Although Grace had so sturdily asserted
her claim on happiness, nevertheless she quailed secretly
before the ordeal of writing to her friends regarding
the change in her plans. Long she pondered before
committing the gloomy information to paper. More
than one anguished tear fell from her eyes as she
relentlessly pursued her difficult task. Not
so very long ago she had fondly dreamed of the time
when she should happily send to those she loved the
summons to come to her on her wedding day. But
the pile of envelopes which eventually found their
way to the nearest mail-box contained news of a vastly
different character.
True to her promise she had conscientiously
waited for the word from Mr. Blaisdell which Mrs.
Gray had anticipated. At the end of three days
of suspense she had sought her Fairy Godmother only
to meet with a letter from the investigator which
sent hope to the winds. In it he stated that
aside from the station master at the lonely little
railway station, he had encountered no one who recalled
seeing a young man of the description of Tom Gray.
He had learned from the former that Tom had halted
him to inquire the way to the camp and to ascertain
if he could obtain any means of conveyance on that
day. As it was then four o’clock in the
afternoon and no one from the camp had met the train,
the station master had warned him that a storm was
coming and advised him to wait over until the following
morning, offering Tom the hospitality of his own home.
The young man had politely declined his offer, saying
that he must reach the camp that night and would walk.
He had said good-bye and swung off toward the dense
growth of forest that rose behind the straggling hamlet,
and nothing further had been seen or heard of him.
Further inquiry at the camp, which
Mr. Blaisdell had experienced considerable difficulty
in reaching, had developed the alarming news that
no such person as Tom Gray had been seen in that vicinity.
He had gleaned, however, that the station master’s
prediction of bad weather had been verified and that
a particularly heavy windstorm had swept that region
early in the evening of the day on which he had talked
with the young man. Torrents of rain had fallen
and trees had been broken down and uprooted.
It was possible that Tom had lost his way and been
killed by a falling tree. Blaisdell did not believe
this, however, as neither a dead nor injured man had
been found by the various search parties of lumber
men who had been sent out to cover the surrounding
territory. So far as possible the search had
been conducted with the utmost secrecy. He had
not divulged Tom’s name. As the camp was
in an out of the way place, peopled by a taciturn
set of men who asked few questions, it was not likely
that any news would travel farther than its limits.
The day following the receipt of this
letter brought a telegraphic notification from David
Nesbit to the effect that he had reached the lumber
camp and was about to start on his search for his chum.
With this small consolation, the patient, tortured
souls who awaited news of their lost one were forced
to be content.
Hard as it had been to write to her
trusty comrades, it was infinitely harder for Grace
to receive the messages of sympathy and love which
poured in upon her. Yet on the heels of her distress
came one letter which, despite the gravity of her
present situation, moved Grace to half-hearted laughter.
On opening an envelope addressed to herself in Arline
Thayer’s unmistakable script, Grace was mildly
astonished to read:
“DEAR STANLEY:
“After our talk last evening
I am quite certain that I could never be happy
as your wife. It has shown me clearly that our
aims and viewpoints are so entirely different
that it would be useless even to dream of spending
the remainder of our lives together. It is hard
to write this, but I feel that no matter what it may
cost me I must be true to myself. I am therefore
returning your ring and letters by express.
You may do as you think best in regard to returning
the letters I have written you.
“With a sincere
wish for your future happiness,
“Yours sincerely,
“ARLINE THAYER.”
Tardily realizing that she had unwittingly
perused a communication not intended for her eyes,
Grace lost no time in writing an apologetic letter
to Arline in which she enclosed the fateful missive
of rejection. How Arline had come to mail it
to her was a matter for speculation.
But she had only set eyes on the beginning
of a drama as she was soon destined to learn.
Late the next afternoon, while seated on the front
veranda with her mother, she viewed with mingled emotions
a taxicab which had come to a full stop before the
house. Out of it stepped a small, golden-haired
young woman whose smart pongee traveling coat and
bulging leather bag proclaimed that she had come from
afar.
“Arline Thayer!” cried
Grace, running down the steps to meet the newcomer
as she passed through the gateway. “Why,
Daffydowndilly! This is a surprise!
You are the last person I had dreamed of seeing.”
Grace caught the dainty little girl in a warm embrace.
“I know I should have telegraphed
you,” apologized Arline, “but well I
didn’t. I made up my mind all in an instant
to come to you, and here I am. Ever since I received
your letter you’ve been constantly in my thoughts.
I replied at once. Of course you received it?”
“Let me take your luggage, Daffydowndilly.”
Grace evaded Arline’s implied interrogation
for the moment. “Come and pay your respects
to Mother, then we’ll go upstairs to your room
and you can rest a little before dinner. You
must be very tired after your long ride. Then,
too, we can exchange confidences. I have something
to say to you about the letter you just mentioned.”
Grace could not refrain from smiling a little.
She suspected that Arline had made a mistake, the precise
result of which was yet to be revealed.
“What is the matter, Grace?”
was Arline’s quick question. She had instantly
detected the unusual in her friend’s enigmatic
smile and evasive speech.
Their progress to the veranda, where
Mrs. Harlowe waited to greet the unexpected but heartily-welcome
arrival, prevented Grace’s reply. It was
not until Arline had been ushered into one of the large,
airy upper chambers which Grace took so much pleasure
in reserving for the use of her frequent guests, that
the former again repeated her question in tones of
deepening anxiety.
