For the first few months after Mercy
went away, Stephen seemed to himself to be like an
automaton, which had been wound up to go through certain
movements for a certain length of time, and could by
no possibility stop. He did not suffer as he
had expected. Sometimes it seemed to him that
he did not suffer at all; and he was terrified at
this very absence of suffering. Then again he
had hours and days of a dull despair, which was worse
than any more active form of suffering. Now he
understood, he thought, how in the olden time men
had often withdrawn themselves from the world after
some great grief, and had lived long, stagnant lives
in deserts and caves. He had thought it would
kill him to lose Mercy out of his life. Now he
felt sure that he should live to be a hundred years
old; should live by very help of the apathy into which
he had sunk. Externally, he seemed very little
changed,-a trifle quieter, perhaps, and
gentler. His mother sometimes said to herself,-
“Steve is really getting old
very fast for so young a man;” but she was content
with the change. It seemed to bring them nearer
together, and made her feel more at ease as to the
possibility of his falling in love. Her old suspicions
and jealousies of Mercy had died out root and branch,
within three months after her departure. Stephen’s
unhesitating assurance to her that he did not expect
to write to Mercy had settled the question in her
mind once for all. If she had known that at the
very moment when he uttered these words he had one
long letter from Mercy and another to her lying in
his pocket, the shock might well-nigh have killed her;
for never once in Mrs. White’s most jealous
and ill-natured hours had the thought crossed her
mind that her son would tell her a deliberate lie.
He told it, however, unflinchingly, in as gentle and
even a tone and with as unruffled a brow as he would
have bade her good-morning. He had thought the
whole matter over, and deliberately resolved to do
it. He did it to save her from pain; and he had
no more compunction about it than he would have had
about closing a blind, to shut out a sunlight too strong
for her eyes. What a terrible thing is the power
which human beings have of deceiving each other!
Woe to any soul which trusts itself to any thing less
than an organic integrity of nature, to which a lie
is impossible!
Mercy’s letters disappointed
Stephen. They were loving; but they were concise,
sensible, sometimes merry, and always cheerful.
Her life was constantly broadening; friends crowded
around her; and her art was becoming more and more
to her every day. Her name was beginning to be
known, and her influence felt. Her verses were
simple, and went to people’s hearts. They
were also of a fine and subtle flavor, and gave pleasure
to the intellect. Strangers began to write words
of encouragement to her,-sometimes a word
of gratitude for help, sometimes a word of hearty
praise. She began to feel that she had her own
circle of listeners, unknown friends, who were always
ready to hear her when she spoke. This consciousness
is a most exquisite happiness to a true artist:
it is a better stimulus than all the flattering criticism
in the world can give.
She was often touched to tears by
the tributes she received from these unknown friends.
They had a wide range, coming sometimes from her fellow-artists
in literature, sometimes from lowly and uncultured
people. Once there came to her by mail, on a
sheet of coarse paper, two faded roses, fragrant,-for
they were cinnamon roses, whose fragrance never dies,-but
yellow and crumpled, for they had journeyed many days
to reach her. They were tied together by a bit
of blue yarn; and on the paper was written, in ill-spelt
words, “I wanted to send you something; and these
were all I had. I am an old woman, and very poor.
You’ve helped me ever so much.”
Another gift was a moss basket filled
with arbutus blossoms. Hid away in the leaves
was a tiny paper, on which were written some graceful
verses, evidently by a not unpractised hand.
The signature was in initials unknown to Mercy; but
she hazarded a guess as to the authorship, and sent
the following verses in reply:-
To E.B.
At night, the stream came to the sea.
“Long leagues,”
it cried, “this drop I bring,
O beauteous, boundless sea!
What is the meagre, paltry
thing
In thine abundance
unto thee?
No ripple, in thy smallest wave, of me
Will know! No thirst its suffering
Shall better slake for my surrendering
My life!
O sea, in vain
My leagues of
toil and pain!”
