by Myrtle Reed
VI
A Letter
[Sidenote: Discouraging Prospects]
Miriam had come home disappointed and secretly afraid to hope for anytangible results from Miss Wynne's promised visit. Nevertheless, shetold Barbara.
"Wouldn't any of them even look at it, Aunty?"
"One of them would have looked at it and rumpled it so that I'd have hadto iron it again, but she wouldn't have bought anything. This young ladysaid she was busy just then, and she wanted to come up and look over allthe things at her leisure. She won't pay much, though, even if she buysanything. She said the price was 'ridiculous.'"
"Perhaps she meant it was too low," suggested Barbara.
"Possibly," answered Miriam. Her tone indicated that it was equallypossible for canary birds to play the piano, or for ducks to sing.
"How does she look?" queried Barbara.
"Well enough." Enthusiasm was not one of Miriam's attractions.
"What did she have on?"
"White. Linen, I think."
"Then she knows good material. Was her gown tailor-made?"
"Might have been. Why?"
"Because if her white linen gowns are tailored she has money and is usedto spending it for clothes. I'm sure she meant the price was too low.Did she say when she was coming?"
"Next week. She didn't say what day."
[Sidenote: Waiting]
"Then," sighed Barbara, "all we can do is to wait."
"We'll wait until she comes, or has had time to. In the meantime, I'mgoing to show my quilts to those old ladies and take down a jar or twoof preserves. I wish you'd write to the people who left orders lastyear, and ask if they want preserves or jam or jelly, or pickles, orquilts, or anything. It would be nice to get some orders in before webuy the fruit."
Barbara put down her book, asked for the pen and ink, and wentcheerfully to work, with the aid of Aunt Miriam's small memorandum bookwhich contained a list of addresses.
"What colour is her hair, Aunty?" she asked, as she blotted and turnedher first neat page.
"A good deal the colour of that old copper tea-kettle that a woman paidsix dollars for once, do you remember? I've always thought she wascrazy, for she wouldn't even let me clean it."
"And her eyes?"
"Brown and big, with long lashes. She looks well enough, and her voiceis pleasant, and I must say she has nice ways. She didn't make me feellike a peddler, as so many of them do. P'raps she'll come," admittedMiriam, grudgingly.
"Oh, I hope so. I'd love to see her and her pretty clothes, even if shedidn't buy anything." Barbara threw back a golden braid impatiently,wishing it were copper-coloured and had smooth, shiny waves in it,instead of fluffing out like an undeserved halo.
While Barbara was writing, her father came in and sat down near her."More sewing, dear?" he asked, wistfully.
[Sidenote: Writing Letters]
"No, Daddy, not this time. I'm just writing letters."
"I didn't know you ever got any letters--do you?"
"Oh, yes--sometimes. The people at the hotel come up to call once in awhile, you know, and after they go away, Aunt Miriam and I occasionallyexchange letters with them. It's nice to get letters."
The old man's face changed. "Are you lonely, dear?"
"Lonely?" repeated Barbara, laughing; "why I don't even know what theword means. I have you and my books and my sewing and these letters towrite, and I can sit in the window and nod to people who go by--howcould I be lonely, Daddy?"
"I want you to be happy, dear."
"So I am," returned the girl, trying hard to make her voice even. "Withyou, and everything a girl could want, why shouldn't I be happy?"
Miriam went out, closing the door quietly, and the blind man drew hischair very near to Barbara.
[Sidenote: Dreaming]
"I dream," he said, "and I keep on dreaming that you can walk and I cansee. What do you suppose it means? I never dreamed it before."
"We all have dreams, Daddy. I've had the same one very often ever sinceI was a little child. It's about a tower made of cologne bottles, with acupola of lovely glass arches, built on the white sand by the blue sea.Inside is a winding stairway hung with tapestries, leading to the cupolawhere the golden bells are. There are lovely rooms on every floor, andyou can stop wherever you please."
"It sounds like a song," he mused.
