OR, HOW I NEARLY LOST MY HUSBAND
(Narrated after the approved fashion
of the best Heart and Home Magazines)
It was after we had been married about
two years that I began to feel that I needed more
air. Every time I looked at John across the breakfast-table,
I felt as if I must have more air, more space.
I seemed to feel as if I had no room
to expand. I had begun to ask myself whether
I had been wise in marrying John, whether John was
really sufficient for my development. I felt
cramped and shut in. In spite of myself the question
would arise in my mind whether John really understood
my nature. He had a way of reading the newspaper,
propped up against the sugar-bowl, at breakfast, that
somehow made me feel as if things had gone all wrong.
It was bitter to realize that the time had come when
John could prefer the newspaper to his wife’s
society.
But perhaps I had better go back and
tell the whole miserable story from the beginning.
I shall never forget I
suppose no woman ever does the evening when
John first spoke out his love for me. I had felt
for some time past that it was there. Again and
again, he seemed about to speak. But somehow his
words seemed to fail him. Twice I took him into
the very heart of the little wood beside Mother’s
house, but it was only a small wood, and somehow he
slipped out on the other side. “Oh, John,”
I had said, “how lonely and still it seems in
the wood with no one here but ourselves! Do you
think,” I said, “that the birds have souls?”
“I don’t know,” John answered, “let’s
get out of this.” I was sure that his emotion
was too strong for him. “I never feel a
bit lonesome where you are, John,” I said, as
we made our way among the underbrush. “I
think we can get out down that little gully,”
he answered. Then one evening in June after tea
I led John down a path beside the house to a little
corner behind the garden where there was a stone wall
on one side and a high fence right in front of us,
and thorn bushes on the other side. There was
a little bench in the angle of the wall and the fence,
and we sat down on it.
“Minnie,” John said, “there’s
something I meant to say ”
“Oh, John,” I cried, and
I flung my arms round his neck. It all came with
such a flood of surprise.
“All I meant, Minn ”
John went on, but I checked him.
“Oh, don’t, John, don’t
say anything more,” I said. “It’s
just too perfect.” Then I rose and seized
him by the wrist. “Come,” I said,
“come to Mother,” and I rushed him along
the path.
As soon as Mother saw us come in hand
in hand in this way, she guessed everything.
She threw both her arms round John’s neck and
fairly pinned him against the wall. John tried
to speak, but Mother wouldn’t let him.
“I saw it all along, John,” she said.
“Don’t speak. Don’t say a word.
I guessed your love for Minn from the very start.
I don’t know what I shall do without her, John,
but she’s yours now; take her.” Then
Mother began to cry and I couldn’t help crying
too. “Take him to Father,” Mother
said, and we each took one of John’s wrists and
took him to Father on the back verandah. As soon
as John saw Father he tried to speak again “I
think I ought to say,” he began, but Mother stopped
him. “Father,” she said, “he
wants to take our little girl away. He loves her
very dearly, Alfred,” she said, “and I
think it our duty to let her go, no matter how hard
it is, and oh, please Heaven, Alfred, he’ll treat
her well and not misuse her, or beat her,” and
she began to sob again.
Father got up and took John by the
hand and shook it warmly.
“Take her, boy,” he said.
“She’s all yours now, take her.”
So John and I were engaged, and in
due time our wedding day came and we were married.
I remember that for days and days before the wedding
day John seemed very nervous and depressed; I think
he was worrying, poor boy, as to whether he could
really make me happy and whether he could fill my
life as it should be filled. But I told him that
he was not to worry, because I meant to be
happy, and was determined just to make the best of
everything.
Father stayed with John a good deal
before the wedding day, and on the wedding morning
he went and fetched him to the church in a closed
carriage and had him there all ready when we came.
It was a beautiful day in September, and the church
looked just lovely. I had a beautiful gown of
white organdie with tulle at the throat, and
I carried a great bunch of white roses, and Father
led John up the aisle after me.
I remember that Mother cried a good
deal at the wedding, and told John that he had stolen
her darling and that he must never misuse me or beat
me. And I remember that the clergyman spoke very
severely to John, and told him he hoped he realized
the responsibility he was taking and that it was his
duty to make me happy. A lot of our old friends
were there, and they all spoke quite sharply to John,
and all the women kissed me and said they hoped I
would never regret what I had done, and I just kept
up my spirits by sheer determination, and told them
that I had made up my mind to be happy and that I
was going to be so.
So presently it was all over and we
were driven to the station and got the afternoon train
for New York, and when we sat down in the compartment
among all our bandboxes and flowers, John said, “Well,
thank God, that’s over.” And I said,
“Oh, John, an oath! on our wedding day, an oath!”
John said, “I’m sorry, Minn, I didn’t
mean ” but I said, “Don’t,
John, don’t make it worse. Swear at me if
you must, but don’t make it harder to bear.”
We spent our honeymoon in New York.