At night, wayfarers reached the sea.
“Long weary leagues
we came,” they cried,
“O beauteous, boundless sea!
The swelling waves of thy
swift tide
Break on the shores where souls are free:
Through lonely wildernesses, unto thee
One tiny stream has been our guide,
And in the desert we had died,
If its oases sweet
Had not refreshed
our feet.”
O tiny stream, lost in the sea,
Close symbol of a lifetime’s speech!
O beauteous, boundless sea,
Close fitting symbol of the reach,
Of measureless Eternity!
Be glad, O stream, O sea, blest equally!
And thou whose words have helped to teach
Me this,-my unknown friend,-for
each
Kind thought, warm thanks.
Only the stream can know
How at such words the long leagues lighter grow.
All these new interests and occupations,
while they did not in the least weaken her loyalty
to Stephen, filled her thoughts healthfully and absorbingly,
and left her no room for any such passionate longing
and brooding as Stephen poured out to her in his letters.
He looked in vain for any response to these expressions.
Sometimes, unable to bear the omission any longer,
he would ask her pathetically why she did not say
that she longed to see him. Her reply was characteristic:-
“You ask me, dear, why I do
not say that I long to see you. I am not sure
that I ever do long, in the sense in which you use
the word. I know that I cannot see you till next
winter, just as I used to know every morning that
I could not see you until night; and the months between
now and then seem to me one solid interval of time
to be filled up and made the most of, just as the
interval of the daytime between your going away in
the morning and coming home at night used to seem
to me. I do not think, dear Stephen, there is
a moment of any day when I have not an under current
of consciousness of you; but it is not a longing for
the sight of you. Are you sure, darling, that
the love which takes perpetual shape in such longings
is the strongest love?”
Little by little, phrases like this
sank into Stephen’s mind, and gradually crystallized
into a firm conviction that Mercy was being weaned
from him. It was not so. It was only that
separation and its surer tests were adjusting to a
truer level the relation between them. She did
not love him one whit less; but she was taking the
position which belonged to her stronger and finer
organization. If she had ever lived by his side
as his wife, the same change would have come; but
her never-failing tenderness would have effectually
covered it from his recognition, and hid it from her
own, so long as he looked into her eyes with pleading
love, and she answered with woman’s fondness.
No realization of inequality could ever have come.
It is, after all, the flesh and blood of the loved
one which we idealize. There is in love’s
sacraments a “real presence,” which handling
cannot make us doubt. It is when we go apart and
reflect that our reason asks questions. Mercy
did not in the least know that she was outgrowing
Stephen White. She did not in the least suspect
that her affection and her loyalty were centring around
an ideal personality, to which she gave his name,
but which had in reality never existed. She believed
honestly that she was living for and in Stephen all
this time; that she was his, as he was hers, inalienably
and for ever. If it had been suggested to her
that it was unnatural that she should be so content
in a daily life which he did not share, so busy and
glad in occupations and plans and aspirations into
which he did not enter, she would have been astonished.
She would have said, “How foolish of me to do
otherwise! We have our lives to lead, our work
to do. It would be a sin to waste one’s
life, to leave one’s work undone, because of
the mere lack of seeing any one human being, however
dear.” Stephen knew love better than this:
he knew that life without the daily sight of Mercy
was a blank drudgery; that, day by day, month by month,
he was growing duller and duller, and more and more
lifeless, as if his very blood were being impoverished
by lack of nourishment. Surely it was a hard
fate which inflicted on this man, already so overburdened,
the perpetual pain of a love denied, thwarted, unhappy.
Surely it was a brave thing in him to bear the double
load uncomplainingly, to make no effort to throw it
off, and never by a word or a look to visit his own
sufferings on the head of the helpless creature, who
seemed to be the cause of them all. If there were
any change in his manner toward his mother during
these months, it was that he grew tenderer and
more demonstrative to her. There were even times
when he kissed her, solely from the yearning need
he felt to kiss something human, he so longed for
one touch of Mercy’s hand. He would sometimes
ask her wistfully, “Do I make you happy, mother?”
