It was evening of early summer.
George Lansing sat by a window of the library at
Brantholme. The house belonged to his cousin;
and George, having lately reached it after traveling
in haste from Norway, awaited the coming of Mrs. Sylvia
Marston in an eagerly expectant mood. It was
characteristic of him that his expression conveyed
little hint of his feelings, for George was a quiet,
self-contained man; but he had not been so troubled
by confused emotions since Sylvia married Marston
three years earlier. Marston had taken her to
Canada; but now he was dead, and Sylvia, returning
to England, had summoned George, who had been appointed
executor of her husband’s will.
Outside, beyond the broad sweep of
lawn, the quiet English countryside lay bathed in
the evening light: a river gleaming in the foreground,
woods clothed in freshest verdure, and rugged hills
running back through gradations of softening color
into the distance. Inside, a ray of sunlight
stretched across the polished floor, and gleams of
brightness rested on the rows of books and somber paneling.
Brantholme was old, but modern art had added comfort
and toned down its austerity; and George, fresh from
the northern snow peaks, was conscious of its restful
atmosphere.
In the meanwhile, he was listening
for a footstep. Sylvia, he had been told, would
be with him in two or three minutes; he had already
been expecting her for a quarter of an hour.
This, however, did not surprise him: Sylvia
was rarely punctual, and until she married Marston,
he had been accustomed to await her pleasure.
She came at length, clad in a thin
black dress that fitted her perfectly; and he rose
and stood looking at her while his heart beat fast.
Sylvia was slight of figure, but curiously graceful,
and her normal expression was one of innocent candor.
The somber garments emphasized the colorless purity
of her complexion; her hair was fair, and she had
large, pathetic blue eyes. Her beauty was somehow
heightened by a hint of fragility: in her widow’s
dress she looked very forlorn and helpless; and the
man yearned to comfort and protect her. It did
not strike him that she had stood for some moments
enduring his compassionate scrutiny with exemplary
patience.
“It’s so nice to see you,
George,” she said. “I knew you would
come.”
He thrilled at the assurance; but
he was not an effusive person. He brought a
chair for her.
“I started as soon as I got
your note,” he answered simply. “I’m
glad you’re back again.”
He did not think it worth while to
mention that he had with difficulty crossed a snow-barred
pass in order to save time, and had left a companion,
who resented his desertion, in the wilds; but Sylvia
guessed that he had spared no effort, and she answered
him with a smile.
“Your welcome’s worth having, because
it’s sincere.”
Those who understood Sylvia best occasionally
said that when she was unusually gracious it was a
sign that she wanted something; but George would have
denied this with indignation.
“If it wouldn’t be too
painful, you might tell me a little about your stay
in Canada,” he said by and by. “You
never wrote, and” he hesitated “I
heard only once from Dick.”
Dick was her dead husband’s
name, and she sat silent a few moments musing, and
glancing unobtrusively at George. He had not
changed much since she last saw him, on her wedding-day,
though he looked a little older, and rather more serious.
There were faint signs of weariness which she did
not remember in his sunburned face. On the whole,
however, it was a reposeful face, with something in
it that suggested a steadfast disposition. His
gray eyes met one calmly and directly; his brown hair
was short and stiff; the set of his lips and the contour
of his jaw were firm. George had entered on
his thirtieth year. Though he was strongly made,
his appearance was in no way striking, and it was
seldom that his conversation was characterized by brilliancy.
But his friends trusted him.
“It’s difficult to speak
of,” Sylvia began. “When, soon after
our wedding, Dick lost most of his money, and said
that we must go to Canada, I felt almost crushed;
but I thought he was right.” She paused
and glanced at George. “He told me what
you wished to do, and I’m glad that, generous
as you are, he wouldn’t hear of it.”
George looked embarrassed.
“I felt his refusal a little,”
he said. “I could have spared the money,
and I was a friend of his.”
He had proved a staunch friend, though
he had been hardly tried. For several years
he had been Sylvia’s devoted servant, and an
admirer of the more accomplished Marston. When
the girl chose the latter it was a cruel blow to George,
for he had never regarded his comrade as a possible
rival; but after a few weeks of passionate bitterness,
he had quietly acquiesced. He had endeavored
to blame neither; though there were some who did not
hold Sylvia guiltless. George was, as she well
knew, her faithful servant still; and this was largely
why she meant to tell him her tragic story.
“Well,” she said, “when
I first went out to the prairie, I was almost appalled.
