Royall's too lonesome."
Miss Hatchard blinked perplexedly behind her eye-glasses. Her
long frail face was full of puzzled wrinkles, and she leant
forward, resting her hands on the arms of her mahogany armchair,
with the evident desire to say something that ought to be said.
"The feeling does you credit, my dear."
She looked about the pale walls of her sitting-room, seeking
counsel of ancestral daguerreotypes and didactic samplers; but they
seemed to make utterance more difficult.
"The fact is, it's not only—not only because of the advantages.
There are other reasons. You're too young to understand——"
"Oh, no, I ain't," said Charity harshly; and Miss Hatchard
blushed to the roots of her blonde cap. But she must have felt a
vague relief at having her explanation cut short, for she
concluded, again invoking the daguerreotypes: "Of course I shall
always do what I can for you; and in case... in case... you know
you can always come to me...."
Lawyer Royall was waiting for Charity in the porch when she
returned from this visit. He had shaved, and brushed his black
coat, and looked a magnificent monument of a man; at such moments
she really admired him.
"Well," he said, "is it settled?"
"Yes, it's settled. I ain't going."
"Not to the Nettleton school?"
"Not anywhere."
He cleared his throat and asked sternly: "Why?"
"I'd rather not," she said, swinging past him on her way to her
room. It was the following week that he brought her up the Crimson
Rambler and its fan from Hepburn. He had never given her anything
before.
The next outstanding incident of her life had happened two years
later, when she was seventeen. Lawyer Royall, who hated to go to
Nettleton, had been called there in connection with a case. He
still exercised his profession, though litigation languished in
North Dormer and its outlying hamlets; and for once he had had an
opportunity that he could not afford to refuse. He spent three days
in Nettleton, won his case, and came back in high good-humour. It
was a rare mood with him, and manifested itself on this occasion by
his talking impressively at the supper-table of the "rousing
welcome" his old friends had given him. He wound up confidentially:
"I was a damn fool ever to leave Nettleton. It was Mrs. Royall that
made me do it."
Charity immediately perceived that something bitter had happened
to him, and that he was trying to talk down the recollection. She
went up to bed early, leaving him seated in moody thought, his
elbows propped on the worn oilcloth of the supper table. On the way
up she had extracted from his overcoat pocket the key of the
cupboard where the bottle of whiskey was kept.
She was awakened by a rattling at her door and jumped out of
bed. She heard Mr. Royall's voice, low and peremptory, and opened
the door, fearing an accident. No other thought had occurred to
her; but when she saw him in the doorway, a ray from the autumn
moon falling on his discomposed face, she understood.
For a moment they looked at each other in silence; then, as he
put his foot across the threshold, she stretched out her arm and
stopped him.
"You go right back from here," she said, in a shrill voice that
startled her; "you ain't going to have that key tonight."
"Charity, let me in. I don't want the key. I'm a lonesome man,"
he began, in the deep voice that sometimes moved her.
Her heart gave a startled plunge, but she continued to hold him
back contemptuously. "Well, I guess you made a mistake, then. This
ain't your wife's room any longer."
She was not frightened, she simply felt a deep disgust; and
perhaps he divined it or read it in her face, for after staring at
her a moment he drew back and turned slowly away from the door.
With her ear to her keyhole she heard him feel his way down the
dark stairs, and toward the kitchen; and she listened for the crash
of the cupboard panel, but instead she heard him, after an
interval, unlock the door of the house, and his heavy steps came to
her through the silence as he walked down the path. She crept to
the window and saw his bent figure striding up the road in the
moonlight. Then a belated sense of fear came to her with the
consciousness of victory, and she slipped into bed, cold to the
bone.
A day or two later poor Eudora Skeff, who for twenty years had
been the custodian of the Hatchard library, died suddenly of
pneumonia; and the day after the funeral Charity went to see Miss
Hatchard, and asked to be appointed librarian. The request seemed
to surprise Miss Hatchard: she evidently questioned the new
candidate's qualifications.
"Why, I don't know, my dear. Aren't you rather too young?" she
hesitated.
"I want to earn some money," Charity merely answered.
"Doesn't Mr.
1 comment