And she would be won upon and softened by the words;
when in reality they were only the outcry of the famished
heart which needed some reassurance that its sacrifices
had not been all in vain.
Month after month went on, and no
tenants came for the “wing.” Stephen
even humiliated himself so far as to offer it to Jane
Barker’s husband at a lowered rent; but his
offer was surlily rejected, and he repented having
made it. Very bitterly he meditated on the strange
isolation into which he and his mother were forced.
His sympathies were not broad and general enough to
comprehend it. He did not know how quickly all
people feel an atmosphere of withdrawal, an air of
indifference. If Stephen had been rich and powerful,
the world would have forgiven him these traits, or
have smothered its dislike of them; but in a poor
man, and an obscure one, such “airs” were
not to be tolerated. Nobody would live in the
“wing.” And so it came to pass that
one day Stephen wrote to Mercy the following letter:-
“You will be sorry to hear that
I have had to foreclose the mortgage on this house.
It was impossible to get a tenant for the other half
of it, and there was nothing else to be done.
The house must be sold, but I doubt if it brings the
full amount of the loan. I should have done this
three months ago, except for your strong feeling against
it. I am very sorry for old Mrs. Jacobs; but
it is her misfortune, not my fault. I have my
mother to provide for, and my first duty is to her.
Of course, Mrs. Jacobs will now have to go to the
alms-house but I am not at all sure that she will
not be more comfortable there than she has made herself
in the cottage. She has starved herself all these
years. Some people say she must have a hoard
of money there somewhere, that she cannot have spent
even the little she has received.
“I shall move out of the house
at once, into the little cottage you liked so much,
farther up on the hill. That is for rent, only
fifty dollars a year. I shall put this house
into good repair, run a piazza around it as you suggested,
and paint it; and then I think I shall be sure of finding
a purchaser. It can be made a very pretty house
by expending a little money on it; and I can sell
it for enough more to repay me. I am sure nobody
would buy it as it is.”
Mercy replied very briefly to this
part of Stephen’s letter. She had discussed
the question with him often before, and she knew the
strict justice of his claim; but her heart ached for
the poor friendless old woman, who was thus to lose
her last dollar. If it had been possible for
Mercy to have continued to pay the rent of the wing
herself, she would gladly have done so; but, at her
suggestion of such a thing, Stephen had been so angry
that she had been almost frightened.
“I am not so poor yet, Mercy,”
he had exclaimed, “as to take charity from you!
I think I should go to the alms-house myself first.
I don’t see why old Granny Jacobs is so much
to you, any way.”
“Only because she is so absolutely
friendless, Stephen,” Mercy had replied gently.
“I never before knew of anybody who had not a
relative or a friend in the world; and I am afraid
they are cruel to the poor people at the alms-house.
They all look so starved and wretched!”
“Well, it will be no more than
she deserves,” said Stephen; “for she was
cruel to her husband’s brother’s wife.
I used to hear horrid stories, when I was a boy, about
how she drove them out of the house; and she was cruel
to her son too, and drove him away from home.
Of course, I am sorry to be the instrument of punishing
her, and I do have a certain pity for the old woman;
but it is really her own fault. She might be living
now in comfort with her son, perhaps, if she had treated
him well.”
“We can’t go by such ‘ifs’
in this world, Steve,” said Mercy, earnestly.
“We have to take things as they are. I don’t
want to be judged way back in my life. Only God
knows all the ‘ifs.’” Such conversations
as these had prepared Mercy for the news which Stephen
now wrote her; but they had in no wise changed her
feeling in regard to it. She believed in the bottom
of her heart that Stephen might have secured a tenant,
if he had tried. He had once, in speaking of
the matter, dropped a sentence which had shocked her
so that she could never forget it.
