At first nobody knew him; then the
Hotchkisses knew him, and then it seemed as if everybody
had always known him. He had run the gauntlet
of gossip and come through without a scratch.
He was first noticed sitting in the warm corner made
by Willcox’s annex and the covered passage that
leads to the main building. Pairs or trios of
people, bareheaded, their tennis clothes (it was a
tennis year) mostly covered from view by clumsy coonskin
coats, passing Willcox’s in dilapidated runabouts
drawn by uncurried horses, a nigger boy sitting in
the back of each, his thin legs dangling, had glimpses
of him through the driveway gap in the tall Amor privet
hedge that is between Willcox’s and the road.
These pairs or trios having seen would break in upon
whatever else they may have been saying to make such
remarks as: “He can’t be, or he wouldn’t
be at Willcox’s”; or, contradictorily:
“He must be, or he’d do something besides
sit in the sun”; or, “Don’t they
always have to drink lots of milk?” or, “Anyway,
they’re quite positive that it’s not catching”;
or, “Poor boy, what nice hair he’s got.”
With the old-timers the new-comer,
whose case was otherwise so doubtful, had one thing
in common: a coonskin coat. It was handsome
of its kind, unusually long, voluminous, and black.
The upturned collar came above his ears, and in the
opening his face showed thin and white, and his eyes,
always intent upon the book in his lap, had a look
of being closed. Two things distinguished him
from other men: his great length of limb and
the color and close-cropped, almost moulded, effect
of his hair. It was the color of old Domingo mahogany,
and showed off the contour of his fine round head
with excellent effect.
The suspicion that this interesting
young man was a consumptive was set aside by Willcox
himself. He told Mrs. Bainbridge, who asked (on
account of her little children who, et cetera,
et cetera), that Mr. Masters was recuperating
from a very stubborn attack of typhoid. But was
Mr. Willcox quite sure? Yes, Mr. Willcox had
to be sure of just such things. So Mrs. Bainbridge
drove out to Miss Langrais’ tea at the golf club,
and passed on the glad tidings with an addition of
circumstantial detail. Mister Masters (people
found that it was quite good fun to say this, with
assorted intonations) had been sick for many months
at she thought the New York
Hospital. Sometimes his temperature had touched
a hundred and fifteen degrees and sometimes he had
not had any temperature at all. There was quite
a romance involved, “his trained nurse, my dear,
not one of the ordinary creatures, but a born lady
in impoverished circumstances,” et cetera,
et cetera. And later, when even Mister Masters
himself had contradicted these brightly colored statements,
Mrs. Bainbridge continued to believe them. Even
among wealthy and idle women she was remarkable for
the number of impossible things she could believe
before breakfast, and after. But she never made
these things seem even half plausible to others, and
so she wasn’t dangerous.
Mister Masters never remembered to
have passed so lonely and dreary a February.
The sunny South was a medicine that had been prescribed
and that had to be swallowed. Aiken on the label
had looked inviting enough, but he found the contents
of the bottle distasteful in the extreme. “The
South is sunny,” he wrote to his mother, “but
oh, my great jumping grandmother, how seldom!
And it’s cold, mummy, like being beaten with
whips. And it rains well, if it rained
cats and dogs a fellow wouldn’t mind. Maybe
they’d speak to him, but it rains solid cold
water, and it hits the windows the way waves hit the
port-holes at sea; and the only thing that stops the
rain is a wind that comes all the way from Alaska
for the purpose. In protected corners the sun
has a certain warmth. But the other morning the
waiter put my milk on the wrong side of my chair,
in the shade, namely, and when I went to drink it it
was frozen solid. You were right about the people
here all being kind; they are all the same kind.
I know them all now by sight; but not by
name, except, of course, some who are stopping at
Willcox’s. We have had three ice storms ’Kennst
du das Land wo die Citronen bluehen?’ I am
getting to kennst it very well. But Willcox,
who keeps a record of such things, says that this
is the coldest winter Aiken has known since last winter!
“But in spite of all this there
is a truth that must be spoken. I feel a thousand
times better and stronger than when I came. And
yesterday, exercising in the privacy of my room, I
discovered that there are once more calves upon my
legs. This is truth, too. I have no one to
talk to but your letters. So don’t stint
me. Stint me with money if you can (here I defy
you), but for the love of Heaven keep me posted.
If you will promise to write every day I will tell
you the name of the prettiest girl in Aiken.
She goes by eight times every day, and she looks my
way out of the corner of her eye. And I pretend
to be reading and try very hard to look handsome and
interesting.... Mother! ... just now I rested
my hand on the arm of my chair and the wood felt hot
to the touch! It’s high noon and the sun’s
been on it since eight o’clock, but still it
seems very wonderful. Willcox says that the winter
is practically over; but I begged him not to hurry....”
