By Edward Bellamy
1898
The train slackened, a brakeman thrust
his head in at the door and shouted “Bah,”-a
mysterious formality observed on American trains as
they enter towns,-and an elderly lady, two
drummers, and a young man with a satchel got out,
followed by the languid envy of the other passengers,
who had longer or shorter penances of heat and dust
before them. The train got under way again, while
the knot of loafers about the station proceeded to
eye the arrivals as judicially as if they were a committee
of safety to protect the village from invasion by doubtful
characters. The old lady, apparently laboring
under some such impression, regarded them deferentially,
as nervous travelers on arriving in strange places
generally do regard everybody who seems to feel at
home. The drummers briskly disappeared down the
main street, each anxious to anticipate the other
at the stores. The young man with the satchel,
however, did not get away till he had shaken hands
and exchanged a few good-natured inquiries with one
of the loungers.
“Who’s that, Bill?”
asked one of the group, staring after the retreating
figure with lazy curiosity.
“Why, did n’t you know
him? Thought everybody knew him. That’s
Arthur Steele,” replied the one who had shaken
hands, in a tone of cordiality indicating that his
politeness had left a pleasant impression on his mind,
as Arthur Steele’s politeness generally did.
“Who is he, anyhow?” pursued the other.
“Why, he ’s a Fairfield
boy” (the brakeman pronounced it “Bah"),
“born and brought up here. His folks
allers lived right next to mine, and now he’s
doin’ a rushin’ lawyer trade down New York,
and I expect he’s just rakin’ the stamps.
Did yer see that diamond pin he wore?”
“S’pose it’s genooine?”
asked a third loafer, with interest.
“Course it was. I tell
you he’s on the make, and don’t you forgit
it. Some fellers allers has luck. Many
’s the time he ‘n’ I ’ve
been in swim-min’ and hookin’ apples together
when we wuz little chaps,” pursued Bill, in
a tone implying a mild reproach at the deceitfulness
of an analogy that after such fair promise in early
life had failed to complete itself in their later
fortunes.
“Why, darn it all, you know
him, Jim,” he continued, dropping the tone of
pensive reminiscence into which he had momentarily
allowed himself to fall. “That pretty gal
that sings in the Baptis’ choir is his sister.”
After a space of silent rumination
and jerking of peanut shells upon the track, the group
broke up its session, and adjourned by tacit understanding
till the next train was due.
Arthur Steele was half an hour in
getting to his father’s house, because everybody
he met on the street insisted on shaking hands with
him. Everybody in Fairfield had known him since
he was a boy, and had seen him grow up, and all were
proud of him as a credit to the village and one of
its most successful representatives in the big outside
world. The young man had sense and sentiment
enough to feel that the place he held in the esteem
of his native community was a thing to feel more just
pride in than any station he could win in the city,
and as he walked along hand-shaking with old friends
on this side and that, it was about his idea of a
triumphal entry.
There was the dear old house, and
as he saw it his memory of it started out vividly
in his mind as if to attest how faithfully it had kept
each detail. It never would come out so clearly
at times when he was far away and needed its comfort.
He opened the door softly. The sitting-room was
empty, and darkened to keep out the heat and flies.
The latched door stood open, and, hearing voices,
he tiptoed across the floor with a guileful smile
and, leaning through the doorway, saw his mother and
sister sitting by the cool, lilac-shaded window, picking
over currants for tea, and talking tranquilly.
Being a provident young man, he paused a minute to
let the pretty, peaceful scene impress itself upon
his mind, to be remembered afterward for the cheer
of bleak boarding-house Sunday afternoons. Then
there was a sudden glancing up, a cry of joyful consternation,
and the pan of currants rolled from Amy’s lap
like a broken necklace of rubies across the uncarpeted
floor, while Arthur held mother and sister in a double
embrace. And when at length the kissing had all
been done, he established himself in his familiar boyish
attitude on the window-seat, kicking his heels against
the mopboard, with his elbows on his knees, and the
three talked away steadily till the shop-bell rang,
and Mrs. Steele sprang up in a panic, exclaiming:
“Father will be here in five minutes, and the
currants are on the floor. Come, Amy, quick;
we must pick some more, and you shall help, Arthur.”
But though he went out into the garden
with them readily enough, it was quite another thing
to make him pick currants, for he insisted on wandering
all over the place and demanding what had become of
everything he missed, and the history of everything
new. And pretty soon Mr. Steele also appeared
in the garden, having found no one in the house on
reaching home. He had learned on the street that
Arthur had arrived, and came out beaming. It
was good to see the hearty affection with which the
two shook hands.
The transition of the son from the
pupilage of childhood and youth to the independence
of manhood is often trying to the filial relation.
