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And they had laughed together.
Sophy finally got quite desperate with the fruitless struggle against him and against herself. She banished him ruthlessly for two weeks. He rebelled in vain. "I _must_ have this time quite to myself," she told him. "I _must_ think things out ... alone."
Loring found himself frantic thus exiled to the Macfarlanes, cut off from his heart's desire by six country miles as by the powers of darkness. He fled to Florida for a fortnight's tarpon-fishing. Then came her letters. He thought he should go mad over those letters. She played on him like the wind on water. Now he was all melting ripples under her delicate words--now some phrase sent his pa.s.sion leaping mountain-high.... In the last letter she said: "Come back to me.... I miss you as the rose misses the honey from her heart ... as the stem misses the gathered flower.... I crave you as a sail might crave the wild wind that gives it life. Dear ... my dearest.... I know now why the 'wisdom of men is foolishness to G.o.d.'... G.o.d is Love ... my wisdom is foolishness to Love.... So I give you my foolish wisdom for a carpet under your feet. And my wise foolishness I give you for a seal upon your heart.... But myself I cannot give you, for I was yours when Love spread the foundations of the world...."
For she had found when Loring was far from her that "her heart was within him." She found the plain, wheaten bread of Philosophy dreary fare without the honey of romance. Poetry fled from her like a wild, shy bird, that would only come to one call. With his name she could lure it.
She wrote page after page of love-verse as a sort of bridal offering for his return. She knew that there was madness in her mood, but it seemed a high and holy sort of frenzy--like the spiritual dementia that sends martyrs singing to the pyre. So she sung amid the flames that so exquisitely consumed her. For this was not a usual pa.s.sion that she felt for Loring. She would have preferred that their love-life should be one long, ecstatic betrothal. She would have liked to give him the flower of love without its fruit. Yet his love was so different from all other loves that she had known ... it was so finely winged--so woven with adoration ... so fresh as with the dews of youth's first dawn; in her the answering love was so immaculate, veiled with imagination as for a first communion; all was so beautifully and perfectly harmonious between them, that she could not imagine discord ever following on this enchanted symphony.
And granted that their tastes were not always the same ... granted that she was older, that he seemed but a boy to her at times--must love mean oneness in all things? Was not oneness of heart and spirit enough? And was not woman immemorially older than man--the first created, but not the first conceived?--Did not the Christian faith give even G.o.d a mother, as if Divinity itself must needs be child of the eternal feminine?
And because the great, tender mother in her cherished Loring, the shy, wild lover in her only loved him more.
XI
They kept their secret from every one until May.
The greatest pang that Sophy felt at this time (and she had not a few) was the fact that Bobby was to be left at Sweet-Waters during these months of absence. They had never been a day, much less a night, apart since he was born. Now she would leave him, in Charlotte's care, whom he dearly loved, it is true, but--she would leave him.
Charlotte could not throw off the depression caused by this fulfilment of her anxious prognostications.
"She may be happy _now_," she told her Joe; "but oh! what will she feel--say in two years--_when she wakes up_?"
The Judge admitted the possibility of Sophy's present joy suffering a diminution. He even went so far as to say that very possibly there might be some disillusionment for her in the soberer future--but he roundly approved her present joy.
"Doggone it, Charlotte!" he exclaimed, using the one form of oath that he permitted himself. "The poor girl's seen enough misery. Why shouldn't she be happy in her own way! This Loring is a nice fellow. He's rich ...
that's not to be sneezed at, let me tell you, old lady. He's good-tempered: he's a gentleman--he's heels over head in love with her...."
"And he's four ... nearly five years younger," put in Charlotte sternly.
The Judge rubbed his dusky wreath of hair the wrong way about his fine, bald poll--a sure sign that he was "up against" a knotty question.
"That's a pity, I admit," he said rather lamely. Like Charlotte, he had very old-fashioned notions about the desirability--almost the necessity--of a husband's being the elder of his wife. It shocked his fixed ideals, when brought face to face with it in this plump manner, that Sophy should be her lover's senior by four years.
Charlotte's fly-away eyebrows came down and joined.
"It's a tragedy and it's a _shame_!" said she.
