One of the most charming writers of
our day and generation has declared that “the
truest blessing a girl can have” is “the
ingenuous devotion of a young boy’s heart.”
Nine mothers in ten will probably take issue with
the gifted author on that point, and though no longer
a young girl in years whatever she might be in looks,
Margaret Garrison would gladly have sent the waiting
gentlemen to the right about, for, though he was only
twenty, “Gov” Prime, as a junior at Columbia,
had been ingenuously devoted to the little lady from
the very first evening he saw her. A boy of frank,
impulsive nature was “Gov” a
boy still in spite of the budding mustache, the twenty
summers and the barely passed “exam” that
wound up the junior year and entitled him to sit with
the seniors when the great university opened its doors
in October. Studies he hated, but tennis, polo,
cricket, riding and dancing were things he loved and
excelled in. Much of his boyhood had been spent
at one of those healthy, hearty English schools where
all that would cultivate physical and mental manhood
was assiduously practiced, and all that would militate
against them was as rigorously “tabooed.”
At the coming of his twentieth birthday
that summer his father had handed him his check for
five thousand dollars the paternal expression
of satisfaction that his boy had never smoked pipe,
cigar or cigarette and the same week “Gov”
had carried off the blue ribbon with the racquet, and
the second prize with the single sculls. It was
during the “exams,” the first week in
June, when dropping in for five o’clock tea on
some girls whom he had known for years, he was presented
to this witching little creature whose name he didn’t
even catch. “We met her away out at an army
post in Wyoming when papa took us to California last
year,” was whispered to him, “and they
entertained us so cordially, and of course we said
if ever you come to New York you must be sure to let
us know and she did but ”
and there his informant paused, dubious. Other
callers came in and it began to rain a
sudden, drenching shower, and the little stranger
from the far West saw plainly enough that her hostesses,
though presenting their friends after our cheery American
fashion, were unable to show her further attention,
and the newly presented almost all women,
said “so very pleased” but failed to look
it, or otherwise to manifest their pleasure.
She couldn’t go in the rain. The
butler had ’phoned for a cab. She wouldn’t
sit there alone and neglected. She deliberately
signaled Mr. Prime. “The ladies are all
busy,” she said, with a charmingly appealing
smile, “but I know you can tell me. I have
to dress for dinner after I get home, and must be
at One Hundred and Tenth Street at 7:30. How
long will it take a carriage to drive me there?
Oh, is that your society pin? Why, are you
still in college? Why, I thought ”
That cab was twenty-five minutes coming,
and when it came Mr. Prime went with it and her, whom
he had not left an instant from the moment of her
question. Moreover, he discovered she was nervous
about taking that carriage drive all alone away up
to One Hundred and Tenth Street, yet what other way
could a girl go in dinner dress. He left her at
her door with a reluctantly given permission to return
in an hour and escort her to the distant home of her
friends and entertainers. He drove to the Waldorf
and had a light dinner with a half pint of Hock, devoured
her with his eyes as they drove rapidly northward,
went to a Harlem theater while she dined and forgot
him, and was at the carriage door when she came forth
to be driven home. Seven hours or less “had
done the business,” so far as Gouverneur Prime
was concerned.
It was the boy’s first wild
infatuation as mad, unreasoning, absurd,
yet intense as was ever that of Arthur Pendennis for
the lovely Fotheringay. Margaret Garrison had
never seen or known the like of it. She had fascinated
others for a time, had kindled love, passion and temporary
devotion, but this this was worship, and
it was something so sweet to her jaded senses, something
so rich and spontaneous that she gave herself up for
a day or two to the delight of studying it. Here
was a glorious young athlete whose eyes followed her
every move and gesture, who hung about her in utter
captivation, whose voice trembled and whose eyes implored,
yet whose strong, brown, shapely hand never dared so
much as touch hers, except when she extended it in
greeting. He was to accompany his father and
sister to Europe in a week, so what harm was there:
He would forget all about it. He knew now she
was married. He was presented to Nita, but had
hardly a word and never a look for her when Margaret
was near. He was dumb and miserable all the day
they drove in the park and later dined at Delmonico’s
with Colonel Frost. He was sick, even when mounted
on his favorite English thoroughbred and scampering
about the bridle path for peeps at the drives, when
she was at the park again with that gray-haired reprobate,
that money shark, Cashton a Wall Street
broker black-balled at every decent club in New York.