Such was the usual trend of his letters.
But that one dated March 7 began with the following
astonishing statement:
“I love Aiken ...” and went on to explain
why.
But Mister Masters was not allowed
to love Aiken until he had come through the whole
gauntlet of gossip. It had first been suggested
that he was a consumptive and a menace ("though of
course one feels terribly sorry for them, my dear").
This had been disproved. Then it was spread about
that he belonged to a wealthy family of Masters from
the upper West Side ("very well in their way, no doubt,
and the backbone of the country, my dear, but one
doesn’t seem to get on with them, and I shouldn’t
think they’d come to Aiken of all places").
But a gentleman who knew the West Side Masters, root
and branch, shook his head to this, and went so far
as to say, “Not much, he isn’t”;
and went further and shuddered. Then it got about
that Mister Masters was poor (and that made people
suspicious of him). Then it got about that he
was rich (and that made them even more so). Then
that he wrote for a living (and that was nearly as
bad as to say that he cheated at cards or
at least it was the kind of thing that they
didn’t do). And then, finally, the real
truth about him, or something like it, got out; and
the hatchet of suspicion was buried, and there was
peace in Aiken. In that Aiken of whose peace
the judge, referring to a pock-marked mulatto girl,
had thundered that it should not be disturbed for
any woman “no not even
were she Helen of Troy.”
This was the truth that got out about
Mister Masters. He was a nephew of the late Bishop
Masters. His mother, on whom he was dependent,
was very rich; she had once been prominent in society.
He was thirty, and was good at games. He did
not work at anything.
So he was something that Aiken could
understand and appreciate: a young man who was
well-born, who didn’t have to work and
who didn’t want to.
But old Mrs. Hotchkiss did not know
of these things when, one bright day in passing Willcox’s
(she was on one good foot, one rheumatic foot, and
a long black cane with a gold handle), she noticed
the young man pale and rather sad-looking in his fur
coat and steamer-rug, his eyes on his book, and stopped
abruptly and spoke to him through the gap in the hedge.
“I hope you’ll forgive
an old woman for scraping an acquaintance,” she
piped in her brisk, cheerful voice, “but I want
to know if you’re getting better, and I thought
the best way to find out was to stop and ask.”
Mister Masters’s steamer-rug
fell from about his long legs and his face became
rosy, for he was very shy.
“Indeed I am,” he said,
“ever so much. And thank you for asking.”
“I’m tired,” said
the old lady, “of seeing you always sitting by
yourself, dead tired of it. I shall come for you
this afternoon at four in my carriage, and take you
for a drive....”
“It was abrupt,” Mister
Masters wrote to his mother, “but it was kind.
When I had done blushing and scraping with my feet
and pulling my forelock, we had the nicest little
talk. And she remembered you in the old days
at Lenox, and said why hadn’t I told her before.
And then she asked if I liked Aiken, and, seeing how
the land lay, I lied and said I loved it. And
she said that that was her nice, sensible young fellow,
or words to that effect. And then she asked me
why, and I said because it has such a fine climate;
and then she laughed in my face, and said that I was
without reverence for her age not a man a
scalawag.
“And do you know, Mrs. Hotchkiss
is like one of those magic keys in fairy stories?
All doors open to her. Between you and me I have
been thinking Aiken’s floating population snobbish,
purse-proud, and generally absurd. And instead,
the place seems to exist so that kindness and hospitality
may not fail on earth. Of course I’m not
up to genuine sprees, such as dining out and sitting
up till half-past ten or eleven. But I can go
to luncheons, and watch other people play tennis, and
poke about gardens with old ladies, and guess when
particular flowers will be out, and learn the names
of birds and of hostile bushes that prick and of friendly
bushes that don’t.
“All the cold weather has gone
to glory; and it’s really spring because the
roosters crow all night. Mrs. Hotchkiss says it’s
because they are roosters and immoral. But I
think they’re crowing because they’ve
survived the winter. I am....”
Aiken took a great fancy to Mister
Masters. First because Aiken was giving him a
good time; and second because he was really good company
when you got him well cornered and his habitual fright
had worn off. He was the shyest, most frightened
six-footer in the memory of Aiken. If you spoke
to him suddenly he blushed, and if you prepared him
by first clearing your throat he blushed just the
same. And he had a crooked, embarrassed smile
that was a delight to see.
But gradually he became almost at
ease with nearly everybody; and in the shyest, gentlest
way enjoyed himself hugely. But the prettiest
girl in Aiken had very hard work with him.
