In years gone by it had been Mr. Van
Norden’s custom to pass the heated term at Rockaway.
But when Rockaway became a popular resort, Mr. Van
Norden, like the sensible man that he was, discovered
that his own house was more comfortable than a crowded
hotel. This particular summer, therefore, he
passed as usual in New York, and Tristrem, who had
moved to his house, kept him company. June was
not altogether disagreeable, but in July the city
was visited by a heat at once insistent and enervating.
In August it was cooler, as our Augusts are apt to
be; yet the air was lifeless, and New York was not
a nosegay. During these months Tristrem was as
lifeless as the air. In his first need of sympathy
he had gone to the irascible and kind-hearted old gentleman
and told him of the breaking of the engagement, and,
he might have added, of his heart, though in the telling
he sought, with a lover’s fealty, to palliate
the grievousness of the cruelty to which he had been
subjected.
“It is this way,” he said;
“Viola, I think, feels that she does not know
me sufficiently well. After all, we have seen
but little of each other, and if she accepted me,
it was on the spur of the moment. Since then she
has thought of it more seriously. It is for me
to win her, not for her to throw herself in my arms.
That is what she has thought. She may seem capricious;
and what if she does? Your knowledge of women
has, I am sure, made you indulgent.”
“Not in the least,” Mr.
Van Norden answered. And then, for the time being,
the subject was dropped.
It was this semi-consolatory view
which Tristrem took of the matter after the effect
of the first shock had lost its force. But when
he received the bundle of letters, together with the
Panama hat, which, through some splendid irony, had
been devised to him in the only clause of the will
in which his name was mentioned, it was as though a
flash had rent the darkness and revealed in one quick
glare an answer to the enigma in which he groped.
The letters were few in number a
dozen at most and they were tied together
with a bit of faded ribbon. They were all in the
same hand, one and all contained protestations of
passionate love, and each was signed in full, Roanoke
Raritan. The envelope which held them was addressed
to Mrs. Erastus Varick.
It was then that he saw the reason
of his disinheritance, and it was then that he understood
the cause of Viola’s withdrawal. It was
evident to him that Mrs. Raritan possessed either
thorough knowledge of the facts, or else that she
had some inkling of them which her feminine instinct
had supplemented into evidence, and which had compelled
her to forbid the banns. There were, however,
certain things which he could not make clear to his
mind. Why had Mrs. Raritan treated him with such
consideration? She had known from the first that
he loved her daughter. And after the engagement,
if she wished it broken, why had she allowed Viola
to invite him to the Pier?
These things were at first inexplicable
to him. Afterward he fancied that it might be
that Mrs. Raritan, originally uninformed, had become
so only through the man whom he had believed was his
father, after the announcement of the engagement had
been made to him, and possibly through some communication
which had only reached her after his sudden death.
This explanation he was inclined to accept, and he
was particularly inclined to do so on recalling the
spasm which had agitated the deceased when he had
come to him with the intelligence of the engagement,
and the nervous excitement which Mrs. Raritan displayed
on the morning when he left for town.
This explanation he accepted later but
in the horror of the situation in which he first found
himself his mind declined to act. He had never
known his mother, but her fame he had cherished as
one cherishes that which is best and most perfect
of all. And abruptly that fame was tarnished,
as some fair picture might be sullied by a splash and
splatter of mud. And as though that were insufficient,
the letters which devastated his mother’s honor
brought him a hideous suspicion, and one which developed
into certainty, that his father and the father of the
girl whom he loved were one and the same.
It is not surprising, then, that during
the summer months Tristrem was as lifeless as the
air he breathed. His grandfather noticed the
change he would have been blind indeed had
he not and he urged him to leave New York.
But at each remonstrance Tristrem shook his head with
persistent apathy. What did it matter to him where
he was? If New York, instead of being merely
hot and uncomfortable, had been cholera-smitten, and
the prey of pest, Tristrem’s demeanor would not
have altered. There are people whom calamity
affects like a tonic, who rise from misfortune refreshed;
there are others on whom disaster acts like a soporific,
and he was one of the latter. For three months
he did not open a book, the daily papers were taken
from him unread, and if during that time he had lost
his reason, it is probable that his insanity would
have consisted in sitting always with eyes fixed,
without laughing, weeping, or changing place.