"Perhaps it is. Can't you make one of it?"
"No--we each have to make our own. I made one this morning."
"Tell me, please."
[Sidenote: Love Never Lost]
"It is about love. When God made the world, He put love in, and none ofit has ever been lost. It is simply transferred from one person toanother. Sometimes it takes a different form, and becomes a deed, which,at first, may not look as if it were made of love, but, in reality, is.
"Love blossoms in flowers, sings in moving waters, fills the forest withbirds, and makes all the wonderful music of Spring. It puts the colourupon the robin's breast, scents the orchard with far-reaching drifts ofbloom, and scatters the pink and white petals over the grass beneath.Through love the flower changes to fruit, and the birds sing lullabiesat twilight instead of mating songs.
"It is at the root of everything good in all the world, and where thingsare wrong, it is only because sometime, somewhere, there has not beenenough love. The balance has been uneven and some have had too muchwhile others were starving for it. As the lack of food stunts the body,so the denial of love warps the soul.
"But God has made it so that love given must unfailingly come back anhundred-fold; the more we give, the richer we are. And Heaven is only aplace where the things that have gone wrong here will at last comeright. Is it not so, Barbara?"
"Surely, Daddy."
"Then," he continued, anxiously, "all my loving must come back to mesometime, somewhere. I think it will be right, for God Himself is Love."
The blind man's sensitive fingers lovingly sought Barbara's face. Histouch was a caress. "I am sure you are like your dear mother," he said,softly. "If I could know that she died loving me, and if I could see herface again, just for an instant, why, all the years of loving, with noanswer, would be fully repaid."
"She loved you, Daddy--I know she did."
[Sidenote: The Old Doubt]
"I know, too, but not always. Sometimes the old, tormenting doubt comesback to me."
"It shouldn't--mother would never have meant you to doubt her."
"Barbara," cried the old man, with sudden passion, "if you ever love aman, never let him doubt you--always let him be sure. There is so muchin a man's world that a woman knows nothing of. When he comes home atnight, tired beyond words, and sick to death of the world and its ways,make him sure. When he thinks himself defeated, make him sure. When yousee him tempted to swerve even the least from the straight path, makehim sure. When the last parting comes, if he is leaving you, give himthe certainty to take with him into his narrow house, and make his lastsleep sweet. And if you are the one to go first, and leave him, old anddesolate and stricken, oh, Barbara, make him sure then--make him verysure."
[Sidenote: A String of Pearls]
The girl's hand closed tightly upon his. He leaned over to pat her cheekand stroke the heavy braids of silken hair. Then he felt the strand ofbeads around her neck.
"You have on your mother's pearls," he said. His fine old face illuminedas he touched the tawdry trinket.
Barbara swallowed the hard lump in her throat. "Yes, Daddy." They hadlived for years upon that single strand of large, perfectly matchedpearls which Ambrose North had clasped around his young wife's neck upontheir wedding day.
"Would you like more pearls, dear? A bracelet, or a ring?"
"No--these are all I want."
"I want to give you a diamond ring some day, Barbara. Your mother's wasburied with her. It was her engagement ring."
"Perhaps somebody will give me an engagement ring," she suggested.
"I shouldn't wonder. I don't want to be selfish, dear. Yo
u are all I have,but, if you loved a man, I wouldn't try to keep you away from him."
"Prince Charming hasn't come yet, Daddy, so cheer up. I'll tell you whenhe does."
Thus she turned the talk into a happier vein. They were laughingtogether like two children when Miriam came in to say that supper wasready.
[Sidenote: Alone]
Afterward, he sat at the piano, improvising low, sweet chords thatechoed back plaintively from the dingy walls. The music was full ofquestioning, of pleading, of longing so deep that it was almost prayer.Barbara finished her letters by the light of the lamp, while Miriam satin the dining-room alone, asking herself the old, torturing questions,facing her temptation, and bearing the old, terrible hunger of the heartthat hurt her like physical pain.
