Whatever his motive might have been,
Laurie studied to some purpose that year, for he graduated
with honor, and gave the Latin oration with the grace
of a Phillips and the eloquence of a Demosthenes, so
his friends said. They were all there, his grandfather oh,
so proud Mr. and Mrs. March, John and Meg,
Jo and Beth, and all exulted over him with the sincere
admiration which boys make light of at the time, but
fail to win from the world by any after-triumphs.
“I’ve got to stay for
this confounded supper, but I shall be home early
tomorrow. You’ll come and meet me as usual,
girls?” Laurie said, as he put the sisters into
the carriage after the joys of the day were over.
He said ‘girls’, but he meant Jo, for she
was the only one who kept up the old custom.
She had not the heart to refuse her splendid, successful
boy anything, and answered warmly...
“I’ll come, Teddy, rain
or shine, and march before you, playing ’Hail
the conquering hero comes’ on a jew’s-harp.”
Laurie thanked her with a look that
made her think in a sudden panic, “Oh, deary
me! I know he’ll say something, and then
what shall I do?”
Evening meditation and morning work
somewhat allayed her fears, and having decided that
she wouldn’t be vain enough to think people were
going to propose when she had given them every reason
to know what her answer would be, she set forth at
the appointed time, hoping Teddy wouldn’t do
anything to make her hurt his poor feelings.
A call at Meg’s, and a refreshing sniff and
sip at the Daisy and Demijohn, still further fortified
her for the tete-a-tete, but when she saw a stalwart
figure looming in the distance, she had a strong desire
to turn about and run away.
“Where’s the jew’s-harp,
Jo?” cried Laurie, as soon as he was within
speaking distance.
“I forgot it.” And
Jo took heart again, for that salutation could not
be called lover-like.
She always used to take his arm on
these occasions, now she did not, and he made no complaint,
which was a bad sign, but talked on rapidly about
all sorts of faraway subjects, till they turned from
the road into the little path that led homeward through
the grove. Then he walked more slowly, suddenly
lost his fine flow of language, and now and then a
dreadful pause occurred. To rescue the conversation
from one of the wells of silence into which it kept
falling, Jo said hastily, “Now you must have
a good long holiday!”
“I intend to.”
Something in his resolute tone made
Jo look up quickly to find him looking down at her
with an expression that assured her the dreaded moment
had come, and made her put out her hand with an imploring,
“No, Teddy. Please don’t!”
“I will, and you must hear me.
It’s no use, Jo, we’ve got to have it
out, and the sooner the better for both of us,”
he answered, getting flushed and excited all at once.
“Say what you like then.
I’ll listen,” said Jo, with a desperate
sort of patience.
Laurie was a young lover, but he was
in earnest, and meant to ’have it out’,
if he died in the attempt, so he plunged into the subject
with characteristic impetuousity, saying in a voice
that would get choky now and then, in spite of manful
efforts to keep it steady...
“I’ve loved you ever since
I’ve known you, Jo, couldn’t help it, you’ve
been so good to me. I’ve tried to show
it, but you wouldn’t let me. Now I’m
going to make you hear, and give me an answer, for
I can’t go on so any longer.”
“I wanted to save you this.
I thought you’d understand...” began Jo,
finding it a great deal harder than she expected.
“I know you did, but the girls
are so queer you never know what they mean.
They say no when they mean yes, and drive a man out
of his wits just for the fun of it,” returned
Laurie, entrenching himself behind an undeniable fact.
“I don’t. I never
wanted to make you care for me so, and I went away
to keep you from it if I could.”
“I thought so. It was
like you, but it was no use. I only loved you
all the more, and I worked hard to please you, and
I gave up billiards and everything you didn’t
like, and waited and never complained, for I hoped
you’d love me, though I’m not half good
enough...” Here there was a choke that
couldn’t be controlled, so he decapitated buttercups
while he cleared his ‘confounded throat’.
