As Bruce galloped up the river road
toward Madeira Place, he found himself so weak with
excitement and physical exhaustion, that he had to
bow over the saddle-horn and cling there, like an old
man. It was a ride to remember. Once he
raised his head and looked out into the night.
The storm had broken, and high in the quivering heavens
the moon shone with a wild, palpitant glory.
In the north and east the clouds had gathered with
a mighty up-piling, from which the eye sank back affrighted,
it towered so near heaven. The trees along the
river, the shaking, shimmering river itself, were
all shot with light. It was a grand scene, but
removed, turbulent, unreal. Steering’s strength
failed him again, and he fell back over the saddle
and hung on. There come times in a man’s
life, good times as well as bad times, when he can
do nothing but hang on. On these dizzying peaks
of happiness, Steering scarcely dared let himself
look beyond the pony’s nose. He was so high
up, so near the consummation of oh of
everything. It would be ridiculously easy to set
matters straight now, in one way or another. She
loved him! If that were true, it would make everything
else come right. And that was true. Piney
had been sure of it, and Piney had just left her.
Everything else, all life, could be made to close
around that salient, delicate fact like the rose-leaves
close around the heart of the rose. Let her father
keep the hills; he did not care, if he could have
the girl. He did not care about anything, if
he could have the girl. And he could have the
girl. Thank God for that.
Little by little he began to allow
himself a meagre consciousness that he was drawing
nearer, nearer! Now, just below the grounds of
Madeira Place! Now, up along the bridle-path!
Now, at the garden gate!
He leaned over the pony’s head,
slipped the gate latch, and passed into the garden.
Dismounting, he tied the pony, and turned toward the
house. Dark, in the shadow of the trees behind
it, the house lay very quiet, unlighted, infinitely
peaceful. In front of the negro cabin at the side
of the house, Bruce could see Samson, his chair tilted
against the cabin wall, his pipe in his mouth, his
bare feet swinging contentedly. From inside the
cabin came the low croon of Samson’s fat black
wife. Some hens clucked sleepily in the hen-house.
With the moonlight disintegrated and softened by the
trees, everything up toward the house breathed peace.
Out here in the garden, however, where the gold light
beat down straightly, there was a sense of waiting,
unrest, sweet and tumultuous. Out here in the
garden it was glorious, but it was not peaceful.
What was it that was responsible for that misty halation
of incompleteness, longing? the shaking breath of
the wide-lipped roses? the secrets within the bowed
slender lilies? the tortured joy of the whole garden
life of fragrance and beauty?
Over by the old vine-covered stump
there was a gleam of white, swaying a little, breathing
a little, it seemed, and Steering went toward it,
strength coming back into his limbs, his head lifting
as he came, his arms outheld.
“I hoped that you would come,
Mr. Steering. I have been waiting a long time
for you,” she said, not moving, her eyes meeting
his, something in her face, her rigidity, stopping
him. Her hands were pale and still on the grey-green
of the vines; her face had caught the wild, gold gleam
of the moon. “I wanted to tell you myself
about that letter, Mr. Steering. I wanted to
tell you myself about the Tigmores being yours.
I have grown afraid, out here in the dark, that Piney
might not have been able to make you understand, might
have misled you in some way about what I
said. I was very much excited when I talked to
Piney, Mr. Steering, and I am not sure that I made
it clear to him that I am very glad indeed that the
hills are yours at last; glad because we are or
have been such good friends, Mr. Steering,
glad for that reason for friendship’s
sake, and for nothing,” her voice wandered, and
the beat of her low broad breast was girlishly pitiful,
“else, but friend ”
she could not go on.
“Ship,” suggested Bruce,
with a great desire to help her, but very much at
sea. Was it to be failure, after all? Had
Piney made a vast mistake? This proud, pale woman
here suddenly an awful timidity seized him,
but he shook himself out of that brusquely and came
on. “She loves you, don’t you go fergit
that!” Piney’s admonition piped up
to him on a high and tuneful memory. He realised
that he was walking a path through the flower-tangled,
pretty precariousness of romance as he came on toward
her potential lovers’ quarrels, separation,
the irate parent, a girl’s pride, her foolish,
solemn effort to fight him back for fear that she
had led him on too far, a man’s uneasy timidity,
the complication of their circumstances the
memory of them all made little snares for his feet,
as he came on toward her. But he came on, growing
bolder as he came, deciding what to do as he came.
It was a crisis for romance as he faced her across
the old vine-covered stump. He put his hands down
on the stump near her hands, and his face caught the
gleam of the light overhead, as hers did.
“Piney has just pulled me out
of the river,” he said in a wan voice, “and
it was all I could do to get here. I I
am as shaky as a kitten.”
She looked up at him, betrayed into
it by his careful conservation of that weakness in
his voice, and, seeing how pale he was, her hands stole
in under his. “Oh, but I am weak, and
sick!” he went on, pursuing his advantage mercilessly,
his hands closing over hers, while her face leaned
toward him, all lit and trembling, “I am weak,
but I love you so!”
“Ah h!” she
cried, a shaking, joyful cry, “you ought to have
said that long ago, Bruce! Tying my hands all
winter! Now, it doesn’t matter which
of us owns the old hills, does it?”
It was there, under the pale, wild
light of the moon, with the wide-lipped roses, the
slender-bowed lilies, the tremulous fragrance, the
delicate unrest, the tortured joy of the garden’s
life of beauty all around them, that she crept into
his arms shyly and radiantly. The trees rustled
with low glad music, and the night air seemed full
of mystic influences, blessings, happinesses.
From the quiet house beyond, there
drifted toward them the sense of late-come, profound
peace.