Part 3 (1/2)
”Miss Morgan,” he said, ”I want to ask your pardon again. You know it was in the dark, and mine was an honest mistake.”
”I will if you will tell me one thing.”
”What is it?”
”Have you really got a camera with you?”
”If I had I should take a picture of you and not of Mr. Grayson.”
Harley remained awhile longer, and Miss Morgan's treatment remained familiar and somewhat disconcerting, rather like the manner of an elder sister to her young brother than of a girl to a man whom she had known only two or three hours. When he rose to leave, she again offered him her hand with perfect coolness. Harley, in a perfunctory manner, expressed his regret that he was not likely to see her again, as he was to leave the next day with Mr. Grayson. The provoking twinkle appeared again in the corner of her eyes.
”I don't intend that you shall forget me, Mr. Harley,” she said, ”because you _are_ to see me again. When you come to Was.h.i.+ngton in search of news, I shall be there as the second lady of the land--Aunt Anna will be first.”
”Oh, of course, I forgot that,” said Harley, but he was not sure that she had Was.h.i.+ngton in mind, remembering Mrs. Grayson's a.s.sertion that she did not always mean what she said nor say what she meant.
The night was quite dark, and when he had gone a few yards Harley stopped and looked back at the house. He felt a distinct sense of relief, because he was gone from the presence of the mountain girl who was not of his kind, and whom he did not know how to take; being a man, he could not retort upon her in her own fas.h.i.+on, and she was able to make him feel cheap.
The drawing-room was still lighted, and he saw the Idaho girl pa.s.s in front of one of the low windows, her figure completely outlined by the luminous veil. It seemed to him to express a singular, flexible grace--perhaps the result of mountain life--but he was loath to admit it, as she troubled him. Harley, although young, had been in many lands and among many people. He had seen many women who were beautiful, and some who were brilliant, but it had been easy to forget every one of them; they hardly made a ripple in the stream of his work, and often it was an effort to recall them. He had expected to dismiss this Idaho girl in the same manner, but she would not go, and he was intensely annoyed with himself.
He went to the telegraph-office, wrote and filed his despatch, and then, lighting a cigar, strolled slowly through the streets. It was not eleven o'clock, but it seemed that everybody except himself was in bed and asleep. The lights in all the houses were out, and there was no sound whatever save that of the wind as it came in from the prairie and stirred the new foliage of the trees. ”And this is our wicked America, for which my foreign friends used to offer me sincere condolences!”
murmured Harley.
But he returned quickly to his own mental disturbance. He felt as he used to feel on the eve of a battle that all knew was coming off, there on the other side of the world. He was then with an army which he was not at all sure was in the right; but when he sat on a hill-top in the night, looking at the flickering lights of the enemy ahead, and knowing that the combat would be joined at dawn, he could not resist a feeling of comrades.h.i.+p with that army to which, for a time--and in a sense, perhaps, alien--he belonged. Those soldiers about him became friends, and the enemy out there was an enemy for him, too. It was the same now when he was to go on a long journey with Jimmy Grayson, who stood upon a platform of which he had many doubts.
He turned back to the hotel, and when he entered the lobby a swarm of men fell upon him and demanded the instant delivery of any news which he might have and they had not. They were correspondents who had come by every train that afternoon--Hobart, Churchill, Blaisdell, Lawson, and others, making more than a score--some representing journals that would support Grayson, and others journals that would call him names, many and bad.
”We hear that you have been to dinner with the candidate,” said Churchill, the representative of the New York _Monitor_, a sneering sheet owned by one foreigner and edited by another, which kept its eye on Europe, and considered European opinion final, particularly in regard to American affairs; ”so you can tell us if it is true that he picks his teeth at table with a fork.”
”You are a good man for the _Monitor_, Churchill,” said Harley, sharply.
”Your humor is in perfect accord with the high taste displayed, and you show the same dignity and consideration in your references to political opponents.”
”Oh, I see,” said Churchill, sneering just as he had been taught to sneer by the _Monitor_. ”He is the first guest to dine with the Presidential nominee, and he is overpowered by the honor.”
”You shut up, Churchill!” said Hobart, another of the correspondents.
”You sha'n't pick a quarrel with Harley, and you sha'n't be a mischief-maker here. There are enough of us to see that you don't.”
Harley turned his back scornfully upon Churchill, who said nothing more, and began to tell his friends of Grayson.
”He is an orator,” he said. ”We know that by undoubted report, and his manner is simple and most agreeable. He has more of the quality called personal magnetism than any other man I ever saw.”
”What of his ability?” asked Tremaine, the oldest of the correspondents.
Harley thought a little while before replying.
”I can't make up my mind on that point,” he said. ”I find in him, so far as I can see, a certain simplicity, I might almost say an innocence, which is remarkable. He is unlike the other public men whom I have met, but I don't know whether this innocence indicates superficiality or a tact and skill lying so deep that he is able to plan an ambush for the best of his enemies.”
”Well, we are to be with him five months,” said Tremaine, ”and it is our business to find out.”