“You, you are, you’re
a great deal too good for me, and I’m so grateful
to you, and so proud and fond of you, I don’t
know why I can’t love you as you want me to.
I’ve tried, but I can’t change the feeling,
and it would be a lie to say I do when I don’t.”
“Really, truly, Jo?”
He stopped short, and caught both
her hands as he put his question with a look that
she did not soon forget.
“Really, truly, dear.”
They were in the grove now, close
by the stile, and when the last words fell reluctantly
from Jo’s lips, Laurie dropped her hands and
turned as if to go on, but for once in his life the
fence was too much for him. So he just laid his
head down on the mossy post, and stood so still that
Jo was frightened.
“Oh, Teddy, I’m sorry,
so desperately sorry, I could kill myself if it would
do any good! I wish you wouldn’t take it
so hard, I can’t help it. You know it’s
impossible for people to make themselves love other
people if they don’t,” cried Jo inelegantly
but remorsefully, as she softly patted his shoulder,
remembering the time when he had comforted her so
long ago.
“They do sometimes,” said
a muffled voice from the post. “I don’t
believe it’s the right sort of love, and I’d
rather not try it,” was the decided answer.
There was a long pause, while a blackbird
sung blithely on the willow by the river, and the
tall grass rustled in the wind. Presently Jo said
very soberly, as she sat down on the step of the stile,
“Laurie, I want to tell you something.”
He started as if he had been shot,
threw up his head, and cried out in a fierce tone,
“Don’t tell me that, Jo, I can’t
bear it now!”
“Tell what?” she asked, wondering at his
violence.
“That you love that old man.”
“What old man?” demanded Jo, thinking
he must mean his grandfather.
“That devilish Professor you
were always writing about. If you say you love
him, I know I shall do something desperate;”
and he looked as if he would keep his word, as he
clenched his hands with a wrathful spark in his eyes.
Jo wanted to laugh, but restrained
herself and said warmly, for she too, was getting
excited with all this, “Don’t swear, Teddy!
He isn’t old, nor anything bad, but good and
kind, and the best friend I’ve got, next to
you. Pray, don’t fly into a passion.
I want to be kind, but I know I shall get angry if
you abuse my Professor. I haven’t the least
idea of loving him or anybody else.”
“But you will after a while,
and then what will become of me?”
“You’ll love someone else
too, like a sensible boy, and forget all this trouble.”
“I can’t love anyone else,
and I’ll never forget you, Jo, Never! Never!”
with a stamp to emphasize his passionate words.
“What shall I do with him?”
sighed Jo, finding that emotions were more unmanagable
than she expected. “You haven’t heard
what I wanted to tell you. Sit down and listen,
for indeed I want to do right and make you happy,”
she said, hoping to soothe him with a little reason,
which proved that she knew nothing about love.
Seeing a ray of hope in that last
speech, Laurie threw himself down on the grass at
her feet, leaned his arm on the lower step of the stile,
and looked up at her with an expectant face. Now
that arrangement was not conducive to calm speech
or clear thought on Jo’s part, for how could
she say hard things to her boy while he watched her
with eyes full of love and longing, and lashes still
wet with the bitter drop or two her hardness of heart
had wrung from him? She gently turned his head
away, saying, as she stroked the wavy hair which had
been allowed to grow for her sake how touching
that was, to be sure! “I agree with Mother
that you and I are not suited to each other, because
our quick tempers and strong wills would probably
make us very miserable, if we were so foolish as to...”
Jo paused a little over the last word, but Laurie
uttered it with a rapturous expression.
“Marry no we shouldn’t!
If you loved me, Jo, I should be a perfect saint,
for you could make me anything you like.”
“No, I can’t. I’ve
tried and failed, and I won’t risk our happiness
by such a serious experiment. We don’t
agree and we never shall, so we’ll be good friends
all our lives, but we won’t go and do anything
rash.”
“Yes, we will if we get the
chance,” muttered Laurie rebelliously.
