The Romance of a Plain Man

Home > Other > The Romance of a Plain Man > Page 25
The Romance of a Plain Man Page 25

by Ellen Anderson Gholson Glasgow


  CHAPTER XXV

  WE FACE THE FACTS AND EACH OTHER

  The panic which had begun with the depositors of small accounts, spreadnext day to the holders of larger ones, and even while I stood at mywindow and watched the cash brought in in bags through the cheeringcrowd on the sidewalk, I knew that the quarter of a million dollarswould go down with the rest. My financial insight had misled me, and thebank funds, which I had believed so carefully guarded, had suffered thesame fate as my private fortune. There were more serious questionsbehind the immediate need of currency, and these questions drummed in mymind now, dull and regular as the beat of a hammer.

  For three days we paid off our accounts, and at the end of that time,when I left the building, after the run had stopped, it seemed to methat the city had a deserted and trampled look, as if some enormouspicnic had been held in the streets. A few loose shreds of paper, abanana peel here and there, the ends of numerous cigars, and the whitepatch torn from a woman's petticoat littered the pavement. Over allthere was a thick coating of dust, and the wind, blowing straight fromthe east, whipped swirls of it into our faces, as the General and Idrove slowly up-town in his buggy.

  "You look down in the mouth, Ben," he remarked, as I took the reins.

  "I've got an infernal toothache, General; it kept me awake all night."

  "Well, bless my soul, you ought to be thankful if it takes your mind offthe country. I haven't seen such a state of affairs since the days ofreconstruction. I tell you, my boy, the only thing on earth to do is totake a julep. Lithia water is well enough in times of prosperity, butyou can't support a panic on it. I've gone back to my julep, and if Idie of it, I'll die with a little spirit in me."

  "There're worse things than death ahead of me, General, there's ruin."

  "It's the toothache, Ben. Don't let it take all the spirit out of you."

  "No, it's more than the toothache, confound it!--it never leaves off.The truth is, I'm in the tightest place of my life, and to keep what Iown would cost me more than I've got. I haven't the money to pay up--andif I can't buy outright, you see that I must let go."

  "I've done what I could for you, Ben, and if there is more I can do,heaven knows I'll be thankful enough."

  "You've already done too much, General, but I've made sure that youshan't suffer by it. I've simply gone down, that's all, and I've got tostay there till I can get on my feet. The bank will close temporarily, Isuppose, but when it starts again, it will have to start with anotherman. I shall look out for a smaller job."

  "If you come back to the road, I'll find a place for you--but it won'tbe like being a bank president, you know."

  "Well, when the time comes, I'll let you know," I added, when the buggystopped before my door, and I handed him the reins.

  "Listen to me, my boy," he called back, as he drove off and I went upthe brown stone steps, "and take a julep."

  But the support I needed was not that of whiskey, and though I swalloweda dozen juleps, the thought of Sally's face when I broke the news wouldsuffer no blessed obscurity.

  "Shall I tell her now, or after dinner?" I asked, while I drew out mylatch-key; and then when she met me at the head of the staircase, withher shining eyes, I grew cowardly again, and said, "Not now--not now.To-night I will tell her."

  At night, when we sat opposite to each other, with a silver bowl ofjonquils between us, she began talking idly about the marriage of BonnyPage, inspired, I felt, by a valiant determination to save the situationin the eyes of the servants at least. The small yellow candle shades,made to resemble flowers, shone like suns in a mist before my eyes; andall the time that my thoughts worked over the approaching hour, I heard,like a muffled undertone, the soft, regular footfalls of old Esdras, thebutler, on the velvet carpet.

  "I'll tell her after the servants have gone, and the house isquiet--when she has taken off her dinner gown--when she may turn on herpillow and cry it out. I'll say simply, 'Sally, I am ruined. I haven't apenny left of my own. Even the horses and the carriages and thefurniture are not mine!' No, that is a brutal way. It will be better toput it like this"--"What did you say, dear?" I asked, speaking aloud.

  "Only that Bonny Page is to have six bridesmaids, but the wedding willbe quiet, because they have lost money."

  "They've lost money?"

  "Everybody has lost money--everybody, the General says. Ben, do youknow," she added, "I've never cared truly about money in my heart."

