
late. I was conversing with Delia when he entered
the room, and we were at an interesting point in the
subject under consideration. I noticed, all at
once, a hesitation and confusion of thought, as her
eyes rested, with a sudden interest, on some object
in the room. Glancing around, I saw the young
man. We went on with our conversation, Delia
rallying herself, as I could see, with an effort.
But she talked no longer from thought, only from memory—uttering
mere truisms and common-places. She put on more
animation, and affected a deeper interest; but I was
not deceived.
We were still in conversation, when
Wallingford joined us. I saw him fix his eyes,
as they met, searchingly upon her face, and saw her
eyes droop away from his. He was fully self-possessed;
she not at ease. His mind was clear; hers in
some confusion. I remained some time near them,
listening to their conversation, and joining in occasionally.
Never before had I seen him appear so well, nor her
to such poor advantage. She tried to act a part—he
was himself. I noticed, as he led the conversation,
that he kept away from the esthetic, and held her
thought in the region of moral causes; that he dwelt
on the ends and purposes of life, as involving everything.
Now and then she essayed a feeble argument, or met
some of his propositions with light banter. But
with a word he obliterated the sophism—and
with a glance repressed the badinage. I think
she could never before have so felt the superiority
of this man, whose pure love—almost worship—she
had put aside as a thing of light importance; and
I think the interview helped him in the work upon
which he had entered, that of obliterating from his
heart all traces of her image.
After this interview, they did not
draw together again during the evening. Delia
tried to be gay and indifferent; but he acted himself
out just as he was. I did not observe that he
was more social than usual, or that he mingled more
than was his wont with the young ladies present.
For most of the time, he kept, as was usual with him,
in company and in conversation with his own sex.
I could not but pity Delia Floyd.
It was plain to me that she was waking up to the sad
error she had committed—an error, the consequences
of which would go with her through life. Very,
very far was she from being indifferent to Wallingford—that
I could plainly see.
During the winter, Ralph came up frequently
from New York to visit his bride to be. As he
was the nephew of Judge Bigelow, he and Wallingford
were, as a thing of course, thrown often together during
these visits. It can hardly excite wonder, that
Wallingford maintained a reserved and distant demeanor
towards the young man, steadily repelling all familiarity,
yet always treating him with such politeness and respect
that no cause of offence could appear. On the
part of Dewey, it may be said that he saw little in
the grave plodder among dusty law books and discolored
parchments, that won upon his regard. He looked
upon him as a young man good enough in his way—a
very small way, in his estimation—good enough
for S——, and small enough for a
country town lawyer. He would have put on towards
him a patronizing air, and tried to excite in his mind
a nobler ambition than to move in our circumscribed
sphere, if something in the young man’s steady,
penetrating, half-mysterious eye had not always held
him back:
“I never can talk with that
young associate or yours, uncle,” he would say,
now and then, to Judge Bigelow, “and I can’t
just make him out. Is he stupid, or queer?”
The Judge would smile, or laugh quietly
to himself, or perhaps answer in this wise:
“I think Henry understands himself.
Still waters, you know, run deep.”
One day in February, on the occasion
of a periodical visit to S——, young
Dewey called in at Judge Bigelow’s office, and
finding Wallingford alone, sat down and entered into
as familiar a talk with him as was possible, considering
how little they had in common. Ralph had a purpose
in view, and as soon as he saw, or thought he saw,
Wallingford’s mind in the right mood, said—
“I am going to ask a particular
favor, and you must not refuse.”
“If I can serve you in any thing,
it will be my pleasure to do so,” was the ready
answer.
“You know that I am to be married next month?”
“So I have heard,” replied Wallingford.
“You will stand my groomsman? Don’t
say no!”
He had seen an instant negative in the young man’s
face.
“Almost any thing else, but
not that!” replied Henry, speaking with some
feeling. He was thrown off his guard by so unexpected
a request.
“Come now, my good friend, don’t
take the matter so much to heart!” said Dewey,
in a light way. “Plenty of good fish in
the sea yet—as good as ever were caught.
