LOVE’S TANGLED WAYS
The mill lane was prinked with all
the June flowers. Over the snake fence massed
the clover, red and white. Through the rails peeped
the thistle bloom, pink and purple, and higher up
above the top rail the white crest of the dogwood
slowly nodded in the breeze this sweet summer day.
In the clover the bumblebees, the crickets, and the
grasshoppers boomed, chirped, crackled, shouting their
joy to be alive in so good a place and on so good
a day. Above, the sky was blue, pure blue, and
all the bluer for the specks of cloud that hung, still-poised
like white-winged birds, white against the blue.
Last evening’s rain had washed the world clean.
The sky, the air, the flowers, the clover, red and
white, the kindly grass that ran green everywhere under
foot, the dusty road, all were washed clean.
In the elm bunches by the fence, in the maples and
thorns, the birds, their summer preoccupations forgotten
at the bidding of this new washed day, recalled their
spring songs and poured them forth with fine careless
courage.
In tune to this brave symphony of
colour and song, and down this flower-prinked, song-filled,
clean washed, grassy lane stepped Dick this summer
morning, stepped with the spring and balance of the
well-trained athlete, stepped with the step of a man
whose heart makes him merry music. A clean-looking
man was Dick, harmonious with the day and with the
lane down which he stepped. Against the grey of
his suit his hands, his face, and his neck, where
the negligee shirt fell away wide, revealing his strong,
full curves spreading to the shoulders, all showed
ruddy brown. He was a man good to look upon, with
his springy step, his tan skin, his clear eye, but
chiefly because out of his clear eye a soul looked
forth clean and unafraid upon God’s good world
of wholesome growing things.
From his three years of ’varsity
life he came back unspoiled to his boyhood’s
love of the open sky and of all things under it.
He had just come through a great year in college,
his third, the greatest in many ways of the college
course. His class had thrust him into a man’s
place of leadership in that world where only manhood
counts, and he had “made good.” In
the literary, in the gym, on the campus he had made
and held high place, and on the class lists, in spite
of his many distractions, he had ranked a double first.
Best of all, it filled him with warm gratitude to
remember that none of his fellows had grudged him any
of his good things. What a decent lot they were!
It humbled him to think of their pride in him.
He would not disappoint them. Noblesse oblige.
At the crest of the hill he paused
to look back, and here the pain that had been running
below his consciousness, like the minor strain in rich
music, came to the top. This was Barney’s
spot. At this spot Barney always made him pause
to look back upon the old mill in its frame of beauty.
Poor Barney! Twice he had gone down to the exams,
and twice he had failed. Of all in the home circle
only Dick could understand the full bitterness of
the cup of humiliation that his brother had put silently
to his lips and drained. To his mother, the failure
brought no surprise, and she would have been glad
enough to have him give up “his notion of being
a doctor and be content with the mill.”
She had no ambitions for poor Barney, who was “a
quiet lad and well-doing enough,” an encomium
which stood for all the virtues removed from any touch
of genius. She was not hurt by his failure.
Indeed, she could hardly understand how deep the shame
had gone into his proud, reserved heart. His
father did not talk about it, but carried him off to
look at some of the mill machinery which had gone
wrong, and it was only by a gentler tone in his voice
that Barney knew that his father understood. But
Dick, with his fuller knowledge of college life, realized
as none other of them did the extent of Barney’s
miserable sense of defeat.
And now, as he looked back upon the
mill, Barney’s pain became his anew. The
causes of his failure were not far to seek. “He
had no chance!” said Dick aloud, leaning upon
the top rail and looking with gloomy eyes upon the
scene of beauty before him. Things had changed
since old Doctor Ferguson’s time. The scientific
basis of medicine was coming to its place in medical
study, and the old doctor’s contempt for these
new-fangled notions had wrought ill for Barney.
Dick remembered how he had gone, hot with indignation
for his brother, to the new English professor in chemistry,
whose papers were the terror of all pass men and,
indeed, all honour men who stuck too closely to the
text-book. He remembered the Englishman’s
drawling contempt as, after looking up Barney’s
name and papers, he dismissed the matter with the words,
“He knows nothing whatever about the subject,
couldn’t conduct the simplest experiment, don’t
you know.” Poor Barney! the ancient and
elementary chemistry of Dr. Ferguson seemed to hold
not even the remotest affinity to that which Professor
Fish expected. Dick was glad this morning that
he had had sense enough to hold his tongue in the professor’s
presence. It comforted him to recall the generous
enthusiasm with which Dr. Trent, the most brilliant
surgeon on the staff, had recalled Barney’s name.
