A DINNER
Time and chance are
but a tide,
Slighted love is sair
to bide.
The dining-room and parlor of our
little suite adjoined; the door was standing open
between them, as I walked up and down the parlor, waiting
nervously for Richard to arrive. The fire was
bright, and the only light in the parlor was a soft,
pretty lamp, which we had brought from Italy.
There were flowers on the table, and in two or three
vases, and the curtains were pretty, and there were
several large mirrors. Outside, it was the twilight
of a dark autumnal day; almost night already, and the
lamps were lit. It lacked several minutes of six
when Richard came. I felt very much agitated
when he entered the room. It was a year and a
half since I had seen him: besides, this piece
of news! But he looked just the same as ever,
and I had not the self-possession to note whether
he seemed agitated at meeting me. I do not know
exactly what we talked about for the first few moments,
probably I was occupied in trying to excuse myself
for coming home so suddenly, for I found Richard was
not altogether pleased at not having been informed,
and thought there must be something yet to tell.
He was not used to feminine caprice, and I began to
feel a good deal ashamed of myself. I had to remind
myself, more than once, that I was not responsible
to any one.
“I just felt like it,”
was such a very weak explanation to offer to this
grave business-man, for disarranging two years of carefully-laid
plans.
I found I was getting to be a little
afraid of Richard: we had been so long apart,
and he had grown so much older.
“I hope, at least, you are not
going to scold me for it,” I said at last, with
a little laugh, feeling that was my best way out of
it. “I shall think you are not glad, to
see me.”
“I am glad to see you,”
he said, gravely; “and as to scolding, it’s
so long since you’ve given me an opportunity,
I should not know how to go to work.”
“Do you mean, because I’ve
been away so long, or because I’ve been so good?”
Susan, who had been watching her opportunity,
now appeared in the dining-room door, and said that
dinner was on the table.
Richard asked for Mrs. Throckmorton
when we sat down to dinner. I told him she was
dining with her niece. (She had reconsidered the question
of the headache, and had gone to hear more news.)
The dinner was very nice, and very nicely served;
but somehow, Richard did not seem to enjoy it very
much, that is, not as I had been in the habit lately
of seeing men enjoy their meals.
“I am afraid you are getting
like Uncle Leonard, and only care about Wall-street,”
I said. “I shouldn’t wonder if you
forgot to order your dinner half the time, and took
the same thing for breakfast every morning in the
year.”
“That’s just exactly how
it is,” he said. “If Sophie did not
come down to my quarters every week or two, and regulate
affairs a little, I don’t know where I should
be, in the matter of my dinners.”
“How is Sophie?” I said.
“Very well. I saw her yesterday.
I went to put Charley in College for her.”
“I can’t think of Charley as a young man.”
“Yes, Charley is a strapping fellow, within
two inches of my height.”
“Impossible! And where is Benny?”
“At school here in town.
His mother will not let him go to boarding-school.
He is a nice boy: I think there’s more in
him than Charley.”
“And I hear Kilian is married!”
“Yes. Kilian is married the
very day you landed, too.”
“Well,” I said, with a
little dash of temper, “I’m very sorry
for you all. I did not think Kilian was going
to be so foolish.”
“He thinks he’s very wise,
though, all the same,” said Richard, with a
smile, which turned into a sigh before he had done
speaking.
“I do dislike her so,”
I exclaimed, warmly. “There isn’t
an honest or straightforward thing about her.
She is weak, too; her only strength is her suppleness
and cunning.”
“I know you never liked her,”
said Richard, gravely; “but I hope you’ll
try to think better of her now.”
“I hope I shall never have to
see her,” I answered, with angry warmth.
Richard was silent, and I was very
much ashamed of myself a moment after. I had
meant him to see how much improved I was, and how well
disciplined. This was a pretty exhibition!
I had not spoken so of any one for a year, at least.