As a stag fights when brought to bay,
so Mister Masters when driven into a corner could
talk as well and as freely as the next man; but on
his own initiative there was, as we Americans say,
“nothing doing.” Whether or not the
prettiest girl in Aiken ever rolled off a log is unknown;
but such an act would have been no more difficult for
her than to corner Mister Masters. The man courted
cornering, especially by her. But given the desired
situation, neither could make anything of it.
Mister Masters’s tongue became forthwith as
helpless as a man tied hand and foot and gagged.
He had nothing with which to pay for the delight of
being cornered but his rosiest, steadiest blush and
his crookedest and most embarrassed smile. But
he retained a certain activity of mind and within
himself was positively voluble with what he would say
if he only could.
I don’t mean that the pair sat
or stood or walked in absolute silence. Indeed,
little Miss Blythe could never be silent for a long
period nor permit it in others, but I mean that with
the lines and the machinery of a North Atlantic liner,
their craft of propinquity made about as much progress
as a scow. Nevertheless, though neither was really
aware of this, each kept saying things, that cannot
be put into words, to the other; otherwise the very
first cornering of Mister Masters by little Miss Blythe
must have been the last. But even as it was way
back at the beginning of things, and always will be,
Beauty spoke to Handsome and Handsome up and spoke
back.
“No,” said little Miss
Blythe, upon being sharply cross-questioned by Mrs.
Hotchkiss, “he practically never does say anything.”
Mrs. Hotchkiss dug a little round
hole in the sand with her long black cane, and made
an insulting face at little Miss Blythe.
“Some men,” said she, “can’t
say ‘Boo’ to a goose.”
If other countries produce girls like
little Miss Blythe, I have never met a specimen; and
I feel very sure that foreign young ladies do not
become personages at the age of seventeen. When
she met Mister Masters she had been a personage for
six years, and it was time for her to yield her high
place to another; to marry, to bear children, and to
prove that all the little matters for which she was
celebrated were merely passing phases and glitterings
of a character which fundamentally was composed of
simple and noble traits.
Little Miss Blythe had many brothers
and sisters; no money, as we reckon money; and only
such prospects as she herself might choose from innumerable
offers. She was little; her figure looked best
in athletic clothes (low neck didn’t do well
with her, because her face was tanned so brown) and
she was strong and quick as a pony. All the year
round she kept herself in the pink of condition ("overkept
herself” some said) dancing, walking, running,
swimming, playing all games and eating to match.
She had a beautiful, clean-cut face, not delicate and
to be hidden and coaxed by veils and soft things,
but a face that looked beautiful above a severe Eton
collar, and at any distance. She had the bright,
wide eyes of a collected athlete, unbelievably blue,
and the whites of them were only matched for whiteness
by her teeth (the deep tan of her skin heightened
this effect, perhaps); and it was said by one admirer
that if she were to be in a dark room and were to press
the button of a kodak and to smile at one and the
same instant, there would be a picture taken.
She had friends in almost every country-clubbed
city in America. Whenever, and almost wherever,
a horse show was held she was there to show the horses
of some magnate or other to the best advantage.
Between times she won tennis tournaments and swimming
matches, or tried her hand at hunting or polo (these
things in secret because her father had forbidden
them), and the people who continually pressed hospitality
upon her said that they were repaid a thousand-fold.
In the first place, it was a distinction to have her.
“Who are the Ebers?” “Why, don’t
you know? They are the people Miss Blythe is
stopping with.”
She was always good-natured; she never
kept anybody waiting; and she must have known five
thousand people well enough to call them by their
first names. But what really distinguished her
most from other young women was that her success in
inspiring others with admiration and affection was
not confined to men; she had the same effect upon all
women, old and young, and all children.
Foolish people said that she had no
heart, merely because no one had as yet touched it.
Wise people said that when she did fall in love sparks
would fly. Hitherto her friendships with men,
whatever the men in question may have wished, had
existed upon a basis of good-natured banter and prowess
in games. Men were absolutely necessary to Miss
Blythe to play games with, because women who could
“give her a game” were rare as ivory-billed
woodpeckers. It was even thought by some, as
an instance, that little Miss Blythe could beat the
famous Miss May Sutton once out of three times at
lawn-tennis. But Miss Sutton, with the good-natured
and indomitable aggression of her genius, set this
supposition at rest. Little Miss Blythe could
not beat Miss Sutton once out of three or three hundred
times. But for all that, little Miss Blythe was
a splendid player and a master of strokes and strategy.