Why should she go with him? He had been most
kind, she said, in the advice and aid he had given
her in the investment of her little fortune. She
told the lie with downcast eyes and cheeks that burned,
for most of that little fortune was already frittered
away, and Cashton’s reports seemed to require
many personal visits that had set tongues wagging
at the hotel, so much frequented of the Army, where
she had taken a room until Nita should have been graduated
and they could go to the seashore. She had promised
to be at home to her boy adorer that very evening
and to go with him to Daly’s, and he had secured
the seats four days ahead. Poor “Gov”
had trotted swiftly home from the park, striving to
comfort himself over his bath and irreproachable evening
clothes, that there, with her by his side, the
wild jealousy of the day would vanish. Sharply
on time he had sent up his card and listened, incredulous,
to the reply: “Mrs. Garrison has not yet
returned.” He would wait, he said, and did
wait, biting his nails, treading the floor, fuming
in doubt and despair until nearly ten, when a carriage
dashed up to the ladies’ entrance and that vile
Cashton handed her out, escorted her in and vanished.
She came hurrying to her boy lover with both little
hands outstretched, with a face deeply flushed and
words of pleading and distress rushing from her lips.
“Indeed I could not help it, Gov,” she
cried. “I told him of my engagement and
said we must not go so far, but away at the north
end something happened, I don’t know what, a
wheel was bent and the harness wrenched by too short
a turn on a stone post at a corner. Something
had to be repaired. They said it wouldn’t
take ten minutes, and he led me out and up to the piazza
of that big hotel you know, we saw it the
day I drove with you ” ("He was a
blackguard to take you there!” burst in Prime,
the blood boiling in his veins.) “Then we waited
and waited and he went to hurry them, and then he
came back and said they had found more serious damages that
it would take an hour, and meantime dinner had been
ordered and was served. He had telephoned to
you and the butler had answered all right.”
“He’s a double-dyed liar!” raved
“Gov,” furiously. “And so what
could I do, Gov? The dinner was delicious, but
I couldn’t eat a mouthful.” (This time
it wasn’t Cashton who lied). “I was
worrying about you, and and about
myself, too, Gov. I had set my heart on going
with you. It was to be almost our last evening.
Oh, if you only didn’t have to sail Saturday,
and could be here next week, you dear boy, you should
have no cause for complaint! Won’t you
try to forgive me?”
And, actually, tears stood in her
eyes, as again she held out both hands. They
were the only people in the parlor, and in an instant,
with quick, sudden, irresistible action he had clasped
and drawn her to his breast, and though she hid her
face and struggled, passionate kisses were printed
on her disheveled hair. It was the first time
he had dared.
And then he did not sail Saturday.
Prime Senior was held by most important business.
They gave up the Saturday Cunarder and took the midweek
White Star, and those four additional days riveted
poor “Gov’s” chains and left her
well-nigh breathless with excitement. The strain
had been intense. It was all she could do to
make the boy try to behave in a rational way in the
presence of others. When alone with her he raved.
A fearful load was lifted from her spare little shoulders
when the Teutonic sailed. Even Nita had worried
and had seen her sister’s worry. Then no
sooner did “Gov” reach Europe than he began
writing impassioned letters by every steamer, but
that wasn’t so bad. She had several masculine
correspondents, some of whom wrote as often as Frank,
but none of whom, to do her justice, got letters as
often as he did, which, however, was saying little,
for she hated writing. “Gov” was to
have stayed abroad three months, piloting the pater
and sister about the scenes so familiar to him, but
they saw how nervous and unhappy he was. They
knew he was writing constantly to some one. Mildred
had long since divined that there was a girl at the
bottom of it all, and longed and strove to find out
who she was. Through the last of June and all
through July he resolutely stood to his promise and
did his best to be loving and brotherly to a loving
and devoted sister and dutiful to a most indulgent
father. But he grew white and worn and haggard,
he who had been such a picture of rugged health, and,
in her utter innocence and ignorance as to the being
on whom her brother had lavished the wealth of his
love, Mildred began to ask herself should she not
urge her father to let “Gov” return to
America. At last, one sweet July evening, late
in the month, the brother and sister were wandering
along the lovely shore of Lucerne. He had been
unusually fitful, restless and moody all day.