Neither party fully realizes that the old relation
is at an end, or just what the new basis is, or when
the change takes place. The absence of the son
for two or three years at this period has often the
best results. He goes a boy and returns a man;
the old relation is forgotten by both parties, and
they readily fall into the new one. So it had
fared with Arthur and his father.
“You’ve got a splendid
lot of watermelons,” said the former, as they
arrived at the upper end of the ample garden in their
tour of inspection.
“Yes,” replied Mr. Steele,
with a shrug; “only thus far they’ve been
stolen a little faster than they ’ve ripened.”
“What made you plant them so near the fence?”
“That was my blunder; but you
see the soil is just the thing, better than lower
down.”
“Why don’t you buy a bulldog?”
“I think it’s more Christian
to shoot a man outright than to set one of those devils
on him. The breed ought to be extirpated.”
“Put some ipecac in one or two.
That ’ll fetch ’em. I know how sick
it made me once.”
“I did; but more were stolen
next night. I can’t afford to medicate the
whole village. Last night I sat up to watch till
twelve o’clock, when mother made me go to bed.”
“I’ll watch to-night,”
said Arthur, “and give ’em a lesson with
a good load of beans from the old shotgun.”
“It would n’t pay,”
replied his father. “I concluded last night
that all the melons in the world were n’t worth
a night’s sleep. They ’ll have to
go, and next year I ’ll know more than to plant
any.”
“You go and help Amy pick currants,
and let me talk to the boy a little,” said Mrs.
Steele, coming up and taking Arthur off for a promenade
up the broad path.
“How pretty Amy has grown,”
said he, glancing with a pleased smile at the girl
as she looked up at her father. “I suppose
the young men are making sheep’s eyes at her
already.”
“It does n’t do them any
good if they are,” said Mrs. Steele, decisively.
“She’s only sixteen and a little girl yet,
and has sense enough to know it.” “What
had she been crying for when I arrived? I saw
her eyes were as red as the currants.”
“Oh, dear!” replied Mrs.
Steele, with a sigh of vexation, “it was her
troubles at the Seminary. You know we let her
go as a day scholar this sum-mer. Some of the
girls slight and snub her, and she is very unhappy
about it.”
“Why, what on earth can anybody
have against Amy?” demanded Arthur, in indignant
surprise.
“I suppose it’s because
some of the little hussies from the city have taken
the notion that they won’t associate with a mechanic’s
daughter, although Amy is very careful not to say
it in so many words, for fear of hurting my feelings.
But I suspect that’s about where the shoe pinches.”
Arthur muttered something between
an oath and a grunt, expressing the emphasis of the
one and the disgust of the other.
“I tell Amy it is foolish to
mind their airs, but I ’m really afraid it spoils
the poor girl’s happiness.”
“Why don’t you send her
away to boarding-school, if it is so serious a matter
as that?”
“We can’t afford it,”
said his mother, whereto Arthur promptly replied:
-
“I ’ll pay her expenses.
I ’m making a good deal more money than I know
what to do with, and I ’d really like the chance
of doing a little good.”
His mother glanced at him with affectionate pride.
“You ’re always wanting
to pay somebody’s expenses, or make somebody
a present. It’s really unsafe, when you
’re around, to indicate that one is n’t
perfectly contented. But you caught me up too
quickly. I was going to say that we could n’t
spare her from home, anyhow. She’s the
light of the house. Besides that, if it comes
to objections, I ’ve my notions about boarding-schools,
and I ’d trust no girl of mine at one that wasn’t
within sight of her home. No, she’ll have
to keep on here and bear it as she can, though it’s
pretty hard, I know. The trouble to-night was,
that Lina Maynard, who is one of the older girls, has
invited nearly everybody at the Seminary except Amy
to a birthday party to-morrow. Little minx, I
could shake her. And the worst of it is, Amy
thinks there ’s nobody like Lina Maynard.”
After tea it was still light, and
Arthur and Amy went out to walk. In spite of
the ten years difference in their ages, he always enjoyed
her company as well as anybody’s in the world,
because she was so refreshingly childlike and natural.
Every chord of feeling answered so true and clear
to the touch, that to talk with her was like playing
on a musical instrument, only far more delightful.
Arthur had looked forward to walks and talks with
Amy as among the jolliest treats of his vacation.
She tried her best now to seem light-hearted, and to
entertain him with the local gossip, for which he
always depended on her. But she could n’t
simulate the vivacious and eager air that had been
the chief charm of her talk. As he glanced down,
he was grieved to see the sad set of the pretty child
face at his side, and how still had grown the fountain
of smiles in the hazel eyes that were wont to send
their ripples outward in constant succession.
