I had often told Eleanore of Joe.
She had asked me about him many times. “It’s
queer,” she had said, “what a hold he must
have had on you. I feel sure he’s just
the kind of a person I wouldn’t like and who
wouldn’t like me. I don’t think he’s
really your kind either, and yet he has a hold on
you still. Yes, he has, I can feel he has.”
And to-night when I told her that I had been with
him,
“What did he want of you?” she asked.
“He wants me to drop everything,”
I answered. And I tried to give her some idea
of what he had said.
But as I talked, the thought came
suddenly into my mind that here at last was the very
time to settle my life one way or the other, to ask
her if she would be my wife. I grew excited and
confused, my voice sounding unnatural to my ears.
And as I talked on about Joe, my heart pounding, I
could barely keep the thoughts in line.
“And I don’t want what
he wants,” I ended desperately. “That
nor anything like it. I want just what I’ve
been getting-just this kind of work and
life. And I want you-for life,
I mean-if you can ever feel like that.”
Eleanore said nothing. In an
instant the world and everything in it had narrowed
to the two of us. The intensity was unbearable.
I rose abruptly and turned away. I felt suddenly
far out of my depth. Confusedly and furiously
I felt that I had bungled things, that here was something
in life so strange I could do nothing with it.
What a young fool I was to have thought she could
ever care for a fellow like me! I felt she must
be smiling. Despairingly I turned to see.
And Eleanore was smiling-in
a way that steadied me in a flash. For her smile
was so plainly a quick, strong effort to steady herself.
“I’m glad you want me
like that,” she said, in a voice that did not
sound like hers. “I don’t believe
in hiding things.... I’m-very
happy.” She looked down at her hands in
her lap and they slowly locked together. “But
of course it means our whole lives, you see-and
we mustn’t hurry or make a mistake. Now
that we know-this much-we can
talk about it quite openly-about each other
and what we want-what kinds of lives-what
we believe in-whether we’d be best
for each other. It’s what we ought to talk
about-a good many times-it may
be weeks.”
“All right,” I agreed.
I was utterly changed. At her first words I had
felt a deep rush of relief, and seeing her tremendous
pluck and the effort she was making, I pitied, worshiped
and loved her all in the same moment. And as
we talked on for a few minutes more in that grave and
unnaturally sensible way about the pros and cons of
it all, these feelings within me mounted so swiftly
that all at once I again broke off.
“I don’t believe there’s
any use in this,” I declared. “It’s
perfectly idiotic!”
“Of course it is,” she promptly agreed.
And then after a rigid instant when
each of us looked at the other as though asking, “Quick!
What are we going to do?”-she burst
out laughing excitedly. So did I, and that carried
her into my arms and-I remember nothing-until
after a while she asked me to go, because she wanted
to be by herself. And I noticed how bright and
wet were her eyes.
I saw them still in the darkness down
along the river front, where I walked for half the
rest of the night, stopping to draw a deep breath
of the sea and laugh excitedly and go on.
Life changed rapidly after that night.
I grew so absorbed in Eleanore and in all that was
waiting just ahead, that it was hard not to shut out
everything else, most of all impersonal things.
It was hard to write, and for days I wrote nothing.
I remember only intimate talks. Everyone I talked
to seemed to be deeply personal.
I told my father about it the next
evening before supper. I found him in his old
chair in the study buried deep in his paper.
“Say, Dad-would you
mind coming up to your room?” He smote his paper
to one side.
“What the devil,” he asked,
“do I want to come up to my room for?”
“I’ve-the fact
is I’ve something you ought to know.”
I could hear Sue in the other room.
“All right, my boy,” he
said nervously. As he followed me he kept clearing
his throat. Sue must have guessed and prepared
him. In his room he fussed about, grunted hard
over getting off his shoes and, finding his slippers,
then lay back on his sofa with his hands behind his
head and uttered an explosive sigh.
“All right, son, now fire ahead,”
he said jocosely. I loved him at that moment.
“You know Eleanore Dillon,” I began.
“She turned you down!”
“No! She took me!”
“The devil you say!” He
sat bolt upright, staring. “Well, my boy,
I’m very glad,” he said thickly.
His eyes were moist. “I’m glad-glad!
She’s a fine girl-strong character-strong!
I wish your poor mother were alive-she’d
be happy-this girl will make a good wife-you
must bring her right here to live with us!”
And so he talked on, his voice trembling.
