Before she had fairly recovered her
poise next day Lucius brought to her a letter from
Humiston a suave, impudent note wherein
he expressed the hope that she was well, and went
on to plead in veiled phrase: “I’m
sorry you did not stay to see the rest of my pictures.
I meant it all as a compliment to your innate good
taste and purity of thought. I expected you to
see them as I painted them in pure artistic
delight. You misunderstood me. I hope you
will let me see you again. You must remember
you promised to let me make a portrait sketch of you.”
Although not skilled in polite duplicity,
Bertha was able to read beneath the serene insolence
of these lines something so diabolically relentless
that she turned cold with fear and repulsion.
She had no experience which fitted her to deal with
such a pursuer, and she shuddered at the rustling
of the paper in her hand as she had once quivered
in breathless terror of a rattlesnake stirring in the
leaves near the door of her tent. Her first impulse
was to lay the whole affair before the Captain, but
the knowledge of his deadly temper when roused decided
her to slip out at the other side of this fearsome
thicket and leave the serpent in possession.
She longed to return to the West. The little
group of people in the Springs allured her; they were
to be trusted. Congdon and Crego and Ben these
men she knew and respected. Her joy of the big
outside Eastern world had begun to pass, and she dreaded
to encounter again the bold eyes and coarse compliments
of the men who loaf about the hotels and clubs.
She turned to Haney as he came into
her room, and said: “Mart, I want to go
home to-day.”
“All right, Bertie, I’m
ready or will be, as soon as I pick up the
old father. But don’t you want to see that
show we’ve got tickets for?”
“No, I’ve had enough of
this old town. I’m crazy to go home.”
“Home it is, then.”
He called sharply; “Lucius!” The man appeared,
impassive, noiseless, unhurried. The Captain issued
his orders: “Thrun me garbage into a thrunk,
and call some one to help the missus; we’re
goin’ to hit the sunset trail to-night.
’Phone me old dad besides, and have him come
over at wanst. Here we emigrate westward by the
next express.”
The man quietly took control of the
situation, and in a few moments the Captain’s
commands were being carried out with the precision
of a military camp.
Bertha, alarmed by Humiston’s
letter, refused to go down to the public dining-room.
A fear that she might encounter the painter possessed
her, and the thought of him was at once a shame and
torment; therefore, she had her luncheon sent up,
and Lucius himself found time to wait upon them.
As they were in the midst of their
meal, Haney remarked rather than asked: “Of
course, you’re going back with us, Lucius.”
“I have thought of it, sir,
but it isn’t in our contract.”
“We can put it in,” said Bertha.
“We can’t do without you now,” added
Mart.
Lucius seemed pleased. “Thank
you for that, Captain. I don’t particularly
care for the West, but I find service with you agreeable.”
Haney chuckled. “Service,
do ye call it? Sure, man, ’tis you are in
command. I’m but a high private in the rear
rank.”
Lucius’s yellow face flushed
and his eyes wavered. “I hope I haven’t
assumed ”
“Assumed! No, ’tis
we who are obligated. We need you as bad as a
plainsman needs a guide in the green timber; and if
you don’t mind a steady job of looking after
us social tenderfeet, I’m willing to make it
right with you and Mrs. Haney feels just
the way I do.”
“Sure, Mart only
trouble with Lucius is, he leaves so little for me
to do. He’s too handy if
anything.”
“That’ll wear off,”
replied Haney. “Well, then, it’s all
settled but the price, and I reckon we can fix that.
If I can’t pay cash, I’ll let you in on
the mine.”
Lucius smiled. “Thank you,
Captain; it’s not entirely a question of pay
with me; my wants are few.”
Bertha seized the moment to put a
question she had been minded many times to ask.
“Lucius, what’s your plan? You can’t
intend to do this all your life? Tell us your
ambition maybe we can help you.”
He looked away, and a deeper shadow
fell over his face. “I had ambitions once,
Mrs. Haney, but my color was against me. Yes,
I think I’ll stay as I am. There is a certain
security in being valet. You white people know
exactly where to find me, and I know just how to meet
you. In my profession it was different I
was always being cursed for presumption.”
“What was your profession?” asked Haney.