It is to be feared that under his breath he applied
some very ungentlemanly language to Lina Maynard and
her clique, whose nonsenical ill-nature had hurt this
little girl’s feelings so sorely, and incidentally
spoiled half the fun of his vacation.
“There, there, you need n’t
talk any more,” he finally said, rather rudely,
half vexed with her, as helpful people are wont to
be with those they can do nothing to help.
She looked up in grieved surprise,
but before he could speak again, they came face to
face with a party of girls coming from the direction
of the Seminary.
There were six or seven of them, perhaps,
but Arthur only got the impression of one and a lot
of others. The one was a rather tall girl of
lithe figure and unusually fine carriage. Her
olive complexion was lighted with great black eyes
that rested on you with an air of imperturbable assurance,
as penetrating as it was negligent. She was talking,
and her companions were listening and laughing.
As they came face to face with Arthur and Amy, he
saw that they barely noticed her, while glancing at
him rather curiously, with the boldness of girls in
a crowd of their own sex. They evidently observed
that he was a stranger to the village, and of quite
a different style from that of the country bumpkins
and rural exquisites they were accustomed to meeting.
There was in the big black eyes, as they had met his
a moment, a suggestion of interest that was strangely
flattering, and left a trace of not unpleasant agitation.
“Who was that?” he asked, as they passed
out of hearing.
He only thought of asking for one,
although there were six, nor she apparently of answering
differently.
“Lina Maynard. They are ‘Sem.’
girls.”
It was a dulled voice she spoke in,
quite unlike her usual eager way of giving information.
She, poor thing, was terribly afraid he would ask
her why they did not seem acquainted with her, and
it would have been a painful humiliation to have explained.
Arthur was conscious that he no longer had exactly
the same feeling of merely contemptuous annoyance
toward Lina Maynard, on account of her treatment of
Amy. He sympathized as much with his sister,
of course, but somehow felt that to be recognized
by Lina Maynard was not such a childish ambition as
he had taken for granted.
It was dusk when they reached home
and found Mr. and Mrs. Steele on the piazza, which
served as an out-door parlor in summer, with a neighbor
who had dropped in to see Arthur. So he got out
his cigar-case and told stories of city life and interesting
law cases to an intent audience till the nine o’clock
bell rang, and the neighbor “guessed he ’d
go home,” and forthwith proved that his guess
was right by going.
“’Gad, I’d forgotten
all about the watermelons! Perhaps they ’re
at ’em already!” cried Arthur, jumping
up and running around the end of the piazza to the
garden.
When he returned, it was to meet a
combined volley of protestations against his foolish
project of keeping watch all night, from his father,
his mother, and Amy. But he declared it was no
use talking; and where were the gun and the beans?
So they adjourned from the piazza, a lamp was lit,
the articles were hunted up, and the gun duly loaded
with a good charge of powder and a pint of hard beans.
It was about ten o’clock when Arthur, with a
parting protest from his mother, went out into the
garden, lugging his gun and a big easy-chair, while
Amy followed, bringing one or two wraps, and a shocking
old overcoat hunted up in the garret, for the chill
hours after midnight.
The front of Mr. Steele’s lot
abutted on one of the pleasantest and most thickly
housed streets of the village; but the lot was deep,
and the rear end rested on a road bordered by few
houses, and separated from the garden by a rail fence
easy to climb over or through. The watermelon
patch was located close to this fence, and thus in
full view and temptingly accessible from the road.
Undoubtedly the human conscience,
and especially the boyish article, recognizes a broad
difference between the theft of growing crops-of
apples on the trees, for instance, or corn on the stalk,
or melons in the field-and that of other
species of property. The surreptitious appropriation
of the former class of chattels is known in common
parlance as “hooking,” while the graver
term “stealing” describes the same process
in other cases. The distinction may arise from
a feeling that, so long as crops remain rooted to
the ground, they are nature’s, not man’s,
and that nature can’t be regarded as forming
business contracts with some individuals to the exclusion
of others, or in fact as acceding to any of our human
distinctions of meum and tuum, however
useful we find them. Ethical philosophers may
refuse to concede the sanction of the popular distinction
here alluded to between “hooking” and
stealing; but, after all, ethics is not a deductive
but an empirical science, and what are morals but
a collection of usages, like orthography and orthoepy?
However that may be, it is the duty of the writer
in this instance merely to call attention to the prevalent
popular sentiment on the subject, without any attempt
to justify it, and to state that Arthur Steele had
been too recently a boy not to sympathize with it.
And accordingly he laid his plans to capture the expected
depredators to-night from practical considerations
wholly, and quite without any sense of moral reprobation
toward them.