I colored with mortification and penitence. Richard
evidently saw it, and felt sorry for me, for he said,
most kindly,
“I can understand exactly how
you feel, Pauline. This marriage is a great trial
to me. I have done all I could to keep Kilian
from throwing himself away, but I might as well have
argued with the winds.”
“I don’t care how much
Kilian throws himself away,” I said, impulsively.
“He deserves it for keeping around her all these
years. But I do mind that she is your sister,
and that she will be mistress of the house at R .”
There was an awful silence then.
Heavens! what had I been thinking about to have said
that! I had precipitated the denouement,
and I had not meant to. I did not want to hear
it that moment, if he were going to marry Charlotte
Benson, nor did I want to hear it, if he were saving
the old place for me. I felt as if I had given
the blow that would bring the whole structure down,
and I waited for the crash in frightened silence.
In the meantime the business of the
table went on. I ate half a chicken croquette,
and Susan placed the salad before Richard, and another
plate. He did not speak till he had put the salad
on his plate; then he said, without looking at me,
in a voice a good deal lower than was usual to him,
“She is not to be mistress of
that house. They will live in town.”
Then I felt cold and chilled to my
very heart; it was well that he did not expect me
to speak, for I could not have commanded my voice enough
to have concealed my agitation. I knew very well
from that moment that he was going to marry Charlotte
Benson. Something that was said a little later
was a confirmation.
I had recovered myself enough to talk
about ordinary things, and to keep strictly to them,
too. Richard was talking of the great heat of
the past summer. I had said it had been unparalleled
in France; had he not found it very uncomfortable
here in town?
“I have been out of town so
much, I can hardly say how it has been here,”
he answered. “I was all of August in the
country; only coming to the city twice.”
My heart sank: that was just
what they had said; he had been a great deal at home
this summer, and she had been there all the time.
The dinner was becoming terribly ennuyant,
and I wished with all my heart Throckmorton had been
contented with just half the courses. Richard
did not seem to enjoy them, and I I was
so wretched I could scarcely say a word, much less
eat a morsel. It had been a great mistake to
invite him to take dinner; it was being too familiar,
when he had put me at such a distance all these years:
I wished for Mrs. Throckmorton with all my heart.
Why had I sent her off? Richard was evidently
so constrained, and it was in such bad taste to have
asked him here; it could not help putting thoughts
in both our minds, sitting alone at a table opposite
each other, as we should have been sitting daily if
that horrid will had not been found. He had dined
with us just twice before, but that was at dinner-parties,
when there had been ever so many people between us,
and when I had not said six words to him during the
whole evening.
The only excuse I could offer, and
that he could understand, would be that I wanted to
talk business to him; I had said in my note that I
wanted to consult him about something, and I must keep
that in mind. I had wanted to ask him about a
house I thought of buying, adjoining the Sisters’
Hospital, to enlarge their work; but I was so wicked
and worldly, I felt just then as if I did not care
whether they had a house or not, or whether they did
any work. However, I resolved to speak about
it, when we had got away from the table, if we ever
did.
Susan kept bringing dish after dish.
“Oh, we don’t want any
of that!” I exclaimed, at last, impatiently;
“do take it away, and tell them to send in the
coffee.”
I was resolved upon one thing:
Richard should tell me of his engagement before he
went away; it would be dishonorable and unkind if he
did not, and I should make him do it. I was not
quite sure that I had self-control enough not to show
how it made me feel, when it came to hearing it all
in so many words. But in very truth, I had not
much pride as regarded him; I felt so sore-hearted
and unhappy, I did not care much whether he knew it
or suspected it.
I could not help remembering how little
concealment he had made of his love for me, even when
he knew that all the heart I had was given to another.
I would be very careful not to precipitate the disclosure,
however, while we sat at table; it is so disagreeable
to talk to any one on an agitating subject vis-a-vis
across a little dinner-table, with a bright light
overhead, and a servant walking around, able to stop
and study you from any point she pleases.
Coffee came at last, though even that,
Susan was unwilling to look upon as the legitimate
finale, and had her views about liqueur, instructed
by Throckmorton. But I cut it short by getting
up and saying, “I’m sure you’ll
be glad to go into the parlor; it gets warm so soon
in these little rooms.”
