Late one evening, some weeks after
the McPhersons had given the dinner party in secret
celebration of the future arrival of what was to be
the first of the great family, they came together
down the steps of a north side house to their waiting
carriage. They had spent, Sam thought, a delightful
evening. The Grovers were people of whose friendship
he was particularly proud and since his marriage with
Sue he had taken her often for an evening to the house
of the venerable surgeon. Doctor Grover was a
scholar, a man of note in the medical world, and a
rapid and absorbing talker and thinker on any subject
that aroused his interest. A certain youthful
enthusiasm in his outlook on life had attracted to
him the devotion of Sue, who, since meeting him through
Sam, had counted him a marked addition to their little
group of friends. His wife, a white-haired,
plump little woman, was, though apparently somewhat
diffident, in reality his intellectual equal and companion,
and Sue in a quiet way had taken her as a model in
her own effort toward complete wifehood.
During the evening, spent in a rapid
exchange of opinions and ideas between the two men,
Sue had sat in silence. Once when he looked at
her Sam thought that he had surprised an annoyed look
in her eyes and was puzzled by it. During the
remainder of the evening her eyes refused to meet
his and she looked instead at the floor, a flush mounting
her cheeks.
At the door of the carriage Frank,
Sue’s coachman, stepped on the hem of her gown
and tore it. The tear was slight, the incident
Sam thought entirely unavoidable, and as much due
to a momentary clumsiness on the part of Sue as to
the awkwardness of Frank. The man had for years
been a loyal servant and a devoted admirer of Sue’s.
Sam laughed and taking Sue by the
arm started to help her in at the carriage door.
“Too much gown for an athlete,” he said,
pointlessly.
In a flash Sue turned and faced the coachman.
“Awkward brute,” she said, through her
teeth.
Sam stood on the sidewalk dumb with
astonishment as Frank turned and climbed to his seat
without waiting to close the carriage door. He
felt as he might have felt had he, as a boy, heard
profanity from the lips of his mother. The look
in Sue’s eyes as she turned them on Frank struck
him like a blow and in a moment his whole carefully
built-up conception of her and of her character had
been shaken. He had an impulse to slam the carriage
door after her and walk home.
They drove home in silence, Sam feeling
as though he rode beside a new and strange being.
In the light of passing street lamps he could see her
face held straight ahead and her eyes staring stonily
at the curtain in front. He didn’t want
to reproach her; he wanted to take hold of her arm
and shake her. “I should like to take the
whip from in front of Frank’s seat and give
her a sound beating,” he told himself.
At the house Sue jumped out of the
carriage and, running past him in at the door, closed
it after her. Frank drove off toward the stables
and when Sam went into the house he found Sue standing
half way up the stairs leading to her room and waiting
for him.
“I presume you do not know that
you have been openly insulting me all evening,”
she cried. “Your beastly talk there at the
Grovers—it was unbearable—who
are these women? Why parade your past life before
me?”
Sam said nothing. He stood at
the foot of the stairs and looked up at her and then,
turning, just as she, running up the stairs, slammed
the door of her own room, he went into the library.
A wood fire burned in the grate and he sat down and
lighted his pipe. He did not try to think the
thing out. He felt that he was in the presence
of a lie and that the Sue who had lived in his mind
and in his affections no longer existed, that in her
place there was this other woman, this woman who had
insulted her own servant and had perverted and distorted
the meaning of his talk during the evening.
Sitting by the fire filling and refilling
his pipe, Sam went carefully over every word, gesture,
and incident of the evening at the Grovers and could
get hold of no part of it that he thought might in
fairness serve as an excuse for the outburst.
In the upper part of the house he could hear Sue moving
restlessly about and he had satisfaction in the thought
that her mind was punishing her for so strange a seizure.
