Home
  By Author [ A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z |  Other Symbols ]
  By Title [ A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z |  Other Symbols ]
  By Language
all Classics books content using ISYS

Download this book: [ ASCII | PDF ]

Look for this book on Amazon


We have new books nearly every day.
If you would like a news letter once a week or once a month
fill out this form and we will give you a summary of the books for that week or month by email.

Title: Hetty's Strange History
Author: Jackson, Helen Hunt
Language: English
As this book started as an ASCII text book there are no pictures available.


*** Start of this LibraryBlog Digital Book "Hetty's Strange History" ***


HETTY’S STRANGE HISTORY


By Anonymous

THE AUTHOR OF “MERCY PHILBRICK’S CHOICE.”


“IS THE GENTLEMAN ANONYMOUS? IS HE A GREAT UNKNOWN?”

                          Daniel Deronda.



1877.


_I._


  _What lover best his love doth prove and show?
  The one whose words are swiftest, love to state?
  The one who measures out his love by weight
  In costly gifts which all men see and know?
  Nay! words are cheap and easy: they may go
  For what men think them worth: or soon or late,
  They are but air. And gifts? Still cheaper rate
  Are they at which men barter to and fro
  Where love is not!_

  _One thing remains. Oh, Love,
  Thou hast so seldom seen it on the earth,
  No name for it has ever sprung to birth;
  To give one’s own life up one’s love to prove,
  Not in the martyr’s death, but in the dearth
  Of daily life’s most wearing daily groove_.


_II_.

  _And unto him who this great thing hath done,
  What does Great Love return? No speedy joy!
  That swift delight which beareth large alloy
  Is guerdon Love bestowed on him who won
  A lesser trust: the happiness begun
  In happiness, of happiness may cloy,
  And, its own subtle foe, itself destroy.
  But steadfast, tireless, quenchless as the sun
  Doth grow that gladness which hath root in pain.
  Earth’s common griefs assail this soul in vain.
  Great Love himself, too poor to pay such debt,
  Doth borrow God’s great peace which passeth yet
  All understanding. Full tenfold again
  Is found the life, laid down without regret!_



HETTY’S STRANGE HISTORY



I.