"No, no ... no, no," almost coaxed the Judge. "Not a shame, Chartie--a pity if you like.... Yes ... it certainly is a pity--but...."
Charlotte's very apprehension for her sister made her bitter.
"It's just another of Sophy's tragic mistakes," said she. "I did think that awful experience had cured her of making mistakes."
Her husband looked at her rather whimsically from under the fluff of smoky black that he had forgotten to smooth down again.
"Are _you_ so doggone sure of making no more mistakes till you die, old lady?"
Charlotte jerked a snarled place from her black curls by main force. She did not even notice the acute pain, so great was her agitation over what she considered this last dire error of her sister.
"That's not the point," she said firmly. She pinned up the now carded ma.s.s with two long, silver hairpins as she had done every night for twenty years, then went into her especial dressing-closet to fetch her night-gown.
It was the evening of the fateful day on which Sophy had announced her coming marriage to Loring, and husband and wife were preparing for sleep, in the big, friendly room which they shared together. In this room were two large, old-fashioned closets, each having its window, its washstand, and its array of pegs whereon to hang the simple and more necessary pieces of wearing apparel.
As Charlotte emerged again, attired in her nainsook gown that ended in decent frills at neck and wrist, the Judge in his turn strode into his sanctuary. He was in search of one of those old-fashioned garments which Charlotte had been so reluctant to lend Loring on the occasion of his first visit.
While she waited for him to appear again, she sat down at a little table near one of the windows, and began arranging what she called her "night-basket." She was the most methodical and orderly of souls, and into this little hamper went her watch, her handkerchief, a bit of "camphor-ice" for her lips, and a box of matches.
The moon was at its full again, and as she sat, sorting these familiar articles, she could see the white blur of Sophy's gown in one of the hammocks, and hear the soft undertone of voices, as she and her lover talked together.
"Just run along, you and Joe, Charlotte, dear," Sophy had said. "We'll come in by the time you're ready to put out the lights."
"And here," reflected Charlotte, frowning towards the hammocks, "it's eleven o'clock, and Joe and I nearly ready for bed, and she isn't even _thinking_ of coming in!"
Her mood was such as in a vigorous, old-fashioned mother means a sound spanking for the offending child. And Charlotte felt that in some sort Sophy _was_ her child, and dearly would she have liked to spank her.
Here Judge Macon came forth again, looking somewhat like the sheeted dead in the extreme length of his linen garment, and armed with a large, palmetto fan. He drew up a rocking-chair, and glancing out of the window towards the culprits, said just a trifle sheepishly, to his wife's acute ears:
"Let's give 'em as long as we can, old lady. Lovers on an old Virginia lawn in the moonlight! It's enough to soften the c.o.c.kles of a stoic's heart."
Charlotte unbendingly smoothed out a bit of tin-foil and wrapped the piece of camphor-ice in it.
"The c.o.c.kles of the heart, and the apple of the eye have always seemed absurd figures of speech to me," she then remarked, putting the unguent into her basket.
Judge Macon tried to take one of her hands, but she withdrew it and firmly wound up her watch before wrapping it in her handkerchief and laying it beside the camphor-ice.
"Come, old lady," wheedled her softer-natured mate, "what's the matter?
Do you really foresee disaster?"
"Joe," replied Charlotte, clasping her hands over the handle of the little basket, and looking sternly at him, "can you, a man who has sat on the Virginia bench for over twenty years, seriously ask me such a question?"
"Why the _Virginia_ bench, particularly, honey?" asked he, and from under his s.h.a.ggy brows came a droll gleam.
But Charlotte was not to be wheedled.
"I merely mentioned your office," said she, "to recall to you that as a Judge you've had more opportunity than most to realise the rarity of happy marriages."
The Judge in his unofficial capacity whistled softly at this Addisonian language, but Charlotte went on undisturbed.
"I ask you," she continued, "_as a Judge_--what chances do you consider that those two"--she waved one hand towards the hammocks--"have of real happiness?"
Her husband rocked for a moment before replying, fanning himself with the round, yellow disk that glistened in the moonlight (Charlotte had blown out the candle for fear of midges).
At last he said seriously:
"You married me, my dear, and I am sixteen years older than you, yet I think we've been pretty happy."