“Your brother, is he? Well, sir, he’s
a wonder!”
“Fish doesn’t think so,” Dick had
replied.
“Oh! Fish be hanged!”
the doctor had answered, with the fine contempt of
a specialist in practical work for the theorist in
medicine. “He has some idiotic notions
in his head that he plucks men for not knowing.
I don’t say they are not necessary, but useful
chiefly for examination purposes. Send your brother
down. Send him down. For if ever I saw an
embryonic surgeon, he’s one! When he comes,
bring him to me.”
“He’ll come,” Dick
had answered, his face hot to think that it was for
his sake Barney had remained grinding at home.
“And he’s going this fall,”
said Dick aloud, “or no ’varsity for me.”
He pulled a letter out of his pocket. It was from
his football comrade, young Macdonald, offering, in
his father’s name, to Barney and himself positions
in one of the lumber mills far up the Ottawa, where,
by working overtime, there was a chance of making
$100 a month and all found. “And we’ll
make it go,” said Dick. “There’s
$300 apiece for us, and that’s more than we
want. Poor old chap!” he continued, musing
aloud, “he’ll get his chance at last.
Besides, we’ll get him away from that girl,
confound her! though I’m afraid it’s no
use now.”
A deeper pain surged up from the bottom
of Dick’s heart. “That girl”
was Iola. The night before, as they were driving
home in the growing dark, with halting words and with
shamed face, as if he were doing his brother a wrong,
Barney had confided to him that Iola and he had come
to an understanding of their mutual love. Dick
remembered this morning, and he would remember to
his dying day, the sense of loss, of being forsaken,
that had smitten him as he cried, “Oh, Barney!
is it possible?” Then, as Barney had gone on
to explain how it had come about, almost apologizing,
as it seemed to Dick, for his weakness, Dick, seeing
in the gloom a gleam of hope, had cried, “We’ll
get you out of it, Barney. I’ll help you
this summer.” And then again the inevitableness
of what had taken place had come over him at Barney’s
reply: “But, Dick, I don’t want to
get out of it.” At that moment Dick’s
world changed. No longer was he first with his
brother. Iola had taken his place. In vain
Barney, guessing the thought in his heart, had protested
with eager, almost piteous, appeal that Dick would
be the same to him as ever. In the first acute
moment of his pain he had cried out some quick word
of bitter reproach, but the look on Barney’s
face had checked him. He was glad now that he
had said nothing against the girl. And as he thought
of her in the saner light of the morning, he felt
that he could not be quite fair to her, and yet he
wished it had been some other than Iola. “It’s
that confounded voice of hers, and her eyes, and her
whole get-up. She’s got something diabolically
fetching about her.” Then, as if he had
gone too far, he continued, still musing aloud, “She’s
good enough, I guess, but not for Barney.”
That was one of the bitter things that had survived
the night. She was not good enough for his brother,
his hero, his beau ideal of high manhood ever since
he could think. “But there is no one good
enough for Barney,” he continued, “except yes there
is one Margaret she is good
enough even for Barney.” As Barney
among men, so Margaret among women had stood with
Dick, peerless. And all his life he had put these
two together. Even as a little fellow, when saying
his prayers to his mother, next in the list to Barney’s
name had always come Margaret’s. She was
like Barney in so many ways; strong like Barney in
her relentless devotion to duty; she had Barney’s
fine sense of honour, of righteousness, and Barney’s
superb courage, and, more than anything else, the
same unfathomable heart of love. One could never
get to the bottom of it. No matter what the drain,
there would still be love there.
It was the thought of Margaret that
had set his heart singing within him this morning.