A little before nine o'clock, the blind man came to kiss Barbaragood-night. Then he went upstairs. Miriam came in and talked a fewminutes of quilts, pickles, and lingerie, then she, too, went up tobegin her usual restless night.
Left alone, Barbara discovered that she did not care to read. It was toolate to begin work upon the new stock of linen, lawn, and batiste whichhad come the day before, and she lacked the impulse, in the face of suchdiscouraging prospects as Aunt Miriam had encountered at the hotel.Barbara steadily refused to admit, even to herself, that she wasdiscouraged, but she found no pleasure in the thought of her work.
[Sidenote: A Light in the Window]
She unfastened the front door, lighted a candle, and set it upon thesill of the front window. Within twenty minutes Roger had come, enteringthe house so quietly that Barbara did not hear his step and wasfrightened when she saw him.
"Don't scream," he said, as he closed the door leading into the hall."I'm not a burglar--only a struggling young law student with noprospects and even less hope."
"I infer," said Barbara, "that the Bascom liver is out of repair."
"Correct. It seems absurd, doesn't it, to be affected by another man'sliver while you are supremely unconscious of your own?"
"There are more things in other people's digestions than our philosophycan account for," she replied, with a wicked perversion of classicphrase. "What was the primary cause of the explosion?"
"It was all his own fault," explained Roger. "I like dogs almost as wellas I do people, but it doesn't follow that dogs should mix so constantlywith people as they usually are allowed to. I was never in favour ofJudge Bascom's bull pup keeping regular office hours with us, but hehas, ever since the day he waddled in behind the Judge with a smallchain as the connecting link. I got so accustomed to his howling in thecorner of the office where he was chained up that I couldn't do my workproperly when he was asleep. So all went well until the Judge decided toremove the chain and give the pup more room to develop himself in.
[Sidenote: "Pethood"]
"I tried to dissuade him, but it was no use. I told him he would runaway, and he said, with great dignity, that he did not desire for a petanything which had to be tied up in order to be retained. He observedthat the restraining influence worked against the pethood so strongly aspractically to obscure it."
"New word?" laughed Barbara.
"I don't know why it isn't a good word," returned Roger, in defence. "If'manhood' and 'womanhood' and 'brotherhood' and all the other 'hoods'are good English, I see no reason why 'pethood' shouldn't be used in thesame sense. The English language needs a lot of words added to it beforeit can be called complete."
"One wouldn't think so, judging by the size of the dictionary. However,we'll let it pass. Go on with the story."
"Things have been lively for a week or more. The pup has romped around agood deal and has playfully bitten a client or two, but the Judge hasbeen highly edified until to-day. Fido got an important legal documentwhich the Judge had just drafted, and literally chewed it to pulp. Thenhe swallowed it, apparently with great relish. I was told to makeanother, and my not knowing about it, and taking the liberty of asking afew necessary questions, produced the fireworks. It wasn't Fido's fault,but mine."
"How is Fido?" queried Barbara, with affected anxiety.
"He was well at last accounts, but the document was long enough andcomplicated enough to make him very ill. I hope he'll die of itto-morrow."
"Perhaps he's going to study law, too," remarked Barbara, "and believes,with Macaulay, that 'a page digested is better than a book hurriedlyread.'"
"I think that will do, Miss North. I'll read to you now, if you don'tmind. I would fain improve myself instead of listening to such childishchatter."
"Perhaps, if you read to me enough, I'll improve so that even you willenjoy talking to me," she returned, with a mischievous smile. "What didyou bring over?"
[Sidenote: A New Book]
"A new book--that is, one that we've never seen before. There is a largebox of father's books behind some trunks in the attic, and I never foundthem until Sunday, when I was rummaging around up there. I haven't readthem--I thought I'd make a list of them first, and you can choose thoseyou'd like to have me read to you. I brought this little one becauseI was sure you'd like it, after reading _Endymion_ and _The Eve of St.Agnes_."
"What is it?"