“I studied law and
practised for a year or two in Washington; but I didn’t
like my position; I was neither white nor colored,
so when I got a good chance I went out to service
with a senator as body-servant.” He stopped
abruptly as though that were all of his tale.
Haney said: “Well, if you
can put up with an ignorant old hill-climber like
meself, I’ll be grateful, and I’ll try
not rub your fur the wrong way.”
Lucius became very earnest for the
first time. “There, sir, is one point upon
which I must insist. If I go with you, you are
to treat me just as you have been doing as
a trusted servant. I’m sorry I told you
anything about myself. My service thus far has
been very pleasant, very satisfactory, and unless
we can go on in the same way, I must leave.”
“Very well,” replied Haney.
“It’s all settled you’re
adjutant-general of the Haneys’ forces.”
After Lucius went away Bertha said,
thoughtfully: “I wish he hadn’t told
us that; I can’t order him around the way I’ve
been doing.”
Haney smiled. “Did ye order
him around? I niver chanced to hear ye do anything
but ask him questions. ‘Lucius, will ye
do this?’ ’Lucius, won’t ye do that?’”
Bertha was troubled, and found herself
embarrassed by the mulatto’s services.
She now perceived sadness beneath the quiet lines of
his face and hard-won culture in the tones of his
voice. The essential tragedy of his defeat grew
more poignant to her as she watched him getting the
trunks strapped, surrounded by maids and porters.
How could she have misread his manner? He was
performing his duties, not with quiet gusto, but in
the spirit of the trained nurse.
This mountain girl had always regarded
Illinois as “the East,” but after a few
weeks in New York City she now looked away to Chicago
as a Western town. She was glad to face the sunset
sky again, and yet as she wheeled away to the train
she acknowledged a regret. Under the skilful guidance
of Lucius she had seen a great deal of the splendid
and furious Manhattan. She had gazed with unenvious
admiration on the palaces of upper Fifth Avenue and
the Park. Together with Haney she had spun up
Riverside Drive, past Grant’s Tomb, and on through
Washington Heights, with joy of the far-spreading
panorama. She had visited the Battery and sailed
the shining way to Staten Island in silent awe of the
ship-filled bay. She had heard the sunset-guns
thunder at Fort Hamilton, and had threaded the mazes
of the Brooklyn Navy-Yard, and each day the mast-hemmed
island widened in grandeur and thickened with threads
of human purpose, making the America she knew very
simple, very quiet, and very remote.
Night by night she had gone to the
music-halls and theatres, and her mind had been powerfully
wrought upon by what she had seen and heard. In
all these trips Haney had heroically accompanied his
wife, though he frequently dropped asleep in his seat;
and he, too, left the city with regret, though he
said, “Thank God, I’m out of it,”
as they settled into their seats in the ferry. “’Tis
not the night traffic that wears me down I’m
used to being on the night shift; ’tis the wild
pace Lucius sets by day. Faith, ’twas the
aquarium in the morning and the circus in the afternoon.
Me dreams have been wan long procession of misbegotten
fish, ballet-dancers, dirty monkeys, and big elephants
the nights. ’Tis a great city, but I am
ready to return to me peaceful perch above the faro-board;
I think ’twould rest me soul to see a game of
craps.”
“Why didn’t you order
Lucius to let up on the sight-seeing business?”
Bertha said.
“And expose me weak knees to me nigger?
No, no, Mike.”
“I wanted you to let me rummage about alone.”
“You did. But I could not
allow that, neyther. So long as I can sit the
road-cart or run me arms into a biled shirt I’ll
stay by, darlin’. ’Tis not safe for
you to go about alone in the hell-broth of these Eastern
streets. Besides, while I’m losin’
weight I’m lighter on me feet than when I came.
I’ve enjoyed me trip, but it does seem sinful
to think of our big house standing empty and the horses
‘stockin’’ in their stalls, and
I’m glad we’re edgin’ along homeward.”
“So am I,” Bertha heartily
agreed, even as she looked lovingly back upon the
mighty walls and towers which filled the sky behind
her. It was a gloriously exciting place to live
in, after all. “Some day I may come back,”
she promised herself, but the thought of Humiston lurking
like a wolf in the shadow came to make her going more
and more like an escape.
