Part 9 (1/2)
Another silence came here. The embers in the fire dropped softly, and the dull March twilight gathered more and more thickly. I felt as if I were being led into some sacred room, closed many years, but where the dead had once lain. Perhaps it was fanciful, but it seemed almost as if I were seeing the place where poor Miss Charlotte's youth had died.
”It wasn't proper that I should marry him, Ruth. I know now father was right, only sometimes--For myself I suppose I hadn't proper pride, and I shouldn't have minded; but father was right. A Kendall couldn't marry a Sprague, of course. I knew it all along; and I vowed to myself over and over that I wouldn't care for him. When a girl tells herself that she won't love a man, Ruth,” she broke in with a bitter laugh, ”the thing's done already. It was so with me. I needn't have promised not to love him if I hadn't given him my whole heart already,--what a girl calls her heart. I wouldn't own it; and over and over I told him that I didn't care for him; and then at last”--
It was terrible to hear the voice in which she spoke. She seemed to be choking, and it was all that I could do to keep control of myself. I could not have spoken, even if there had been anything to say. I wanted to take her in my arms and get her pitiful, tear-stained face hidden; but I only sat quiet.
”Well, we were engaged at last, and I knew father would never consent; but I hoped something would happen. When we are young enough we all hope the wildest things will happen and we shall get what we want. Then father found out; and then--and then--I don't blame father, Ruth. He was right. I see now that he was right. Of course it wouldn't have done; but then it almost killed me. If it hadn't been for your mother, dear, I think I should have died. I wanted to die; but I had to take care of father.”
I put out my hand and got hold of hers, but I could not speak. The tears dropped down so that they sparkled in the firelight, but she did not wipe them away. I was crying myself, for her old sorrow and mine seemed all part of the one great pain of the race, somehow. I felt as if to be a woman meant something so sad that I dared not think of it.
”And the hardest was that he thought I was wrong to give him up. He could not see it as I did, Ruth; and of course it was natural that he couldn't understand how father would feel about the family. I could never explain it to him, and I couldn't have borne to hurt his feelings by telling him.”
”Is he”--
”He is dead, my dear. He married over at Fremont, and I hope he was happy. I think probably he was. Men are happy sometimes when a woman wouldn't be. I hope he was happy.”
That was the whole of it. We sat there silent until Rosa came to call us to supper. When we stood up I put my arms about her, and kissed her.
Then she made a joke, and wiped her eyes, and through supper she was so gay that I could hardly keep back the tears. Poor, poor, lonely, brave Miss Charlotte!
March 21. Cousin Mehitable arrived yesterday according to her usual fas.h.i.+on, preceded by a telegram. I tell her that if she followed her real inclinations, she would dispatch her telegram from the station, and then race the messenger; but she is constrained by her breeding to be a little more deliberate, so I have the few hours of her journey in which to expect her. It is all part of her brisk way. She can never move fast enough, talk quickly enough, get through whatever she is doing with rapidity enough. I remember Father's telling her once that she would never have patience to lie and wait for the Day of Judgment, but would get up every century or two to hurry things along. It always seems as if she would wear herself to shreds in a week; yet here she is, more lively at sixty than I am at less than half that age.
She was very kind, and softened wonderfully when she spoke of Mother. I think that she loved her more than she does any creature now alive.
”Aunt Martha,” she said last night, ”wasn't human. She was far too angelic for that. But she was too sweet and human for an angel. For my part I think she was something far better than either, and far more sensible.”
This was a speech so characteristic that it brought me to tears and smiles together.
To-night Cousin Mehitable came to the point of her errand with customary directness.
”I came down,” she said, ”to see how soon you expect to arrange to live with me.”
”I hadn't expected anything about it,” I returned.
”Of course you would keep the house,” she went on, entirely disregarding my feeble protest. ”You might want to come back summers sometimes. This summer I'm going to take you to Europe.”
I am too much accustomed to her habit of planning things to be taken entirely by surprise; but it did rather take my breath away to find my future so completely disposed of. I felt almost as if I were not even to have a chance to protest.
”But I never thought of giving up the house,” I managed to say.
”Of course not; why should you?” she returned briskly. ”You have money enough to keep up the place and live where you please. Don't I know that for this ten years you and Aunt Martha haven't spent half your income?
Keep it, of course; for, as I say, sometimes you may like to come back for old times' sake.”
I could only stare at her, and laugh.
”Oh, you laugh, Ruth,” Cousin Mehitable remarked, more forcibly than ever, ”but you ought to understand that I've taken charge of you. We are all that are left of the family now, and I'm the head of it. You are a foolish thing anyway, and let everybody impose on your good-nature. You need somebody to look after you. If I'd had you in charge, you'd never have got tangled up in that foolish engagement. I'm glad you had the sense to break it.”
I felt as if she had given me a blow in the face, but I could not answer.
”Don't blush like that,” Cousin Mehitable commanded. ”It's all over, and you know I always said you were a fool to marry a country lawyer.”