Closely adjoining the edge of the
melon-patch was a patch of green corn, standing ten
feet high, and at the fullest perfection of foliage.
This Arthur selected for his ambush, its position
being such that he could cut off the retreat to the
fence of any person who had once got among the melons.
Hewing down a hill of corn in the second row from the
front, he made a comfortable place for his easy-chair.
Amy lingered for a while, enjoying the excitement
of the occasion, and they talked in whispers; but
finally Arthur sent her in, and as her dress glimmered
away down the garden path, he settled himself comfortably
for his watch.
In the faint moonlight he could just
descry the dark shapes of the melons on the ground
in front of him. The crickets were having a high
time in the stubble around, and the night air drew
sweet autumnal exhalations from the ground; for autumn
begins by night a long time before it does by day.
The night wind rustled in the corn with a crisp articulateness
he had never noticed in daytime, and he felt like
an eavesdropper. Then for a while he heard the
music of some roving serenaders, down in the village,
and grew pensive with the vague reminiscences of golden
youth, romance, and the sweet past that nightly music
suggests,-vague because apparently they
are not reminiscences of the individual but of the
race, a part of the consciousness and ideal of humanity.
At last the music was succeeded by the baying of a
dog in some distant farmyard, and then, ere the ocean
of silence had fairly smoothed its surface over that,
a horse began to kick violently in a neighboring barn.
Some time after, a man chopped some kindlings in a
shed a couple of lots off. Gradually, however,
the noises ceased like the oft-returning yet steadily
falling ebb of the tide, and Arthur experienced how
many degrees there are of silence, each more utter
than the last, so that the final and absolute degree
must be something to which the utmost quiet obtainable
on earth is uproar. One by one the lights went
out in the houses, till the only ones left were in
the windows of the Seminary, visible over the tree-tops
a quarter of a mile away.
“The girls keep late hours,”
thought Arthur. And from that he fell to thinking
of Lina Maynard and the careless, almost insolent,
grace of her manner, and that indifferent yet penetrating
glance of hers. Where did she come from?
Probably from California, or the far West; he had heard
that the girls out there were of a bolder, more unconventional
type than at the East. What a pity she did not
fancy Amy!
What was that moving across the melon-patch?
He reached for his gun. It was only a cat, though,
after all. The slight noise in the corn-patch
attracted the animal’s attention, and it came
across and poked its head into the opening where Arthur
sat. As the creature saw him, its start of surprise
would have shattered the nervous system of anything
but a cat. It stood half thrown back on its haunches,
its ears flattened, its eyes glaring in a petrifaction
of amazement. Arthur sat motionless as marble,
laughing inwardly. For full two minutes the two
stared at each other without moving a muscle, and
then, without relaxing its tense attitude, the cat
by almost imperceptible degrees withdrew one paw and
then another, and, thus backing out of the corn-patch,
turned around when at a safe distance and slunk away.
A few minutes later a dog, that enthusiast
in perfumes, jumped through the fence and trotted
across the melon-patch, his nose to the ground, making
a collection of evening smells. Arthur expected
nothing but that he would scent his neighborhood,
find him out, and set up a barking. But, chancing
to strike the cat’s trail, off went the dog on
a full run with nose to the ground.
Such were the varying humors of the
night. After the episode of the dog, feeling
a little chilly, Arthur enveloped himself in the tattered
old overcoat and must have dropped into a nap.
Suddenly he awoke. Within ten feet of him, just
in the act of stooping over a huge melon, was a woman’s
figure. He saw the face clearly as she rose.
Immortal gods! it was-But I am anticipating.
The discipline at Westville Seminary
had been shockingly lax since the long illness of
the principal had left the easy-going first assistant
teacher at the head of affairs. The girls ran
all over the rules,-had private theatricals,
suppers, and games of all sorts in their rooms at
all hours of day or night. In the course of the
evening whose events in another sphere of life have
been narrated, several girls called at Lina Maynard’s
room to notify her of the “spread” at Nell
Barber’s, N, at eleven o’clock.
They found her sitting in a low rocking-chair, with
an open letter in her hand and a very pensive, discontented
expression of countenance.
“Does he press for an answer,
Lina? We ’re just in time to advise you,”
cried Nell Barber.
“Don’t say Yes unless
his eyes are blue,” drawled a brunette.
“Unless they ’re black,
you mean,” sharply amended a bright blonde.
“Make him elope with you,”
suggested Nell, “It will be such fun to have
a real rope-ladder elopement at the Seminary, and
we’ll all sit up and see it.”
“Oh, do, do, Lina!” chorused the others.