“Now do be reasonable, and take
a sensible view of the case,” implored Jo, almost
at her wit’s end.
“I won’t be reasonable.
I don’t want to take what you call ’a
sensible view’. It won’t help me,
and it only makes it harder. I don’t believe
you’ve got any heart.”
“I wish I hadn’t.”
There was a little quiver in Jo’s
voice, and thinking it a good omen, Laurie turned
round, bringing all his persuasive powers to bear as
he said, in the wheedlesome tone that had never been
so dangerously wheedlesome before, “Don’t
disappoint us, dear! Everyone expects it.
Grandpa has set his heart upon it, your people like
it, and I can’t get on without you. Say
you will, and let’s be happy. Do, do!”
Not until months afterward did Jo
understand how she had the strength of mind to hold
fast to the resolution she had made when she decided
that she did not love her boy, and never could.
It was very hard to do, but she did it, knowing that
delay was both useless and cruel.
“I can’t say ‘yes’
truly, so I won’t say it at all. You’ll
see that I’m right, by-and-by, and thank me
for it...” she began solemnly.
“I’ll be hanged if I do!”
and Laurie bounced up off the grass, burning with
indignation at the very idea.
“Yes, you will!” persisted
Jo. “You’ll get over this after a
while, and find some lovely accomplished girl, who
will adore you, and make a fine mistress for your
fine house. I shouldn’t. I’m
homely and awkward and odd and old, and you’d
be ashamed of me, and we should quarrel we
can’t help it even now, you see and
I shouldn’t like elegant society and you would,
and you’d hate my scribbling, and I couldn’t
get on without it, and we should be unhappy, and wish
we hadn’t done it, and everything would be horrid!”
“Anything more?” asked
Laurie, finding it hard to listen patiently to this
prophetic burst.
“Nothing more, except that I
don’t believe I shall ever marry. I’m
happy as I am, and love my liberty too well to be in
a hurry to give it up for any mortal man.”
“I know better!” broke
in Laurie. “You think so now, but there’ll
come a time when you will care for somebody, and you’ll
love him tremendously, and live and die for him.
I know you will, it’s your way, and I shall
have to stand by and see it,” and the despairing
lover cast his hat upon the ground with a gesture
that would have seemed comical, if his face had not
been so tragic.
“Yes, I will live and die for
him, if he ever comes and makes me love him in spite
of myself, and you must do the best you can!”
cried Jo, losing patience with poor Teddy. “I’ve
done my best, but you won’t be reasonable, and
it’s selfish of you to keep teasing for what
I can’t give. I shall always be fond of
you, very fond indeed, as a friend, but I’ll
never marry you, and the sooner you believe it the
better for both of us so now!”
That speech was like gunpowder.
Laurie looked at her a minute as if he did not quite
know what to do with himself, then turned sharply away,
saying in a desperate sort of tone, “You’ll
be sorry some day, Jo.”
“Oh, where are you going?”
she cried, for his face frightened her.
“To the devil!” was the consoling answer.
For a minute Jo’s heart stood
still, as he swung himself down the bank toward the
river, but it takes much folly, sin or misery to send
a young man to a violent death, and Laurie was not
one of the weak sort who are conquered by a single
failure. He had no thought of a melodramatic
plunge, but some blind instinct led him to fling hat
and coat into his boat, and row away with all his
might, making better time up the river than he had
done in any race. Jo drew a long breath and
unclasped her hands as she watched the poor fellow
trying to outstrip the trouble which he carried in
his heart.
“That will do him good, and
he’ll come home in such a tender, penitent state
of mind, that I shan’t dare to see him,”
she said, adding, as she went slowly home, feeling
as if she had murdered some innocent thing, and buried
it under the leaves. “Now I must go and
prepare Mr. Laurence to be very kind to my poor boy.
I wish he’d love Beth, perhaps he may in time,
but I begin to think I was mistaken about her.
Oh dear! How can girls like to have lovers and
refuse them? I think it’s dreadful.”