No letter had reached him in over a fortnight, and
he was miserably unhappy. They stopped at a grassy
bank that ran down to the rippling water’s edge,
and she seated herself on a stone ledge, while in
reckless abandonment he threw himself full length
on the dewy grass. Instantly the last doubt vanished.
Bending over him, her soft hand caressing his hair,
she whispered: “Gov, dear boy, is it so
very hard? Would you like to go to her at once?”
And the boy buried his face in her
lap, twined his arms about her slender waist, and
almost groaned aloud as he answered. “For
pity’s sake help me if you can, Mildred, I’m
almost mad.”
Early in August the swiftest steamer
of the line was splitting the Atlantic surges and
driving hard for home, with “Gov” cursing
her for a canal boat. The day after he reached
New York he had traced and followed the White Sisters
to West Point, and Margaret Garrison stared in mingled
delight, triumph and dismay at the card in her hand.
Delight that she could show these exclusive Pointers
that the heir to one of the oldest and best names
in Gotham’s Four Hundred was a slave to her beck
and call. Dismay to think of the scene that might
occur through his jealousy when he saw the devoted
attentions she received from so many men officers,
civilians and cadets. Old Cashton came up now
as regularly as Saturday night came around and
there were others. Margaret Garrison was more
talked about than any woman in Orange County, yet,
who could report anything of her beyond that she was
a universal favorite, and danced, walked, possibly
flirted with a dozen different cavaliers every day
of her life? There were some few among her accusers,
demure and most proper even prudish women,
of whom, were the truth to be told, so little could
not be said.
“Gov” Prime took the only
kind of room to be had in the house, so full was it a
little seven by ten box on the office floor. He
would have slept in the coal bin rather than leave
her. He saw her go off to the hop looking radiant,
glancing back over her shoulder and smiling sweetly
at him. He rushed to his trunk, dragged out his
evening clothes, and stood at the wall looking on
until the last note of the last dance he
a noted German leader in the younger set and the best
dancer of his years in Gotham. Not so much as
a single spin had he, and he longed to show those
tight-waisted, button-bestrewed fellows in gray and
white how little they really knew about dancing well
as many of them appeared on the floor. His reward
was tendered as the hop broke up. She came gliding
to him with such witchery in her upraised face.
“Now, sir, it is your turn. I couldn’t
give you a dance, for my card was made out days ago,
but Mr. Latrobe was glad enough to get rid of taking
me home. He is daft about Nita, and of course
she can’t let him take her to more than
one hop a week. Mr. Stanton is her escort to-night.”
Then she placed her little hand on
his arm, and drew herself to his side, and when he
would have followed the others, going straight across
the broad plain to the lights at the hotel, turned
him to the left. “I’m going to take
you all the way round, sir,” she said joyously.
“Then we can be by ourselves at least ten minutes
longer.”
And so began the second period of
Gouverneur Prime’s thralldom. A young civilian
at the Point has few opportunities at any time, but
when the lady of his love is a belle in the corps,
he would much better take a long ocean voyage than
be where he could hear and see, and live in daily
torment. One comfort came to him when he could
not be with Mrs. Garrison (who naively explained that
“Gov” was such a dear boy and they were
such stanch friends, real comrades, you know).
He had early made the acquaintance of Pat Latrobe,
and there was a bond of sympathy between them which
was none the less strong because, on Prime’s
side, it could neither be admitted nor alluded to that
they were desperately in love with the sisters, and
it was not long before it began to dawn on Prime that
pretty little Nita was playing a double game that
even while assuring her guardian sister that she had
only a mild interest in Latrobe, she was really losing
or had lost her heart to him, and in every way in
her power was striving to conceal the fact from Margaret,
and yet meet her lover at hours when she thought it
possible to do so without discovery. As the friendship
strengthened between himself and Latrobe they began
using him as Cupid’s postman, and many little
notes and some big ones found their way to and from
the Fourth Division of cadet barracks. Mrs. Frank
was only moderately kind to her civilian adorer then,
granting him only one dance at each hop, and going
much with other men, but that dance was worth seeing.