The elder Haney amused her by his
frank comment on everything that was strange to him.
His new teeth, which did not fit him very securely,
troubled him greatly, and he spoke with one hand held
alertly, ready to catch them if they fell, but his
smile was a radiant grin, and his shrewd old face
was good to look at as he faced the splendors of the
limited express.
“’Tis foine as a bar-room,”
said he. “To be whisked about over the world
like this is no hairdship. Bedad, if I’d
known how aisy it was I’d a visited McArdle
befoore.” He pretended to believe that everybody
travelled this way, and that Mart was merely doing
the ordinary in the matter of meals and state-room;
and as he wandered from end to end of the train and
found only luxurious coaches, and people taking their
ease, he had all the best of the argument. Lucius
he regarded as a man of his own level, and they held
long confabulations together the colored
man accepting this comradeship in the spirit of democracy
in which it was given. Mart, for his part, sat
looking out of the window, dreaming of the past.
As she neared Chicago next day Bertha
thought with pleasure of seeing the Mosses again.
Now that Humiston was eliminated, she had only the
pleasantest memories of the people she had met in the
smoky city. It was as if in a dark forest of
lofty trees she had found a pleasant mead on which
the warm sunlight fell. The mellow charm of the
studios was made all the more appealing by reason
of the drab and desolate waste through which she was
forced to pass to attain the light and laughter of
those high places.
Chicago had grown more gloomily impressive,
and at the same time by reason of her knowledge
of the larger plans and mightier enterprises of New
York it seemed simpler, and Bertha re-entered
the hotel which had once dazzled her in confidence,
finding it cheerful and familiar. She liked it
all the better because it was less pretentious.
It gave her a pleasant sense of getting back home
to have the men in buttons smile and say, “Glad
to see you, Mrs. Haney.” The head clerk
was very cordial; he even found time to come out and
shake hands. “I can’t give you precisely
your old quarters,” he said, “but I can
fix you out on the next floor. I’m sure
you’ll be very comfortable.” Thereupon
she took up her quietly luxurious life at the point
where she had dropped it some weeks before.
There lay in this Western girl a strongly
marked tendency towards the culture and refinement
of the East; and, though she had grown up far from
anything aesthetic in home-life, she instinctively
knew and loved the beautiful in nature, the right
thing in art; and now that she was about to leave
the East for the West perhaps to abandon
the town for the village she found herself
aching with a hunger which had hitherto been unconscious.
She was torn with desire to go and a longing to stay.
New York, Paris, the world, was open before her if
only she were content to take Marshall Haney’s
money and use it to these ends.
That night as she lay in her bed hearing
the rumble and jar of the city’s traffic, her
mind recalled and dwelt upon the wonderful scenes,
especially the beautiful pictures which her eyes had
gleaned from the East. The magical, glittering
spread of Manhattan harbor, the silver sweep of the
Hudson at West Point, the mighty panorama from Grant’s
Tomb, the silken sheen of Fifth Avenue on a rainy night,
the crash and glitter of upper Broadway, the splendid
halls of art, literature, and especially of music
and the drama all these came back one by
one to claim a place beside her peaks and canons,
sharing the glory of the purple deeps and the snowy
heights of the mountains she had hitherto loved so
single-heartedly and so well.
She saw Sibley now for what it was a
village almost barren of beauty a good,
kindly, homey place, but so little and so dull!
To go back there to live was quite impossible.
“If I quit Mart I must find something to do
here in the East. I can’t stand
Sibley.”
She longed for the Springs because
of her home there and because of Ben but
she realized that it possessed, after all, but very
limited opportunities for the purchase of culture.
The great centres had begun to exercise dominion over
her. She had ever been a lonely little soul,
with no confidante of her own sex. Speech had
never been fluent with her, and she was still elliptical,
curt, and in a sense inexpressive. She had no
chatter, and the ways of women were in many directions
alien to her. Miss Franklin had been her teacher,
and yet, while respecting her, she had never learned
to love her. Next to Ben Fordyce she leaned upon
the judgment and sympathy of the sculptor, whose fine
eyes were aglow with a high purpose. She was
certain that he was both good and wise.
Mart was much amused at his father,
who refused to sleep a second night at the hotel.
