By Mary Hartwell Catherwood
Maurice Barrett sat waiting in the
old lime-kiln built by the British in the war of 1812 a
white ruin like much-scattered marble, which stands
bowered in trees on a high part of the island.
He had, to the amusement of the commissioner, hired
this place for a summer study, and paid a carpenter
to put a temporary roof over it, with skylight, and
to make a door which could be fastened. Here
on the uneven floor of stone were set his desk, his
chair, and a bench on which he could stretch himself
to think when undertaking to make up arrears in literary
work. But the days were becoming nothing but
trysts with her for whom he waited.
First came the heavenly morning walk
and the opening of his study, then the short half-hour
of labor, which ravelled off to delicious suspense.
He caught through trees the hint of a shirt-waist which
might be any girl’s, then the long exquisite
outline which could be nobody’s in the world
but hers, her face under its sailor hat, the blown
blond hair, the blue eyes. Then her little hands
met his outstretched hands at the door, and her whole
violet-breathing self yielded to his arms.
They sat down on the bench, still
in awe of each other and of the swift miracle of their
love and engagement. Maurice had passed his fiftieth
year, so clean from dissipation, so full of vitality
and the beauty of a long race of strong men, that
he did not look forty, and in all out-door activities
rivalled the boys in their early twenties. He
was an expert mountain-climber and explorer of regions
from which he brought his own literary material; inured
to fatigue, patient in hardship, and resourceful in
danger. Money and reputation and the power which
attends them he had wrung from fate as his right,
and felt himself fit to match with the best blood
in the world except hers.
Yet she was only his social equal,
and had grown up next door, while his unsatisfied
nature searched the universe for its mate a
wild sweetbrier-rose of a child, pink and golden,
breathing a daring, fragrant personality. He
hearkened back to some recognition of her charm from
the day she ran out bareheaded and slim-legged on her
father’s lawn and turned on the hose for her
play. Yet he barely missed her when she went
to an Eastern school, and only thrilled vaguely when
she came back like one of Gibson’s pictures,
carrying herself with state-liness. There was
something in her blue eyes not to be found in any other
blue eyes. He was housed with her family in the
same hotel at the island before he completely understood
the magnitude of what had befallen him.
“I am awfully set up because
you have chosen me,” she admitted at first.
He liked to have her proud as of a conquest, and he
was conscious of that general favor which stamped
him a good match, even for a girl half his age.
“How much have you done this
morning?” she inquired, looking at his desk.
“Enough to tide over the time
until you came. Determination and execution are
not one with me now.” Her hands were cold,
and he warmed them against his face.
“It was during your married
life that determination and execution were one?”
“Decidedly. For that was
my plodding age. Sometimes when I am tingling
with impatience here I look back in wonder on the dogged
drive of those days. Work is an unhappy man’s
best friend. I have no concealments from you,
Lily. You know I never loved my wife not
this way though I made her happy; I did
my duty. She told me when she died that I had
made her happy. People cannot help their limitations.”
“Do you love me?” she asked, her lips
close to his ear.
“I am you! Your blood flows
through my veins. I feel you rush through me.
You don’t know what it is to love like that,
do you?”
She shook her head.
“When you are out of my sight
I do not live; I simply wait. What is the weird
power in you that creates such gigantic passion?”
“The power is all in your imagination.
You simply don’t know me. You think I am
a prize. Why, I flirt and
I’ve kissed men!”
He laughed. “You would
be a queer girl, at your age, if you hadn’t kissed
men a little. Whatever your terrible
past has been, it has made you the infinite darling
that you are!”
She moved her eyes to watch the leaves
twinkling in front of the lime-kiln.
“I must go,” she said.
“‘I must go’!” he mocked.
“You are no sooner here than ’
I must go ’!”
“I can’t be with you all
the time. You don’t care for appearances,
so I have to.”.
“Appearances are nothing. This is the only
real thing in the universe.”
“But I really must go.”
She lifted her wilful chin and sat still. They
stared at each other in the silence of lovers.