When Squire Gunn and his wife died, within three months of each other,
and Hetty their only child was left alone in the big farm-house,
everybody said, “Well, now Hetty Gunn’ll have to make up her mind to
marry somebody.” And it certainly looked as if she must. What could
be lonelier than the position of a woman thirty-five years of age sole
possessor of a great stone house, half a dozen barns and out-buildings,
herds of cattle, and a farm of five hundred acres? The place was known
as “Gunn’s,” far and wide. It had been a rich and prosperous farm ever
since the days of the first Squire Gunn, Hetty’s grandfather. He was
one of Massachusetts’ earliest militia-men, and had a leg shot off at
Lexington. To the old man’s dying day he used to grow red in the face
whenever he told the story, and bring his fist down hard on the table,
with “damn the leg, sir! ‘Twasn’t the leg I cared for: ‘twas the not
having another chance at those damned British rascals;” and the
wooden leg itself would twitch and rap on the floor in his impatient
indignation. One of Hetty’s earliest recollections was of being led
about the farm by this warm-hearted, irascible, old grandfather, whose
wooden leg was a perpetual and unfathomable mystery to her. Where the
flesh leg left off and the wooden leg began, and if, when the wooden leg
stumped so loud and hard on the floor, it did not hurt the flesh leg
at the other end, puzzled little Hetty’s head for many a long hour. Her
grandfather’s frequent and comic references to the honest old wooden pin
did not diminish her perplexities. He was something of a wag, the old
Squire; and nothing came handier to him, in the way of a joke, than a
joke at his own expense. When he was eighty years old, he had a stroke
of paralysis: he lived six years after that; but he could not walk about
the farm any longer. He used to sit in a big cane-bottomed chair
close to the fireplace, in winter, and under a big lilac-bush, at the
north-east corner of the house, in summer. He kept a stout iron-tipped
cane by his side: in the winter, he used it to poke the fire with; in
the summer, to rap the hens and chickens which he used to lure round his
chair by handfuls of corn and oats. Sometimes he would tap the end of
the wooden leg with this cane, and say, laughingly, “Ha! ha! think of a
leg like that’s being paralyzed, if you please. Isn’t that a joke? It ‘s
just as paralyzed as the other: damn those British rascals.” And only a
few hours before he died, he said to his son: “Look here, Abe, you put
on my grave-stone,--‘Here lies Abraham Gunn, all but one leg.’ What do
you suppose one-legged men’re going to do in the resurrection, hey, Abe?
I’ll ask the parson if he comes in this afternoon,” he added. But, when
the parson came, the brave, merry eyes were shut for ever, and the old
hero had gone to a new world, on which he no doubt entered as resolutely
and cheerily as he had gone through nearly a century of this. These
glimpses of the old Squire’s characteristics are not out of place here,
although he himself has no place in our story, having been dead and
buried for more than twenty years before the story begins. But he lived
again in his granddaughter Hetty. How much of her off-hand, comic,
sturdy, resolute, disinterested nature came to her by direct inheritance
from his blood, and how much was absorbed as she might have absorbed it
from any one she loved and associated with, it is impossible to tell.
But by one process or the other, or by both, Hetty Gunn was, as all the
country people round about said, “Just the old Squire over again,” and
if they sometimes added, as it must be owned they did, “It’s a thousand
pities she wasn’t a boy,” there was, in this reflection on the Creator,
no reflection on Hetty’s womanliness: it was rather on the accepted
theory and sphere of woman’s activities and manifestations. Nobody in
this world could have a tenderer heart than Hetty: this also she had
inherited or learned from her grandfather. Many a day the two had spent
together in nursing a sick or maimed chicken, or a half-frozen lamb,
even a woodchuck that had got its leg broken in a trap was not an
outcast to them; and as for beggars and tramps, not one passed “Gunn’s,”
 from June till October, that was not hailed by the old squire from under
his lilac-bush, and fed by Hetty. Plenty of sarcastic and wholesome
advice the old gentleman gave them, while they sat on the ground eating;
and every word of it sank into Hetty’s wide-open ears and sensible soul,
developing in her a very rare sort of thing which, for want of a better
name, we might call common-sense sympathy. To this sturdy common-sense
barrier against the sentimental side of sympathy with other people’s
sufferings, Hetty added an equally sturdy, and she would have said
common-sense, fortitude in bearing her own. This invaluable trait she
owed largely to her grandfather’s wooden leg. Before she could speak
plain, she had already made his cheerful way of bearing the discomfort
and annoyance of that queer leg her own standard of patience and
equanimity. Nothing that ever happened to her, no pain, no deprivation,
seemed half so dreadful as a wooden leg. She used to stretch out her own
fat, chubby, little legs, and look from them to her grandfather’s. Then
she would timidly touch the wooden tip which rested on the floor, and
look up in her grandfather’s face, and say, “Poor Grandpa!”

“Pshaw! pshaw! child,” he would reply, “that’s nothing. It does almost
as well to walk on, and that’s all legs are for. I’d have had forty
legs shot off rather than not have helped drive out those damned British
rascals.”

Not even for sake of Hetty’s young ears could the old Squire mention
the British rascals without his favorite expletive. Here, also, came
in another lesson which sank deep into Hetty’s heart. It was for his
country that her grandfather had lost that leg, and would have gladly
lost forty, if he had had so many to lose, not for himself; for
something which he loved better than himself: this was distinct in Hetty
Gunn’s comprehension before she was twelve years old, and it was a most
important force in the growth of her nature. No one can estimate the
results on a character of these slow absorptions, these unconscious
biases, from daily contact. All precepts, all religions, are
insignificant agencies by their side. They are like sun and soil to a
plant: they make a moral climate in which certain things are sure to
grow, and certain other things are sure to die; as sure as it is that
orchids and pineapples thrive in the tropics, and would die in New
England.

