Six years from the day Jessie Loring
laid her bleeding heart on the marriage altar had
passed. For over three years of that time she
had not stepped beyond the threshold of her aunt’s
dwelling, and only at rare intervals was she seen
by visitors. She had not led an idle life, however;
else would her days long ere this have been numbered.
To her aunt and cousins she had, from the day of her
return, devoted herself, in all things wherein she
could aid, counsel, minister, or sustain; and that
with so much of patient cheerfulness, and loving self-devotion,
that she had become endeared to them beyond any former
attachment. There was an odor of goodness about
her life that made her presence an incentive to right
action.
Long before this period, Mrs. Loring
had ceased all efforts to lead Jessie out of her self-imposed
seclusion.
“Not yet, dear aunt! Not
yet,” was the invariable answer.
The day on which she received formal
notice that her husband had applied for a divorce,
she shut herself up in her room, and did not leave
it, nor hold communion with any one, until the next
morning. Then, with the exception of a wearied
look, as if she had not slept well, and a shade of
sadness about her lips, no change was discernible.
When the decree, annulling the marriage between her
and Dexter, was placed in her hands, she seemed bewildered
for a time, as if she found it almost impossible to
realize her new position.
“I congratulate you, Jessie
Loring!” said her aunt, speaking from her external
view of the case. “You are free again.
Free as the wind!”
“This does not place me where I was,”
Jessie replied.
“Why not? The law has cancelled
your marriage!” said Mrs. Loring. “You
stand in your old relation to the world.”
“But not to myself,” Jessie
answered with a deep sigh; and leaving her aunt, she
went away to her little chamber, there to sit in solemn
debate over this new aspect of affairs in her troubled
life.
No—no. She did not
stand in her old relation to herself. She was
not a maiden with lips free from the guile of a false
marriage promise; but a divorced wife. A thing
questionably recognized, both in human opinion and
divine law. Deeply and solemnly did this conviction
weigh upon her thoughts. View the case in any
of the lights which shone into her mind, she could
not discover an aspect that gave her real comfort.
It is true she was free from all legal obligations
to her former husband, and that was something gained.
But what of that husband’s position under the
literal reading of the divine law? No doubt he
contemplated marriage. But could he marry, conscience
clear? Had not her false vows cursed both their
lives?—imposed on each almost impossible
necessities?
Such were the questions that thrust
themselves upon her, and clamored for solution.
She had not solved them when the intelligence
came of Mr. Dexter’s marriage in England.
“I have news that will surprise
you,” said Mrs. Loring, coming into the sitting-room
where Jessie was at work on a piece of embroidery.
“What is it?” she asked,
looking up almost with a start, for something in her
aunt’s manner told her that she had a personal
interest in the news.
“Mr. Dexter is married!”
Instantly a pallor overspread Jessie’s face.
“Married to an English lady,” said Mrs.
Loring.
Jessie looked at her aunt for a little
while, but without a remark. She then turned
her eyes again upon her embroidery, lifting it close
to her face. But her hand trembled so that she
could not take a stitch.
“I hope he’s satisfied
now,” said Mrs. Loring. “He’s
married an heiress—so the story goes; and
is going to reside with her in England. I’m
glad of that any how. It might not be so pleasant
for you to meet them—sensitive thing that
you are! But it wouldn’t trouble me.
I could look them both in the face and not blink.
Much joy may he have with his English bride! Bless
me, child, how you do tremble!” she added, as
she noticed the fingers of her niece trying in vain
to direct the needle she held upon the face of the
embroidery. “It’s nothing more than
you had to expect. And, besides, what is Leon
Dexter to you now? Only as another man?”
Jessie arose without speaking, and
kissing her aunt in token of love, passed quickly
from the room.
“Dear! dear! what a strange
child it is!” said Aunt Loring, as she wiped
off a tear which had fallen from Jessie’s eyes
upon her cheek. “Just like her mother for
all the world in some things”—the
last part of the sentence was in a qualifying tone—“though,”
she went on, “her mother hadn’t anything
like her trials to endure. Oh, that Dexter! if
I only had my will of him!”
And Aunt Loring, in her rising indignation,
actually clenched her hand and shook it in the air.
“It has come to this at last,”
said Jessie as soon as she had gained the sanctuary
of her little chamber, where she could think without
interruption. “And I knew it must come;
but oh, how I have dreaded the event! Is he innocent
in the sight of heaven? Ah, if I could only have
that question answered in the affirmative, a crushing
weight would be lifted from my soul. If he is
not innocent, the stain of his guilt rests upon my
garments! He is not alone responsible. Who
can tell the consequences of a single false step in
life?”
From a small hanging shelf she took
a Bible, and opening to a marked page, read over three
or four verses with earnest attention.
“I can see no other meaning,”
she said with a painful sigh, closing the book and
restoring it to its place on the shelf. It was
all in vain that Jessie Loring sought for light and
comfort in this direction. They were not found.
When she joined her aunt, some hours afterwards, her
face had not regained its former placidity.
“Well, dear,” said Mrs.
Loring, speaking in what sounded to the ear of her
niece a light tone, “have you got it all right
with yourself?”
Jessie smiled faintly, and merely answered—
“It will take time. But
I trust that all will come out truly adjusted in the
end.”
She had never ventured to bring to
her aunt’s very external judgment the real questions
that troubled her. Mrs. Loring’s prompt
way of sweeping aside these cobwebs of the brain,
as she called the finer scruples of conscience, could
not satisfy her yearning desire for light.
“Yes; time works wonders.
He is the great restorer. But why not see clearly
at once; and not wait in suffering for time’s
slow movements? I am a wiser philosopher than
you are, Jessie; and try to gain from the present
all that it has to give.”
“Some hearts require a severer
discipline than others,” said Jessie. “And
mine, I think, is one of them.”
“All that is sickly sentiment,
my dear child! as I have said to you a hundred times.
It is not shadow, but sunshine that your heart wants—not
discipline, but consolation—not doubt, but
hope. You are as untrue to yourself as the old
anchorites. These self-inflicted stripes are
horrible to think of, for the pain is not salutary,
but only increases the morbid states of mind that
ever demand new flagellations.”
“We are differently made, Aunt
Phoebe,” was the quiet answer.
“No, we are not, but we make
ourselves different,” replied Mrs. Loring a
little hastily.
“The world would be a very dead-level
affair, if we were all made alike,” said Jessie,
forcing a smile, and assuming a lighter air, in order
to lead her aunt’s mind away from the thought
of her as too painfully disturbed by the announcement
of Mr. Dexter’s marriage. And she was successful.
The subject was changed to one of a less embarrassing
character. And this was all of the inner life
of Jessie Loring that showed itself on the surface.