Nothing would have astonished her
world more than to learn that little Miss Blythe had
a secret, darkly hidden quality of which she was dreadfully
ashamed. At heart she was nothing if not sentimental
and romantic. And often when she was thought
to be sleeping the dreamless sleep of the trained
athlete who stores up energy for the morrow’s
contest, she was sitting at the windows in her night-gown,
looking at the moon (in hers) and weaving all sorts
of absurd adventures about herself and her particular
fancy of the moment.
It would be a surprise and pleasure
to some men, a tragedy perhaps to others, if they
should learn that little Miss Blythe had fancied them
all at different times, almost to the boiling point,
and that in her own deeply concealed imagination Jim
had rescued her from pirates and Jack from a burning
hotel, or that just as her family were selling her
to a rich widower, John had appeared on his favorite
hunter and carried her off. The truth is that
little Miss Blythe had engaged in a hundred love affairs
concerning which no one but herself was the wiser.
And at twenty-three it was high time
for her to marry and settle down. First because
she couldn’t go on playing games and showing
horses forever, and second because she wanted to.
But with whom she wanted to marry and settle down
she could not for the life of her have said.
Sometimes she thought that it would be with Mr. Blagdon.
He was rich and he was a widower; but
wherever she went he managed to go, and he had some
of the finest horses in the world, and he wouldn’t
take no for an answer. Sometimes she said to
the moon:
“I’ll give myself a year,
and if at the end of that time I don’t like
anybody better than Bob, why....” Or, in
a different mood, “I’m tired of everything
I do; if he happens to ask me to-morrow I’ll
say yes.” Or, “I’ve ridden
his horses, and broken his golf clubs, and borrowed
his guns (and he won’t lend them to anybody
else), and I suppose I’ve got to pay him back.”
Or, “I really do like him a lot,”
or “I really don’t like him at all.”
Then there came into this young woman’s
life Mister Masters. And he blushed his blush
and smiled his crooked smile and looked at her when
she wasn’t looking at him (and she knew that
he was looking) and was unable to say as much as “Boo”
to her; and in the hidden springs of her nature that
which she had always longed for happened, and became,
and was. And one night she said to the moon:
“I know it isn’t proper for me to be so
attentive to him, and I know everybody is talking about
it, but ” and she rested her beautiful
brown chin on her shapely, strong, brown hands, and
a tear like a diamond stood in each of her unbelievably
blue eyes, and she looked at the moon, and said:
“But it’s Harry Masters or bust!”
Mr. Bob Blagdon, the rich widower,
had been content to play a waiting game; for he knew
very well that beneath her good-nature little Miss
Blythe had a proud temper and was to be won rather
by the man who should make himself indispensable to
her than by him who should be forever pestering her
with speaking and pleading his cause. She is an
honest girl, he told himself, and without thinking
of consequences she is always putting herself under
obligations to me. Let her ride down lover’s
lane with young Blank or young Dash, she will not be
able to forget that she is on my favorite mare.
In his soul he felt a certain proprietorship in little
Miss Blythe; but to this his ruddy, dark-mustached
face and slow-moving eyes were a screen.
Mr. Blagdon had always gone after
what he wanted in a kind of slow, indifferent way
that begot confidence in himself and in the beholder;
and (in the case of Miss Blythe) a kind of panic in
the object sought. She liked him because she
was used to him, and because he could and would talk
sense upon subjects which interested her. But
she was afraid of him because she knew that he expected
her to marry him some day, and because she knew that
other people, including her own family, expected this
of her. Sometimes she felt ready to take unto
herself all the horses and country places and automobiles
and yachts, and in a life lived regardless of expense
to bury and forget her better self. But more
often, like a fly caught in a spider’s web, she
wished by one desperate effort (even should it cost
her a wing, to carry out the figure) to free herself
once and forever from the entanglement.
It was pleasant enough in the web.
The strands were soft and silky; they held rather
by persuasion than by force. And had it not been
for the spider she could have lived out her life in
the web without any very desperate regrets. But
it was never quite possible to forget the spider;
and that in his own time he would approach slowly and
deliberately, sure of himself and of little Miss Fly....
But, after all, the spider in the
case was not such a terrible fellow. Just because
a man wants a girl that doesn’t want him, and
means to have her, he hasn’t necessarily earned
a hard name. Such a man as often as not becomes
one-half of a very happy marriage. And Mr. Bob
Blagdon was considered an exceptionally good fellow.
In his heart, though I have never heard him say so
openly, I think he actually looked down on people
who gambled and drank to excess, and who were uneducated
and had acquired (whatever they may have been born
with) perfectly empty heads. I think that he
had a sound and sensible virtue; one ear for one side
of an argument, and one for the other.