Though the girl’s face was without a line, she
was more skilled in the play of love than he.
“Indeed I must go. Your eyes are half shut,
like a gentian.”
“When you are living intensely
you don’t look at the world through wide-open
eyes,” said Maurice. “I never let
myself go before. Repression has been the law
of my life. Think of it! In a long life-time
I have loved but two persons the woman
I told you of, and you. Twenty years ago I found
out what life meant. For the first time, I knew!
But I was already married. I took that beautiful
love by the throat and choked it down. Afterwards,
when I was free, the woman I first loved was married.
How long I have had to wait for you to bloom, lotos
flower! This is living! All the other years
were preparation.”
“Do you never see her?” inquired the girl.
“Who? That first one? I have avoided
her.”
“She loved you?”
“With the blameless passion
that we both at first thought was the most perfect
friendship.”
“Wouldn’t you marry her now if she were
free?”
“No. It is ended.
We have grown apart in renunciation for twenty years.
I am not one that changes easily, you see. You
have taken what I could not withhold from you, and
it is yours. I am in your power.”
They heard a great steamer blowing
upon the strait. Its voice reverberated through
the woods. The girl’s beautiful face was
full of a tender wistfulness, half maternal.
Neither jealousy nor pique marred its exquisite sympathy.
It was such an expression as an untamed wood-nymph
might have worn, contemplating the life of man.
“Don’t be sad,” she breathed.
Vague terror shot through Maurice’s gaze.
“That is a strange thing for
you to say to me, Lily. Is it all you can say when
I love you so?”
“I was thinking of the other woman. Did
she suffer?”
“At any rate, she has the whole
world now beauty, talent, wealth, social
prestige. She is one of the most successful women
in this country.”
“Do I know her name?”
“Quite well. She has been
a person of consequence since you were a child.”
“I couldn’t capture the
whole world,” mused Lily. Maurice kissed
her small fingers.
“Some one else will put it in
your lap, to keep or throw away as you choose.”
The hurried tink-tank of an approaching
cow-bell suggested passers. Then a whir of wheels
could be heard through tangled wilderness. The
girl met his lips with a lingering which trembled
through all his body, and withdrew herself.
“Now I am going. Are you coming down the
trail with me?”
Maurice shut the lime-kiln door, and
crossed with her a grassy avenue to find among birches
the ravelled ends of a path called the White Islander’s
Trail. You may know it first by a triangle of
roots at the foot of an oak. Thence a thread,
barely visible to expert eyes, winds to some mossy
dead pines and crosses a rotten log. There it
becomes a trail cleaving the heights, and plunging
boldly up and down evergreen glooms to a road parallel
with the cliff. Once, when the island was freshly
drenched in rain, Lily breathed deeply, gazing down
the tunnel floored with rock and pine-needles, a flask
of incense. “It is like the violins!”
In that seclusion of heaven Maurice
could draw her slim shape to him, for the way is so
narrow that two are obliged to walk close. They
parted near the wider entrance, where a stump reared
itself against the open sky, bearing a stick like
a bow, and having the appearance of a crouching figure.
“There is the Indian on the
trail,” said Lily. “You must go back
now.”
“He looks so formidable,”
said Maurice; “especially in twilight, and,
except at noon, it is always twilight here. But
when you reach him he is nothing but a stump.”
“He is more than a stump,”
she insisted. “He is a real Indian, and
some day will get up and take a scalp! It gives
me a shiver every time I come in sight of him crouched
on the trail!”
“Do you know,” complained
her lover, “that you haven’t told me once
to-day?”
“Well I do.”
“How much?”
“Oh a little!”
“A little will not do!”
“Then a great deal.”
“I want all all!”
Her eyes wandered towards the Indian
on the trail, and the bow of her mouth was bent in
a tantalizing curve.
“I have told you I love you. Why doesn’t
that satisfy you?”
“It isn’t enough!”
“Perhaps I can’t satisfy you. I love
you all I can.”
“All you can?”
“Yes. Maybe I can’t love you as much
as you want me to. I am shallow!”