He and Grover had perhaps been somewhat carried away,
he told himself; they had talked of marriage and its
meaning and had both declared somewhat hotly against
the idea that the loss of virginity in women was in
any sense a bar to honourable marriage, but he had
said nothing that he thought could have been twisted
into an insult to Sue or to Mrs. Grover. He had
thought the talk rather good and clearly thought out
and had come out of the house exhilarated and secretly
preening himself with the thought that he had talked
unusually forcefully and well. In any event what
had been said had been said before in Sue’s
presence and he thought that he could remember her
having, in the past, expressed similar ideas with enthusiasm.
Hour after hour he sat in the chair
before the dying fire. He dozed and his pipe
dropped from his hand and fell upon the stone hearth.
A kind of dumb misery and anger was in him as over
and over endlessly his mind kept reviewing the events
of the evening.
“What has made her think she
can do that to me?” he kept asking himself.
He remembered certain strange silences
and hard looks from her eyes during the past weeks,
silences and looks that in the light of the events
of the evening became pregnant with meaning.
“She has a temper, a beast of
a temper. Why shouldn’t she have been square
and told me?” he asked himself.
The clock had struck three when the
library door opened quietly and Sue, clad in a dressing
gown through which the new roundness of her lithe
little figure was plainly apparent, came into the room.
She ran across to him and putting her head down on
his knee wept bitterly.
“Oh, Sam!” she said, “I
think I am going insane. I have been hating you
as I have not hated since I was an evil-tempered child.
A thing I worked years to suppress in me has come
back. I have been hating myself and the baby.
For days I have been fighting the feeling in me, and
now it has come out and perhaps you have begun hating
me. Can you love me again? Will you ever
forget the meanness and the cheapness of it? You
and poor innocent Frank—Oh, Sam, the devil
was in me!”
Reaching down, Sam took her into his
arms and cuddled her like a child. A story he
had heard of the vagaries of women at such times came
back to him and was as a light illuminating the darkness
of his mind.
“I understand now,” he
said. “It is a part of the burden you carry
for us both.”
For some weeks after the outbreak
at the carriage door events ran smoothly in the McPherson
house. One day as he stood in the stable door
Frank came round the corner of the house and, looking
up sheepishly from under his cap, said to Sam:
“I understand about the missus. It is the
baby coming. We have had four of them at our
house,” and Sam, nodding his head, turned and
began talking rapidly of his plans to replace the carriages
with automobiles.
But in the house, in spite of the
clearing up of the matter of Sue’s ugliness
at the Grovers, a subtle change had taken place in
the relationship of the two. Although they were
together facing the first of the events that were
to be like ports-of-call in the great voyage of their
lives, they were not facing it with the same mutual
understanding and kindly tolerance with which they
had faced smaller things in the past—a
disagreement over the method of shooting a rapid in
a river or the entertainment of an undesirable guest.
The inclination to fits of temper loosens and disarranges
all the little wires of life. The tune will not
get itself played. One stands waiting for the
discord, strained, missing the harmony. It was
so with Sam. He began feeling that he must keep
a check upon his tongue and that things of which they
had talked with great freedom six months earlier now
annoyed and irritated his wife when brought into an
after-dinner discussion. To Sam, who, during his
life with Sue, had learned the joy of free, open talk
upon any subject that came into his mind and whose
native interest in life and in the motives of men and
women had blossomed in the large leisure and independence
of the last year, this was trying. It was, he
thought, like trying to hold free and open communion
with the people of an orthodox family, and he fell
into a habit of prolonged silences, a habit that later,
he found, once formed, unbelievably hard to break.
One day in the office a situation
arose that seemed to demand Sam’s presence in
Boston on a certain date. For months he had been
carrying on a trade war with some of the eastern manufacturers
in his line and an opportunity for the settlement
of the trouble in a way advantageous to himself had,
he thought, arisen. He wanted to handle the matter
himself and went home to explain to Sue. It was
at the end of a day when nothing had occurred to irritate
her and she agreed with him that he should not be
compelled to trust so important a matter to another.
“I am no child, Sam. I
will take care of myself,” she said, laughing.