Even last night, after the first few moments of pain,
the thought of Margaret had come to him, bringing
an odd sense of happiness, and early this morning
the first consciousness of loss, that had made him
tighten his arm hard about his brother, had been followed
by that feeling of happiness, indefinable at first,
but soon traced to the thought of Margaret. For
the first time in his life he thought of her unrelated
to Barney. He had always loved Margaret, rejoiced
in her high spirit, her courage, her downright sincerity,
her deep heart, but never for himself, always for
Barney. The first resentment that Barney should
have passed her by for one like Iola had given way
to a timid fluttering of heart that strengthened and
deepened to a great joy that the way to Margaret for
him stood open. For himself, now, he might love
her. With such marvellous swiftness does love
work that, when his mother bade him go “pay
his duty to the minister,” his heart responded
with so great a leap of joy that he found himself
glancing quickly at the faces of those about him,
sure that they must have noticed.
And now he was on his way to Margaret.
It was as if he had to make acquaintance of her.
He wondered how she would greet him and he wondered
what he should say to her. What would she be doing
now? He glanced at his watch. It was just
ten o’clock. The morning work would be done.
She might come for a little stroll in the woods at
the back of the manse, but he would say nothing to
her to-day. He would wait and watch to read her
heart. He sprang up the bank, that ran along beside
the fence, to go on his way. A gleam of white
through the snake fence against the pink of the clover
caught his eye. Under the thorn tree he
knew the spot well and upon the grass,
lay a girl. “By Jove!” he whispered,
his heart stopping, thumping, then rushing, “it
is Margaret.” He would creep up and surprise
her. The deep grass deadened his footfalls.
He was close to her. He held his breath.
She lay asleep, one arm under her head, the other
flung wide in an abandonment of weariness. He
stood gazing down upon her. Pale she looked to
him, and thin and weary. The lines about her
mouth and eyes spoke of cares and of griefs, too.
How much older she was than he had thought! “Poor
girl! she has been having a hard time! It’s
a shame, a downright shame! And she’s only
a child yet!” At the thought of her long sacrifice
for those three past years a great pity stole into
his heart. At that touch of pity the love that
had ever filled his heart, dammed back for so long
by his regard for his brother’s rights, suddenly
finding its new channel, burst forth and swept like
a torrent through his being. He lost grip of himself
and, before he knew, he had bent over the sleeping
girl and kissed her lips. A long shivering sigh
shook her. “Barney,” she murmured,
a slight smile playing about her lips. She opened
her eyes. A moment she lay looking up into Dick’s
face, then, suddenly wide awake, she sat upright.
“You! Dick!” she
cried, surprise, indignation, shame, mingling in her
voice. “You you dare to ”
“Yes, Margaret,” said
Dick, aghast at what he had done, “I couldn’t
help it. You looked so sweet and so sad, and and
I love you so much.”
“You,” cried the girl
again, as if she could find no other word. “What
did you say?”
“I said, Margaret,” he
replied, gathering his courage together, “that
I love you so much.”
“You love me?” she gasped.
“Yes, I love you. I never knew till last
night.”
“Last night?” she echoed,
with her eyes upon his face, now grown pale, but illuminated
with a light she had never seen there before.
“Yes, last night. It was
always there, Margaret,” he hurried to say,
“but only last night I found out I might love
you. I never let myself go. I thought I
had no right. I mean I thought Barney ”
At the mention of his brother’s name, the face
that had been white with a look almost of horror flamed
quickly with red. “Last night,” continued
Dick, wondering at the change in her, “I found
out, and this morning, Margaret, the whole world is
just humming with joy because I know I may love you
all I want to. Oh, it’s great! I never
imagined a fellow could hold so much love or so much
joy. Do you understand me, Margaret? Do
you knew what I am talking about?” Margaret’s
face had grown pale and haggard, as with pain, and
her eyes were wide open with pity.
“Yes, Dick,” she said
slowly, “I know. I have just been learning.”
The brave lips quivered, but she kept firm hold of
herself. “I know all the joy and all
the pain.” She stopped short at the look
in Dick’s face. The buoyant, glad light
flickered and went out. A look of perplexity,
of great fear, and then of desolation, like that on
her own face, spread over his. He knew her too
well to misunderstand her meaning. She leaned
over to him, still kneeling in the grass. “Oh,
Dick, dear!” she cried, taking his hand in hers
with a mother-touch and tone, “must you suffer,
too? Oh, don’t say you must! Not with
my pain, Dick! Not with my pain!” Her voice
rose in a cry, broke into a sob, but still she held
him with her eyes.
“Do you say I must?” he
answered in a hoarse tone. “I love you with
all my heart.”