“It would be a great deal better
for me,” he had said, “to have the money
invested in some other way. If the house does
fall into my hands, I shall sell it; and, even if
I don’t get the full amount of what father loaned,
I shall make it bring us in a good deal more than
it does this way.”
This sentence rang in Mercy’s
ears, as she read in Stephen’s letter all his
plans for improving the house; but the thing was done,
and it was not Mercy’s habit to waste effort
or speech over things which could not be altered.
“I am very sorry,” she
wrote, “that you have been obliged to take the
house. You know how I always felt for poor old
Granny Jacobs. Perhaps we can do something to
make her more comfortable in the alms-house. I
think Lizzy could manage that for us.”
And in her own mind Mercy resolved
that the old woman should never lack for food and
fire, however unwilling the overseers might be to permit
her to have unusual comforts.
Stephen’s next letter opened
with these words: “O Mercy, I have such
a strange thing to tell you. I am so excited
I can hardly find words. I have found a lot of
money in your old fireplace. Just think of our
having sat there so quietly night after night, within
hands’ reach of it, all last winter! And
how lucky that I found it, instead of any of the workmen!
They’d have pocketed it, and never said a word.”
“To be sure they would,”
thought Mercy, “and poor old Granny Jacobs would
have been”-she was about to think,
“cheated out of her rights again,” but
with a pang she changed the phrase into “none
the better off for it. Oh, how glad I am for
the poor old thing! People always said her husband
must have hid money away somewhere.”
Mercy read on. “I was in
such a hurry to get the house done before the snow
came that I took hold myself, and worked every night
and morning before the workmen came; and, after they
had gone, I found this last night, and I declare,
Mercy, I haven’t shut my eyes all night long.
It seems to me too good to be true. I think there
must be as much as three thousand dollars, all in
solid gold. Some of the coins I don’t know
the value of; but the greater proportion of them are
English sovereigns. Of course rich people wouldn’t
think this such a very big sum, but you and I know
how far a little can go for poor people.”
“Yes, indeed,” thought
Mercy. “Why, it will make the poor old woman
perfectly comfortable all her life: it will give
her more than she had from the house.”
And Mercy laid the letter in her lap and fell into
a reverie, thinking how strange it was that this good
fortune should have come about by means of an act
which had seemed to her cruel on Stephen’s part.
She took the letter up again.
It continued: “O Mercy, my darling, do you
suppose you can realize what this sudden lift is to
me? All my life I have found our poverty so hard
to bear, and these latter years I have bitterly felt
the hardship of being unable to go out into the world
and make my fortune as other men do, as I think I
might, if I were free. But this sum, small as
it is, will be a nucleus, I feel sure it will, of a
competency at least. I know of several openings
where I can place it most advantageously. O Mercy!
dear, dear Mercy! what hopes spring up in my heart!
The time may yet come when we shall build up a lovely
home together. Bless old Jacobs’s miserliness!
How little he knew what he was hoarding up his gold
for!”
At this point, Mercy dropped the letter,-dropped
it as if it had been a viper that stung her.
She was conscious of but two things: a strange,
creeping cold which seemed to be chilling her to the
very marrow of her bones; and a vague but terrible
sense of horror, mentally. The letter fell to
the floor. She did not observe it. A half-hour
passed, and she did not know that it had been a moment.
Gradually, her brain began to rouse into activity
again, and strove confusedly with the thoughts which
crowded on it.
“That would be stealing.
He can’t mean it. Stephen can’t be
a thief.” Half-formed, incoherent sentences
like these floated in her mind, seemed to be floating
in the air, pronounced by hissing voices.
She pressed her hands to her temples,
and sprang to her feet. The letter rustled on
the floor, as her gown swept over it. She turned
and looked at it, as if it were a living thing she
would kill. She stooped to pick it up, and then
recoiled from it. She shrank from the very paper.