“It’s too far from the street,” said
he. “I think I’ll go stay with Fan
if ye’ll lay out the course that leads to her
dure.” So Lucius went with him, bearing
a message from Haney: “Tell Fan I’ll
be over to see her to-morrow. I’m too tired
to go to-day,” and the father hurried away in
joyous relief.
“’Tis unnatural to see
a son of mine in such Babylonish splendor,” he
confided to Lucius. “Faith, it gives me
a turn every time I see him unwind a bill from that
big wad he carries in his pocket. ’Tis like
palin’ a red onion to him nothing
more.”
The Captain was up early next day,
and eager to see how his sister was getting along
in her new house, and to please him Bertha went with
him. The transposition of the McArdles, like
most charitable enterprises, had not been entirely
a success. The children had blubbered at being
torn away from their playmates and the alleys and
runways which they infested. They were like lusty
rats suddenly let loose in a fine new barn with no
dark corners, no burrows, no rotten planks, chips,
or coal-heaps to dig into or hide beneath. The
alleys in Glenwood were leafy lanes, the streets parked
and concreted, and the school-yard unnaturally clean
and shaded by fine young trees which no
one was allowed to climb.
Furthermore, there was work to do
in the garden and this was onerous to the
boys. Then, too, they had to fight their battles
all over again. However, they did this with pleasure,
establishing dreadful reputations among the neat,
knickerbocker “sissies” who were foolish
enough to cross them. Dress, Mrs. McArdle declared,
was now a real trial. The girls had to be “in
trim all the time,” and the boys were as violently
in contrast to their fellows as a litter of brindle
barn-kits beside a well-groomed tabby-cat’s
family. “I’m clean worn out with it,
Mart,” she confessed. “We’ve
been here two weeks the day, and the children howlin’
the whole time to go back and McArdle workin’
himself to the figger of a spoon with a mind to polish
the lawn and get the garden into seed.”
But Mart only smiled. “’Tis good discipline,
Fan.”
Haney senior was delighted with his
daughter’s household. “Faith, the
roar and tumble of the whelps brings back to me me
own wife and childer. Them was good days.
‘Twas hard skirmishin’ some weeks for bacon
and p’taties, but I got ’em someway, and
you ate ivery flick of it snappin’
and snarlin’, but happy as a box of pups.”
His son and daughter looked at each
other and laughed; then Mart said: “’Tis
a sad memory the father has, a most inconvenient and
embarrassing mind.”
They all stayed to dinner, and Bertha
rolled up her sleeves and helped in the kitchen while
the Captain went to market with Lucius. McArdle
having got a half-day off, came home highly wrought
up again at thought of meeting Captain Haney and his
handsome wife. He looked distinctly less care-worn,
though he confessed that it was hard to rise at the
hour necessary to reach his work at seven. Bertha’s
heart warmed to him. In a certain dreamy, speculative
turn of eye he was like her father a man
inventing new forms as naturally as other minds copy
worn models. He was gaining in conversational
powers, as he came to know Mart better, and took occasion
to lay before him the plans for several inventions,
small in themselves, but of possible value, so Lucius
said.
There was something hearty, wholesome,
and satisfying in this visit, and Bertha went away
with increased liking for the McArdles. “I’m
glad you gave them a boost, Mart,” she said,
as they left the house, “and you fixed it fine.
Mac talked to me a half-hour explaining that you hadn’t
put it on a charity basis just sold the
house on long time.”
“That was Lucius’s idea. Wasn’t
it, Lucius?”
Lucius did not appear to hear.
They were whirring down an avenue
bordered by elms in expanding leaf, the sky was filled
with big white clouds like those which come and go
over the great domes of the Rockies, and the air was
warm and sweet, not yet dusked by the city’s
chimneys. Bertha’s heart rose on joyous
wing. “Let’s call and take the Mosses
for a ride,” she suggested.
“With all the pleasure in the
world,” he replied; and when they drew up before
the side door of the huge block, Bertha sprang out
and hurried in without waiting for Lucius to accompany
her.
Mrs. Moss came to the studio door,
and Bertha’s shining face so wrought upon her
that she seized her and kissed her with sincere pleasure.
“Joe, here’s Mrs. Haney.”