“Oh, don’t Dick, dear,” she pleaded,
“don’t say it!”
“Yes, I will,” he said,
recovering his voice, “because it’s true.
And I’m glad it’s true. I’m
glad that I can at last let myself love you. It
was only last night when Barney told me about Iola,
you know.”
“Yes, yes,” she said hurriedly.
“I had always thought that it
was you, and I was glad to think so for Barney.
But last night” here a quick flash
of joy came into his face at the memory “I
found out, and this morning I could hardly help shouting
it as I came along to you.” He paused, and,
leaning toward her, he took her hand. “Don’t
you think, Margaret, you might perhaps some time.”
The piteous entreaty in his voice broke down the girl’s
proud courage.
“Oh, Dick! Oh, Dick!”
she sobbed, “don’t! Don’t ask
me!” Her sobs came tempestuously.
He put his arms about her and, stroking
her yellow hair, gently said, “Never mind, little
girl. Don’t do that! I can’t
stand that, and well, I won’t bother
you a bit with my affair. Don’t think about
me. I’ll get hold of myself. There
now hush, hush, girlie. Don’t
cry like that!” He held her close to him, caressing
her till she grew quiet.
At length she drew away, saying, “I
don’t know why I should act like this.
I haven’t cried for a year. I think I am
tired. It has been a hard winter, Dick.
They used to play and sing together for hours.
Oh, it was wonderful music, but I could have shrieked
aloud. Don’t think me horrid,” she
went on hurriedly. “I wonder I am not ashamed
to tell you. But I never let anyone know, neither
of them nor anyone else. Mind you that, Dick,
no one knows.” She sat up straight, her
courage coming back. “I never meant to
tell you, Dick, but you know you took me unaware.”
A little smile was struggling to the corners of her
mouth and a faint flush touched her pale cheek.
“But I am glad you know. And, Dick, can’t
we go back? Won’t you forget what you have
said?” Dick had been looking at her, wondering
at her courage and self-command, but in his eyes a
look of misery that went to the girl’s heart.
“Forget!” he cried. “Tell me
how.”
She shook her head, and then, reading
his eyes, she cried aloud, “Oh, Dick! must we
go on and on like this?” She pressed her hands
hard upon her heart. “There’s a sore,
sore pain right here,” she said. “Is
there to be no rest, no relief from it? It’s
been there for two years.” She was fast
losing her grip of herself again. Once more he
caught her in his strong brown hands.
“Now, Margaret dear, don’t
do that! We’ll help each other somehow.
God yes, God will help us if He takes any
interest in us at all. He can’t let us
go on like this!”
The words steadied her.
“I know, Dick,” she said,
a sudden quiet falling upon her, “there has
been no one else for all these months, and He has helped
me. He will help you, too. Come,”
she continued, “let us go.”
“No, sit down and talk,”
replied Dick. He looked at his watch. “A
quarter after ten,” he said, in surprise.
“Can the whole world change in one little quarter
of an hour?” he asked, looking up at her, “it
was ten when I stopped at the hill.”
“Come, Dick,” she said
again, “we’ll talk another time, I can’t
trust myself just now. I was going to your mother’s.”
But Dick remained kneeling in the
grass where he was. It seemed to him as if he
had been in some strange land remote from this common
life, and he shrank from contact with the ordinary
day and its ordinary doings.
“I can’t, Margaret,”
he said. “You go. Let me fight it out.”
She knew too well where he was.
“No, Dick, I will not leave you here. Come,
do.” She went quickly to him, kneeled down,
put her arms about his neck and kissed him. “Help
me, Dick,” she whispered.
It was the word he needed. He
threw his arms about her, kissed her once, and then,
as if seized with a frenzy of passion, he kissed, again
and again, her hair, her face, her hands, her lips,
murmuring in hoarse, passionate tones, “I love
you! I love you!” For a few moments she
suffered him, and then gently pushed him back and drew
apart from him. Her action recalled him to himself.
“Forgive me, Margaret,”
he cried brokenly, “I’m a great, selfish
brute. I think only of myself. Now I’m
ready to go. And when I weaken again, don’t
think me quite a cad.”
He sprang up, threw back his shoulders
as if adjusting them to a load, gave her his hand,
and lifted her up, and together they set off down the
lane, the shadow a little lighter as each felt the
other near.