  In some vague woman's way she meant it, I suppose, yet as I looked ather, where she sat beyond the bowl of jonquils, in one of her old Parisgowns, which she had told me she was wearing out, I broke into a short,mirthless laugh. She held her head high, with its wreath of plaits thatmade a charming frame for her arched black eyebrows and her full redmouth. On her bare throat, round and white as a marble column, there wasan old-fashioned necklace of wrought gold, which had belonged to someancestress, who was doubtless the belle and beauty of her generation.Was it possible to picture her in a common gown, with her sleeves rolledup and the perplexed and anxious look that poverty brings in her eyes?For the first time in my life I was afraid to face the moment before me.

  The roast was removed, the dessert served, and played with in silence.The footfalls of old Esdras, the butler, sounded softer on the carpet,as he carried away the untasted pudding and brought coffee and anapricot brandy, which he placed before me with a persuasive air. I lit acigar at the flame of the little silver lamp he offered me, drank mycoffee hurriedly, and rose from the table.

  "Are you going to work, Ben?" asked Sally, following me to the door ofthe library.

  "Yes, I am going to work."

  Without a word she raised her lips to mine, and when I had kissed her,she turned slowly away, and went up the staircase, with the branchinglights in the hall shining upon her head.

  I closed the door, lowered the wick of the oil lamp on my desk, andbegan walking up and down the length of the room, between the black oakbookcases filled with rows of calf-bound volumes. I tried to think, butbetween my thoughts and myself there obtruded always, like some small,malignant devil, the face of the old woman on the pavement before thebank, with her distorted and twisted mouth. "This will have togo--everything will have to go--when I've sold every last stick I havein the world, I shall still owe a debt of some cool hundreds ofthousands. I'll pay that, too, some day. Of course, of course, but when?Meanwhile, we've got to live somewhere, somehow. There's the child,too--and there's Sally. I always said I'd only money to give her, andnow I haven't that. We'll have to go into some cheap place, and I'llbegin over again, with the disadvantages of a failure behind me, and aburden of debt on my shoulders. She's got to know--I've got to tell her.Confound that old woman! Why can't I keep her out of my thoughts?"

  The hours went by, and still I walked up and down between the black oakbookcases, driven by some demon of torture to follow the same line inthe Turkish rug, to turn always at the same point, to measure always thesame number of steps.

  "Well, she got her money--they all got their money," I said at last. "Iam the only one who is ruined--no, not the only one--there is Sally andthere is the child. I'd feel easier," I added, echoing the words of theold woman aloud, "I'd feel easier if I were the only one."

  A clock somewhere in the city struck the hour of midnight, and while thesound was still in the air, the door opened softly and Sally came intothe room. She had slipped on a wrapper over her nightdress, and herhair, flattened and warmed by the pillow, hung in a single braid overher bosom. There were deep circles under her eyes, which shone the morebrilliantly because of the heavy shadows.

  "What is the matter, Ben? Why don't you come upstairs?"

  "I couldn't sleep--I am thinking," I answered, almost roughly, oppressedby my weight of misery.

  "Would you rather be alone? Shall I go away again?"

  "Yes, I'd rather be alone."

  She went silently to the door, stood there a minute, and then ran backwith her arms outstretched.

  "Oh, Ben, Ben, why are you
so hard? Why are you so cruel?"

  "Cruel? Hard? To you, Sally?"

  "You treat me as if--as if I'd married you for your money and you'vemade me hate and despise it. I wish--I almost wish we hadn't a penny."

  I laughed the bitter, mirthless laugh that had broken from me at dinner.

  "As a matter of fact we haven't--not a single penny that we can honestlycall our own."

  She drew back instantly, her head held high under the branching electricjet in the ceiling.

  "Well, I'm glad of it," she responded defiantly.

  "You don't in the least understand what it means, Sally. It isn't merelygiving up a few luxuries, it is actually going without the necessities.It is practically beginning again."

  "I am glad of it," she repeated, and there was no regret in her voice.

  "Oh, can't you understand?"

  "Tell me and I will try."

  "I've lost everything. I'm ruined."

  "There is nothing left?"

  "There is honour," I said bitterly, "a couple of hundred thousanddollars of debt, and a little West Virginia railroad too poor to gobankrupt."

  "Then we must start from the very bottom?"

  "From the very bottom. Nothing that you are likely to imagine can beworse than the facts--and I've brought you to it."

  Something that was like a sob burst from me, and turning away, I flungmyself into the chair on the hearth-rug.

  "Can't you think of anything that would be worse?" she asked quietly.

  I shook my head, "The worst thing about it is that I've brought you toit."

  "Wouldn't it be worse," she went on in the same level voice, "if you hadlost me?"

  "Lost you!" I cried, and my arms were open at the thought.