Then out of his confusion rose the money question,
and at once his mind grew clear. And to my surprise
he urged me to lose no time in looking around for “some
good, steady position” in a magazine office.
My writing I could do at night.
“It’s so uncertain at
best,” he said. “It’s nothing
you can count on. And you’ve got to think
of a wife and children. Her father has no money
saved.”
I found he’d been looking Dillon
up, and this jarred on me horribly. But still
worse was his lack of faith in my writing. I was
making four hundred dollars a month, and it was a
most unpleasant jolt to have it taken so lightly.
I went down to Sue. As I came
into the living room she met me suddenly at the door.
In a moment her arms were about my neck and she was
saying softly:
“I know what it is, dear, and
I’m glad-I’m awfully glad.
If I’ve been horrid about it ever, please forgive
me. I’m sure now it’s just the life
you want!”
And that evening, while Dad slept
in his chair, Sue and I had a long affectionate talk.
We drew closer than we had been for months. She
was eager to hear everything, she wanted to know all
our plans. When I tried at last to turn our talk
to herself and our affairs at home, at first she would
not hear to it.
“My dear boy,” she said
affectionately, “you’ve had these worries
long enough. You’re to run along now and
be happy and leave this house to Dad and me.”
I slipped my arm around her:
“Look here, Sis, let’s
see this right. You can’t run here on what
Dad earns, and if you try to work yourself you’ll
only hurt him terribly. My idea is to help as
before, without letting him know that I’m doing
it. Make him think you’ve cut expenses.”
It took a long time to get her consent.
The next night I went to Eleanore’s
father. He received me quietly, and with a deep
intensity under that steady smile of his, which reminded
me so much of hers, he spoke of all she had meant
to him and of her brave search for a big, happy life.
He told how he had watched her with me slowly making
up her mind.
“It took a long time, but it’s
made up now,” he said. “And now that
it is, she’s the kind that will go through anything
for you that can ever come up in your life.”
He looked at me squarely, still smiling a little,
frankly letting his new affection come into his eyes.
“I wish I knew all that’s going to happen,”
he added, almost sadly. “I hope you’ll
get used to telling me things-talking things
over-anything-no matter what-where
I can be of the slightest help.”
Then he, too, spoke of money.
He meant to keep up her allowance, he said, and he
had insured his life for her. Again, as with my
father, I felt that disturbing lack of faith in my
work. I spoke of it to Eleanore and she looked
at me indignantly.
“You must never think of it
like that,” she said. “I won’t
have you writing for money. Dad has never worked
that way and you’re not to do it on any account-least
of all on account of me. Whatever you make we’ll
live on, and that’s all there is to be said-except
that we’ll live splendidly,” she added
very gaily, “and we won’t spend the finest
part of our lives saving up for rainy days. We’ll
take care of the rain when it rains, and we’ll
have some wonderful times while we can.”
We decided at once on a trip abroad
as soon as I had finished my work. And I remember
writing hard, and reading it aloud to her and rewriting
over and over again, for Eleanore could be severe.
But I remember, too, more trips in her boat to gather
the last odds and ends. I remember how the big
harbor took on a new glory to our eyes, mingled with
all the deep personal joys and small troubles and
crises we went through, the puzzles and the questionings
and the glad discoveries that made up the swift growth
of our love.
And though I never once thought of
Joe Kramer, he had prophesied aright. I belonged
wholly now to Dillon’s world, a world of clean
vigorous order that seemed to welcome me the more as
I wrote in praise of its power. And happy over
my success, and in love and starting life anew with
all the signs so bright-how could I have
any doubts of my harbor?
We were married very quietly late
one April afternoon. It rained, I remember, all
that day, but the next was bright and clear for our
sailing. In our small stateroom on the ship we
found a note from the company, a large, engraved impressive
affair, presenting their best wishes and asking us
to accept for the voyage one of their most luxurious
cabins.
“This is what comes,”
said Eleanore gaily, “of being the wife of a
writer.”
“Or the daughter,” I said
softly, “of a very wonderful engineer.”
“You darling boy!”
We moved up to a large sunny cabin.
I remember her swiftly reading the telegrams and letters
there as though to get them all out of the way.
I remember her unpacking and taking possession of
our first home.
“We’re married, aren’t we,”
said a voice.
There was only one more good-by to
be said. On the deck, as we went out of the harbor,
Eleanore stood by the rail. I felt her hand close
tight on mine and I saw her eyes glisten a little
with tears.
“What a splendid place it has been,” she
said.