The parlor was very cool and pleasant;
a window had been open, and the air was fresh, and
the flowers were delicious, and the lamp was softer
and pleasanter than the gas. I went to break up
the coal and make the fire blaze, and Richard to shut
the window down.
When I had pulled a chair up to the
fire and seated myself, he stood leaning on the mantelpiece,
on the other side from me. I felt sure he meant
to go, the minute that he could get away a
committee meeting, no doubt, or some such nauseous
fraud. But he should not go away until he had
told me, that was certain.
“What is it that you wanted
to ask me about, Pauline?” he said, rather abruptly.
My heart gave a great thump; how could
he have known? Oh, it was the business that I
had spoken of in my stupid note. Yes; and I began
to explain to him what I wanted to do about the hospital.
He looked infinitely relieved.
I believe he had an idea it was something very different.
My explanation could not have added much to his reverence
for my business ability. I was very indefinite,
and could not tell him whether it was hundreds or
thousands that I meant.
He said, with a smile, he thought
it must be thousands, as city property was so very
high. He was very kind, however, about the matter,
and did not discourage me at all. He always seemed
to approve of my desire to give away in charity, and,
within bounds, always furthered such plans of doing
good. He said he would look into it, and would
write me word next week what his impression was; and
then, I think, he meant to go away.
Then I began talking on every subject
I could think of, hoping some of the roads would lead
to Rome. But none of them led there, and I was
in despair.
“Oh, don’t you want to
look at some photographs?” I said, at last,
thinking I saw an opening for my wedge. I got
the package, and he came to the table and looked at
them, standing up. They were naturally of much
more interest to me than to him, being of places and
people with which I had so lately been familiar.
But he looked at them very kindly,
and asked a good many questions about them.
“Look at this,” I said,
handing him an Antwerp peasant-woman in her hideous
bonnet. “Isn’t that ridiculously like
Charlotte Benson? I bought it because it was
so singular a resemblance.”
“It is like her,” he said,
thoughtfully, looking at it long. “The mouth
is a little larger and the eyes further apart.
But it is a most striking likeness. It might
almost have been taken for her.”
“How is she, and when have you
seen her?” I said, a little choked for breath.
“She is very well. I saw
her yesterday,” he answered, still looking at
the little picture.
“Was she with Sophie this summer?”
“Yes, for almost two months.”
“I hope she doesn’t keep
everybody in order as sharply as she used to?”
I said, with a bitter little laugh.
“I don’t know,”
he said. “I think, perhaps, she is rather
less decided than she used to be.”
“Oh, you call it decision, do
you? Well, I’m glad I know what it is.
I used to think it hadn’t such a pretty name
as that.”
Richard looked grave; it certainly
was not a graceful way to lead up to congratulations.
“But then, you always liked her,” I said.
“Yes, I always liked her,” he answered,
simply.
“I’m afraid I’m
not very amiable,” I retorted, “for I never
liked her: no better even than that fraudulent
Mary Leighton, clever and sensible as she always was.
There is such a thing as being too clever, and too
sensible, and making yourself an offence to all less
admirable people.”
Richard was entirely silent, and,
I was sure, was disapproving of me very much.
“Do you know what I heard yesterday?”
I said, In a daring way. “And I hope you’re
going to tell me if it’s true, to-night?”
“What was it that you heard
yesterday?” he asked, without much change of
tone. He had laid down the photograph, and had
gone back, and was leaning by the mantelpiece again.
“Why, I heard that you were
going to marry Charlotte Benson. Is it true?”
I had pushed away the pile of photographs
from me, and had looked up at him when I began, but
my voice and courage rather failed before the end,
and my eyes fell. There was a silence a
silence that seemed to stifle me.
“Why do you ask me that question?”
he said, at last, in a low voice. “Do you
believe I am, yourself?”