There is no reason to doubt that he
was a good husband to his first wife, and wished to
replace her with little Miss Blythe, not to supplant
her. To his three young children he was more of
a grandfather than a father; though strong-willed
and even stubborn, he was unable half the time to
say no to them. And I have seen him going on all-fours
with the youngest child perched on his back kicking
him in the ribs and urging him to canter. So
if he intended by the strength of his will and of his
riches to compel little Miss Blythe to marry (and to
be happy with him; he thought he could manage that,
too), it is only one blot on a decent and upright
character. And it is unjust to have called him
spider.
But when Mister Masters entered (so
timidly to the eye, but really so masterfully) into
little Miss Blythe’s life, she could no longer
tolerate the idea of marrying Mr. Blagdon. All
in a twinkle she knew that horses and yachts and great
riches could never make up to her for the loss of
a long, bashful youth with a crooked smile. You
can’t be really happy if you are shivering with
cold; you can’t be really happy if you are dripping
with heat. And she knew that without Mister Masters
she must always be one thing or the other too
cold or too hot, never quite comfortable.
Her own mind was made up from the
first; even to going through any number of awful scenes
with Blagdon. But as time passed and her attentions
(I shall have to call it that) to Mister Masters made
no visible progress, there were times when she was
obliged to think that she would never marry anybody
at all. But in her heart she knew that Masters
was attracted by her, and to this strand of knowledge
she clung so as not to be drowned in a sea of despair.
Her position was one of extreme difficulty
and delicacy. Sometimes Mister Masters came near
her of his own accord, and remained in bashful silence;
but more often she was obliged to have recourse to
“accidents” in order to bring about propinquity.
And even when propinquity had been established there
was never any progress made that could be favorably
noted. Behind her back, for instance, when she
was playing tennis and he was looking on, he was quite
bold in his admiration of her. And whereas most
people’s eyes when they are watching tennis follow
the flight of the ball, Mister Masters’s faithful
eyes never left the person of his favorite player.
One reason for his awful bashfulness
and silence was that certain people, who seemed to
know, had told him in the very beginning that it was
only a question of time before little Miss Blythe would
become Mrs. Bob Blagdon. “She’s always
been fond of him,” they said, “and of course
he can give her everything worth having.”
So when he was with her he felt as if he was with
an engaged girl, and his real feelings not being proper
to express in any way under such circumstances, and
his nature being single and without deceit, he was
put in a quandary that defied solution.
But what was hidden from Mister Masters
was presently obvious to Mr. Blagdon and to others.
So the spider, sleepily watching the automatic enmeshment
of the fly, may spring into alert and formidable action
at seeing a powerful beetle blunder into the web and
threaten by his stupid, aimless struggles to set the
fly at liberty and to destroy the whole fabric spun
with care and toil.
To a man in love there is no redder
danger signal than a sight of the object of his affections
standing or sitting contentedly with another man and
neither of them saying as much as “Boo”
to the other. He may, with more equanimity, regard
and countenance a genuine flirtation, full of laughter
and eye-making. The first time Mr. Blagdon saw
them together he thought; the second time he felt;
the third time he came forward graciously smiling.
The web might be in danger from the beetle; the fly
at the point of kicking up her heels and flying gayly
away; but it may be in the power of the spider to
spin enough fresh threads on the spur of the moment
to rebind the fly, and even to make prisoner the doughty
beetle.
“Don’t you ride, Mister Masters?”
said Mr. Blagdon.
“Of course,” said the
shy one, blushing. “But I’m not to
do anything violent before June.”
“Sorry,” said Mr. Blagdon,
“because I’ve a string of ponies that are
eating their heads off. I’d be delighted
to mount you.”
But Mister Masters smiled with unusual
crookedness and stammered his thanks and his regrets.
And so that thread came to nothing.
The spider attempted three more threads;
but little Miss Blythe looked serenely up.
“I never saw such a fellow as
you, Bob,” said she, “for putting other
people under obligations. When I think of the
weight of my personal ones I shudder.”
She smiled innocently and looked up into his face.
“When people can’t pay their debts they
have to go through bankruptcy, don’t they?
And then their debts all have to be forgiven.”
Mr. Blagdon felt as if an icy cold
hand had been suddenly laid upon the most sensitive
part of his back; but his expression underwent no change.
His slow eyes continued to look into the beautiful,
brightly colored face that was turned up to him.
“Very honorable bankrupts,”
said he carelessly, “always pay what they can
on the dollar.”
Presently he strolled away, easy and
nonchalant; but inwardly he carried a load of dread
and he saw clearly that he must learn where he stood
with little Miss Blythe, or not know the feeling of
easiness from one day to the next. Better, he
thought, to be the recipient of a painful and undeserved
ultimatum, than to breakfast, lunch, and dine with
uncertainty.