Being sure that no one could do it
so well as herself, she went straight to Mr. Laurence,
told the hard story bravely through, and then broke
down, crying so dismally over her own insensibility
that the kind old gentleman, though sorely disappointed,
did not utter a reproach. He found it difficult
to understand how any girl could help loving Laurie,
and hoped she would change her mind, but he knew even
better than Jo that love cannot be forced, so he shook
his head sadly and resolved to carry his boy out of
harm’s way, for Young Impetuosity’s parting
words to Jo disturbed him more than he would confess.
When Laurie came home, dead tired
but quite composed, his grandfather met him as if
he knew nothing, and kept up the delusion very successfully
for an hour or two. But when they sat together
in the twilight, the time they used to enjoy so much,
it was hard work for the old man to ramble on as usual,
and harder still for the young one to listen to praises
of the last year’s success, which to him now
seemed like love’s labor lost. He bore
it as long as he could, then went to his piano and
began to play. The windows were open, and Jo,
walking in the garden with Beth, for once understood
music better than her sister, for he played the ‘Sonata
Pathétique’, and played it as he never did
before.
“That’s very fine, I dare
say, but it’s sad enough to make one cry.
Give us something gayer, lad,” said Mr. Laurence,
whose kind old heart was full of sympathy, which he
longed to show but knew not how.
Laurie dashed into a livelier strain,
played stormily for several minutes, and would have
got through bravely, if in a momentary lull Mrs. March’s
voice had not been heard calling, “Jo, dear,
come in. I want you.”
Just what Laurie longed to say, with
a different meaning! As he listened, he lost
his place, the music ended with a broken chord, and
the musician sat silent in the dark.
“I can’t stand this,”
muttered the old gentleman. Up he got, groped
his way to the piano, laid a kind hand on either of
the broad shoulders, and said, as gently as a woman,
“I know, my boy, I know.”
No answer for an instant, then Laurie
asked sharply, “Who told you?”
“Jo herself.”
“Then there’s an end of
it!” And he shook off his grandfather’s
hands with an impatient motion, for though grateful
for the sympathy, his man’s pride could not
bear a man’s pity.
“Not quite. I want to
say one thing, and then there shall be an end of it,”
returned Mr. Laurence with unusual mildness. “You
won’t care to stay at home now, perhaps?”
“I don’t intend to run
away from a girl. Jo can’t prevent my seeing
her, and I shall stay and do it as long as I like,”
interrupted Laurie in a defiant tone.
“Not if you are the gentleman
I think you. I’m disappointed, but the
girl can’t help it, and the only thing left for
you to do is to go away for a time. Where will
you go?”
“Anywhere. I don’t
care what becomes of me,” and Laurie got up with
a reckless laugh that grated on his grandfather’s
ear.
“Take it like a man, and don’t
do anything rash, for God’s sake. Why
not go abroad, as you planned, and forget it?”
“I can’t.”
“But you’ve been wild
to go, and I promised you should when you got through
college.”
“Ah, but I didn’t mean
to go alone!” and Laurie walked fast through
the room with an expression which it was well his
grandfather did not see.
“I don’t ask you to go
alone. There’s someone ready and glad to
go with you, anywhere in the world.”
“Who, Sir?” stopping to listen.
“Myself.”
Laurie came back as quickly as he
went, and put out his hand, saying huskily, “I’m
a selfish brute, but you know Grandfather ”
“Lord help me, yes, I do know,
for I’ve been through it all before, once in
my own young days, and then with your father.
Now, my dear boy, just sit quietly down and hear my
plan. It’s all settled, and can be carried
out at once,” said Mr. Laurence, keeping hold
of the young man, as if fearful that he would break
away as his father had done before him.
“Well, sir, what is it?”
and Laurie sat down, without a sign of interest in
face or voice.
“There is business in London
that needs looking after. I meant you should
attend to it, but I can do it better myself, and things
here will get on very well with Brooke to manage them.