All the vehemence of her nature was roused. As
in the moment of drowning people are said to review
in one swift flash of consciousness their whole lives,
so now in this moment did Mercy look back over the
months of her life with Stephen. Her sense of
the baseness of his action now was like a lightning
illuming every corner of the past: every equivocation,
every concealment, every subterfuge he had practised,
stood out before her, bare, stripped of every shred
of apology or excuse. “He lies; he has always
lied. Why should he not steal?” she exclaimed.
“It is only another form of the same thing.
He stole me, too; and he made me steal him. He
is dishonest to the very core. How did I ever
love such a man? What blinded me to his real nature?”
Then a great revulsion of feeling,
of tenderness toward Stephen, would sweep over her,
and drown all these thoughts. “O my poor,
brave, patient darling! He never meant to do
any thing wrong in his life. He does not see
things as I do: no human soul could see clearly,
standing where he stands. There is a moral warp
in his nature, for which he is no more responsible
than a tree is responsible for having grown into a
crooked shape when it was broken down by heavy stones
while it was a sapling. Oh, how unjust I am to
him! I will never think such thoughts of him again.
My darling, my darling! He did not stop to think
in his excitement that the money was not his.
I daresay he has already seen it differently.”
Like waves breaking on a beach, and
rolling back again to meet higher waves and be swallowed
up in them, these opposing thoughts and emotions struggled
with each other in Mercy’s bosom. Her heart
and her judgment were at variance, and the antagonism
was irreconcilable. She could not believe that
her lover was dishonest. She could not but call
his act a theft. The night came and went, and
no lull had come to the storm by which her soul was
tossed. She could not sleep. As the morning
dawned, she rose with haggard and weary eyes, and
prepared to write to Stephen. In some of her
calmer intervals, she had read the remainder of his
letter. It was chiefly filled with the details
of the manner in which the gold had been hidden.
A second fireplace had been built inside the first,
leaving a space of several inches between the two
brick walls. On each side two bricks had been
so left that they could be easily taken out and replaced;
and the bags of gold hung upon iron stanchions in the
outer wall. What a strange picture it must have
been in the silent night hours,-the old
miser bending above the embers of the dying fire on
the hearth, and reaching down the crevice to his treasures!
The bags were of leather, curiously embossed; they
were almost charred by the heat, and the gold was
dull and brown.
“I wonder which old fellow put
it there?” said Stephen, at the end of his letter.
“Captain John would have been more likely to
have foreign gold; but why should he hide it in his
brother’s fireplace? At any rate, to whichever
of them I am indebted for it, I am most profoundly
grateful. If ever I meet him in any world, I’ll
thank him.”
Suddenly the thought occurred to Mercy,
“Perhaps old Mrs. Jacobs is dead. Then
there would be nobody who had any right to the money.
But no: Stephen would have told me if she had
been.”
Still she clung to this straw of a
hope; and, when she sat down to write to Stephen,
these words came first to her pen:-
“Is Mrs. Jacobs dead, Stephen?
You do not say any thing about her; but I cannot imagine
your thinking for a moment of keeping that money for
yourself, unless she is dead. If she is alive,
the money is hers. Nobody but her husband or
his brother could have put it there. Nobody else
has lived in the house, except very poor people.
Forgive me, dear, but perhaps you had not thought
of this when you first wrote: it has very likely
occurred to you since then, and I may be making a very
superfluous suggestion.” So hard did she
cling to the semblance of a trust that all would yet
prove to be well with her love and her lover.
Stephen’s reply came by the
very next mail. It was short: it ran thus:-
“Dear darling,-I
do not know what to make of your letter. Your
sentence, ’I cannot imagine your thinking for
a moment of keeping that money for yourself,’
is a most extraordinary one. What do you mean
by ’keeping it for myself’? It is
mine: the house was mine and all that was in it.
Old Mrs. Jacobs is alive still, at least she was last
week; but she has no more claim on that money than
any other old woman in town. I can’t suppose
you would think me a thief, Mercy; but your letter
strikes me as a very strange one. Suppose I were
to discover that there is a gold mine in the orchard,-stranger
things than that have happened,-would you
say that that also belonged to Mrs. Jacobs and not
to me? The cases are precisely parallel.