“For God’s sake, don’t
say you are shallow! There is deep under deep
in you! I couldn’t have staked my life
on you, I couldn’t have loved you, if there
hadn’t been! Say I have only touched the
surface yet, but don’t say you are shallow!”
The girl shook her head.
“There isn’t enough of
me. Do you know,” she exclaimed, whimsically,
“that’s the Indian on the trail! You’ll
never feel quite sure of me, will you?”
Maurice’s lips moved. “You are my
own!”
She kept him at bay with her eyes, though they filled
slowly with tears.
“I ama child of the devil!”
exclaimed Lily, with vehemence. “I give
people trouble and make them suffer!”
“She classes me with ’people’!”
Maurice thought. He said, “Have I ever
blamed you for anything?”
“No.”
“Then don’t blame yourself.
I will simply take what you can give me. That
is all I could take. Forgive me for loving you
too much. I will try to love you less.”
“No,” the girl demurred. “I
don’t want you to do that.”
“I am very unreasonable,”
he said, humbly. “But the rest of the world
is a shadow. You are my one reality. There
is nothing in the universe but you.”
She brushed her eyes fiercely.
“I mustn’t cry. I’ll have to
explain it if I do, and the lids will be red all day.”
The man felt internally seared, as
by burning lava, with the conviction that he had staked
his all late in life on what could never be really
his. She would diffuse herself through many.
He was concentrated in her. His passion had its
lips burned shut.
“I am Providence’s favorite
bag-holder,” was his bitter thought. “The
game is never for me.”
“Good-bye,” said Lily.
“Good-bye,” said Maurice.
“Are you coming into the casino to-night?”
“If you will be there.”
“I have promised a lot of dances. Good-bye.
Go back and work.”
“Yes, I must work,” said Maurice.
She gave him a defiant, radiant smile,
and ran towards the Indian on the trail. He turned
in the opposite direction, and tramped the woods until
nightfall.
At first he mocked himself. “Oh
yes, she loves me! I’m glad, at any rate,
that she loves me! There will be enough to moisten
my lips with; and if I thirst for an ocean that is
not her fault.”
Why had a woman been made who could
inspire such passion without returning it? He
reminded himself that she was of a later, a gayer,
lighter, less strenuous generation than his own.
Thousands of men had waded blood for a principle and
a lost cause in his day. In hers the gigantic
republic stood up a menace to nations. The struggle
for existence was over before she was born. Yet
women seemed more in earnest now than ever before.
He said to himself, “I have always picked out
natures as fatal to me as a death-warrant, and fastened
my life to them.”
The thought stabbed him that perhaps
his wife, whom he had believed satisfied, had carried
such hopeless anguish as he now carried. Tardy
remorse for what he could not help gave him the feeling
of a murderer. And since he knew himself how
little may be given under the bond of marriage, he
could not look forward and say, “My love will
yet be mine!”
He would, indeed, have society on
his side; and children he drew his breath
hard at that. Her ways with children were divine.
He had often watched her instinctive mothering of,
and drawing them around her. And it should be
much to him that he might look at and, touch her.
There was life in her mere presence.
He felt the curse of the artistic
temperament, which creates in man the exquisite sensitiveness
of woman.
Taking the longest and hardest path
home around the eastern beach, Maurice turned once
on impulse, parted a screen of birches, and stepped
into an amphitheatre of the cliff, moss-clothed and
cedar-walled. It sloped downward in three terraces.
A balcony or high parapet of stone hung on one side,
a rock low and broad stood in the centre, and an unmistakable
chair of rock, cushioned with vividly green-branched
moss, waited an occupant. Maurice sat down, wondering
if any other human being, perplexed and tortured,
had ever domiciled there for a brief time. Slim
alder-trees and maples were clasped in moss to their
waists. The spacious open was darkened by dense
shade overhead. Bois Blanc was plainly in view
from the beach. But the eastern islands stretched
a line of foliage in growing dusk. Maurice felt
the cooling benediction of the place. This world
is such a good world to be happy in, if you have the
happiness.