“No,” I cried, springing
up, and going over to his side. “No, I don’t
believe it. Tell me it isn’t true, and promise
me you won’t ever, ever marry Charlotte Benson.”
The relief was so unspeakable that
I didn’t care what I said, and the joy I felt
showed itself in my face and voice. I put out
my hand to him when I said “promise me,”
but he did not take it, and turned his head away from
me.
“I shall not marry Charlotte
Benson,” he said; “but I cannot understand
what difference it makes to you.”
It was now my turn to be silent, and
I shrank back a step or two in great confusion.
He raised his head, and looked steadily
at me for a moment, and then said:
“Pauline, you did a great many
things, but I don’t think you ever willingly
deceived me. Did you?”
I shook my head without looking lip.
“Then be careful what you do
now, and let the past alone,” he said, and his
voice was almost stern.
I trembled, and turned pale.
“Women sometimes play with dangerous
weapons,” he said; “I don’t accuse
you of meaning to give pain, but only of forgetting
that some recollections are not to you what they are
to me. I never want to interfere with any one’s
comfort or enjoyment; I only want to be let alone.
I do very well, and am not unhappy. About marrying,
now or ever, I should have thought you would have
known. But let me tell you once for all:
I haven’t any thought of it, and shall not ever
have. It is not that I am holding to any foolish
hopes. It would be exactly the same if you were
married, or had died. It simply isn’t in
my nature to feel the same way a second time.
People are made differently, that is all. I’m
very well contented, and you need never let it worry
you.”
He was very pale now, and his eyes
had an expression I had never seen in them before.
“Richard,” I said, faintly,
“I never have deceived you: believe
me now when I tell you, I am sorry from my heart for
all that’s past.”
“You told me so before, and
I did forgive you. I forgave you fully, and have
never had a thought that wasn’t kind.”
“I know it,” I said.
“But you do not trust me you don’t
ever come near me, or want to see me.”
“You do not know what you are
talking of,” he answered, turning from me.
“I forgive you anything you may have done at
any time to give me pain. I will do everything
I can to serve you, in every way I can; only do not
stir up the past, and let me forget the little of it
that I can forget.”
I burst into tears, and put my hands before my face.
“What is it?” he said, uneasily.
“You need not be troubled about me.”
Seeing that I did not stop, he said
again, “Tell me: is it that that troubles
you?”
I shook my head.
“What is it, then? Something
that I do not know about? Pauline, you are unhappy,
and yet you’ve everything in the world to make
you happy. I often think, there are not many
women have as much.”
“The poorest of them are better
off than I,” I said, without raising my head.
“Then you are ungrateful,”
he said, “for you have youth, and health, and
money, and everybody likes you. You could choose
from all the world.”
“No, I couldn’t,”
I exclaimed, like a child; “and everybody doesn’t
like me,” and then I cried again,
for I was really in despair, and thought he meant
to put me away, memory and all.
“Well, if that’s your
trouble,” he said, with a sigh, “I suppose
I cannot help you; but I’m very sorry.”
“Yes, you can help me,”
I cried imploringly, forgetting all I ought to have
remembered; “if you only would forgive me, really
and in earnest, and be friends again and
let me try ” and I covered my face
with my hands.
“Pauline,” he said, standing
by my side, and his voice almost frightened me, it
was so strong with feeling; “is this a piece
of sentiment? Do you mean anything? Or am
I to be trifled with again?”
He took hold of my wrists with both
his hands, with such force as to give me pain, and
drew them from my face.
“Look at me,” he said,
“and tell me what you mean; and decide now forever
and forever. For this is the last time that you
will have a chance to say.”
“It’s all very well,”
I said, trying to turn my face away from him.
“It’s all very well to talk about loving
me yet, and being just the same; but this isn’t
the way you used to talk, and I think it’s very
hard ”
“That isn’t answering
me,” he said, holding me closer to him.
“What shall I say,” I
whispered, hiding my face upon his arm. “Nothing
will ever satisfy you.”
“Nothing ever has satisfied me,”
he said, “ before.”