Crittenton Madeira’s daughter
wandered down the garden path, singing softly, after
her father had left her, but there was in her song,
as there had been in her laughter, a little tremble
of unrest. The garden was a delicious place,
whose fragrance beat up in waves of sweetness at every
turn. All the flowers were in their luxuriant
last bloom. There were great roses and sweet
elysium, mignonette, peppermint pinks, crepe myrtle,
riotous vines and creepers. Long ago she had taken
everything out of the garden that was not sweet.
She had a fancy that fragrance was one of the spirit’s
tremulous paths into heaven, and out in the garden
she liked to shut her eyes and, with her little straight
nose in the air, go drifting off toward what was infinitely
good, fine, strong, imperishable. It sometimes
seemed to her that the most intimate and exquisite
happinesses of her life had come to her with her eyes
shut in that garden. She called it the Garden
of Dreams.
When Steering found her, she was waiting
for him, her arms on an old vine-covered stump, that
dusky-gold radiance of hers playing over her and from
her, the most beautifully, glowingly alive woman in
the world. What he said to her was “How-do-you-do?”
But what he wanted to say was, “Oh, stand there
so forever, and let every grace, every beauty burn
into my brain, so that all my life I may carry you
about with me, your wine-warm eyes, your sunlit hair,
the whole sweet glow of you, having you
perfectly, knowing you perfectly everywhere, everyhow,
near, far, in the sunshine, in the dark!” And
when a man wants to talk like that “how-do-you-do”
is as good a catchphrase as the next to keep his tongue
discreet.
“I do very well,” she
told him, smiling at him, maddening him, “I always
do well, here in my garden, but you, you
put my sense of well-being to shame. You look
so glad!”
“I am the gladdest man on earth,”
Bruce told her, knowing chiefly that he had her hand
in his. He barely remembered in time that she
was rich in gold and lands and cattle, and that he
was poor, and that the positivism of his personality
had already incurred the ill-will of her father.
“Still, I don’t think there is any doubt
in the world how it is all going to end,” he
said hazily. He still had her hand. She had
the hardest hand to put down that he had ever taken
up.
“I don’t quite follow?
All what?” She bit her lip; her eyes flashed
off across the Di, bright and swift as mating
birds, as she drew her hand gently away.
“I was only thinking that a
man may go on and on through so many meaningless years,
of no special significance to himself or to anybody
else and then suddenly, think everything
is going to be all right some day.” He
clasped his hands and leaned on the other side of the
vine-covered stump and looked at her wishfully, and
she laughed at him, with her eyes still on the pale
river.
“How do you like my garden?”
she asked divertingly. For answer he shut his
eyes and breathed deeply. “Oh, how good!”
she cried, satisfied, “that’s the only
way really to follow the path of fragrance, that’s
my own way!” He blessed his stars that he had
sniffed at the roses. “Where did the path
lead you?” she queried, as he opened his eyes
dreamily upon her golden beauty. “Into
heaven,” he murmured with sublime conviction,
and she clasped her slender hands, delighted at their
mystical congeniality.
“I am so glad that we like the
same thing,” she continued, hurrying a little;
“haven’t you noticed? we both
like the garden, and we both like Piney.
When did you see Piney?”
“Piney? Oh, I see Piney
often.” He rather wished that she had not
mentioned Piney. Since he had come to know the
tramp-boy better his first ache for him had become
sharper and sharper. “Piney and I were out
on the hills together only yesterday. Poor Piney!”
“Why,” she took his hand
and led him forward through a tangle of rose-bushes;
she would not look at him, but the bewildering sweetness
of her hair, her gown, the curve of her cheek came
back to him “why poor Piney?”
She was guiding him to a bench of twisted grape-vines
from which they might look down upon the river.
“Sit down,” she said, “and tell me
why poor Piney?”
“Well,” he sat down and
looked at the river, half-frowning, “it has
seemed to me I’ve had a notion oh,
I don’t know. I suppose it is not poor
Piney after all.”
“Tell me,” she insisted,
“tell me what you started to tell me.”
“Well, it has seemed to me ever
since I first met Piney that he was in the way of
trouble,” he dashed on more abruptly, thinking
only of Piney for a moment “I have
come to love that boy. I find myself clinging
to him. I think it is because he stands to me
for the spirit of my own boyhood; perhaps that, perhaps
because he stands for the spirit of the woods he loves;
because he stands for simplicity, honesty, spontaneity.
At any rate he is rare, what with his musical gift
and his high melody of living and oh
well, I’ve sometimes felt sorry that he is not
all wood-spirit, that he is part human.”
The characteristics that had made Steering stand too
determinedly to suit Crittenton Madeira made him forge
ahead determinedly now. “Piney would be
apt to suffer less if he were wholly the sylvan, irresponsible
creature, the faun, he sometimes seems to be.
