SHADOWS OF THE NIGHT
It was a wind-swept, chilly morning
in late November, and Evelyn Brydon, alone in the
silent little house, stood at the window looking listlessly
at the dull gray monochrome which stretched before
her.
The unaccustomed housework had roughened
and chapped her hands, and the many failures in her
cooking experiments, in spite of Mrs, Corbett’s
instructions, had left her tired and depressed, for
a failure is always depressing, even if it is only
in the construction of the things which perish.
This dark morning it seemed to her
that her life was as gray and colorless as the bleached-out
prairie the glamor had gone from everything.
She and Fred had had their first quarrel,
and Fred had gone away dazed and hurt by the things
she had said under the stress of her anger. He
was at a loss to know what had gone wrong with Evelyn,
for she had seemed quite contented all the time.
He did not know how the many little annoyances had
piled up on her; how the utter loneliness of the prairie,
with its monotonous sweep of frost-killed grass, the
deadly sameness, and the perpetual silence of the
house, had so worked upon her mind that it required
but a tiny spark to cause an explosion.
The spark he had supplied himself
when he had tried to defend his brothers from her
charges. All at once Evelyn felt herself grow
cold with anger, and the uncontrolled hasty words,
bitterer than anything she had ever thought, utterly
unjust and cruel, sprang to her lips, and Fred, stung
to the quick with the injustice of it, had gone away
without a word.
It was with a very heavy heart that
he went to his work that day; but he had to go, for
he was helping one of the neighbors to thresh, and
every dry day was precious, and every man was needed.
All day long Evelyn went about the
house trying to justify herself. A great wave
of self-pity seemed to be engulfing her and blotting
out every worthier feeling.
The prairie was hateful to her that
day, its dull gray stretches cruel and menacing, and
a strange fear of it seemed to possess her.
All day she tried to busy herself
about the house, but she worked to no purpose, taking
up things and laying them down again, forgetting what
she was going to do with them; strange whispering voices
seemed to sound in the room behind her, trying to
tell her something to warn her and
it was in vain that she tried to shake off their influence.
Once or twice she caught a glimpse of a black shadow
over her shoulder, just a reflecting vanishing glimpse,
and when she turned hastily round there was nothing
there, but the voices, mocking and gibbering, were
louder than ever.
She wished Fred would come. She
would tell him that she hadn’t meant what she
said.
As the afternoon wore on, and Fred
did not make his appearance, a sudden deadly fear
came over her at the thought of staying alone.
Of course the twins occupied the other half of the
house, and to-night, at least, she was glad of their
protection.
Suddenly it occurred to her that she
had heard no sound from their quarters for a long
time. She listened and listened, the silence
growing more and more oppressive, until at last, overcoming
her fears, she went around and tried the door.
Even the voices of her much-despised brothers-in-law
would be sweet music to her ears.
The door was locked and there was
no response to her knocks.
An old envelope stuck in a sliver
in the door bore the entry in lead-pencil, “Gone
Duck Shooting to Plover Slough,” for it was the
custom of the twins to faithfully chronicle the cause
of their absence and their probable location each
time they left home, to make it easy to find them
in the event of a cablegram from Aunt Patience’s
solicitors!
Evelyn turned away and ran back to
her own part of the house. She hastily barred
the door.
The short autumn day was soon over.
The sun broke out from the dull gray mountain of clouds
and threw a yellow glare on the colorless field.
She stood by the window watching the light as it faded
and paled and died, and then the shades of evening
quickly gathered. Turning again to replenish
the fire, the darkness of the room startled her.
There was a shadow under the table like a cave’s
mouth. Unaccustomed sounds smote her ear; the
logs in the house creaked uncannily, and when she
walked across the floor muffled footfalls seemed to
follow her.
She put more wood in the stove and
tried to shake off the apprehensions which were choking
her. She lit the lamp and hastily drew down the
white cotton blind and pinned it close to keep out
the great pitiless staring Outside, which seemed to
be peering in at her with a dozen white, mocking,
merciless faces.
In the lamp’s dim light the
shadows were blacker than ever; the big packing-box
threw a shadow on the wall that was as black as the
mouth of a tunnel in a mountain.
She noticed that her stock of wood
was running low, and with a mighty effort of the will
she opened the door to bring in some from a pile in
the yard. Stopping a minute to muster up her courage,
she waited at the open door. Suddenly the weird
cry of a wolf came up from the creek bank, and it
was a bitter, lonely, insistent cry.
She slammed the door, and coming back
into the room, sank weak and trembling into a chair.
A horror grew upon her until the beads of perspiration
stood upon her face. Her hands grew numb and useless,
and the skin of her head seemed stiff and frozen.
Her ears were strained to catch any sound, and out
of the silence there came many strange noises to torment
her overstrained senses.
She thought of Mrs. Corbett at the
Stopping-House, and tried to muster courage to walk
the distance, but a terrible fear held her to the spot.
The fire died out, and the room grew
colder and colder, but huddled in a chair in a panic
of fear she did not notice the cold. Her teeth
chattered; spots of light danced before her tightly-shut
eyes. She did not know what she was afraid of;
a terrible nameless fear seemed to be clutching at
her very heart. It was the living, waking counterpart
of the nightmare that had made horrible her childhood
nights a gripping, overwhelming fear of
what might happen.
