Mr. Royall's was the only house where the young
man could have been offered a decent hospitality. There had been
nothing, therefore, in the outward course of events to raise in
Charity's breast the hopes with which it trembled. But beneath the
visible incidents resulting from Lucius Harney's arrival there ran
an undercurrent as mysterious and potent as the influence that
makes the forest break into leaf before the ice is off the
pools.
The business on which Harney had come was authentic; Charity had
seen the letter from a New York publisher commissioning him to make
a study of the eighteenth century houses in the less familiar
districts of New England. But incomprehensible as the whole affair
was to her, and hard as she found it to understand why he paused
enchanted before certain neglected and paintless houses, while
others, refurbished and "improved" by the local builder, did not
arrest a glance, she could not but suspect that Eagle County was
less rich in architecture than he averred, and that the duration of
his stay (which he had fixed at a month) was not unconnected with
the look in his eyes when he had first paused before her in the
library. Everything that had followed seemed to have grown out of
that look: his way of speaking to her, his quickness in catching
her meaning, his evident eagerness to prolong their excursions and
to seize on every chance of being with her.
The signs of his liking were manifest enough; but it was hard to
guess how much they meant, because his manner was so different from
anything North Dormer had ever shown her. He was at once simpler
and more deferential than any one she had known; and sometimes it
was just when he was simplest that she most felt the distance
between them. Education and opportunity had divided them by a width
that no effort of hers could bridge, and even when his youth and
his admiration brought him nearest, some chance word, some
unconscious allusion, seemed to thrust her back across the
gulf.
Never had it yawned so wide as when she fled up to her room
carrying with her the echo of Mr. Royall's tale. Her first confused
thought was the prayer that she might never see young Harney again.
It was too bitter to picture him as the detached impartial listener
to such a story. "I wish he'd go away: I wish he'd go tomorrow, and
never come back!" she moaned to her pillow; and far into the night
she lay there, in the disordered dress she had forgotten to take
off, her whole soul a tossing misery on which her hopes and dreams
spun about like drowning straws.
Of all this tumult only a vague heart-soreness was left when she
opened her eyes the next morning. Her first thought was of the
weather, for Harney had asked her to take him to the brown house
under Porcupine, and then around by Hamblin; and as the trip was a
long one they were to start at nine. The sun rose without a cloud,
and earlier than usual she was in the kitchen, making cheese
sandwiches, decanting buttermilk into a bottle, wrapping up slices
of apple pie, and accusing Verena of having given away a basket she
needed, which had always hung on a hook in the passage. When she
came out into the porch, in her pink calico, which had run a little
in the washing, but was still bright enough to set off her dark
tints, she had such a triumphant sense of being a part of the
sunlight and the morning that the last trace of her misery
vanished. What did it matter where she came from, or whose child
she was, when love was dancing in her veins, and down the road she
saw young Harney coming toward her?
Mr. Royall was in the porch too. He had said nothing at
breakfast, but when she came out in her pink dress, the basket in
her hand, he looked at her with surprise. "Where you going to?" he
asked.
"Why—Mr. Harney's starting earlier than usual today," she
answered.
"Mr. Harney, Mr. Harney? Ain't Mr. Harney learned how to drive a
horse yet?"
She made no answer, and he sat tilted back in his chair,
drumming on the rail of the porch. It was the first time he had
ever spoken of the young man in that tone, and Charity felt a faint
chill of apprehension. After a moment he stood up and walked away
toward the bit of ground behind the house, where the hired man was
hoeing.
The air was cool and clear, with the autumnal sparkle that a
north wind brings to the hills in early summer, and the night had
been so still that the dew hung on everything, not as a lingering
moisture, but in separate beads that glittered like diamonds on the
ferns and grasses. It was a long drive to the foot of Porcupine:
first across the valley, with blue hills bounding the open slopes;
then down into the beech-woods, following the course of the
Creston, a brown brook leaping over velvet ledges; then out again
onto the farm-lands about Creston Lake, and gradually up the ridges
of the Eagle Range. At last they reached the yoke of the hills, and
before them opened another valley, green and wild, and beyond it
more blue heights eddying away to the sky like the waves of a
receding tide.
Harney tied the horse to a tree-stump, and they unpacked their
basket under an aged walnut with a riven trunk out of which
bumblebees darted. The sun had grown hot, and behind them was the
noonday murmur of the forest. Summer insects danced on the air, and
a flock of white butterflies fanned the mobile tips of the crimson
fireweed. In the valley below not a house was visible; it seemed as
if Charity Royall and young Harney were the only living beings in
the great hollow of earth and sky.
Charity's spirits flagged and disquieting thoughts stole back on
her. Young Harney had grown silent, and as he lay beside her, his
arms under his head, his eyes on the network of leaves above him,
she wondered if he were musing on what Mr.
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