But, alas, Piney has a man’s heart, Miss Madeira.
He will have to suffer for that, for he will have
to love. That’s why ‘poor’
Piney; because he will have to love.”
“Would that be so terrible?”
The flash from the amber eyes that she turned up to
him made the world go zig-zagging through a long space
while Steering looked on with a great tremulous intake
of breath. Then he steadied again to what he
wanted to say to her and could say to her for Piney’s
sake.
“It would be for Piney.
Piney is going to love hopelessly,” he saw that
a little shiver caught her and he was glad of it.
“Yes, it would be terrible to love hopelessly,
wouldn’t it?” he said, to strengthen his
hidden appeal for Piney. He wanted to make her
realise what she was doing for Piney, realise that
for sheer kindness, kindness as to a dumb thing, she
should never let the lad come near her. He had
forgotten the woman in her when he began to formulate
that appeal. She laughed a light, mocking laugh.
“I believe that you think that
Piney loves me!” she cried. “Piney,
the spirit of the oaks! the song of the night-wind!
Piney suffer! Piney love!” Steering was
sorry to hear the note of evasion in her voice.
No woman, he remembered, too late, could be brought
to treat man’s love or boy’s love quite
honestly. His eyes clouded. He felt masculinely,
sanely sympathetic with Piney.
“I wish,” he said gloomily,
“that you would sometimes put yourself in the
place of a man who loves you, put yourself in Piney’s
place.”
Her eyes crinkled up again. “I’ll
just do it,” she said gaily, “I’ll
do it now. Presto,” she shut her eyes.
“Now I have his point of view. Now I’m
seeing what he sees that Miss Sally Madeira
likes to hear him sing, and humours him and pets him
because he is gay and glad to be alive, and because
Uncle Bernique says that he needs somebody to mother
him. I mother Piney. Can’t you see
that.” She laughed again and arose and stood
in front of him, gay, mocking, nonchalant. “Piney
love! And if Piney could love, that you should
fancy that he might dare love Salome Madeira!”
He forgot about Piney. She blocked
his farther vision like a shaft of light. He
could not see an inch beyond her. Madeira’s
voice rang down the garden walk. Steering did
not hear it. “Salome! Salome!”
he murmured, “Is that it, Salome?”
“Yes, that’s it, Salome.
Isn’t it foolish? The Di down there
is the Diaphanous, too. Some pioneer poet named
it for its shimmer, but what good did it do?
Missouri promptly called it the ‘Di.’
No more good is it to name a child Salome in the backwoods
of Missouri. She’s bound to grow up Sally.
I’ve always been Sally, except at school.
I’ll always be Sally down here with my own people.”
“No, you won’t always
be Sally no you won’t always be down
here with your own people either,” he
leaned back on the bench and watched her, his eyes
half shut, his whole sense of being illumined by her,
his tongue playing audaciously with his discretion.
“Yes, I shall always be Sally,
too.” That bisque-warm skin of hers flushed
wondrously and she seemed to talk out of a little confused
audacity of her own. Madeira’s voice rang
down the walk again. “Yes, Father! and
down here with my own people, too. Yes, Father!”
“Company’s here, Sally.”
“All right, Father, coming.”
“And I have to go?” asked Steering piteously.
“Oh no, come up to the house
and meet our sixteen-to-one congressman, Quicksilver
Sam.”
“No I’ll go,”
chose Steering. “Say, can’t I get
through from the garden here, and go down the river
road?”
“Yes, you can. Samson shall
bring your horse around, if you like. There’s
a bridle-path down to the river; it’s Piney’s
way.”
“Well, if you will be so good
as to have the horse brought, I’ll take Piney’s
path. I’m going to the hills to try to find
Piney and Uncle Bernique. Think I’ll sleep
in the hills with them to-night. I feel so sad.
When may I come back?”
“Well, you see,” the trouble
crept into her voice again, misty, tremulous “you
see, I may go away.”
“Oh!” he cried, and then
again, “Oh!” a bitter wailing note.
“Yes, I may,” she said
hastily. “You see, your friend, Miss Gossamer,
wants me to join her in Europe. She is very insistent
about it.”
“And you may go?”
“And I may go.”
He knew that she said that she would
see him again before going, if it came to pass that
she decided to go, and that she pressed his hand, with
the grateful look that she had bestowed upon him when
she had tried to thank him for holding on to her father
in the Joplin mine; and that afterwards she stole
away through the garden, and a negro man-servant brought
his horse around to the rear grounds and showed him
a bridle-path to the river; but these things were
hazy. The vivid thing was an imprecation that
by and by took awful form, like a monster of the mist,
hissingly, from between his clenched teeth:
“Damn Miss Europe!”