Arline Thayer had entered Grace’s
home life at a moment when the latter most needed
the inspiring companionship of an intimate friend.
Quickly recovering from her own woes, it was borne
upon Arline that she must exert herself to the utmost
to cheer up the girl who had never failed her.
The blithsome joy of living which, formerly, Grace
had seemed to radiate had entirely disappeared.
Although she went about the house, feigning desperately
to maintain a cheerful attitude, a subdued air of
wistfulness clung to her that filled Arline with a
fierce resentment against the circumstances that had
risen so unexpectedly to rob Grace of her happiness.
She frequently wondered how it was possible for Grace
to keep up so bravely in the face of such crushing
adversity. Given the same sinister conditions,
Arline admitted inwardly that she could never have
maintained the remarkable composure which Grace daily
exhibited.
She was thinking of this when, on
the afternoon of her third day’s sojourn with
the Harlowes, the two young women had just left Haven
Home behind them, Grace having asked Arline to accompany
her on one of her frequent pilgrimages to her beautiful
House Behind the World. Usually it was Nora Wingate
who went with her. Occasionally Mrs. Harlowe bore
her daughter company.
Grace never visited Haven Home empty-handed.
Always she carried some new treasure designed by herself
or her friends to adorn the stately habitation in
which she felt sure that some day would indeed mean
Haven Home to herself and Tom. Before he had
left her to make the journey that had resulted in
his complete disappearance, she had promised him that
the finishing labors at Haven Home should go steadily
forward. Those who knew her most intimately could
readily testify that she was unfalteringly keeping
her word. In moments of darkest depression she
wondered from whence came the strength that enabled
her to go on with these visits, each in itself a separate
agony. She had been plunged for a moment in one
of these painful reveries when Arline asked with an
inflection of wonderment, “How can you be so
brave, Grace?”
“I’m not very brave,”
she answered, her eyes wistful. “Not so
brave as I wish I were. I have to struggle continually
to make myself believe that whatever happens must
be for the best. I often feel bitter and resentful
and wonder why this sorrow should have been visited
upon me rather than on some one else. Of course,
that is wrong. No one ought to wish their troubles
shifted to other folks’ shoulders. Thousands
of persons have greater griefs than I. Take Aunt Rose,
for instance, who lost her husband and daughter so
many years ago. Tom was the light of her life;
her greatest pride. Think what she is suffering!
We had such high hopes that David Nesbit would find
Tom. Yet, thus far, he hasn’t met with even
a clue. Poor little Fairy Godmother says she has
only one thing for which to be thankful. No one
in Oakdale knows about Tom, barring a few trusted
friends. She had been in constant fear lest the
newspaper reporters should get hold of it. Of
course it would be a severe shock to her to pick up
some day a paper and read, ’Mysterious Disappearance
of Tom Gray,’ or ’Young Man Mysteriously
Disappears on the Eve of His Wedding Day,’ or
some cruel scarehead of the kind. I don’t
quite know how I should feel about it.”
“But suppose he never came back,”
cut in Arline, her usual tact deserting her.
“Forgive me, Grace,” she added penitently.
“I should not have said that.”
“Why not?” Only the sudden
tightening of her lips betrayed that Arline’s
thoughtless inquiry had struck home. “I
faced that long ago. If we continue to be without
news of him, sooner or later his disappearance must
become known. But Aunt Rose prefers to keep it
secret as long as possible. Her constant prayer
is that he will return before any such thing comes
to pass. Sometimes I think it would be better
if it were generally known. I hate secrecy.”
During the drive to Mrs. Gray’s,
both girls were unusually silent. After leaving
the roadster in the Gray garage, they went up to the
house to spend an hour with the lonely old lady, whose
pitiful efforts to be cheerfully hospitable cut them
both to the heart. Promising to come again on
the following day they left her, the forlorn little
chatelaine of a big house, grown oppresively empty
since robbed of Tom’s genial presence.
As they neared Grace’s home,
both glimpsed in the same instant a taxicab standing
in the street directly opposite to the house.
“That taxicab is from the station!”
exclaimed Grace. “Hurry, Arline, it may
be ” She broke off short, her heart
thumping madly. She dared not voice the hope
that perhaps her weary waiting was over.
Arriving on the veranda, Grace made
a hasty entrance through the open hall door.
Pausing in the hall, deep masculine tones, issuing
from the drawing room, caused her to speed toward
the sound, Arline at her heels. The voice was
not Tom’s, yet her first wild conjecture as she
viewed the stranger seated in a chair near the door,
was that he might be Mr. Blaisdell, the investigator,
with news of Tom.
A faint cry of, “Stanley Forde!”
from Arline sent over her a sickening wave of disappointment.
As they entered, the young man rose, looking the reverse
of amiable as he stepped forward, grim purpose in every
feature. Ignoring Grace he addressed himself
to Arline with the stiff rebuke:
“I have been waiting for you for some time.”
“I did not expect you.”
Arline’s blue eyes flashed forth her displeasure.
Merely touching the hand he offered her, she said,
“Mr. Forde, this is my friend, Grace
Harlowe.”
The young man acknowledged the introduction
with an ironical smile in which Grace read trouble
ahead for herself. She met him with a frank,
kindly courtesy that betrayed nothing of her inner
mind. Personally, she was not impressed in his
favor.