Moss was modelling a small figure
on a stand near one of the windows, but left his work
and came towards her with beaming smile. “What
a coincidence! We were just discussing you.
How do you do? Shake my arm my hands
are muddy.” She took his outbent wrist and
shook it with frank heartiness. He explained:
“I said you’d come back; Julia declared,
’No. Once she tastes the glories of New
York, good-bye to Chicago and the West.’”
Bertha interrupted: “I
want you to lay off and go out for a whirl in our
machine.”
“How gay!” cried Moss.
“I ought to be working, for my rent is coming
due; but what’s the diff? Here goes!
Come on, Julia, we’ll shut up shop and let art
wag.”
Julia was doubtful. “You know you promised ”
“Of course I did that’s
the prerogative of the artist. Come on, now;
I’ll work to-night.”
“To-night is the Hall’s circus party.”
“So it is! Well, no matter.
I’m hungry for some whizzing, lashing, cool,
clear air.”
Dodging behind a screen in the corner,
like an actor “doing a stunt,” he reappeared
a few moments later with clean hands, wearing a gray
jacket and cap. “Hurry, hurry!” he
called. He was like a lad invited to go fishing
or swimming.
“I’ve been all ‘balled
up’ since you went away,” he explained “took
a contract to produce a certain line of ornamental
reliefs; it never pays to be mercenary. But there
it is! I was greedy, I went out for money now
behold me in the grasp of a business agreement.
Can’t sleep, can’t breathe country air had
to work all day Sunday.”
“It’ll pay some of our
debts, though,” explained Mrs. Moss, “and
buy the children’s summer suits.”
“Summer suits! Why summer
suits? I only had one complete suit a year when
I was a child and that was a buff.”
All the way down the elevator he gazed
admiringly at Bertha. “My, my! how fit
you look. Julia, why don’t you get a hat
and cloak like that?”
“Why don’t I? Do
you know why?” Then as they came out in sight
of the ’mobile she said, “Why don’t
you furnish me an auto-car like this?”
“I will,” he said, as
though the notion had just risen in his mind.
“I’ll secure one this week.”
Mart, who had taken a seat with Lucius,
was touched and warmed by their hearty greeting, and
they rolled away up the street as merry as school-children even
the self-contained Lucius smiled at Joe’s odd
turns of speech. Bertha’s heart swelled
with the keen delight of giving pleasure to her friends.
This was, indeed, the chief of all the wondrous powers
of money it enabled one to be hospitable,
to possess a home wherein visitors were always welcome,
to own a car in which dear friends could ride; for
the moment her resolution to give it all up weakened.
Moss was delirious with joy as they
went sweeping up the Lake Shore Drive. He took
off his cap and stood up in the car in order to drink
deep of the wind that came over the water, crisp and
clean and crystalline.
On the park mead the boys were playing
ball, and the combination of green grass and soft
and feathery foliage was very beautiful. The
water-fowl were out, the captive cranes crying, and
the drives were full of carriages and cars. It
was all very cheering, with death and winter far away.
Moss, sobering somewhat, began to
set forth his plan for making Chicago a new and greater
Venice by bringing the lake into all the city boulevards
and spanning these waterways with stately bridges of
a new type, “designed by Joe Moss, of course,”
he added; “’twould make Venice look like
a faded print in a lovely old song-book.”
His talk took hold of Bertha’s
imagination not because she cared to see
Chicago adorned, but because he was so singularly altruistic
in his concernments. That a man should live to
make the world more beautiful was a wondrous discovery
for her. He was not specially troubled about
the physical welfare or the morals of the average citizen,
but the city’s grossness, its willingness to
perpetuate ugly forms, rasped him, angered him.
She was eager to tell him of her own
change of view, but waited till their ride was over
and they were seated in the studio and a moment’s
private conversation was possible. Tingling with
the stimulus of his fragmentary exclamations, she
impulsively began: “If I were a poor girl
who wanted to earn a living in the world, what would
you advise me to do?”
“Get married!” His answer
was jocular, but, observing her displeasure, he added:
“I’m sorry I said that in just that tone,
but at the same time I really mean it. A woman
can do other things, but marry she must if she is
to fulfil her place in the world and be
happy.”
