To the New Yorker March is the vilest
month of all the year. In the South it is usually
serene. Mrs. Metuchen, who gave herself the airs
of an invalid, and who possessed the invalid’s
dislike of vile weather, was aware of this; and while
the first false promises of February were being protested
she succeeded in persuading Miss Dunellen to accompany
her out of snow-drifts into the sun. It was Aiken
that she chose as refuge; and when the two ladies
arrived there they felt satisfied that their choice
had been a proper one a satisfaction which
they did not share alone, for a few days after their
arrival Roland Mistrial arrived there too.
During the intervening weeks he had
seemed idle; but it is the thinker’s characteristic
to appear unoccupied when he is most busily engaged,
and Roland, outwardly inactive, had in reality made
the most of his time.
On the morning succeeding the encounter
with Thorold something kept coming and whispering
that he had undertaken a task which was beyond his
strength. To many of us night is apt to be more
confident than are the earlier hours of the day, and
the courage which Roland had exhibited spent itself
and went. It is hard to feel the flutter of a
bird beneath one’s fingers, and, just when the
fingers tighten, to discover that the bird is no longer
there. Such a thing is disappointing, and the
peculiarity of a disappointment consists in this the
victim of it is apt to question the validity of his
own intuitions. Thus far up to the
looming of Thorold everything had been in
Roland’s favor. Without appreciable effort
he had achieved the impossible. In three days
he had run an heiress to earth, gained her father’s
liking, captivated her chaperon, and, at the moment
when the air was sentient with success, the highway
on which he strode became suddenly tortuous and obscure.
Do what he might he could not discern so much as a
sign-post; and as in perplexity he twirled his thumbs,
little by little he understood that he must either
turn back and hunt another quarry, or stand where he
was and wait. Another step on that narrowing
road and he might tumble into a gully. Did he
keep his word with Thorold he felt sure that Thorold
would keep his word with him. But did he break
it, and Thorold learn he had done so, several consequences
were certain to ensue, and among them he could hear
from where he stood the bang with which Mr. Dunellen’s
door would close. The only plank which drifted
his way threatened to break into bits. He needed
no one to tell him that Justine was not a girl to
receive him or anyone else in the dark; and even fortune
favoring, if in chance meetings he were able to fan
her spark of interest for him into flame, those chance
meetings would be mentioned by her to whomsoever they
might concern. No, that plank was rotten; and
yet in considering it, and in considering too the
possibilities to which, were it a trifle stronger,
it might serve as bridge, he passed that morning, a
number of subsequent mornings. A month elapsed,
and still he eyed that plank.
Meanwhile he had seen Miss Dunellen
but once. She happened to be driving up the Avenue,
but he had passed her unobserved. Then the weather
became abominable, and he knew it was useless to look
for her in the Park; and once he had visited her father’s
office and learned again, what he already knew, that
in regard to the lost estate, eternity aiding, something
might be recovered, but that the chances were vague
as was it. And so February came and found his
hunger unappeased. The alternate course which
had suggested itself came back, and he determined to
turn and hunt another quarry. During his sojourn
abroad he had generally managed a team of three.
There was the gerundive, as he termed the hindmost the
woman he was about to leave; there was another into
whose graces he had entered; and there was a third
in training for future use. This custom he had
found most serviceable. Whatever might happen
in less regulated establishments, his stable was full.
And that custom, which had stood him in good stead
abroad, had nothing in it to prevent adoption here.
Indeed, he told himself it was because of his negligence
in that particular that he found himself where he was.
Instead of centring his attention on Miss Dunellen,
it would have been far better to wander in and out
of the glittering precincts of Fifth Avenue, and see
what else he could find. After all, there was
nothing like being properly provisioned. If one
comestible ran short, there should be another to take
its place. Moreover, if, as Jones had intimated,
there were heiresses enough for export purposes, there
must surely be enough to supply the home demand.
The alternate course alluded to he
had therefore determined to adopt, when an incident
occurred which materially altered his plans. One
particularly detestable morning he read in public print
that Mrs. Metuchen and Miss Dunellen were numbered
among the visitors to South Carolina, and thereupon
he proceeded to pack his valise. A few days later
he was in Aiken, and on the forenoon of the third day
succeeding his arrival, as he strolled down the verandah
of the Mountain Glen Hotel, he felt at peace with
the world and with himself.
It was a superb morning, half summer,
half spring. In the distance a forest stretched
indefinitely and lost itself in the haze of the horizon
beyond. The sky was tenderly blue, and, beneath,
a lawn green as the baize on a roulette-table was
circled by a bright-red road. He had breakfasted
infamously on food that might have been cooked by a
butcher to whom breakfast is an odious thing.
Yet its iniquity he accepted as a matter of course.
He knew, as we all do, that for bad food, bad service,
and for futility of complaint our country hotels are
unrivalled, even in Spain. He was there not to
enjoy himself, still less for the pleasures a blue
ribbon can cause: he was there to fan into flame
the interest which Miss Dunellen had exhibited; and
as he strolled down the verandah, a crop under his
arm, his trousers strapped, he had no intention of
quarrelling with the fare. Quite a number of people
were basking in the sunlight, and, as he passed, some
of them turned and looked; for at Aiken men that have
more than one lung are in demand, and, when Roland
registered his historic name, to the unattached females
a little flutter of anticipation came.
But Roland was not in search of flirtations:
he moved by one group into another until he reached
a corner of the verandah in which Mrs. Metuchen and
Miss Dunellen sat. Merely by the expression on
the faces of those whom he greeted it was patent to
the others that the trio were on familiar terms; and
when presently he accompanied Miss Dunellen off the
verandah, aided her to mount a horse that waited there,
mounted another himself, and cantered off with the
girl, the unattached females declared that the twain
must be engaged. In that they were in error.
As yet Roland had not said a word to the charge he
might not have said to the matron. Both of these
ladies had been surprised when he reached Aiken, and
both had been pleased as well. In that surprise,
in that pleasure, Roland had actively collaborated;
and taking on himself to answer before it was framed
the question which his advent naturally prompted, he
stated that in journeying from Savannah to Asheville
he had stopped over at Aiken as at a halfway house,
and that, too, without an idea of encountering anyone
whom he knew. Thereafter for several days he managed
to make himself indispensable to the matron, companionable
to her charge; but now, on this particular morning,
as he rattled down the red road, the courage which
had deserted him returned; and a few hours later,
when before a mirror in his bedroom he stood arranging
his cravat, he caught a reflection of Hyperion, son-in-law
of Croesus.