“You will pardon my leaving
you, Mr. Forde?” Mrs. Harlowe had also risen.
She now addressed the young man with a distant politeness
which Grace recognized as disapproval. From Arline
she had learned of the broken engagement. It
seemed evident that she also had not been favorably
impressed with her guest’s ex-fiance.
“Certainly. Very pleased
to have met you,” bowed the unwelcome caller.
Again Grace caught faint sarcasm in the speech.
Hardly had Mrs. Harlowe disappeared
when he turned to Grace, his heavy brows meeting in
a decided frown. “I believe I am indebted
to you, Miss Harlowe, for a great disappointment which
has recently come to me. Your unkind interference
has caused Arline to reconsider her promise to become
my wife. It is fortunate that she made the mistake
of sending the letter she wrote you to me. It
has put me in complete possession of the facts of
the case. I ”
“You have no right to come here
uninvited and insult Grace Harlowe in her own house,”
cut in Arline in a low, furious voice. “You
shall not accuse her of interfering. I won’t
allow it. It is ”
“Please allow Mr. Forde to say
whatever he wishes, Arline.” Grace’s
interruption came with gentle dignity. Her gaze
resting untroubled on the angry man, she said:
“I had no wish to interfere in your affairs,
Mr. Forde.”
“Then why did you do it?”
came the bitter retort. “What grudge could
you possibly have against a man you had never even
met?”
“None whatever,” was the soft answer.
“But you interfered. This
letter proves as much.” Triumphantly he
jerked the misdirected letter from a coat pocket.
Grace was silent. She did not
wish to say that Arline had appealed to her for advice,
neither was she anxious to remain in the room as a
third party.
“I’ll tell you the reason,”
volunteered Arline sharply. “I asked Grace’s
advice.” Her pretty face pale with resentment,
Arline poured forth a rapid outline of her talk with
Grace. “That’s the reason,”
she ended. “If you had met me fairly when
I tried to talk to you about my work this would never
have happened. I am glad now that it has.
I don’t love you and never have truly loved
you. I am glad to be free. I shall never
marry any one. All men are hateful! Now I
wish you to go away, and never, never speak to me
again as long as you live!”
But the unpleasant interview continued
for another ten minutes despite Arline’s pointed
dismissal. Mr. Stanley Forde could not forgive
Grace for what he rudely termed her “meddling.”
The idolized son of a too-adoring, snobbish mother,
he had nothing in common with Grace’s high ideals.
Though she explained to him gently that she had only
advised Arline to choose whichever course seemed wisest,
remembering only that nothing counted so much as being
true to herself, her lofty precepts merely tended
further to infuriate him.
“You are one of those empty-headed
idealists who go about creating disturbances for sensible
persons,” was the scathing criticism he delivered
the moment she ceased speaking. “You will
regret this interference in my affairs. Now that
you know my opinion of you, will you kindly leave
us? I wish to talk privately with Arline.”
“I don’t wish to talk
to you at all,” flared Arline hotly. “Please
don’t leave me, Grace. Whatever Mr. Forde
has to say he must say in your presence.”
“I am sorry, Arline, but I must
ask you to excuse me from remaining longer in the
room. Mr. Forde has come a long way to see you.
I think you should grant his request for a private
talk with you. Good afternoon, Mr. Forde.
I regret that you should have so entirely misunderstood
my motives.” The finality of her words robbed
the disagreeable caller of a ready reply. Before
he could rally a further relay of rude sarcasm to
his aid, Grace had left the room.
If it is indeed true that actions
speak louder than words, the distinctly belligerent
manner in which, ten minutes later, Mr. Stanley Forde
stormed down the walk to the waiting taxicab, gave
glaring proof of the dire result of his untimely call.
From the garden, where Grace had fled to recover from
the irritation of having been so grossly misunderstood,
she saw the boorish young man depart. Privately
she marveled that Arline should have so deceived herself
in regard to her feelings for him. He was undoubtedly
handsome, yet his regular features indicated a certain
lack of strength and nobility which she thought totally
marred his claim to good looks. His large black
eyes had a trick of narrowing unpleasantly, and the
set of his mouth betokened tyranny.
Her sympathy going out to Arline,
she passed slowly among the winding garden paths,
lined with colorful summer flowers, and entered the
house. The sight of a pathetic little figure
crumpled in a disconsolate heap on a broad settee
aroused her pity afresh.
“Don’t cry, Daffydowndilly,”
she soothed, sitting down beside her. “He
isn’t worth it. You were wise in breaking
your engagement. Some day real love will come
knocking at your door. You were never intended
to be a sedate spinster and live out your days in
single blessedness. I’m sorry for Mr. Forde.
He loves you, I think. But not in the unselfish
way you deserve to be adored.”
Grace paused, her hand straying gently
over the curly head against her shoulder. All
of a sudden she felt very aged and very tired.
The unpleasant scene with Arline’s disgruntled
suitor had shaken her severely. She was living
out the Golden Summer, that had promised so much,
in a fashion far different from the glorious realization
of it for which she and Tom had hoped and planned.
Yet she had been mercifully spared the pain of beholding
a cherished ideal shatter itself at her feet.
God had granted her the priceless boon of a true man’s
true love. Though she and Tom had but briefly
glimpsed their Golden Summer, the remembrance of his
unselfish devotion would keep it alive forever.