Everything was so crude and barbarous but
you know the country.”
George merely nodded. He had
spent a few years in a wheat-growing settlement, inhabited
by well-bred young Englishmen. The colony, however,
was not conducted on economic lines; and when it came
to grief, George, having come into some property on
the death of a relative, returned to England.
“Still,” continued Sylvia,
“I tried to be content, and blamed myself when
I found it difficult. There was always so much
to do cooking, washing, baking one
could seldom get any help. I often felt worn
out and longed to lie down and sleep.”
“I can understand that,”
said George, with grave sympathy. “It’s
a very hard country for a woman.”
He was troubled by the thought of
what she must have borne for it was difficult to imagine
Sylvia engaged in laborious domestic toil. It
had never occurred to him that her delicate appearance
was deceptive.
“Dick,” she went on, “was
out at work all day; there was nobody to talk to our
nearest neighbor lived some miles off. I think
now that Dick was hardly strong enough for his task.
He got restless and moody after he lost his first
crop by frost. During that long, cruel winter
we were both unhappy: I never think without a
shudder of the bitter nights we spent sitting beside
the stove, silent and anxious about the future.
But we persevered; the next harvest was good, and we
were brighter when winter set in. I shall always
be glad of that in view of what came after.”
She paused, and added in a lower voice:
“You heard, of course?”
“Very little; I was away. It was a heavy
blow.”
“I couldn’t write much,”
explained Sylvia. “Even now, I can hardly
talk of it but you were a dear friend of
Dick’s. We had to burn wood; the nearest
bluff where it could be cut was several miles away;
and Dick didn’t keep a hired man through the
winter. It was often very cold, and I got frightened
when he drove off if there was any wind. It
was trying to wait in the quiet house, wondering if
he could stand the exposure. Then one day something
kept him so that he couldn’t start for the bluff
until noon; and near dusk the wind got up and the snow
began to fall. It got thicker, and I could not
sit still. I went out now and then and called,
and was driven back, almost frozen, by the storm.
I could scarcely see the lights a few yards away;
the house shook. The memory of that awful night
will haunt me all my life!”
She broke off with a shiver, and George looked very
compassionate.
“I think,” he said gently,
“you had better not go on.” “Ah!”
replied Sylvia, “I must grapple with the horror
and not yield to it; with the future to be faced,
I can’t be a coward. At last I heard the
team and opened the door. The snow was blinding,
but I could dimly see the horses standing in it.
I called, but Dick didn’t answer, and I ran
out and found him lying upon the load of logs.
He was very still, and made no sign, but I reached
up and shook him I couldn’t believe
the dreadful thing. I think I screamed; the
team started suddenly, and Dick fell at my feet.
Then the truth was clear to me.”
A half-choked sob broke from her, but she went on.
“I couldn’t move him;
I must have gone nearly mad, for I tried to run to
Peterson’s, three miles away. The snow
blinded me, and I came back again; and by and by another
team arrived. Peterson had got lost driving
home from the settlement. After that, I can’t
remember anything; I’m thankful it is so I
couldn’t bear it!”
Then there was silence for a few moments
until George rose and gently laid his hand on her
shoulder.
“My sympathy’s not worth
much, Sylvia, but it’s yours,” he said.
“Can I help in any practical way?”
Growing calmer, she glanced up at him with tearful
eyes.
“I can’t tell you just
yet; but it’s a comfort to have your sympathy.
Don’t speak to me for a little while, please.”
He went back to his place and watched
her with a yearning heart, longing for the power to
soothe her. She looked so forlorn and desolate,
too frail to bear her load of sorrow.
“I must try to be brave,”
she smiled up at him at length. “And you
are my trustee. Please bring those papers I
laid down. I suppose I must talk to you about
the farm.”
It did not strike George that this
was a rather sudden change, or that there was anything
incongruous in Sylvia’s considering her material
interests in the midst of her grief. After examining
the documents, he asked her a few questions, to which
she gave explicit answers.
“Now you should be able to decide
what must be done,” she said finally; “and
I’m anxious about it. I suppose that’s
natural.”
“You have plenty of friends,”
George reminded her consolingly.
Sylvia rose, and there was bitterness in her expression.
“Friends? Oh, yes; but
I’ve come back to them a widow, badly provided
for that’s why I spent some months
in Montreal before I could nerve myself to face them.”
Then her voice softened as she fixed her eyes on
him. “It’s fortunate there are one
or two I can rely on.”