She was balked and disappointed, he
perceived, and he was forced to go further: “I
certainly wouldn’t advise any girl to study painting
or sculpture in the hope of making a living by it.
The only side of art that isn’t hopelessly out
of the running is the decorative home decoration
is a sure and worthy profession. People don’t
feel keen need of sculpture, but they do like pretty
walls and nice furniture. I know several highly
successful women decorators but I wouldn’t
advise that work for any one as an easy way to make
a living, for the decorative sense is either a gift
at birth or acquired after hard study.”
“Do they teach it over there?”
She nodded towards the lake. “I liked it
over there,” she said, wistfully. “You
see I didn’t get much of a show at school.
I began to stay out to help mother when I was fourteen.
I missed a whole lot. I’d kind o’
like to make it up now if I could.”
Moss was eager to probe a little deeper.
“Your life is thrillingly romantic to us the
kind of thing we read of. Congdon writes that
you have a superb home. I should think you’d
hate to leave it, even for a visit.”
Her hands strained together as if
in resistance to an impulse of pleading; then she
answered: “Yes but then, you
see, it isn’t really mine it’s
the Captain’s.”
“Yours by marriage.”
“That’s what people say but
I don’t know. Sometimes I think I have no
right to any part of it. You have to earn what
you own, don’t you?”
What was this doubt at her heart?
The unexplained emotion in her voice moved him profoundly.
He cautiously approached. “Of course, we
know Frank Congdon he likes to ‘string’
us Easterners and we take his yarns with due discount.
I suppose Captain Haney, like many other Western men,
is ready to try his luck now and again, and in that
sense really is a gambler.”
She faced him squarely. “No,
he has been the real thing. He kept a saloon when
I first knew him, but he gave it all up for me.
I wouldn’t promise to marry him till he did.
Everybody out there knows his career, and most people
think he got his money underhand, but he tells me he
didn’t, and I take his word. Every dollar
he spends on me or on our home comes out of some mines
he owns. I told him I wouldn’t touch a dollar
of the saloon money and I won’t.
Some folks think I don’t care, but I do.
I don’t like the saloon business, and he got
out and he’s livin’ straight now, as straight
as any man. It’s pretty hard on him, too,
though he won’t admit it. He must get awful
sick of sittin’ round the way he does.
I tell him he needn’t cut out all his old cronies
on my account. He says he ain’t sufferin’,
but it’s like shuttin’ a bronco up in
the corral and lettin’ the herd go back into
the hills.”
“Perhaps he thinks you’re
better fun than any of his cronies.”
She ignored the implied compliment and went on:
“All the same, it’s drawin’
mighty close lines on him. You can’t take
a man living a free-and-easy life the way he was and
wing him all at once and tie him down to a chair without
seein’ some suffering. Don’t you
know it?”
“Does he complain?”
“Not a whimper. Sometimes
I wish he would. No, he just waits but
I’m afraid he’ll get lonesome some day
and break loose and go back to the game.”
In this way the sculptor had come
very close to her secret, and she was trembling to
deeper confidence, when he said, very gently:
“Of course, it does seem a little strange to
me that one so young and charming as you are should
be married to a man of his type, but I suppose he was
a handsome figure before his accident.”
Her eyes glowed. “He was
one of the grandest-looking men! I never liked
his trade and I mistrusted him, at first;
but when he cut himself out of the whole business for
me I couldn’t help likin’ him;
he was so big-hearted and free-handed. We needed
his help, all right. Mother was sick, and my
brother’s ranch was playing to hard luck.
But don’t think I married him for his money I
liked him then, and, besides well, I thought
I was doing the right thing but now well,
I’m guessing.” She ended abruptly,
and in the tremor of that final word Moss read her
secret. She had never loved her husband.
Pity and a kind of loyalty to her word had carried
her to his side, and now a sense of duty bound her
there.
With sincere sympathy, he said:
“We all do wrong at times that good may come
out of it. You could not foresee the future the
best of us can only guess at the effect of
any action. You did the best you knew at the
moment. The question you have to face now has
only slight relation to the past. No one can
enter wholly into another’s perplexity I’m
not even sure of a single one of my inferences but
if you are thinking of separation, I would
say, meet this crisis as bravely as you met the other.