But Lina, apparently too much chagrined
at something to be in a mood for jests, sat with her
eyebrows petulantly contracted, her feet thrust out,
and the hand holding the letter hanging by her side,
her whole attitude indicating despondence.
“Still pensive! It can’t
be he’s faithless!” exclaimed Nell.
“Faithless to those eyes!
I should say not,” cried the blonde, whom Lina
called her sweetheart, and who claimed to be “engaged”
to her according to boarding-school fashion.
“Don’t mind him, dear,”
she went on, throwing herself on the floor, clasping
her hands about Lina’s knee, and leaning her
cheek on it. “You make me so jealous.
Have n’t you got me, and ain’t I enough?”
“Plenty enough, dear,”
said Lina, stroking her cheek. “This is
only from my brother Charley.”
“The one at Watertown ’Sem.’?”
“Yes,” said Lina; “and
oh, girls,” she went on, with gloomy energy,
“we don’t have any good times at all compared
with those boys. They do really wicked things,
hook apples, and carry off people’s gates and
signs, and screw up tutors’ doors in the night,
and have fights with what he calls ’townies,’-I
don’t know exactly what they are,-and
everything. I thought before that we were doing
some things too, but we ’re not, compared with
all that, and I shall be so ashamed when I meet him
at home not to have anything to tell except little
bits of things.”
A depressing pause followed.
Lina’s disparaging view of achievements in the
way of defying the proprieties, of which all the girls
had been very proud, cast a profound gloom over the
circle. The blonde seemed to voice the common
sentiment when she said, resting her chin on Lina’s
knee, and gazing pensively at the wall:-
“Oh, dear! that comes of being
girls. We might as well be good and done with
it. We can’t be bad so as to amount to anything.”
“Good or bad, we must eat,”
said Nell Barber. “I must go and get the
spread ready. I forgot all about it, Lina; but
we came in just to invite you. Eleven sharp,
remember. Three knocks, a pause, and another,
you know. Come, girls.”
The brunette followed her, but Lina’s
little sweetheart remained.
“What have they got?” demanded the former
listlessly.
“Oh, Nell has a jar of preserves
from home, and I smuggled up a plate of dried beef
from tea, and cook let us have some crackers and plates.
We tried hard to get a watermelon there was in the
pantry, but cook said she did n’t dare let us
have it. It’s for dinner to-morrow.”
Lina’s eyes suddenly became
introspective; then after a moment she rose slowly
and stood in her tracks with an expression of deep
thought, absent-mindedly took one step, then another,
and after a pause a third, finally pulling up before
the mirror, into which she stared vacantly for a moment,
and then muttered defiantly as she turned away:-
“We ’ll see, Master Charley.”
“Lina Maynard, what’s
the matter with you?” cried the blonde, who had
watched the pantomime with open mouth and growing eyes.
Lina turned and looked at her thoughtfully
a moment, and then said with decisiveness:-
“You just go to Nell’s,
my dear, and say I ’m coming pretty soon; and
if you say anything else, I ’ll-I
’ll never marry you.”
The girls were in the habit of doing
as Lina wanted them to, and the blonde went, pouting
with unappeased curiosity.
To gain exit from the Seminary was
a simple matter in these lax days, and five minutes
later Lina was walking rapidly along the highway, her
lips firm set, but her eyes apprehensively reconnoitring
the road ahead, with frequent glances to each side
and behind. Once she got over the stone wall
at the roadside in a considerable panic and crouched
in the dewy grass while a belated villager passed,
but it was without further adventure that she finally
turned into the road leading behind Mr. Steele’s
lot, and after a brief search identified the garden
where she remembered seeing some particularly fine
melons, when out walking a day or two previous.
There they lay, just the other side the fence, faintly
visible in the dim light She could not help congratulating
herself, by the way, on the excellent behavior of
her nerves, whose tense, fine-strung condition was
a positive luxury, and she then and there understood
how men might delight in desperate risks for the mere
sake of the exalted and supreme sense of perfect self-possession
that danger brings to some natures. Not, indeed,
that she stopped to indulge any psychological speculations.
The coast was clear; not a footfall or hoof-stroke
sounded from the road, and without delay she began
to look about for a wide place between the rails where
she might get through. Just as she found it,
she was startled by an unmistakable human snore, which
seemed to come from a patch of high corn close to the
melons, and she was fairly puzzled until she observed,
about ten rods distant in the same line, an open attic
window. That explained its origin, and with a
passing self-congratulation that she had made up her
mind not to marry a man that snored, she began to
crawl through the fence. When halfway through
the thought struck her,-wasn’t it
like any other stealing, after all? This crawling
between rails seemed dreadfully so. Her attitude,
squeezed between two rails and half across the lower
one, was neither graceful nor comfortable, and perhaps
that fact shortened her scruples.