Suddenly something burst into the
room the terrible something that she had
been waiting for. The silence broke into a thousand
screaming voices. She slipped to the floor and
cried out in an agony of terror.
There was a loud knocking on the door,
and then through the horrible silence that followed
there came a voice calling to her not to be afraid.
She staggered to the door and unbarred
it, and heard someone speak again in blessed human
voice.
The door opened, and she found herself
looking into the face of Rance Belmont, and her fear-tortured
eyes gave him a glad welcome.
She seized him by the arm, holding
to him as a child fear-smitten in the night will hold
fast to the one who comes in answer to his cries.
Rance Belmont knew how to make the
most, yet not too much, of an advantage. He soothed
her fears courteously, gently; he built up the fire;
he made her a cup of tea; there was that strange and
subtle influence in all that he said and did that
made her forget everything that was unpleasant and
be happy in his presence.
A perfect content grew upon her; she
forgot her fears her loneliness
her quarrel with Fred; she remembered only the happy
company of the present.
Under the intoxication of the man’s
presence she ceased to be the tired, discouraged,
irritable woman, and became once more the Evelyn Grant
whose vivacity and wit had made her conspicuous in
the brightest company.
She tried to remind herself of some
of the unpleasant things that neighborhood gossip
said of Rance Belmont of Mrs. Corbett’s
dislike of him but in the charm of his
presence they all faded into vague unrealities.
There was flattery, clever, hidden
flattery, which seemed like adoration, in every word
he spoke, every tone of his voice, every glance of
his coal-black eyes, that seemed in some way to atone
for the long, gray, monotonous days that had weighed
so heavily upon her spirits.
“Are you always frightened when
you are left alone?” he asked her. Every
word was a caress, the tone of his voice implying that
she should never be left alone, the magnetism of his
presence assuring her that she would never be left
alone again.
“I was never left alone in the
evening before,” she said. “I thought
I was very brave until to-night, but it was horrible it
makes me shudder to think of it.”
“Don’t think!” he said gently.
“Fred thought the twins would
be here, I know, or he would not have stayed away,”
Evelyn said, wishing to do justice to Fred, and feeling
indefinitely guilty about something.
“The twins are jolly good company, oh,
I say!” laughed Rance, in tones so like her
brothers-in-law that Evelyn laughed delightedly.
It was lovely to have someone to laugh with.
“But where are the heavenly twins to-night?”
“I suppose they saw a flock
of ducks going over, or heard the honk-honk of wild
geese,” she answered. “It does not
take much to distract them from labor and
they have a soul above it, you know.”
Rance Belmont need not have asked
her about the twins; he had met them on their way
to the Plover Slough and had given Reginald the loan
of his gun; he had learned from them that Fred, too,
was away.
“But if dear Aunt Patience will
only lift her anchor all will yet be well, and the
dear twins will not need to be bothered with anything
so beastly as farm-work.” His tone and
manner were so like the twins that Evelyn applauded
his efforts. Then he told her the story of the
cow, and of how the twins, endeavoring to follow the
example of some of the Canadians whom they had seen
locking their wagon-wheels with a chain when going
down the Souris hill, had made a slight mistake in
the location of the chain and hobbled the oxen, with
disastrous results.
When he looked at his watch it was nine o’clock.
“I must go,” he said,
hastily rising; “it would hardly do for me to
be found here!”
“What do you mean?” she asked in surprise.
“What do you suppose your husband
would say if he came home and found me here?”
Evelyn flushed angrily.
“My husband has confidence in
me,” she answered proudly. “I don’t
know what he thinks of you, but I know what he thinks
of me, and it would make no difference what company
he found me in, he would never doubt me. I trust
him in the same way. I would believe his word
against that of the whole world.”
She held her handsome head high when she said this.
Rance Belmont looked at her with a dull glow in his
black eyes.
“I hope you are right,” he said, watching
the color coming in her face.
“I am right,” she said
after a pause, daring which she had looked at him
defiantly. He was wise enough to see he had made
a false move and had lost ground in her regard.
“I think you had better go,”
she said at last. “I do not like that insinuation
of yours that your presence here might be misconstrued.
Yes, I want you to go. I was glad to see you;
I was never so glad to see anyone; I was paralyzed
with fear; but now I am myself again, and I am sure
Fred will come home.”
There was a sneering smile on his
face which she understood and resented.
“In that case I had better go,” he said.
“That is not the reason I want
you to go. I tell you again that Fred would not
believe that I was untrue to him. He believes
in me utterly.” She drew herself up with
an imperious gesture and added: “I am worthy
of his trust.”
Rance Belmont thought he had never seen her so beautiful.
“I will not leave you,”
he declared. “Forgive me for speaking as
I did. I judged your husband by the standards
of the world. I might have known that the man
who won you must be different from other men.
It was only for your sake that I said I must go.
I care nothing for his fury. If it were the fury
of a hundred men I would stay with you; just to be
near you, to hear your sweet voice, to see you, is
heaven to me.”
Evelyn sprang to her feet indignantly
as he arose and came towards her.
Just at that moment the door opened,
and Fred Brydon, having heard the last words, stood
face to face with them both!