But after the hearing in the Surrogate’s
Court there was a change of scene. The will was
set aside, and the estate, of which Tristrem had taken
absolutely no thought whatever, reverted to him.
It was then that he made it over in its entirety to
the institution to which it had been originally devised;
and it was in connection with the disposal of the
property, a disposal which he effected as a matter
of course, and as the only right and proper thing
for him to do, that he enjoyed a memorable interview
with his grandfather.
He had not spoken to Mr. Van Norden
about the letters, and the old gentleman, through
some restraining sense of delicacy, had hesitated to
question. Besides, he was confident that the estate
would be Tristrem’s, and thus assured, it seemed
unnecessary to him to touch on a matter to which Tristrem
had not alluded, and which was presumably distasteful
to him. But when he learned what Tristrem had
done, he looked upon the matter in a different light,
and attacked him very aggressively the next day.
“I can understand perfectly,”
he said, “that you should decline to hold property
on what you seem to regard as a legal quibble.
But I should be very much gratified to learn in what
your judgment is superior to that of the Legislature,
and why you should refuse that to which you had as
clear and indefeasible a claim as I have to this fob
on my waistcoat. I should be really very much
gratified to learn ”
Tristrem looked at his grandfather
very much as though he had been asked to open a wound.
But he answered nothing. He got the letters and
placed them in the old gentleman’s hand.
Mr. Van Norden glanced at one, and
then turned to Tristrem. It was evident that
he was in the currents of conflicting and retroacting
emotions. He made as though he would speak, yet
for the time being the intensity of his feelings prevented
him. He took up the letters again and eyed them,
shaking his head as he did so with the anger of one
enraged at the irreparable, and conscious of the futility
of the wrath.
In the lives of most men and women
there are moments in which they are pregnant with
words. The necessity of speech is so great that
until the parturition is accomplished they experience
the throes of suffocation. If no listener be
at hand, there are at least the walls. Mr. Van
Norden was standing near to Tristrem, but that he
might be the better assured of his attention, he caught
him by the arm, and addressed him in abrupt, disjointed
sentences, in a torrent of phrases, unconnected, as
though others than himself beat their vocables
from his mouth. His words were so tumultuous
that they assailed the gates of speech, as spectators
at the sight of flame crowd the exits of a hall, and
issue, some as were they hurled from catapults, others,
maimed, in disarray.
He was possessed of anger, and as
sometimes happens off the stage, his anger was splendid
and glorious to behold. And Tristrem, with the
thirst of one who has drunk of thirst itself, caught
the cascade of words, and found in them the waters
and fountains of life.
“These letters But
how is it possible? God in Heaven !
But can’t you see? the bare idea
is an infamy. Your mother was as interested in
Raritan as as It’s
enough to make a mad dog blush. It was just a
few months before you were born Bah!
the imbecility of Erastus Varick would unnerve a pirate.
I know he was always running there, Raritan was, but
anyone with the brain of a wooden Indian would have
understood Why, they were here they
came to me, all three of them, and because I knew
her father And precious little thanks
I got for my pains. He said he would see the
girl in her grave first. He would have it that
Raritan was after her for her money. It’s
true he hadn’t a penny but what’s
that got to do with it? The mischief’s done.
She must have sent these letters to your mother to
return to Raritan just before she married that idiot
Wainwaring. Your mother was her most intimate
friend they were at school together at Pelham
Priory. Raritan, I suppose, was away. Before
he got back, your mother you were born,
you know, and she died. She had no chance to
return them. That imbecile of a father of yours
must have found the letters, and thought But
how is such a thing possible? Good God! he ought
to be dug up and cowhided. And it was for this
he left you a Panama hat! And it was for this
you have turned over millions to an institution for
the shelter of vice! It was for this See
here, since Christ was crucified, a greater stupidity,
or one more iniquitous, has never been committed.”
In the magnificence of his indignation,
Mr. Van Norden stormed on until he lacked the strength
to continue. But he stormed to ravished and indulgent
ears. And when at last he did stop, Tristrem,
who meanwhile had been silent as a mouse, went over
to the arm-chair into which, in his exhaustion, he
had thrown himself, and touched his shoulder.
“If he did not wish me to have
the money,” he said, “how could I keep
it? How could I?” And before the honesty
that was in his face the old man lowered his eyes
to the ground. “I am gladder,” Tristrem
continued, “to know myself his son than to be
the possessor of all New York. But when I thought
that I was not his son, was that a reason why I should
cease to be a gentleman. Though I lost everything
else, what did it matter if I kept my self-respect?”