“It can’t be really stealing,
for I don’t feel like a thief,” was the
logic that settled it, and the next moment she had
the novel sensation of having both feet surreptitiously
and feloniously on another person’s land.
She decidedly did n’t relish it, but she would
go ahead now and think of it afterward. She was
pretty sure she never would do it again, anyhow, experiencing
that common sort of repentance beforehand for the
thing she was about to do, the precise moral value
of which it would be interesting to inquire.
It ought to count for something, for, if it does n’t
hinder the act, at least it spoils the fun of it.
Here was a melon at her feet; should she take it?
That was a bigger one further on, and her imperious
conscientiousness compelled her to go ten steps further
into the enemy’s country to get it, for now that
she was committed to the undertaking, she was bound
to do the best she could.
To stoop, to break the vine, and to
secure the melon were an instant’s work; but
as she bent, the high corn before her waved violently
and a big farmer-looking man in a slouch hat and shocking
old coat sprang out and seized her by the arm, with
a grip not painful but sickeningly firm, exclaiming
as he did so:-
“Wal, I swan ter gosh, if ’t ain’t
a gal!”
Lina dropped the melon, and, barely
recalling the peculiar circumstances in time to suppress
a scream, made a silent, desperate effort to break
away. But her captor’s hold was not even
shaken, and he laughed at the impotence of her attempt.
In all her petted life she had never been held a moment
against her will, and it needed not the added considerations
that this man was a coarse, unknown boor, the place
retired, the time midnight, and herself in the position
of a criminal, to give her a feeling of abject terror
so great as to amount to positive nausea, as she realized
her utter powerlessness in his hands.
“So you’ve been a-stealin’
my melons, hey?” he demanded gruffly.
The slight shake with which the question
was enforced deprived her of the last vestige of dignity
and self-assertion. She relapsed into the mental
condition of a juvenile culprit undergoing correction.
Now that she was caught, she no longer thought of
her offense as venial. The grasp of her captor
seemed to put an end to all possible hairsplitting
on that point, and prove that it was nothing more nor
less than stealing, and a sense of guilt left her
without any moral support against her fright.
She was only conscious of utter humiliation, and an
abject desire to beg off on any terms.
“What do you go round stealin’
folks’s melons for, young woman? Don’t
yer folks bring yer up better ’n that? It’s
a dodrotted shame to ’em, ef they don’t.
What did ye want with the melons? Don’t
they give yer enough to eat ter home, hey?”
“We were going to have some
supper, sir,” she replied, in a scared, breathless
tone, with a little hope of propitiating him by being
extremely civil and explicit in her replies.
“Who was havin’ supper
to this time er night?” he snorted incredulously.
“We girls,” was the faint reply.
“What gals?”
Had she got to tell where she came
from and be identified? She couldn’t, she
wouldn’t. But again came that dreadful shake,
and the words faltered out:-
“Over at the Seminary, sir.”
“Whew! so ye ’re one er them, are ye?
What’s yer name?”
Cold dew stood on the poor girl’s
forehead. She was silent. He might kill
her, but she would n’t disgrace her father’s
name.
“What’s yer name?” he repeated,
with another shake.
She was still silent, though limp as a rag in his
grasp.
“Wal,” said he sharply,
after waiting a half minute to see if she would answer,
“I guess ye’ll be more confidin’
like to the jedge when he inquiries in the mornin’.
A night in the lock-up makes folks wonderful civil.
Now I’ll jest trouble ye to come along to the
police office,” and he walked her along by the
arm toward the house.
As the horrible degradation to which
she was exposed flashed upon Lina, the last remnant
of her self-control gave way, and, hanging back with
all her might against his hand, she burst into sobs.
“Oh, don’t, don’t!
It will kill me. I’ll tell you my name.
It’s Lina Maynard. My father is a rich
merchant in New York, Broadway, N. He will
give you anything, if you let me go. Anything
you want. Oh, please don’t! Oh, don’t!
I could n’t! I could n’t!”
In this terror-stricken, wild-eyed
girl, her face streaming with tears, and every lineament
convulsed with abject dread, there was little enough
to remind Arthur Steele of the queenly maiden who had
favored him with a glance of negligent curiosity that
afternoon. He stopped marching her along and
said reflectively:-
“Lina Maynard, hey! Then
you must be the gal that’s down on Amy Steele
and would n’t ask her to the party to-morrow.
Say, ain’t yer the one?”
Lina was too much bewildered by the
sudden change of tack to do more than stammer inarticulately.