Prime’s was the only black “claw-hammer”
in the room, and therefore conspicuous, and cadets who
know a good thing when they see it and many
a pretty girl partner, would draw aside to watch the
perfection of their step and the exquisite ease with
which they seemed to float through space, circling
and reversing and winding among the other dancers,
he ever alert, watchful, quick as a cat and lithe
and strong as a panther she all yielding
lissome airy grace. That dance was “Gov”
Prime’s reward, and almost only reward for hours
of impatient waiting. Other women, charming and
pretty and better women, would gladly have been his
partners. Some two or three whom he met at the
hotel even intimated as much. But not until Lady
Garrison told him he must to protect her
from scandal did he ask another to dance.
At last came the end of the summer’s encampment,
the return of the corps to barracks and studies, one
blissful week in which he was enabled to spend several
uninterrupted hours each day at her side, and then
a cataclysm. A letter intended only for Nita’s
hands fell into those of her sister. It was bulky.
It was from Latrobe. She hesitated only a moment,
then, with determination in her eyes, opened and read all.
Two days after Nita was whisked away to New York,
and within another week, leaving two most disconsolate
swains on the Hudson, the sisters, one of them bathed
in tears, went spinning away to the West, where Frank
Garrison was on duty at department headquarters.
Prime was permitted to write once a fortnight (he
sent a volume), and Latrobe forbidden, but already
the poor boy owned a thick packet of precious missives,
all breathing fond love and promising utter constancy
though she had to wait for him for years. For
a month Nita would hardly speak to her sister, but
in October there were lovely drives, picnics and gayeties
of all kinds. There were attractive young officers
and assiduous old ones, and among these latter was
Frost, with his handsome gray mustache and distinguished
bearing, and that air of conscious success and possession
which some men know so well how to assume even when
their chances are slimmer than my lady’s hand.
The sisterly breach was healed before that beautiful
month was over. Frost dined at the Garrison’s
four times a week and drove Miss Nita behind his handsome
bays every day or two. In November he asked a
question. In December there was an announcement
that called forth a score of congratulations around
headquarters, and in January the wedding cards went
all over the Union some to West Point but
to Latrobe, who had been looking ill and anxious for
six weeks, said his classmates, and falling off fearfully
in his studies, said his professors, only a brief note
inclosing his letters and begging for hers. At
reveille next morning there was no captain to receive
the report of roll call from the first sergeant of
Company “B.” “Where’s
Latrobe?” sleepily asked the officer of the
day of the cadet first lieutenant. “I don’
know,” was the answer, and to the amaze of Latrobe’s
roommate, who had gone to bed and to sleep right after
taps the night before, they found evidence that “Pat”
had left the post. He had not even made down
his bedding. His cadet uniforms were all there,
but a suit of civilian clothes, usually in a snug package
up the chimney, that had been used several times “running
it” to the hotel after taps in August, was now,
like its owner, missing. After three days’
waiting and fruitless search, the superintendent wired
Latrobe’s uncle and best friend, old General
Drayton, and that was the last seen or heard of “Pat.”
In the spring and ahead of time his class was graduated
without him, for the war with Spain was on. In
the spring an irate and long-tried father was upbraiding
another only son for persistent failures at college.
“Gov Prime will get the sack, not the sheepskin,”
prophesied his fellows. And then somehow, somewhere
the father heard it was a married woman with whom
his boy was so deeply in love, and there were bitter,
bitter words on both sides so bitter that
when at last he flung himself out of his father’s
study Gov Prime went straight to Mildred’s room,
silently kissed her and walked out of the house.
This was in April. The next heard of him he had
enlisted for the war and was gone to San Francisco
with his regiment with the prospect of service in the
Philippines ahead of him, but that was full four months
after his disappearance. Thither, late in July
the father followed, bringing Mildred with him and the
reader knows the rest.