You have allowed your impulsive feeling to run away
with your judgment; and, as I so often tell you, whenever
you do that, you are wrong. I never thought,
however, it would carry you so far as to make you
suspect me of a dishonorable act.”
Stephen was deeply wounded. Mercy’s
attempted reticence in her letter had not blinded
him. He felt what had underlain the words, and
it was a hard blow to him. His conscience was
as free from any shadow of guilt in the matter of
that money as if it had been his by direct inheritance
from his own father. Feeling this, he had naturally
the keenest sense of outrage at Mercy’s implied
accusation.
Before Stephen’s second letter
came, Mercy had grown calm. The more she thought
the thing over, the more she felt sure that Mrs. Jacobs
must be dead, and that Stephen in his great excitement
had forgotten to mention the fact. Therefore
the second letter was even a greater blow to her than
the first: it was a second and a deeper thrust
into a wound which had hardly begun to heal.
There was also a tone of confident, almost arrogant,
assumption in the letter, it seemed to Mercy, which
irritated her. She did not perceive that it was
the inevitable confidence of a person so sure he is
right that he cannot comprehend any doubt in another’s
mind on the subject. There was in Mercy’s
nature a vein of intolerance, which was capable of
the most terrible severity. She was as blinded,
to Stephen’s true position in the matter as he
was to hers. The final moment of divergence had
come: its seeds were planted in her nature and
in Stephen’s when they were born. Nothing
could have hindered their growth, nothing could have
forestalled their ultimate result. It was only
a question of time and of occasion, when the two forces
would be arrayed against each other, and would be
found equally strong.
Mercy took counsel with herself now,
and delayed answering this second letter. She
was resolved to be just to Stephen.
“I will think this thing over
and over,” she said to herself, “till I
am sure past all doubt that I am right, before I say
another word.”
But her long thinking did not help
Stephen. Each day her conviction grew deeper,
her perception clearer, her sense of alienation from
Stephen profounder. If a moral antagonism had
grown up between them in any other shape, it would
have been less fatal to her love. There were many
species of wrong-doing which would have been less
hateful in her sight. It seemed to her sometimes
that there could be no crime in the world which would
appear to her so odious as this. Her imagination
dwelt on the picture of the lonely old woman in the
alms-house. She had been several times to see
Mrs. Jacobs, and had been much moved by a certain grim
stoicism which gave almost dignity to her squalor
and wretchedness.
“She always had the bearing
of a person who knew she was suffering wrongly, but
was too proud to complain,” thought Mercy.
“I wonder if she did not all along believe there
was something wrong about the mortgage?” and
Mercy’s suspicious thoughts and conjectures ran
far back into the past, fastening on the beginnings
of all this trouble. She recollected old Mr.
Wheeler’s warnings about Stephen, in the first
weeks of her stay in Penfield. She recollected
Parson Dorrance’s expression, when he found out
that she had paid her rent in advance. She tortured
herself by reviewing minutely every little manoeuvre
she had known of Stephen’s practising to conceal
his relation with her.
Let Mercy once distrust a person in
one particular, and she distrusted him in all.
Let one act of his life be wrong, and she believed
that his every act was wrong in motive, or in relation
to others, however specious and fair it might be made
to appear. All the old excuses and apologies she
had been in the habit of making for Stephen’s
insincerities to his mother and to the world seemed
to her now less than nothing; and she wondered how
she ever could have held them as sufficient.
In vain her heart pleaded. In vain tender memories
thrilled her, by their vivid recalling of hours, of
moments, of looks and words. It was with a certain
sense of remorse that she dwelt on them, of shame
that she was conscious of clinging to them still.
“I shall always love him, I am afraid,”
she said to herself; “but I shall never trust
him again,-never!”
And hour by hour Stephen was waiting
and looking for his letter.