When the light faded he went on, climbing
low headlands which jutted into the water, and sliding
down on the other side; so that he reached the hotel
physically exhausted, and had his dinner sent to his
room. But a vitality constantly renewing itself
swept away every trace of his hard day when he entered
the gayly lighted casino.
He no longer danced, not because dancing
ceased to delight him, but because the serious business
of life had left no room for it. He walked along
the waxed floor, avoiding the circling procession of
waltzers, and bowing to a bank of pretty faces, but
thinking his own thought, in growing bitterness:
“They who live blameless lives are the fools
of fate. If I had it to do over again, I would
take what I wanted in spite of everything, and let
the consequences fall where they would!” Looking
up, he met in the eyes the woman of his early love.
She was holding court, for a person
of such consequence became the centre of the caravansary
from the instant of her arrival; and she gave him
her hand with the conventional frankness and self-command
that set her apart from the weak. Once more he
knew she was a woman to be worshipped, whose presence
rebuked the baseness he had just thought.
“Perhaps it was she who kept
me from being worse,” Maurice recognized in
a flash; “not I myself!”
“Why, Mrs. Carstang, I didn’t
know you were here!” he spoke, with warmth around
the heart.
“We came at noon.”
“And I was in the woods all
day.” Maurice greeted the red-cheeked,
elderly Mr. Carstang, whom, according to half the world,
his wife doted upon, and according to the other half,
she simply endured. At any rate, he looked pleased
with his lot.
While Maurice stood talking with Mrs.
Carstang, the new grief and the old strangely neutralized
each other. It was as if they met and grappled,
and he had numb peace. The woman of his first
love made him proud of that early bond. She was
more than she had been then. But Lily moved past
him with a smile. Her dancing was visible music.
It had a penetrating grace hers, and no
other person’s in the world. The floating
of a slim nymph down a forest avenue, now separating
from her partner, and now joining him at caprice,
it rushed through Maurice like some recollection of
the Golden Age, when he had stood imprisoned in a
tree. There was little opportunity to do anything
but watch her, for she was more in demand than any
other girl in the casino. Hop nights were her
unconscious ovations. He took a kind of aching
delight in her dancing. For while it gratified
an artist to the core, it separated her from her lover
and gave her to other men.
Next morning he waited for her in
the study with a restlessness which would not let
him sit still. More than once he went as far as
the oak-tree to watch for a glimmer. But when
Lily finally appeared at the door he pretended to
be very busy with papers on his desk, and looked up,
saying, “Oh!”
The morning was chill, and she seemed
a fair Russian in fur-edged cloth as she put her cold
fingers teasingly against his neck.
“Are you working hard?”
“Trying to. I am behind.”
“But if there is a good wind
this afternoon you are not to forget the Carstangs’
sail. They will be here only a day or two, and
you mustn’t neglect them. Mrs. Carstang
told me if I saw you first to invite you.”
Maurice met the girl’s smiling
eyes, and the ice of her hand went through him.
“Isn’t Mrs. Carstang lovely!
As soon as I saw you come in last night, I knew she
was the other woman.”
“You didn’t look at me.”
“I can see with my eyelashes.
Do you know, I have often thought I should love her
if I were a man!”
There was not a trace of jealousy
in Lily’s gentle and perfect manner.
“You resemble her,” said
Maurice. “You have the blond head, and the
same features only a little more delicate.”
“I have been in her parlor all
morning,” said Lily. “We talked about
you. I am certain, Maurice, Mrs. Carstang is in
her heart still faithful to you.”
That she should thrust the old love
on him as a kind of solace seemed the cruelest of
all. There was no cognizance of anything except
this one maddening girl. She absorbed him.
She wrung the strength of his manhood from him as
tribute, such tribute as everybody paid her, even Mrs.
Carstang. He sat like a rock, tranced by the strong
control which he kept over himself.
“I must go,"-said Lily.
She had not sat down at all. Maurice shuffled
his papers.
“Good-bye,” she spoke.
“Good-bye,” he answered.