Sam wired his New York man asking
him to make the arrangements for the meeting in Boston
and picked up a book to spend the evening reading aloud
to her.
And then, coming home the next evening
he found her in tears and when he tried to laugh away
her fears she flew into a black fit of anger and ran
out of the room.
Sam went to the ’phone and called
his New York man, thinking to instruct him in regard
to the conference in Boston and to give up his own
plans for the trip. When he had got his man on
the wire, Sue, who had been standing outside the door,
rushed in and put her hand over the mouthpiece of the
’phone.
“Sam! Sam!” she cried.
“Do not give up the trip! Scold me!
Beat me! Do anything, but do not let me go on
making a fool of myself and destroying your peace
of mind! I shall be miserable if you stay at home
because of what I have said!”
Over the ’phone came the insistent
voice of Central and putting her hand aside Sam talked
to his man, letting the engagement stand and making
some detail of the conference answer as his need of
calling.
Again Sue was repentant and again
after her tears they sat before the fire until his
train time, talking like lovers.
To Buffalo in the morning came a wire from her.
“Come back. Let business go. Cannot
stand it,” she had wired.
While he sat reading the wire the porter brought another.
“Please, Sam, pay no attention
to any wire from me. I am all right and only
half a fool.”
Sam was irritated. “It
is deliberate pettiness and weakness,” he thought,
when an hour later the porter brought another wire
demanding his immediate return. “The situation
calls for drastic action and perhaps one good stinging
reproof will stop it for all time.”
Going into the buffet car he wrote
a long letter calling her attention to the fact that
a certain amount of freedom of action was due him,
and saying that he intended to act upon his own judgment
in the future and not upon her impulses.
Having begun to write Sam went on
and on. He was not interrupted, no shadow crossed
the face of his beloved to tell him he was hurting
and he said all that was in his mind to say.
Little sharp reproofs that had come into his mind
but that had been left unsaid now got themselves said
and when he had dumped his overloaded mind into the
letter he sealed and mailed it at a passing station.
Within an hour after the letter had
left his hands Sam regretted it. He thought of
the little woman bearing the burden for them both,
and things Grover had told him of the unhappiness
of women in her condition came back to haunt his mind
so that he wrote and sent off to her a wire asking
her not to read the letter he had mailed and assuring
her that he would hurry through the Boston conference
and get back to her at once.
When Sam returned he knew that in
an evil moment Sue had opened and read the letter
sent from the train and was surprised and hurt by the
knowledge. The act seemed like a betrayal.
He said nothing, going about his work with a troubled
mind and watching with growing anxiety her alternate
fits of white anger and fearful remorse. He thought
her growing worse daily and became alarmed for her
health.
And, then, after a talk with Grover
he began to spend more and more time with her, forcing
her to take with him daily, long walks in the open
air. He tried valiantly to keep her mind fixed
on cheerful things and went to bed happy and relieved
when a day ended that did not bring a stormy passage
between them.
There were days during that period
when Sam thought himself near insanity. With
a light in her grey eyes that was maddening Sue would
take up some minor thing, a remark he had made or
a passage he had quoted from some book, and in a dead,
level, complaining tone would talk of it until his
head reeled and his fingers ached from the gripping
of his hands to keep control of himself. After
such a day he would steal off by himself and, walking
rapidly, would try through pure physical fatigue to
force his mind to give up the remembrance of the persistent,
complaining voice. At times he would give way
to fits of anger and strew impotent oaths along the
silent street, or, in another mood, would mumble and
talk to himself, praying for strength and courage
to keep his own head during the ordeal through which
he thought they were passing together. And when
he returned from such a walk and from such a struggle
with himself it often occurred that he would find
her waiting in the arm chair before the fire in her
room, her mind clear and her little face wet with the
tears of her repentance.
And then the struggle ended.