The next day, there being some dozens
of people almost in earshot, Mr. Blagdon had an opportunity
to speak to little Miss Blythe. Under the circumstances,
the last thing she expected was a declaration; they
were in full view of everybody; anybody might stroll
up and interrupt. So what Mr. Blagdon had to
say came to her with something the effect of sudden
thunder from a clear sky.
“Phyllis,” said he, “you
have been looking about you since you were seventeen.
Will I do?”
“Oh, Bob!” she protested.
“I have tried to do,”
said he, not without a fine ring of manliness.
“Have I made good?”
She smiled bravely and looked as nonchalant
as possible; but her heart was beating heavily.
“I’ve liked being good
friends so much,” she said.
“Don’t spoil it.”
“I tell her,” said he,
“that in all the world there is only the one
girl only the one. And she says Don’t
spoil it.’”
“Bob ”
“I will make you happy,”
he said.... “Has it never entered your dear
head that some time you must give me an answer?”
She nodded her dear head, for she was very honest.
“I suppose so,” she said.
“Well,” said he.
“In my mind,” she said,
“I have never been able to give you the same
answer twice....”
“A decision is expected from
us,” said he. “People are growing
tired of our long backing and filling.”
“People! Do they matter?”
“They matter a great deal. And you know
it.”
“Yes. I suppose they do.
Let me off for now, Bob. People are looking at
us....”
“I want an answer.”
But she would not be coerced.
“You shall have one, but not now. I’m
not sure what it will be.”
“If you can’t be sure now, can you ever
be sure?”
“Yes. Give me two weeks. I shall think
about nothing else.”
“Thank you,” he said.
“Two weeks.... That will be full moon....
I shall ask all Aiken to a picnic in the woods, weather
permitting ... and and if your answer is
to be my happiness, why, you shall come up to me, and
say, ‘Bob drive me home, will you?’”
“And if it’s the other answer, Bob?”
He smiled in his usual bantering way.
“If it’s the other, Phyllis why you you
can walk home.”
She laughed joyously, and he laughed,
just as if nothing but what was light and amusing
was in question between them.
Along the Whiskey Road nearly the
whole floating population of Aiken moved on horseback
or on wheels. Every fourth or fifth runabout carried
a lantern; but the presence in the long, wide-gapped
procession of other vehicles or equestrians was denoted
only by the sounds of voices. Half a dozen family
squabbles, half a dozen flirtations (which would result
in family squabbles), and half a dozen genuine romances
were moving through the sweet-smelling dark to Mr.
Bob Blagdon’s picnic in Red Oak Hollow.
Only three of the guests knew where Red Oak Hollow
was, and two of these were sure that they could only
find it by daylight; but the third, a noted hunter
and pigeon shot, rode at the head of the procession,
and pretended (he was forty-five with the heart of
a child) that he was Buffalo Bill leading a lost wagon-train
to water. And though nobody could see him for
the darkness, he played his part with minute attention
to detail, listening, pulling up short, scowling to
right and left, wetting a finger and holding it up
to see from which direction the air was moving.
He was so intent upon bringing his convoy safely through
a hostile country that the sounds of laughter or of
people in one runabout calling gayly to people in
another were a genuine annoyance to him.
Mr. Bob Blagdon had preceded his guests
by half an hour, and was already at the scene of the
picnic. Fate, or perhaps the weather bureau at
Washington, had favored him with just the conditions
he would have wished for. The night was hot without
heaviness; in the forenoon of that day there had been
a shower, just wet enough to keep the surfaces of
roads from rising in dust. It was now clear and
bestarred, and perhaps a shade less dark than when
he had started. Furthermore, it was so still
that candles burned without flickering. He surveyed
his preparations with satisfaction. And because
he was fastidious in entertainment this meant a great
deal.
A table thirty feet long, and low
to the ground so that people sitting on rugs or cushions
could eat from it with comfort, stood beneath the
giant red oak that gave a name to the hollow.
The white damask with which it was laid and the silver
and cut glass gleamed in the light of dozens of candles.
The flowers were Marechal Niel roses in a long bank
of molten gold.
Except for the lanterns at the serving
tables, dimly to be seen through a dense hedgelike
growth of Kalmia latifolia, there were no other lights
in the hollow; so that the dinner-table had the effect
of standing in a cave; for where the gleam of the
candles ended, the surrounding darkness appeared solid
like a wall.