"Keats's letters to Fanny Brawne."
The little brown book was old and its corners were dog-eared, but theyellowed pages, with their record of a deathless passion, were stillwarmly human and alive. Roger had a deep, pleasant voice, and he readwell. Quite apart from the beauty of the letters, it gave Barbarapleasure to sit in the firelight and watch his face.
[Sidenote: A Folded Paper]
He read steadily, pausing now and then for comment, until he washalf-way through the volume; then, as he turned a page, a folded paperfell out. He picked it up curiously.
"Why, Barbara," he said, in astonishment. "It's my father's writing."
"What is it--notes?"
"No, he seems to have been trying to write a letter like those in thebook. It is all in pencil, with changes and erasures here and there.Listen:
[Sidenote: The Letter]
"'You are right, as you always are, and we must never see each other again. We must live near each other for the rest of our lives, with that consciousness between us. We must pass each other on the street and not speak unless others are with us; then we must bow, pleasantly, for the sake of appearances.
"'I hope you do not blame me because I went mad. I ask your pardon, and yet I cannot say I am sorry. That one hour of confession is worth a lifetime of waiting--it is worth all the husks that we are to have henceforward while we starve for more.
"'Through all the years to come, we shall be separated by less than a mile, yet the world lies between us and divides us as by a glittering sword. You will not be unfaithful to your pledge, nor I to mine. Nothing is changed there. It is only that two people chose to live in the starlight and bound themselves to it eternally, then had one blinding glimpse of God's great sun.
"'But, Constance, the stars are the same as always, and we must try to forget that we have seen the sun. The little lights of the temple must be the more faithfully tended if the Great Light goes out. When the white splendour fades, we must be content with the misty gold of night, and not mind the shadows nor the great desolate spaces where not even starlight comes. Your star and mine met for an instant, then were sundered as widely as the poles, but the light of each must be kept steadfast and clear, because of the other.
"'I do not know that I shall have the courage to send this letter. Everything was said when I told you that I love you, for that one word holds it all and there is nothing more. As you can take your heart in the hollow of your hand and hold it, it is so small a thing; so the one word 'love' holds everything that can be said, or given, or
hungered for, or prayed for and denied.
"'And if, sometimes, in the starlight, we dream of the sun, we must remember that both sun and stars are God's. Past the unutterable leagues that divide us now, one day we shall meet again, purged, mayhap, of earthly longing for earthly love.
"'But Heaven, for me, would be the hour I held you close again. I should ask nothing more than to tell you once more, face to face and heart to heart, the words I write now: I love you--I love you--I love you.'"
[Sidenote: A Discovery]
Roger put down the book and stared fixedly at the fire. Barbara's facewas very pale and the light had gone from her eyes.
"Roger," she said, in a strange tone, "Constance was my mother's name.Do you think----"
He was startled, for his thought had not gone so far as her intuition."I--do--not--know," he said.
"They knew each other," Barbara went on, swiftly, "for the two familieshave always lived here, in these same two houses where you and I wereborn. It was only a step across the road, and they----"
[Sidenote: A Barrier]
She choked back a sob. Something new and terrible seemed to have sprungup suddenly between her and Roger.
The blood beat hard in his ears and his own words sounded dull and faraway. "It is dated June third," he said.
"My mother died on the seventh," said Barbara, slowly,"by--her--own--hand."
They sat in silence for a long time. Then, speaking of indifferentthings, they tried to get back upon the old friendly footing again, butfailed miserably. There was a consciousness as of guilt, on either side.
Roger tried not to think of it. Later, when he was alone, he would goover it all and try to reason it out--try to discover if it were true.Barbara did not need to do this, for, with a woman's quick insight, sheknew.
Secretly, too, both were ashamed, having come unawares upon knowledgethat was not meant for them. Presently, Roger went home, and was glad tobe alone in the free outer air; but, long after he was gone, Barbara satin the dark, her heart aching with the burden of her father's doubt andher dead mother's secret.