With Doctor Grover it had been arranged that Sue should
be taken to the hospital for the great event, and they
drove there hurriedly one night through the quiet
streets, the recurring pains gripping Sue and her
hands clutching his. An exalted cheerfulness had
hold of them. Face to face with the actual struggle
for the new life Sue was transfigured. Her voice
rang with triumph and her eyes glistened.
“I am going to do it,”
she cried; “my black fear is gone. I shall
give you a child—a man child. I shall
succeed, my man Sam. You shall see. It will
be beautiful.”
When the pain gripped she gripped
at his hand, and a spasm of physical sympathy ran
through him. He felt helpless and ashamed of his
helplessness.
At the entrance to the hospital grounds
she put her face down upon his knees so that the hot
tears ran through his hands.
“Poor, poor old Sam, it has been horrible for
you.”
At the hospital Sam walked up and
down in the corridor through the swinging doors at
the end of which she had been taken. Every vestige
of regret for the trying months now lying behind had
passed, and he paced up and down the corridor feeling
that he had come to one of those huge moments when
a man’s brain, his grasp of affairs, his hopes
and plans for the future, all of the little details
and trivialities of his life, halt, and he waits anxious,
breathless, expectant. He looked at a little clock
on a table at the end of the corridor, half expecting
it to stop also and wait with him. His marriage
hour that had seemed so big and vital seemed now,
in the quiet corridor, with the stone floor and the
silent white-clad, rubber-shod nurses passing up
and down and in the presence of this greater event,
to have shrunk enormously. He walked up and down
peering at the clock, looking at the swinging door
and biting at the stem of his empty pipe.
And then through the swinging door came Grover.
“We can get the child, Sam,
but to get it we shall have to take a chance with
her. Do you want to do that? Do not wait.
Decide.”
Sam sprang past him toward the door.
“You bungler,” he cried,
and his voice rang through the long quiet corridor.
“You do not know what this means. Let me
go.”
Doctor Grover, catching him by the
arm, swung him about. The two men stood facing
each other.
“You stay here,” said
the doctor, his voice remaining quiet and firm; “I
will attend to things. Your going in there would
be pure folly now. Now answer me—do
you want to take the chance?”
“No! No!” Sam shouted.
“No! I want her—Sue—alive
and well, back through that door.”
A cold gleam came into his eyes and
he shook his fist before the doctor’s face.
“Do not try deceiving me about this. By
God, I will——”
Turning, Doctor Grover ran back through
the swinging door leaving Sam staring blankly at his
back. A nurse, one whom he had seen in Doctor
Grover’s office, came out of the door and taking
his arm, walked beside him up and down the corridor.
Sam put his arm around her shoulder and talked.
An illusion that it was necessary to comfort her came
to him.
“Do not worry,” he said.
“She will be all right. Grover will take
care of her. Nothing can happen to little Sue.”
The nurse, a small, sweet-faced, Scotch
woman, who knew and admired Sue, wept. Some quality
in his voice had touched the woman in her and the tears
ran in a little stream down her cheeks. Sam continued
talking, the woman’s tears helping him to regain
his grip upon himself.
“My mother is dead,” he
said, an old sorrow revisiting him. “I wish
that you, like Mary Underwood, would be a new mother
to me.”
When the time came that he could be
taken to the room where Sue lay, his self-possession
had returned to him and his mind had begun blaming
the little dead stranger for the unhappiness of the
past months and for the long separation from what
he thought was the real Sue. Outside the door
of the room into which she had been taken he stopped,
hearing her voice, thin and weak, talking to Grover.
“Unfit—Sue McPherson
unfit,” said the voice, and Sam thought it was
filled with an infinite weariness.
He ran through the door and dropped
on his knees by her bed. She turned her eyes
to him smiling bravely.
“The next time we’ll make it,” she
said.
The second child born to the young
McPhersons arrived out of time. Again Sam walked,
this time through the corridor of his own house and
without the consoling presence of the sweet-faced
Scotch woman, and again he shook his head at Doctor
Grover who came to him consoling and reassuring.