It might have been a secret meeting
of smugglers or pirates, the Georgian silver on the
table representing years of daring theft; it seemed
as if blood must have been spilled for the wonderful
glass and linen and porcelain. Even those guests
most hardened in luxury and extravagance looked twice
at Mr. Bob Blagdon’s picnic preparations before
they could find words with which to compliment him
upon them; and the less experienced were beside themselves
with enthusiasm and delight. But Mr. Bob Blagdon
was wondering what little Miss Blythe would think
and say, and he thought it unkind of her, under the
circumstances, to be the last to arrive. Unkind,
because her doing so was either a good omen or an
evil one, and he could not make up his mind which.
The guests were not homogeneously
dressed. Some of the men were in dinner clothes;
some were in full evening dress; some wore dinner coats
above riding breeches and boots; some had come bareheaded,
some with hats which they did not propose to remove.
Half the women were in low neck and short sleeves;
one with short curly hair was breeched and booted
like a man; others wore what I suppose may be called
theatre gowns; and a few who were pretty enough to
stand it wore clothes suited to the hazards of a picnic
in the woods.
Mr. Blagdon’s servants wore
his racing colors, blue and silver, knee-breeches,
black silk stockings, pumps with silver buckles, and
powdered hair. They were men picked for their
height, wooden faces, and well-turned calves.
They moved and behaved as if utterly untouched and
uninterested in their unusual and romantic surroundings;
they were like jinns summoned for the occasion by
the rubbing of a magic lamp.
At the last moment, when to have been
any later would have been either rude or accidental,
little Miss Blythe’s voice was heard calling
from the darkness and asking which of two roads she
should take. Half a dozen men rushed off to guide
her, and presently she came blinking into the circle
of light, followed by Mister Masters, who smiled his
crookedest smile and stumbled on a root so that he
was cruelly embarrassed.
Little Miss Blythe blinked at the
lights and looked very beautiful. She was all
in white and wore no hat. She had a red rose at
her throat. She was grave for her and
silent.
The truth was that she had during
the last ten minutes made up her mind to ask Mr. Bob
Blagdon to drive her home when the picnic should be
over. She had asked Mister Masters to drive out
with her; and how much that had delighted him nobody
knew (alas!) except Mister Masters himself. She
had during the last few weeks given him every opportunity
which her somewhat unconventional soul could sanction.
In a hundred ways she had showed him that she liked
him immensely; and well if he liked her
in the same way, he would have managed to show it,
in spite of his shyness. The drive out had been
a failure. They had gotten no further in conversation
than the beauty and the sweet smells of the night.
And finally, but God alone knows with what reluctance,
she had given him up as a bad job.
The long table with its dozens of
candles looked like a huge altar, and she was Iphigenia
come to the sacrifice. She had never heard of
Iphigenia, but that doesn’t matter. At Mister
Masters, now seated near the other end of the table,
she lifted shy eyes; but he was looking at his plate
and crumbling a piece of bread. It was like saying
good-by. She was silent for a moment; then, smiling
with a kind of reckless gayety, she lifted her glass
of champagne and turned to the host.
“To you!” she said.
Delight swelled in the breast of Mr.
Bob Blagdon. He raised his hand, and from a neighboring
thicket there rose abruptly the music of banjos and
guitars and the loud, sweet singing of negroes.
Aiken will always remember that dinner
in the woods for its beauty and for its gayety.
Two or three men, funny by gift and habit, were at
their very best; and fortune adapted the wits of others
to the occasion. So that the most unexpected
persons became humorous for once in their lives, and
said things worth remembering. People gather together
for one of three reasons: to make laws, to break
them, or to laugh. The first sort of gathering
is nearly always funny, and if the last isn’t,
why then, to be sure, it is a failure. Mr. Bob
Blagdon’s picnic was an uproarious success.
Now and then somebody’s whole soul seemed to
go into a laugh, in which others could not help joining,
until uncontrollable snorts resounded in the hollow
and eyes became blinded with tears.
And then suddenly, toward dessert,
laughter died away and nothing was to be heard but
such exclamations as: “For Heaven’s
sake, look at the moon!” “Did you ever
see anything like it?”
Mr. Blagdon had paid money to the
owner of Red Oak Hollow for permission to remove certain
trees and thickets that would otherwise have obstructed
his guests’ view of the moonrise. At the
end of the vista thus obtained the upper rim of the
moon now appeared, as in a frame. And, watching
in silence, Mr. Blagdon’s guests saw the amazing
luminary emerge, as it were, from the earth like a
bright and blameless soul from the grave, and sail
clear, presently, and upward into untroubled space;
a glory, serene, smiling, and unanswerable.
No one remembered to have seen the
moon so large or so bright. Atomized silver poured
like tides of light into the surrounding woods; and
at the same time heavenly odors of flowers began to
move hither and thither, to change places, to return,
and pass, like disembodied spirits engaged in some
tranquil and celestial dance.