You must forgive the girl for liking me the best.”
“You jest on a grave subject,”
said Wallingford, his face growing pale, but his eyes,
a little dilated, riveting his companion’s where
he stood.
“No, I am in earnest,”
said Dewey, with something in his manner that was
offensive.
“Jest or earnest, your familiarity
is out of place with me,” retorted Wallingford,
with a sternness of manner, that quickened the flow
of bad blood in Dewey’s heart.
“Oh, you needn’t take
on airs!” replied the other with a sneer of
contempt. Then muttering to himself, yet loud
enough to be heard,—“I didn’t
suppose the puppy would growl at a familiar pat on
the head.”
This was too much for Wallingford.
At another time, he might have borne it with a manly
self-possession. But only an hour before he had
met Miss Floyd in the street, and the look she then
gave him had stirred his heart, and left a tinge of
shadowy regret on his feelings. He was, therefore,
in no mood to bear trifling, much less insult.
Scarcely had the offensive words passed Dewey’s
lips, when a blow in the face staggered him back against
the wall. Instantly recovering himself, he sprang
towards Wallingford in blind rage, and struck at him
with a savage energy; but the latter stepped aside,
and let his assailant come, with stunning force, against
the wall at the other side of the office, when he
fell to the floor.
At this instant, Judge Bigelow came in.
“Henry! Ralph!” he exclaimed—”
what is the meaning of this?”
“Your nephew insulted me, and
in the heat of anger I struck him in the face.
In attempting to return that blow, he missed his aim,
and fell against the wall, as you see.”
Wallingford spoke without excitement,
but in a stern, resolute way. By this time, Dewey
was on his feet again. The sight of his uncle,
and the unflinching aspect of the person he had ventured
to insult, had the effect to cool off his excitement
many degrees.
“What is the meaning of this,
young men?” sternly repeated Judge Bigelow,
looking from one to the other.
“I have answered your question
as far as I am concerned,” replied Henry.
“Ralph! Speak! Did you offer him an
insult?”
To this demand, the nephew replied,
with no abatement of his originally offensive manner—
“If he chooses to consider my
words as an insult, let him do so. I shall in
no case take them back.”
“What did you say?”
There was an imperative force in the Judge’s
manner.
Dewey was silent.
“What did he say,”—Judge
Bigelow turned to Wallingford, “that you should
answer it with a blow?”
“If he is satisfied with the
answer,” replied the latter, “the case
can rest where it is. If not, I am ready to meet
him on any appeal. I He will find me no trifler.”
The Judge turned again to his nephew.
“Ralph! I insist upon having
this matter explained. I know Henry too well
to believe that he would strike you, unless there had
been strong provocation.”
“Perhaps he regarded it as such;
I did not,” said Dewey.
“If he is satisfied with his
chastisement, there is no occasion to press him farther,
Judge.” Wallingford was provoked to this
by the young man’s cool impertinence.
Dewey made a movement as if about
to rush upon Wallingford, but the Judge interposed
his body to keep them apart. The appearance of
a fourth party at this juncture, in the person of
Squire Floyd, the prospective father-in-law of one
of the belligerents, changed materially the aspect
of affairs.
“Good-morning, Squire,”
said Wallingford, with a quickly assumed cheerfulness
of manner, smiling in his usual grave way.
Both the Judge and his nephew saw
reason to imitate the example of Wallingford, and
thus throw up a blind before the eyes of Squire Floyd,
who thought he perceived something wrong as he came
in, but was afterwards inclined to doubt the evidence
of his senses.
Wallingford retired in a few moments.
When he came back to the office an hour afterwards,
he found a note of apology on his table, accompanied
by a request that so unpleasant an incident as the
one which had just occurred, might be suffered to
pass into oblivion. No acknowledgment of this
communication was made by the young lawyer. He
felt the strongest kind of repugnance towards Dewey,
and could not gain his own consent to have any intercourse
with him. His position, as an associate with
Judge Bigelow, occasionally brought him in contact
with his nephew, who recognized him always in a respectful
manner. But Wallingford held him ever coldly at
a distance.