But I don’t believe we should decide any such
question selfishly. I am not of those who always
seek the side on which lies personal happiness, because
a happiness that is essentially selfish won’t
last. The Captain lives only for you any
one can see that. What he does for you springs
from deep affection. What would happen to him if
you left him?”
He paused a moment and watched her
subduing her tears; then added: “I won’t
say I was unprepared for what you’ve said, for
the entire relationship, from our first meeting, seemed
too abnormal to be altogether happy. Money will
buy a great many desirable things, but it has its
limits. At the same time, it is too much to expect
of you If your feeling for him has changed ”
His delicacy, his sympathy for her,
was made apparent by the unusual hesitation of his
speech, and she would have broken down completely had
not Julia Moss called out: “Joe, turn on
the lights it’s getting dark.”
Conscious of Bertha’s emotion,
he did not immediately do as he was bidden. “I
wish you’d talk this over with Julia,”
he ended gently; “she’s a very wise little
woman.”
Bertha shook her head. “I
didn’t intend to talk it over with you.
I don’t know what possessed me. I had no
business to say what I did.”
He reassured her. “All
you’ve told me and the part I’ve guessed
is quite safe. I will not even permit Julia to
share your confidence till you are willing to speak
to her yourself.”
As he slowly lighted the studio Bertha
was surprised and a little troubled to find that two
or three other visitors had slipped in through the
dusk, and were grouped about the tea-table, and that
the Captain was again the centre of an eager-eyed
group. “They treat him as if he were an
Eskimo,” she thought bitterly, and rose to join
the circle and protect him from their inquisition.
Haney was feeling extremely well,
and talked with so much of his old time vigor and
slash of epithet that his little audience was quite
entranced. He enlarged upon the experiences of
a year he had spent in Alaska. “Mining
up there in them days made gambling slow business,”
he said. (He had told Bertha that he had made an attempt
to get out of “the trade,” but she was
content to have him put it on less self-righteous
grounds.) He contrived to make his hearers feel very
keenly the pitiless, long-drawn ferocity of that sunless
winter. He made it plain why men in that far
land came together in vile dens to drink and gamble,
and Moss glowed with the wonder and delight of those
great boys who could rush away to the arctic edge
of the world and die with laughing curses on their
lips.
“What did you all do it for?”
he asked, bluntly. “For money?”
“Partly but more
for the love of doing something hard. No man but
a miser punishes himself for love of gold it’s
for love of what the stuff will buy, that men fight
the snows.”
While Haney talked of these things
Bertha’s eyes were musingly turned on the face
of the sculptor, and her mind was far from the scenes
which Mart so vividly described. This side of
his life no longer amused her on the contrary
she shrank from any disclosure of his savage career.
She was now as unjust in her criticism as she had been
fond in her admiration, and when with darkening brow
she cut short his garrulous flow of narrative Julia
perceived her displeasure.
Haney apologized, handsomely.
“It’s natural for the ould bedraggled
eagle in the cage with a club on his wrist to dream
of the circles he used to cut and the fish he set
claw to. In them days I feared no man’s
weight, and no night or stream. ’Twas all
joyous battle to me, and now, as I sit here on velvet
with only to snap me fingers for anything I want,
I look back at thim fierce old times with a sneaking
kind o’ wish to live ’em all over again.
Bertie knows me weakness. I would talk forever
did she lave me go on; but ’tis no blame to her it
was a cruel, bad, careless life.”
“When I come West,” said
Moss, sincerely, “we’ll go camping together,
and every night by the fire we’ll smoke and you
can tell me all about your journeys. I assure
you they are epic to me.”
Dr. Brent, a little later, put in
a private word to Bertie. “Now you’re
going back into the high country and you’ll find
it necessary to watch the Captain pretty closely.
I suspect he’ll find his heart thumping briskly
when he reaches the Springs. He may stand that
altitude all right, but don’t let him go higher.
He will be taking chances if he goes above six thousand
feet. You’d better have Steel of Denver
come down and examine him to see how he stands the
first few days. I mention Steel because I know
him I’ve no doubt there are plenty
of good men in the Springs.”
“What’ll I do if he’s worse?”
“Bring him back here or go to sea level only
beware of high passes.”