After the death of the second child
Sue lay for months in bed. In his arms, in her
own room, she wept openly in the presence of Grover
and the nurses, crying out against her unfitness.
For several days she refused to see Colonel Tom, harbouring
in her mind the notion that he was in some way responsible
for her physical inability to bear living children,
and when she got up from her bed, she remained for
months white and listless but grimly determined upon
another attempt for the little life she so wanted
to feel in her arms.
During the days of her carrying the
second baby she had again the fierce ugly attacks
of temper that had shattered Sam’s nerves, but
having learned to understand, he went quietly about
his work, trying as far as in him lay to close his
ears to the stinging, hurtful things she sometimes
said; and the third time, it was agreed between them
that if they were again unsuccessful they would turn
their minds to other things.
“If we do not succeed this time
we might as well count ourselves through with each
other for good,” she said one day in one of the
fits of cold anger that were a part of child bearing
with her.
That second night when Sam walked
in the hospital corridor he was beside himself.
He felt like a young recruit called to face an unseen
enemy and to stand motionless and inactive in the
presence of the singing death that ran through the
air. He remembered a story, told when he was a
child by a fellow soldier who had come to visit his
father, of the prisoners at Andersonville creeping
in the darkness past armed sentries to a little pool
of stagnant water beyond the dead line, and felt that
he too was creeping unarmed and helpless in the neighbourhood
of death. In a conference at his house between
the three some weeks before, it had been decided,
after tearful insistence on the part of Sue and a stand
on the part of Grover, who declared that he would
not remain on the case unless permitted to use his
own judgment, that an operation should be performed.
“Take the chances that need
be taken,” Sam had said to Grover after the
conference; “she will never stand another defeat.
Give her the child.”
In the corridor it seemed to Sam that
hours had passed and still he stood motionless waiting.
His feet felt cold and he had the impression that they
were wet although the night was dry and a moon shone
outside. When, from a distant part of the hospital,
a groan reached his ears he shook with fright and
had an inclination to cry out. Two young interns
clad in white passed.
“Old Grover is doing a Caesarian
section,” said one of them; “he is getting
out of date. Hope he doesn’t bungle it.”
In Sam’s ears rang the remembrance
of Sue’s voice, the Sue who that first time
had gone into the room behind the swinging doors with
the determined smile on her face. He thought
he could see again the white face looking up from
the wheeled cot on which they had taken her through
the door.
“I am afraid, Dr. Grover—I
am afraid I am unfit,” he had heard her say as
the door closed.
And then Sam did a thing for which
he cursed himself the rest of his life. On an
impulse, and maddened by the intolerable waiting, he
walked to the swinging doors and, pushing them open,
stepped into the operating room where Grover was at
work upon Sue.
The room was long and narrow, with
floors, walls and ceiling of white cement. A
great glaring light, suspended from the ceiling, threw
its rays directly down on a white-clad figure lying
on a white metal operating table. On the walls
of the room were other glaring lights set in shining
glass reflectors. And, here and there through
an intense, expectant atmosphere, moved and stood
silently a group of men and women, faceless, hairless,
with only their strangely vivid eyes showing through
the white masks that covered their faces.
Sam, standing motionless by the door,
looked about with wild, half-seeing eyes. Grover
worked rapidly and silently, taking from time to time
little shining instruments from a swinging table close
at his hand. The nurse standing beside him looked
up toward the light and began calmly threading a needle.
And in a white basin on a little stand at the side
of the room lay the last of Sue’s tremendous
efforts toward new life, the last of their dreams
of the great family.
Sam closed his eyes and fell.
His head, striking against the wall, aroused him and
he struggled to his feet.
Without stopping his work, Grover began swearing.
“Damn it, man, get out of here.”
Sam groped with his hand for the door.
One of the white-clad, ghoulish figures started toward
him. And then with his head reeling and his eyes
closed he backed through the door and, running along
the corridor and down a flight of broad stairs, reached
the open air and darkness. He had no doubt of
Sue’s death.