My partners do almost everything, I’m merely
holding on until you take my place, and can be off
at any time.”
“But you hate traveling, Sir.
I can’t ask it of you at your age,” began
Laurie, who was grateful for the sacrifice, but much
preferred to go alone, if he went at all.
The old gentleman knew that perfectly
well, and particularly desired to prevent it, for
the mood in which he found his grandson assured him
that it would not be wise to leave him to his own devices.
So, stifling a natural regret at the thought of the
home comforts he would leave behind him, he said stoutly,
“Bless your soul, I’m not superannuated
yet. I quite enjoy the idea. It will do
me good, and my old bones won’t suffer, for
traveling nowadays is almost as easy as sitting in
a chair.”
A restless movement from Laurie suggested
that his chair was not easy, or that he did not like
the plan, and made the old man add hastily, “I
don’t mean to be a marplot or a burden.
I go because I think you’d feel happier than
if I was left behind. I don’t intend to
gad about with you, but leave you free to go where
you like, while I amuse myself in my own way.
I’ve friends in London and Paris, and should
like to visit them. Meantime you can go to Italy,
Germany, Switzerland, where you will, and enjoy pictures,
music, scenery, and adventures to your heart’s
content.”
Now, Laurie felt just then that his
heart was entirely broken and the world a howling
wilderness, but at the sound of certain words which
the old gentleman artfully introduced into his closing
sentence, the broken heart gave an unexpected leap,
and a green oasis or two suddenly appeared in the
howling wilderness. He sighed, and then said,
in a spiritless tone, “Just as you like, Sir.
It doesn’t matter where I go or what I do.”
“It does to me, remember that,
my lad. I give you entire liberty, but I trust
you to make an honest use of it. Promise me that,
Laurie.”
“Anything you like, Sir.”
“Good,” thought the old
gentleman. “You don’t care now, but
there’ll come a time when that promise will
keep you out of mischief, or I’m much mistaken.”
Being an energetic individual, Mr.
Laurence struck while the iron was hot, and before
the blighted being recovered spirit enough to rebel,
they were off. During the time necessary for
preparation, Laurie bore himself as young gentleman
usually do in such cases. He was moody, irritable,
and pensive by turns, lost his appetite, neglected
his dress and devoted much time to playing tempestuously
on his piano, avoided Jo, but consoled himself by
staring at her from his window, with a tragic face
that haunted her dreams by night and oppressed her
with a heavy sense of guilt by day. Unlike some
sufferers, he never spoke of his unrequited passion,
and would allow no one, not even Mrs. March, to attempt
consolation or offer sympathy. On some accounts,
this was a relief to his friends, but the weeks before
his departure were very uncomfortable, and everyone
rejoiced that the ’poor, dear fellow was going
away to forget his trouble, and come home happy’.
Of course, he smiled darkly at their delusion, but
passed it by with the sad superiority of one who knew
that his fidelity like his love was unalterable.
When the parting came he affected
high spirits, to conceal certain inconvenient emotions
which seemed inclined to assert themselves. This
gaiety did not impose upon anybody, but they tried
to look as if it did for his sake, and he got on very
well till Mrs. March kissed him, with a whisper full
of motherly solicitude. Then feeling that he
was going very fast, he hastily embraced them all
round, not forgetting the afflicted Hannah, and ran
downstairs as if for his life. Jo followed a
minute after to wave her hand to him if he looked round.
He did look round, came back, put his arms about
her as she stood on the step above him, and looked
up at her with a face that made his short appeal eloquent
and pathetic.
“Oh, Jo, can’t you?”
“Teddy, dear, I wish I could!”
That was all, except a little pause.
Then Laurie straightened himself up, said, “It’s
all right, never mind,” and went away without
another word. Ah, but it wasn’t all right,
and Jo did mind, for while the curly head lay on her
arm a minute after her hard answer, she felt as if
she had stabbed her dearest friend, and when he left
her without a look behind him, she knew that the boy
Laurie never would come again.