At first I had thought of going somewhere to the great
lonely woods, where I could have walked under the
great trees and felt the silence of nature, and where
John should have been my Viking and captured me with
his spear, and where I should be his and his alone
and no other man should share me; and John had said
all right. Or else I had planned to go away somewhere
to the seashore, where I could have watched the great
waves dashing themselves against the rocks. I
had told John that he should be my cave man, and should
seize me in his arms and carry me whither he would.
I felt somehow that for my development I wanted to
get as close to nature as ever I could that
my mind seemed to be reaching out for a great emptiness.
But I looked over all the hotel and steamship folders
I could find and it seemed impossible to get good
accommodation, so we came to New York. I had
a great deal of shopping to do for our new house, so
I could not be much with John, but I felt it was not
right to neglect him, so I drove him somewhere in
a taxi each morning and called for him again in the
evening. One day I took him to the Metropolitan
Museum, and another day I left him at the Zoo, and
another day at the aquarium. John seemed very
happy and quiet among the fishes.
So presently we came back home, and
I spent many busy days in fixing and arranging our
new house. I had the drawing-room done in blue,
and the dining-room all in dark panelled wood, and
a boudoir upstairs done in pink and white enamel to
match my bedroom and dressing-room. There was
a very nice little room in the basement next to the
coal cellar that I turned into a “den”
for John, so that when he wanted to smoke he could
go down there and do it. John seemed to appreciate
his den at once, and often would stay down there so
long that I had to call to him to come up.
When I look back on those days they
seem very bright and happy. But it was not very
long before a change came. I began to realize
that John was neglecting me. I noticed it at
first in small things. I don’t know just
how long it was after our marriage that John began
to read the newspaper at breakfast. At first
he would only pick it up and read it in little bits,
and only on the front page. I tried not to be
hurt at it, and would go on talking just as brightly
as I could, without seeming to notice anything.
But presently he went on to reading the inside part
of the paper, and then one day he opened up the financial
page and folded the paper right back and leant it
against the sugar-bowl.
I could not but wonder whether John’s
love for me was what it had been. Was it cooling?
I asked myself. And what was cooling it?
It hardly seemed possible, when I looked back to the
wild passion with which he had proposed to me on the
garden bench, that John’s love was waning.
But I kept noticing different little things.
One day in the spring-time I saw John getting out
a lot of fishing tackle from a box and fitting it
together. I asked him what he was going to do,
and he said that he was going to fish. I went
to my room and had a good cry. It seemed dreadful
that he could neglect his wife for a few worthless
fish.
So I decided to put John to the test.
It had been my habit every morning after he put his
coat on to go to the office to let John have one kiss,
just one weeny kiss, to keep him happy all day.
So this day when he was getting ready I bent my head
over a big bowl of flowers and pretended not to notice.
I think John must have been hurt, as I heard him steal
out on tiptoe.
Well, I realized that things had come
to a dreadful state, and so I sent over to Mother,
and Mother came, and we had a good cry together.
I made up my mind to force myself to face things and
just to be as bright as ever I could. Mother
and I both thought that things would be better if I
tried all I could to make something out of John.
I have always felt that every woman should make all
that she can out of her husband. So I did my
best first of all to straighten up John’s appearance.
I shifted the style of collar he was wearing to a
tighter kind that I liked better, and I brushed his
hair straight backward instead of forward, which gave
him a much more alert look. Mother said that John
needed waking up, and so we did all we could to wake
him up. Mother came over to stay with me a good
deal, and in the evenings we generally had a little
music or a game of cards.
About this time another difficulty
began to come into my married life, which I suppose
I ought to have foreseen I mean the attentions
of other gentlemen. I have always called forth
a great deal of admiration in gentlemen, but I have
always done my best to act like a lady and to discourage
it in every possible way. I had been innocent
enough to suppose that this would end with married
life, and it gave me a dreadful shock to realize that
such was not the case. The first one I noticed
was a young man who came to the house, at an hour
when John was out, for the purpose, so he said at
least, of reading the gas meter. He looked at
me in just the boldest way and asked me to show him
the way to the cellar. I don’t know whether
it was a pretext or not, but I just summoned all the
courage I had and showed him to the head of the cellar
stairs. I had determined that if he tried to
carry me down with him I would scream for the servants,
but I suppose something in my manner made him desist,
and he went alone. When he came up he professed
to have read the meter and he left the house quite
quietly. But I thought it wiser to say nothing
to John of what had happened.
There were others too. There
was a young man with large brown eyes who came and
said he had been sent to tune the piano. He came
on three separate days, and he bent his ear over the
keys in such a mournful way that I knew he must have
fallen in love with me. On the last day he offered
to tune my harp for a dollar extra, but I refused,
and when I asked him instead to tune Mother’s
mandoline he said he didn’t know how.
Of course I told John nothing of all this.
Then there was Mr. McQueen, who came
to the house several times to play cribbage with John.
He had been desperately in love with me years before at
least I remember his taking me home from a hockey match
once, and what a struggle it was for him not to come
into the parlour and see Mother for a few minutes
when I asked him; and, though he was married now and
with three children, I felt sure when he came to play
cribbage with John that it meant something.