“I will tell you when you have
made yourself comfortable,” stipulated Grace.
Assisting Arline in removing her hat and coat, she
applied herself assiduously to the comfort of her
friend.
“You are a truly ideal hostess,
Grace,” was Arline’s tribute as she finally
settled herself in a deep willow chair. “Now
I am ready to hear what you have been keeping from
me.”
“You asked me if I had received
your letter,” began Grace as she dropped into
a nearby chair. “Yesterday morning I did
receive a letter you wrote, but it was not for me.
The envelope was addressed to me, but the letter I
read it before I realized that I hadn’t that
right was written to Mr. Stanley Forde.
I wrote you an apology, enclosed the other letter
with it and mailed them to you.”
“Oh!” Arline gave a horrified
gasp. “How perfectly dreadful! How
in the world did I happen to make such a mistake!
This is awful!”
“Then you wrote to me at the
same time and confused the two letters? I was
afraid of that. But it doesn’t matter to
me if it doesn’t to you.” Grace tried
to put on an air of kindly unconcern. Secretly
it saddened her a trifle to know that a stranger had
received even an inkling of her private affairs.
Undoubtedly Arline’s letter to herself had contained
an expression of sympathy which could not fail to
put Mr. Stanley Forde in possession of certain painful
facts relating to her own trouble.
“But it matters a great deal!”
exclaimed Arline, flushing deeply. “In
that letter to you I said that I could never be thankful
enough that I had had such a wonderful talk with you.
I said, too, that you had made me see things in a
different light and that I knew now that what I had
believed was love wasn’t love at all. Worse
still, I said that if it had not been for you I would
never have had the courage to break my engagement,
but would have failed to be true to myself. Now,
Stanley has that letter!” Arline made a despairing
gesture. “I don’t care what he thinks
about me, but what will he think about you?”
Grace was not prepared to answer this
pertinent question from the jilted Stanley’s
viewpoint. Personally she had a disagreeably clear
idea of what he was quite likely to think. Yet
she was too sturdily honest by nature to regret the
advice she had given Arline in good faith. “I
am sorry this has happened,” she returned slowly,
“but I am not sorry for what I said to you.
I meant it. I would have said as much to Mr. Forde
had an occasion risen which demanded plain speaking.”
“You are Loyalheart, through
and through,” came impulsively from Arline.
“You would stand by your colors to the death.
I couldn’t blame you if you were terribly angry
with me for mixing you up so miserably in my affairs.
I should have been more careful, but I was dreadfully
upset when I wrote those letters. You see, Stanley
came to my home on the evening of the day he returned
from Oregon. As you know, I had decided to have
a plain talk with him. It began pleasantly enough,
but before it ended we were both very angry.
He declared point-blank that after we were married
I would positively have to give up my settlement
work. He said a great many hateful, sneering
things about the poor people I’ve been trying
to help. I was going to give him back his ring
then, but I remembered what you advised about not
being too hasty. So I told him I wouldn’t
discuss the subject with him any more that evening.
“After that he was very pleasant.
I suppose he thought he had won me over to his point
of view. When he had gone I sat for a long time
on the veranda thinking hard. Then I went upstairs
to my room and wrote him, breaking our engagement.
Of course I cried a little. I was so unhappy.
Then I thought of you and felt like writing you about
it. After I had written both letters, I read
them over; first the one to him, then yours.
It was after midnight and I was so tired. I suppose
that is how I happened to make the mistake of putting
your address on his letter and vice versa. He
will be simply furious. I only hope that he doesn’t
write you a hateful letter. If he writes to me,
I’ll send the letter back unopened. You’d
better do the same.”
“No; I couldn’t do that.
It is perfectly proper for you to do so, but it would
appear cowardly on my part. Let us hope he doesn’t
bother to write me. Does he know my surname and
where I live?”
“Yes; I’ve told him of
you a great many times. I wish now that I hadn’t.
I am sure he will write you. It’s a shame.
I came to Oakdale to comfort you and be comforted.
Now I’ve landed both of us in a nice muddle.”
Arline lifted a pair of mournful blue eyes to Grace.
In the presence of impending tragedy
a sudden sense of the ridiculous swept the two girls.
Their eyes meeting, they began to laugh. It was
the first genuine mirth that had stirred Grace Harlowe
since the day on which she had left the Briggs’
cottage to return to Oakdale.
“One ought not laugh over such
a serious matter,” apologized Arline, with a
half hysterical chuckle. “But I can’t
help thinking how surprised you must have been to
receive that letter to Stanley, and how wrathful he
must be by this time.”
“I’d rather laugh over
it than cry,” smiled Grace. “Don’t
worry, Daffydowndilly. I’m not afraid of
any letter that Mr. Stanley Forde may choose to send
me. You had better write him another letter at
once, though, and explain matters. You owe him
that, at least.”
“I will,” sighed Arline.
“There’s just one thing more I have to
say. I shall never, never fall in love
again. It’s fatal to one’s peace of
mind. Now that I’ve fallen out of love,
I feel about a hundred years younger. I’m
going to be a nice, kind, spinster and found a home
for poor children.”
Grace smiled at this naïve announcement.
She was unselfishly glad that Arline could thus lightly
cast her burden from her dainty shoulders. Perhaps
she, too, would have known greater content, had love
not entered her heart. Yet in the same instant
she put away the thought as unworthy of herself.
Come what might she was intensely sure that she had
chosen the better part.