“She is gone,” he muttered,
hurrying bareheaded along the deserted streets.
Through street after street he ran.
Twice he came out upon the shores of the lake, and,
then turning, went back into the heart of the city
through streets bathed in the warm moonlight.
Once he turned quickly at a corner and stepping into
a vacant lot stood behind a high board fence as a
policeman strolled along the street. Into his
head came the idea that he had killed Sue and that
the blue-clad figure walking with heavy tread on the
stone pavement was seeking him to take him back to
where she lay white and lifeless. Again he stopped,
before a little frame drugstore on a corner, and sitting
down on the steps before it cursed God openly and
defiantly like an angry boy defying his father.
Some instinct led him to look at the sky through the
tangle of telegraph wires overhead.
“Go on and do what you dare!”
he cried. “I will not follow you now.
I shall never try to find you after this.”
Presently he began laughing at himself
for the instinct that had led him to look at the sky
and to shout out his defiance and, getting up, wandered
on. In his wanderings he came to a railroad track
where a freight train groaned and rattled over a crossing.
When he came up to it he jumped upon an empty coal
car, falling as he climbed, and cutting his face upon
the sharp pieces of coal that lay scattered about
the bottom of the car.
The train ground along slowly, stopping
occasionally, the engine shrieking hysterically.
After a time he got out of the car
and dropped to the ground. On all sides of him
were marshes, the long rank marsh grasses rolling and
tossing in the moonlight. When the train had
passed he followed it, walking stumblingly along.
As he walked, following the blinking lights at the
end of the train, he thought of the scene in the hospital
and of Sue lying dead for that—that ping
livid and shapeless on the table under the lights.
Where the solid ground ran up to the
tracks Sam sat down under a tree. Peace came
over him. “This is the end of things,”
he thought, and was like a tired child comforted by
its mother. He thought of the sweet-faced nurse
who had walked with him that other time in the corridor
of the hospital and who had wept because of his fears,
and then of the night when he had felt the throat
of his father between his fingers in the squalid little
kitchen. He ran his hands along the ground.
“Good old ground,” he said. A sentence
came into his mind followed by the figure of John Telfer
striding, stick in hand, along a dusty road. “Here
is spring come and time to plant out flowers in the
grass,” he said aloud. His face felt swollen
and sore from the fall in the freight car and he lay
down on the ground under a tree and slept.
When he woke it was morning and grey
clouds were drifting across the sky. Within sight,
down a road, a trolley car went past into the city.
Before him, in the midst of the marsh, lay a low lake,
and a raised walk, with boats tied to the posts on
which it stood, ran down to the water. He went
down the walk, bathed his bruised face in the water,
and boarding a car went back into the city.
In the morning air a new thought took
possession of him. The wind ran along a dusty
road beside the car track, picking up little handfuls
of dust and playfully throwing them about. He
had a strained, eager feeling like some one listening
for a faint call out of the distance.
“To be sure,” he thought,
“I know what it is, it is my wedding day.
I am to marry Sue Rainey to-day.”
At the house he found Grover and Colonel
Tom standing in the breakfast room. Grover looked
at his swollen, distorted face. His voice trembled.
“Poor devil!” he said. “You
have had a night!”
Sam laughed and slapped Colonel Tom on the shoulder.
“We will have to begin getting
ready,” he said. “The wedding is at
ten. Sue will be getting anxious.”
Grover and Colonel Tom took him by
the arm and began leading him up the stairs, Colonel
Tom weeping like a woman.
“Silly old fool,” thought Sam.
When, two weeks later, he again opened
his eyes to consciousness Sue sat beside his bed in
a reclining chair, her little thin white hand in his.
“Get the baby!” he cried,
believing anything possible. “I want to
see the baby!”
She laid her head down on the pillow.
“It was gone when you saw it,” she said,
and put an arm about his neck.
When the nurse came back she found
them, their heads together upon the pillow, crying
weakly like two tired children.