He waited a moment for an answer,
and then a very singular thing happened. From
Dirck Van Norden’s lowered eyes first one tear
and then a second rolled down into the furrows of
his cheek. From his throat came a sound that
did not wholly resemble a sob and yet was not like
to laughter, his mouth twitched, and he turned his
head aside. “It’s the first time
since your mother died,” he said at last, but
what he meant by that absurd remark, who shall say?
For some time Tristrem lingered, lost
in thought. It was indeed as he had said.
He was gladder to feel again that he was free to love
and free to be loved in return than he would have
been at holding all New York in fee. As he rose
from the nightmare in which he suffocated he did not
so much as pay the lost estate the compliment of a
regret. It was not that which had debarred him
from her, nor was it for that that she had once placed
her hand in his. He was well rid of it all, since
in the riddance the doors of his prison-house were
unlocked. For three months his heart had been
not dead but haunted, and now it was instinct with
life and fluttered by the beckonings of hope.
He had fronted sorrow. Pain had claimed him for
its own, and in its intensity it had absorbed his tears.
He had sunk to the uttermost depths of grief, and,
unbereft of reason, he had explored the horrors of
the abyss. And now in the magic of the unforeseen
he was transported to dazzling altitudes, to landscapes
from which happiness, like the despot that it is,
had routed sorrow and banished pain. He was like
one who, overtaken by years and disease, suddenly
finds his youth restored.
His plans were quickly made.
He would go to Narragansett at once, and not leave
until the engagement was renewed. He had even
the cruelty to determine that his grandfather should
come to the Pier himself, and argue with Mrs. Raritan,
if argument were necessary.
“I have so much to say,”
he presently exclaimed, “that I don’t know
where to begin.”
“Begin at the end,” his grandfather suggested.
But Tristrem found it more convenient
to begin in the middle. He led the old gentleman
into the rhyme and reason of the rupture, he carried
him forward and backward from old fancies to newer
hopes. He explained how imperative it was that
with the demolition of the obstacle which his father
had erected the engagement should be at once renewed;
he blamed himself for having even suggested that Viola
was capricious; he mourned over the position in which
she had been placed; he pictured Mrs. Raritan’s
relief when she learned of the error into which she
had wandered; and after countless digressions wound
up by commanding his grandfather to write an explanation
which would serve him as a passport to renewed and
uninterruptable favor.
“Certainly certainly,”
Mr. Van Norden cried, with the impatience of one battling
against a stream. “But even granting that
your father wrote to Mrs. Raritan, which I doubt although,
to be sure, he was capable of anything don’t
you see that you are in a very different position to-day
than you would have been had you not had
you not ”
“You mean about the money?”
“Why, most assuredly I mean
about the money,” the old gentleman cried, aroused
to new indignation by the wantonness of the question.
At this Tristrem, with the blithe
confidence of a lover, shook his head. “You
don’t know Viola,” he answered. “Besides,
I can work. Other men do why shouldn’t
I?”
“And be able to marry when you
are ready for the grave. That’s nonsense.
Unless the young lady is a simpleton, and her mother
a fit subject for Bedlam, don’t tell them that
you are going to work. And what would you work
at, pray? No, no that won’t do.
You are as fitted to go into business as I am to open
a bake-shop.”
“I might try stocks,” said Tristrem, bravely.
“So you might, if you had the
St. Nicholas money to start with. And even then
you would have to lose two fortunes before you could
learn how to make one. No, if you have not six
or seven millions, you will, one of these days and
the later the day the better for me you
will have a few hundred thousand. It is paltry
enough in comparison to the property which you threw
out of the window, but, paltry or not, it’s more
than you deserve. Meanwhile, I will There,
don’t begin your nonsense again, sir. For
the last three months you have done nothing but bother
the soul out of me. Meanwhile, if you don’t
accept what I care to give, and accept it, what’s
more, with a devilish good grace, I’ll I’ll
disinherit you myself begad I will.
I’ll leave everything I have to the St. Nicholas.
It’s a game that two can play at. You have
set the fashion, and you can abide by it. And
now I would be very much indebted if you would let
me get some rest.”
Therewith the fierce old gentleman
looked Tristrem in the eyes, and grasping him by the
shoulder, he held him to him for a second’s space.