And it became cooler, so that women
called for light wraps and men tied sweaters round
their necks by the arms. Then at a long distance
from the dinner-table a bonfire began to flicker,
and then grow bright and red. And it was discovered
that rugs and cushions had been placed (not too near
the fire) for people to sit on while they drank their
coffee and liquors, and that there were logs to lean
against, and boxes of cigars and cigarettes where
they could most easily be reached.
It was only a question now of how
long the guests would care to stay. As a gathering
the picnic was over. Some did not use the rugs
and cushions that had been provided for them, but
strolled away into the woods. A number of slightly
intoxicated gentlemen felt it their duty to gather
about their host and entertain him. Two married
couples brought candles from the dinner-table and
began a best two out of three at bridge. Sometimes
two men and one woman would sit together with their
backs against a log; but always after a few minutes
one of the men would go away “to get something”
and would not return.
It was not wholly by accident that
Mister Masters found himself alone with little Miss
Blythe. Emboldened by the gayety of the dinner,
and then by the wonder of the moon, he had had the
courage to hurry to her side; and though there his
courage had failed utterly, his action had been such
as to deter others from joining her. So, for there
was nothing else to do, they found a thick rug and
sat upon it, and leaned their backs against a log.
Little Miss Blythe had not yet asked
Mr. Blagdon to drive her home. Though she had
made up her mind to do so, it would only be at the
last possible moment of the twelfth hour. It
was now that eleventh hour in which heroines are rescued
by bold lovers. But Mister Masters was no bolder
than a mouse. And the moon sailed higher and higher
in the heavens.
“Isn’t it wonderful?” said little
Miss Blythe.
“Wonderful!”
“Just smell it!”
“Umm.”
Her sad, rather frightened eyes wandered
over to the noisy group of which Mr. Bob Blagdon was
the grave and silent centre. He knew that little
Miss Blythe would keep her promise. He believed
in his heart that her decision would be favorable
to him; but he was watching her where she sat with
Masters and knew that his belief in what she would
decide was not strong enough to make him altogether
happy.
“And he was old enough
to be her father!” repeated the gentleman in
the Scotch deer-stalker who had been gossiping.
Mr. Blagdon smiled, but the words hurt “old
enough to be her father.” “My God,”
he thought, “I am old enough just!”
But then he comforted himself with “Why not?
It’s how old a man feels, not how old he is.”
Then his eyes caught little Miss Blythe’s,
but she turned hers instantly away.
“This will be the end of the season,”
she said.
Mister Masters assented. He wanted to tell her
how beautiful she looked.
“Do you see old Mr. Black over
there?” she said. “He’s pretending
not to watch us, but he’s watching us like a
lynx.... Did you ever start a piece of news?”
“Never,” said Mister Masters.
“It would be rather fun,”
said little Miss Blythe. “For instance,
if we held hands for a moment Mr. Black would see
it, and five minutes later everybody would know about
it.”
Mister Masters screwed his courage
up to the sticking point, and took her hand in his.
Both looked toward Mr. Black as if inviting him to
notice them. Mr. Black was seen almost instantly
to whisper to the nearest gentleman.
“There,” said little Miss
Blythe, and was for withdrawing her hand. But
Masters’s fingers tightened upon it, and she
could feel the pulses beating in their tips.
She knew that people were looking, but she felt brazen,
unabashed, and happy. Mister Masters’s grip
tightened; it said: “My master has a dozen
hearts, and they are all beating for you.”
To return that pressure was not an act of little Miss
Blythe’s will. She could not help herself.
Her hand said to Masters: “With the heart with
the soul.” Then she was frightened and ashamed,
and had a rush of color to the face.
“Let go,” she whispered.
But Masters leaned toward her, and
though he was trembling with fear and awe and wonder,
he found a certain courage and his voice was wonderfully
gentle and tender, and he smiled and he whispered:
“Boo!”
Only then did he set her hand free.
For one reason there was no need now of so slight
a bondage; for another, Mr. Bob Blagdon was approaching
them, a little pale but smiling. He held out his
hand to little Miss Blythe, and she took it.
“Phyllis,” said he, “I
know your face so well that there is no need for me
to ask, and for you to deny.”
He smiled upon her gently, though it cost him an effort.
“I wanted her for myself,” he turned to
Masters with charming frankness, “but even an
old man’s selfish desires are not proof against
the eloquence of youth, and I find a certain happiness
in saying from the bottom of my heart bless
you, my children....”
The two young people stood before him with bowed heads.
“I am going to send you the
silver and glass from the table,” said he, “for
a wedding present to remind you of my picnic....”
He looked upward at the moon. “If I could,”
said he, “I would give you that.”
Then the three stood in silence and
looked upward at the moon.