She did not ask, “Are you coming
down the trail with me?” but ebbed softly away,
the swish of her silken petticoat subsiding on the
grassy avenue.
Her lover stretched his arms across
the desk and sobbed upon them with heart-broken gasps.
“It is killing me! It is
killing me! And there is no escape. If I
took my life my disembodied ghost would follow her,
less able to make itself felt than now! I cannot
live without her, and she is not for me not
for me!”
He cursed the necessity which drove
him out with the sailing party, and the prodigal waste
of life on neutral, trivial doings which cannot be
called living. He could see Lily with every pore
of his body, and grew faint keeping down a wild beast
in him which desired to toss overboard the men who
crowded around her. She was more deliciously droll
than any comedienne, full of music and wit, the kind
of spirit that rises flood-tide with occasion.
He was himself hilarious also during this experience
of sailing with two queens surrounded by courtiers
and playing the deep game of fascination, as if men
were created for the amusement of their lighter moments.
Lily’s defiant, inscrutable eyes mocked him.
But Mrs. Carstang gave him sweet friendship, and he
sat by her with the unchanging loyalty of a devotee
to an altar from which the sacrament has been removed.
Next morning Lily did not come to
the lime-kiln. Maurice worked furiously all day,
and corrected proof in his room at night, though tableaux
were shown in the casino, both Mrs. Carstang and Lily
being head and front of the undertaking.
The second day Lily did not come to
the limekiln. But he saw her pass along the grassy
avenue in front of his study with Mrs. Carstang, a
man on each side of them. They waved their hands
to him.
Maurice sat with his head on his desk
all the afternoon, beaten and broken-hearted.
He told himself he was a poltroon; that he was losing
his manhood; that the one he loved despised him, and
did well to despise him; that a man of his age who
gave way to such weakness must be entering senility.
The habit of rectitude would cover him like armor,
and proclaim him still of a chivalry to which he felt
recreant. But it came upon him like revelation
that many a man had died of what doctors had called
disease, when the report to the health-officer should
have read: “This man loved a woman with
a great passion, and she slew him.”
The sigh of the woods around, and
the sunlight searching for him through his door, were
lonelier than illimitable space. It was what the
natives call a “real Mackinac day,” with
infinite splendor of sky and water.
Maurice heard the rustle of woman’s
clothes, and stood up as Lily came through the white
waste of stones. She stopped and gazed at him
with large hunted eyes, and submitted to his taking
and kissing her hands. It was so blessed to have
her at all that half his trouble fled before her.
They sat down together on the bench.
Much of his life Maurice had been
in the attitude of judging whether other people pleased
him or not. Lily reversed this habit of mind,
and made him humbly solicitous to know whether he
pleased her or not. He silently thanked God for
the mere privilege of having her near him. Passionate
selfishness was chastened out of him. One can
say much behind the lips and make no sound at all.
“If I drench her with my love
and she does not know it,” thought Maurice,
“it cannot annoy her. Let me take what she
is willing to give, and ask no more.”
“The Carstangs are gone,” said Lily.
“Yes; I bade them good-bye this morning before
I came to the lime-kiln.”
“You don’t say you regret their going.”
“I never seek Mrs. Carstang.”
He sat holding the girl’s hands
and never swerving a glance from her face, which was
weirdly pallid the face of her spirit.
He felt himself enveloped and possessed by her, his
will subject to her will. He said within himself,
voicelessly: “I love you. I love the
firm chin, the wilful lower lip, and the Cupid’s
bow of the upper lip. I love the oval of your
cheeks, the curve of your ears, the etched eyebrows,
and all the little curls on your temples. I love
the proud nose and most beautiful forehead. Every
blond hair on that dear head is mine! Its upward
tilt on the long throat is adorable! Have you
any gesture or personal trait which does not thrill
me? But best of all, because through them you
yourself look at me, revealing more than you think,
I adore your blue eyes.”
“What are you thinking?” demanded Lily.
“Of a man who lay face downward
far out in the desert, and had not a drop of water
to moisten his lips.”