  "I'm glad, I'm glad." With the words she was on her knees at my side,and her mouth touched my cheek. "I knew it wasn't the worst, Ben,--Iknew you'd rather give up the money than give up me. Ah, can't yousee--can't you see, that the worst can't come to us while we are stilltogether?"

  Leaning over her, I gathered her to me with a hunger for comfort,kissing her eyes, her mouth, her throat, and the loosened braid on herbosom.

  "Oh, you witch, you've almost made me happy!" I said.

  "I am happy, Ben."

  "Happy? The horses must go, and the carriage and the furniture even.We'll have to move into some cheap place. I'll get a position of somekind with the railroad, and then we'll have to scrimp and save for aneternity, until we pay off this damned burden of debt."

  She laughed softly, her mouth at my ear. "I'm happy, Ben."

  "We shan't be able to keep servants. You'll have to wear old clothes,and I'll go so shabby that you'll be ashamed of me. We'll forget what abottle of wine looks like, and if we were ever to see a decent dinner,we shouldn't recognise it."

  Again she laughed, "I'm still happy, Ben."

  "We'll live in some God-forsaken, out-of-the-way little hole, and nevereven dare ask a person in to a meal for fear there wouldn't be enoughpotatoes to go around. It will be a daily uphill grind until I'vemanaged to pay off honestly every cent I owe."

  Her arms tightened about my neck, "Oh, Ben, I'm so happy."

  "Then you are a perfectly abandoned creature," I returned, lifting herfrom the rug until she nestled against my heart. "I've given up tryingto make you as miserable as a self-respecting female ought to be. If youwon't be proper and wretched, I can't help it, for I've done my best.And the most ridiculous part of it is, darling, that I actually believeI'm happy, too!"

  She laughed like a child between her kisses. "Then, you see, it isn'treally the thing, but the way you take it that matters."

  "I'm not sure about the logic of that--but I'm inclined to think justnow that the only thing I've ever taken is you."

  "If you'll try to remember that, you'll be always happy."

  "But I must remember also that I've brought you to poverty--I, who hadonly money to give you."

  "Do you dare to tell me to my face that I married you for money?"

  "You couldn't very well have married me without it."

  "I don't know about the 'very well,' but I know that I'd have done it."

  "Do you think that, Sally?"

  Turning in my arms, she lifted her head, and looked steadily into myface.

  "Have I ever lied to you since we were married, Ben?"

  "No, darling."

  "Have I ever deceived you?"

  "Never, I am sure," I responded with a desperate levity, "except for mygood."

  "Have I ever deceived you," she demanded sternly, "even for your good?"

  "To tell the truth, I don't believe you ever have."

  The warm pressure of her body was withdrawn, and rising to her feet, shestood before me under the blazing light.

  "Then I'm not lying to you when I say that I'd have married you if youhadn't possessed a penny to your name--I'd have married you if--if I'dhad to take in washing."

  "Sally!" I cried, and made a movement to recapture her; but pushing meback, she stood straight and tall, with the fingers of her outstretchedhand touching my breast.

  "No, listen to me, listen to me," she said gravely. "As long as I haveyou and you love me, Ben, nothing can break my spirit, because the thingthat makes life of value to me will still be mine. If you ever ceased tolove me, I might get desperate, and do something wild and foolish--evenrun off with another man, I believe--I don't know, but I am my father'sdaughter, as well as my mother's. Until that time comes, I can bearanything, and bear it with courage--with gaiety even. I can imaginemyself without everything else, but not without you. I love mychild--you know I love my child--but even my child isn't you. If I hadto choose to-night between my baby and you, I'd give him up,--and clingthe closer to you. You are myself, and if I had to choose betweeneverything else I've ever known in my life and you, I'd let everythingelse go and follow you anywhere--anywhere. There is nothing that you canendure that I cannot share with you. I can bear poverty, I could evenhave borne shame. If we had to go to some strange country far away fromall I have ever known, I could go and go cheerfully. I can work besideyou, I can work for you--oh, my dear, my dearest, I am your wife, do youstill doubt me?"

  I had fallen on my knees before her, with her open palms pressed to myforehead, in which my very brain seemed throbbing. As I looked up ather, she stooped and gathered me to her bosom.

  "Do you know me now?" she asked in a whisper.

  Then her voice broke, and the next instant she would have sunk downbeside me, if I had not sprung to my feet and lifted her in my arms.While I held her thus, pressed close against me, something of herradiant strength entered into me, and I was aware of a power in myselfthat was neither hers nor mine, but the welding of the finer qualitiesin both our natures.

 

‹ Prev