I am afraid that in her terror she would have been
capable of denying it, if she had thought that would
help her. Her captor reflected more deeply, scratched
his head, and finally, assuming a diplomatic attitude
by thrusting his hands in his pocket, remarked:-
“I s’pose ye ’d
like it dummed well ef I was to let yer go and say
nothin’ more about it. I reelly don’t
s’pose I ’d orter do it; but it riles
me to see Amy comin’ home cryin’ every
day, and I ’ll tell ye what I ’ll do.
Ef you ’ll ask her to yer fandango to-morrer,
and be friends with her arterward so she ’ll
come home happy and cheerful like, I ’ll let
ye go, and if ye don’t, I ’ll put ye in
jug overnight, sure’s taxes. Say Yes or
No now, quick!”
“Yes, yes!” Lina cried, with frantic eagerness.
There was scarcely any possible ransom
he could have asked that she would not have instantly
given. She dared not credit her ears, and stood
gazing at him in intense, appealing suspense, as if
he might be about to revoke his offer. But instead
of that, he turned down the huge collar of the old
overcoat, took it off, threw it on the ground, and,
turning up the slouch of his hat, stood before her
a very good-looking and well-dressed young gentleman,
whom she at once recognized and at length identified
in her mind as the one walking with Amy that afternoon,
which now seemed weeks ago. He bowed very low,
and said earnestly enough, though smiling:-
“I humbly beg your pardon.”
Lina stared at him with dumb amazement, and he went
on:-
“I am Arthur Steele. I
came home on a vacation to-day, and was sitting up
to watch father’s melon-patch for the pure fun
of it, expecting to catch some small boys, and when
I caught you, I couldn’t resist the temptation
of a little farce. As for Amy, that only occurred
to me at the last; and if you think it unfair, you
may have your promise back.”
Lina had now measurably recovered
her equannimity, and, ignoring his explanation, demanded,
as she looked around:-
“How am I to get out of this
dreadful place?” mentally contemplating meanwhile
the impossibility of clambering through that fence
with a young gentleman looking on.
“I will let down the bars,”
he said, and they turned toward the fence.
“Let’s see, this is your
melon, is it not?” he observed, stooping to
pick up the booty Lina had dropped in her first panic.
“You must keep that anyhow. You ’ve
earned it.”
Since the tables turned so unexpectedly
in her favor, Lina had recovered her dignity in some
degree, and had become very freezing toward this young
man, by whom she began to feel she had been very badly
treated. In this reaction of indignation she
had really almost forgotten how she came in the garden
at all. But this reference to the melon quite
upset her new equanimity, and as Arthur grinned broadly
she blushed and stood there in awful confusion.
Finally she blurted out:-
“I didn’t want your stupid
melon. I only wanted some fun. I can’t
explain, and I don’t care whether you understand
it or not.”
Tears of vexation glittered in her
eyes. He sobered instantly, and said, with an
air of the utmost deference:-
“Pardon me for laughing, and
do me the justice to believe that I ’m in no
sort of danger of misunderstanding you. I hooked
too many melons myself as a boy not to sympathize
perfectly. But you must really let me carry the
melon home for you. What would the girls say,
if you returned empty-handed?”
“Well, I will take the melon,”
she said, half defiantly; “but I should prefer
not to have your company.”
He did not reply till he had let down
the bars, and then said:-
“The streets are not safe at
this hour, and you ’ve had frights enough
for one night.”
She made no further objections, and
with the watermelon poised on his shoulder he walked
by her side, neither speaking a word, till they reached
the gate of the Seminary grounds. There she stopped,
and, turning, extended her hands for the melon.
As he gave it to her their eyes met a moment, and
their mutual appreciation of the humor of the situation
expressed itself in an irrepressible smile that seemed
instantly to make them acquainted, and she responded
almost kindly to his low “Good-evening.”
Amy came home jubilant next day.
Lina May-nard had invited her to her party, and
had been ever so good to her, and there was nobody
in the world like Lina. Arthur listened and said
nothing. All the next week it was the same story
of Lina’s beauty, good-nature, cleverness, and
perfections generally, and, above all, her goodness
to herself, Amy Steele. Lina was indeed fulfilling
her promise with generous over-measure. And after
once taking up with Amy, the sweet simplicity and
enthusiastic loyalty of the child to herself won her
heart completely. The other girls wondered, but
Lina Maynard’s freaks always set the fashion,
and Amy, to her astonishment and boundless delight,
found herself the pet of the Seminary. The little
blonde, Lina’s sweetheart, alone rebelled against
the new order of things and was furiously jealous,
for which she was promptly snubbed by Lina, and Amy
taken into her place. And meanwhile Lina caught
herself several times wondering whether Arthur Steele
was satisfied with the way she was keeping her pledge.