“Is he in your story?”
“Yes, he is in my story.”
“I thought perhaps you didn’t want me
to come here any more,” she said.
“You didn’t think so!” flashed Maurice.
“But you turned your cheek to
me the last time I was here. You were too busy
to do more than speak.”
Voicelessly he said: “I
lay under your feet, my life, my love! You walked
on me and never knew it.” Aloud he answered:
“Was I so detestable? Forgive me.
I am trying to learn self-control.”
“You are all self-control!
If you have feeling, you manage very well to conceal
it.”
“God grant it!” he said,
in silence, behind his lips. “For the touch
of your hand is rapture. My God! how hard it is
to love so much and be still!” Aloud he said,
“Don’t you know the great mass of human
beings are obliged to conceal their feelings because
they have not the gift of expression?”
“Yes, I know,” answered Lily, defiantly.
“But that can never be said
of you,” Maurice went on. “For you
are so richly endowed with expression that your problem
is how to mask it.”
“Are you coming down the trail
with me? It is sunset, and time to shut the study
for the day.”
He prepared at once to leave his den,
and they went out together on the trail, lingering
step by step. Though it was the heart of the island
summer, the maples still had tender pink leaves at
the extremities of branches; and the trail looked
wild and fresh as if that hour tunnelled through the
wilderness. Sunset tried to penetrate western
stretches with level shafts, but none reached the
darkening path where twilight already purpled the
hollows.
The night coolness was like respite
after burning pain. Maurice wondered how close
he might draw this changeful girl to him without again
losing her. He had compared her to a wild sweetbrier-rose.
She was a hundred-leaved rose, hiding innumerable
natures in her depths.
They passed the dead pines, crossed
the rotten log, and came silently within sight of
the Indian on the trail, but neither of them noted
it. The Indian stood stencilled against a background
of primrose light, his bow magnified.
It was here that Maurice felt the
slight elastic body sag upon his arm.
“I am tired,” said Lily.
“I have been working so hard to amuse your friends!”
“Would that I were my friends!”
responded Maurice. He said, silently: “I
love you! I wonder if I shall ever learn to love
you less?”
The unspoken appeal of her swaying
figure put him off his guard, and he found himself
holding her, the very depths of his passion rushing
out with the force of lava.
“It is you I want! the
you that is not any other person on earth or in the
universe! Whatever it is the identity the
spirit that is you the you that
was mated with me in other lives that I
have sought will seek must have,
whatever the price in time and anguish! understand! there
is nobody but you!”
Tears oozed from under her closed
lids. She lay in his arms passive, as in a half-swoon.
“You do the talking,” she breathed.
“I do the loving!”
Without opening her eyes she met him
with her perfect mouth, and gave herself to him in
a kiss. He understood a spirit so passionately
reticent that it denied to itself its own inward motions.
The wilfulness of a solitary exalted nature melted
in that kiss. All the soft curves of her face
concealed and belied the woman who opened “her
wild blue eyes and looked at him, passionately adoring,
fierce for her own, yet doubtful of fate.
“If I let you know that I loved
you all I do, you would tire of me!”
“How can you say I could ever tire of you?”
“I know it! When you are not quite sure
of me, you love me best!”
Maurice laughed against her lips.
“You said that was the Indian on the trail my
never being quite sure of you! Will you take an
oath with me?”
“Yes.”
“This is the oath: I swear
before God that I love you more than any one else
on earth; more than any one else in the universe.”
She repeated: “I swear
before God that I love you more than any one else
on earth; more than any one else in the universe!”
Maurice held her blond head against
his breast, quivering through flesh and spirit.
That was the moment of life. What was conquering
the dense resistance of material things, or coming
off victor in bouts with men? The moment of life
is when the infinite sea opens before the lover.
The heart of the island held them
like the heart of Allah. The pines sang around
them.
“We must go on,” spoke
Lily. “It is so dark we can’t see
the Indian on the trail.”
“There isn’t any Indian
on the trail now,” laughed Maurice. “You
can never frighten me with him again.”