He was very discreet and honourable, and never betrayed
himself for a moment, and I acted my part as if there
was nothing at all behind. But one night, when
he came over to play and John had had to go out, he
refused to stay even for an instant. He had got
his overshoes off before I told him that John was
out, and asked him if he wouldn’t come into the
parlour and hear Mother play the mandoline, but
he just made one dive for his overshoes and was gone.
I knew that he didn’t dare to trust himself.
Then presently a new trouble came.
I began to suspect that John was drinking. I
don’t mean for a moment that he was drunk, or
that he was openly cruel to me. But at times
he seemed to act so queerly, and I noticed that one
night when by accident I left a bottle of raspberry
vinegar on the sideboard overnight, it was all gone
in the morning. Two or three times when McQueen
and John were to play cribbage, John would fetch home
two or three bottles of bevo with him and they
would sit sipping all evening.
I think he was drinking bevo
by himself, too, though I could never be sure of it.
At any rate he often seemed queer and restless in the
evenings, and instead of staying in his den he would
wander all over the house. Once we heard him I
mean Mother and I and two lady friends who were with
us that evening quite late (after ten o’clock)
apparently moving about in the pantry. “John,”
I called, “is that you?” “Yes, Minn,”
he answered, quietly enough, I admit. “What
are you doing there?” I asked. “Looking
for something to eat,” he said. “John,”
I said, “you are forgetting what is due to me
as your wife. You were fed at six. Go back.”
He went. But yet I felt more
and more that his love must be dwindling to make him
act as he did. I thought it all over wearily enough
and asked myself whether I had done everything I should
to hold my husband’s love. I had kept him
in at nights. I had cut down his smoking.
I had stopped his playing cards. What more was
there that I could do?
So at last the conviction came to
me that I must go away. I felt that I must get
away somewhere and think things out. At first
I thought of Palm Beach, but the season had not opened
and I felt somehow that I couldn’t wait.
I wanted to get away somewhere by myself and just face
things as they were. So one morning I said to
John, “John, I think I’d like to go off
somewhere for a little time, just to be by myself,
dear, and I don’t want you to ask to come with
me or to follow me, but just let me go.”
John said, “All right, Minn. When are you
going to start?” The cold brutality of it cut
me to the heart, and I went upstairs and had a good
cry and looked over steamship and railroad folders.
I thought of Havana for a while, because the pictures
of the harbour and the castle and the queer Spanish
streets looked so attractive, but then I was afraid
that at Havana a woman alone by herself might be simply
persecuted by attentions from gentlemen. They
say the Spanish temperament is something fearful.
So I decided on Bermuda instead. I felt that in
a beautiful, quiet place like Bermuda I could think
everything all over and face things, and it said on
the folder that there were always at least two English
regiments in garrison there, and the English officers,
whatever their faults, always treat a woman with the
deepest respect.
So I said nothing more to John, but
in the next few days I got all my arrangements made
and my things packed. And when the last afternoon
came I sat down and wrote John a long letter, to leave
on my boudoir table, telling him that I had gone to
Bermuda. I told him that I wanted to be alone:
I said that I couldn’t tell when I would be back that
it might be months, or it might be years, and I hoped
that he would try to be as happy as he could and forget
me entirely, and to send me money on the first of
every month.
Well, it was just at that moment that
one of those strange coincidences happen, little things
in themselves, but which seem to alter the whole course
of a person’s life. I had nearly finished
the letter to John that I was to leave on the writing-desk,
when just then the maid came up to my room with a
telegram. It was for John, but I thought it my
duty to open it and read it for him before I left.
And I nearly fainted when I saw that it was from a
lawyer in Bermuda of all places and
it said that a legacy of two hundred thousand dollars
had been left to John by an uncle of his who had died
there, and asking for instructions about the disposition
of it.
A great wave seemed to sweep over
me, and all the wicked thoughts that had been in my
mind for I saw now that they were
wicked were driven clean away. I thought
how completely lost poor old John would feel if all
this money came to him and he didn’t have to
work any more and had no one at his side to help and
guide him in using it.
I tore up the wicked letter I had
written, and I hurried as fast as I could to pack
up a valise with John’s things (my own were packed
already, as I said). Then presently John came
in, and I broke the news to him as gently and as tenderly
as I could about his uncle having left him the money
and having died. I told him that I had found out
all about the trains and the Bermuda steamer, and
had everything all packed and ready for us to leave
at once. John seemed a little dazed about it
all, and kept saying that his uncle had taught him
to play tennis when he was a little boy, and he was
very grateful and thankful to me for having everything
arranged, and thought it wonderful.
I had time to telephone to a few of
my women friends, and they just managed to rush round
for a few minutes to say good-bye. I couldn’t
help crying a little when I told them about John’s
uncle dying so far away with none of us near him,
and I told them about the legacy, and they cried a
little to hear of it all; and when I told them that
John and I might not come back direct from Bermuda,
but might take a run over to Europe first, they all
cried some more.
We left for New York that evening,
and after we had been to Bermuda and arranged about
a suitable monument for John’s uncle and collected
the money, we sailed for Europe.
All through the happy time that has
followed, I like to think that through all our trials
and difficulties affliction brought us safely together
at last.