It was Wednesday night, and Arthur
was to return to New York Thursday morning. Although
he had walked the street every afternoon and had met
nearly all the other girls at the Seminary, he had
not seen Lina again. His mother, whom he took
about a good deal on pleasure drives, seriously wondered
if the eagerness of city life was really spoiling his
faculty for leisurely pleasures. He always seemed
to be looking out ahead for something, instead of
quietly enjoying the passing sights and scenery.
He had consented to accompany Amy to a little church
sociable on the evening before his departure.
It was a species of entertainment which he detested,
but he thought he might possibly meet Lina there, as
Amy had said some of the Seminary girls would be present.
At once, on entering the vestry, he
caught sight of her at the other end of the room among
a group of girls. At the sound of the closing
door she glanced up with an involuntary gesture of
expectancy, and their eyes met. She looked confused,
and instantly averted her face. There was plenty
of recognition in her expression, but she did not bow,
the real reason being that she was too much embarrassed
to think of it. But during the week he had so
many times canvassed the chances of her recognizing
him when they should meet that he had become quite
morbid about it, and manifested the usual alacrity
of persons in that state of mind in jumping at conclusions
they wish to avoid. He had been a fool to think
that she would recognize him as an acquaintance.
What had he done but to insult her, and what associations
save distressing ones could she have with him?
He would exchange a few greetings with old friends,
and then quietly slink off home and go to packing
up. He was rather sorry for his mother; she would
feel so badly to have him moody and cross on the last
evening at home. Just then some one touched his
sleeve, and looking around he saw Amy. She put
her flushed little face close to his ear and whispered:-
“Lina said I might introduce
you. Is n’t she beautiful, though, to-night?
Of course you ’ll fall in love with her, but
you must n’t try to cut me out.”
Arthur was Amy’s ideal of gentlemanly
ease and polish, and she had been very proud of having
so fine a city brother to introduce to the girls.
Imagine her astonishment and chagrin when she saw him
standing before Lina with an exaggeration of the agitated,
sheepish air the girls made such fun of in their rural
admirers! But if that surprised her, what was
her amazement to see Lina looking equally confused,
and blushing to where her neck curved beneath the
lace, although the brave eyes met his fairly!
A wise instinct told Amy that here was something she
didn’t understand, and she had better go away,
and she did.
“The melon was very good, Mr.
Steele,” said Lina demurely, with a glimmer
of fun in her black eyes.
“Miss Maynard, I don’t
know how I shall beg pardon, or humble myself enough
for my outrageous treatment of you,” burst forth
Arthur. “I don’t know what I should
have done if I had n’t had an opportunity for
apologizing pretty soon, and now I scarcely dare look
you in the face.”
His chagrin and self-reproach were
genuine enough, but he might have left off that last,
for he had n’t been looking anywhere else since
he came into the room.
“You did shake me rather hard,”
she said, with a smiling contraction of the black
eyebrows.
Good heavens! had he actually shaken
this divine creature,-this Cleopatra of
a girl, whose queenly brow gave her hair the look of
a coronet! He groaned in spirit, and looked so
self-reproachful and chagrined that she laughed.
“I don’t know about forgiving
you for that, but I ’m so grateful you did n’t
take me to the lock-up that I suppose I ought not to
mind the shaking.”
“But, Miss Maynard, you surely
don’t think I was in earnest about that?”
he exclaimed, in strenuous deprecation.
“I don’t know, I ’m
sure,” she said doubtfully. “You looked
as if you were capable of it.”
He was going on to protest still farther
when she interrupted him, and said laughingly:-
“You take to apologizing so
naturally that I ’d nearly forgotten that it
was not you but I who was the real culprit. I
must really make a few excuses myself before I hear
any more from you.”
And then she told him all about her
brother Charley’s letter, and the spirit of
emulation that had got her into trouble. It was
easy enough to joke about certain aspects of the matter;
but when she came to talk in plain language about
her performances that night, she became so much embarrassed
and stumbled so badly that Arthur felt very ill at
ease.
“And when I think what would
have happened if I ’d fallen into anybody’s
hands but yours, you seem almost like a deliverer.”
At which Arthur had another access of humiliation
to think how un-chivalrously he had treated this princess
in disguise. How he would like to catch somebody
else abusing her that way! And then he told her
all that he had thought and felt about her during
the stealing scene, and she gave her side of the drama,
to their intense mutual interest.
“Is n’t it about time
we were going home, Arthur?” said Amy’s
voice.
He glanced up. The room was nearly
empty, and the party from the Seminary were waiting
for Lina.
“Miss Maynard, may I call upon
you in New York during vacation?”
“I should be happy to see you.”
“Au revoir, then!”
“Au revoir!”