Sylvia left him with two clear impressions:
her helplessness, and the fact that she trusted him.
While he sat turning over the papers, his cousin
and co-trustee came in. Herbert Lansing was a
middle-aged business man, and he was inclined to portliness.
His clean-shaven and rather fleshy face usually wore
a good-humored expression; his manners were easy and,
as a rule, genial.
“We must have a talk,”
he began, indicating the documents in George’s
hand. “I suppose you have grasped the position,
even if Sylvia hasn’t explained it. She
shows an excellent knowledge of details.”
There was a hint of dryness in his
tone that escaped George’s notice.
“So far as I can make out,”
he answered, “Dick owned a section of a second-class
wheat-land, with a mortgage on the last quarter, some
way back from a railroad. The part under cultivation
gives a poor crop.”
“What would you value the property at?”
George made a rough calculation.
“I expected something of the
kind,” Herbert told him. “It’s
all Sylvia has to live upon, and the interest would
hardly cover her dressmaker’s bills.”
He looked directly at his cousin. “Of course,
it’s possible that she will marry again.”
“She must never be forced to
contemplate it by any dread of poverty,” George
said shortly.
“How is it to be prevented?”
George merely looked thoughtful and
a little stern. Getting no answer, Herbert went
on:
“So far as I can see, we have
only two courses to choose between. The first
is to sell out as soon as we can find a buyer, with
unfortunate results if your valuation’s right;
but the second looks more promising. With immigrants
pouring into the country, land’s bound to go
up, and we ought to get a largely increased price
by holding on a while. To do that, I understand,
the land should be worked.”
“Yes. It could, no doubt,
be improved; which would materially add to its value.”
“I see one difficulty:
the cost of superintendence might eat up most of the
profit. Wages are high on the prairie, are they
not?”
George assented, and Herbert continued:
“Then a good deal would depend
on the man in charge. Apart from the question
of his honesty, he would have to take a thorough interest
in the farm.”
“He would have to think of nothing
else, and be willing to work from sunrise until dark,”
said George. “Successful farming means
determined effort in western Canada.”
“Could you put your hands upon a suitable person?”
“I’m very doubtful.
You don’t often meet with a man of the kind
we need in search of an engagement at a strictly moderate
salary.”
“Then it looks as if we must
sell out now for enough to provide Sylvia with a pittance.”
“That,” George said firmly, “is
not to be thought of!”
There was a short silence while he
pondered, for his legacy had not proved an unmixed
blessing. At first he had found idleness irksome,
but by degrees he had grown accustomed to it.
Though he was still troubled now and then by an idea
that he was wasting his time and making a poor use
of such abilities as he possessed, it was pleasant
to feel that, within certain limits, he could do exactly
as he wished. Life in western Canada was strenuous
and somewhat primitive; he was conscious of a strong
reluctance to resume it; but he could not bear to
have Sylvia, who had luxurious tastes, left almost
penniless. There was a way in which he could
serve her, and he determined to take it. George
was steadfast in his devotion, and did not shrink from
a sacrifice.
“It strikes me there’s
only one suitable plan,” he said. “I
know something about western farming. I wouldn’t
need a salary; and Sylvia could trust me to look after
her interests. I’d better go out and take
charge until things are straightened up, or we come
across somebody fit for the post.”
Herbert heard him with satisfaction.
He had desired to lead George up to this decision,
and he suspected that Sylvia had made similar efforts.
It was not difficult to instil an idea into his cousin’s
mind.
“Well,” he said thoughtfully,
“the suggestion seems a good one; though it’s
rather hard on you, if you really mean to go.”
“That’s decided,” was the brief
answer.
“Then, though we can discuss
details later, you had better give me legal authority
to look after your affairs while you are away.
There are those Kaffir shares, for instance; it might
be well to part with them if, they go up a point or
two.”
“I’ve wondered why you
recommended me to buy them,” George said bluntly.
Herbert avoided a direct answer.
He now and then advised George, who knew little about
business, in the management of his property, but his
advice was not always disinterested or intended only
for his cousin’s benefit.
“Oh,” he replied, “the
cleverest operators now and then make mistakes, and
I don’t claim exceptional powers of precision.
It’s remarkably difficult to forecast the tendency
of the stock-market.”
George nodded, as if satisfied.
“I’ll arrange things before
I sail, and I’d better get off as soon as possible.
Now, suppose we go down and join the others.”