When old Squire Gunn was buried, all the villages within twenty miles
turned out to his funeral. He was the last revolutionary hero of the
county. An oration was delivered in the meeting-house; and the brass
band of Welbury played “My country, ‘tis of thee,” all the way from the
meeting-house to the graveyard gate. After the grave was filled up, guns
were fired above it, and the Welbury village choir sang an anthem.
The crowd, the music, the firing of guns, produced an ineffaceable
impression upon Hetty’s mind. While her grandfather’s body lay in the
house, she had wept inconsolably. But as soon as the funeral services
began, her tears stopped; her eyes grew large and bright with
excitement; she held her head erect; a noble exaltation and pride shone
on her features; she gazed upon the faces of the people with a composure
and dignity which were unchildlike. No emperor’s daughter in Rome could
have borne herself, at the burial of her most illustrious ancestor, more
grandly and yet more modestly than did little Hetty Gunn, aged twelve,
at the burial of this unfamed Massachusetts revolutionary soldier: and
well she might; for a greater than royal inheritance had come to her
from him. The echoes of the farewell shots which were fired over the old
man’s grave were never to die out of Hetty’s ears. Child, girl, woman,
she was to hear them always: signal guns of her life, they meant
courage, cheerfulness, self-sacrifice.

Of Hetty’s father, the “young Squire,” as to the day of his death he was
called by the older people in Welbury, and of Hetty’s mother, his
wife, it is not needful to say much here. The young Squire was a lazy,
affectionate man to whom the good things of life had come without his
taking any trouble for them: even his wife had been more than half wooed
for him by his doting father; and there were those who said that pretty
Mrs. Gunn had been quite as much in love with the old Squire, old as he
was, as with the young one; but that was only an idle village sneer.
The young Squire and his wife loved each other devotedly, and their only
child, Hetty, with an unreasoning and unreasonable affection which would
have been the ruin of her, if she had been any thing else but what she
was, “the old Squire over again.” As it was, the only effect of this
overweening affection, on their part, was to produce a slow reversal of
some of the ordinary relations between parents and children. As
Hetty grew into womanhood, she grew more and more to have a sense of
responsibility for her father’s and mother’s happiness. She was the most
filially docile of creatures, and obeyed like a baby, grown woman as she
was. It was strange to hear and to see.

“Hetty, bring me my overcoat,” her father would say to her in her
thirty-fifth year, exactly as he would have said it in her twelfth; and
she would spring with the same alacrity and the same look of pleasure at
being of use. But there was a filial service which she rendered to her
parents much deeper than these surface obediences and attentions. They
were but dimly conscious of it; and yet, had it been taken away from
them, they had found their lives blighted indeed. She was the link
between them and the outside world. She brought merriment, cheer, hearty
friendliness into the house. She was the good comrade of every young
woman and every young man in Welbury; and she compelled them all to
bring a certain half-filial affection and attention to her father and
mother. The best tribute to what she had accomplished in this direction
was in the fact, that you always heard the young people mention Squire
Gunn and his wife as “Hetty Gunn’s father” or “Hetty Gunn’s mother;” and
the two old people were seen at many a gathering where there was not a
single old face but theirs.

“Hetty won’t go without her father and mother,” or “Hetty’ll be so
pleased if we ask her father and mother,” was frequently heard. From
this free and unembarrassed association of the old and the young, grew
many excellent things. In this wholesome atmosphere honesty and good
behavior thrived; but there was little chance for the development of
those secret sentimental preferences and susceptibilities out of which
spring love-making and thoughts of marriage.

There probably was not a marriageable young man in Welbury who had not
at one time or another thought to himself, what a good thing it would be
to marry Hetty Gunn. Hetty was pretty, sensible, affectionate, and rich.
Such girls as that were not to be found every day. A man might look
far and long before he could find such a wife as Hetty would make. But
nothing seemed to be farther from Hetty’s thoughts than making a wife
of herself for anybody. And the world may say what it pleases about its
being the exclusive province of men to woo: very few men do woo a woman
who does not show herself ready to be wooed. It is a rare beauty or
a rare spell of some sort which can draw a man past the barrier of
a woman’s honest, unaffected, and persistent unconsciousness of any
thoughts of love or matrimony. So between Hetty’s unconsciousness and
her perpetual comradeship with her father and mother, the years went on,
and on, and no man asked Hetty to marry him. The odd thing about it was
that every man felt sure that he was the only man who had not asked her;
and a general impression had grown up in the town that Hetty Gunn had
refused nearly everybody. She was so evidently a favorite; “Gunn’s” was
so much the headquarters for all the young people; it was so open to
everybody’s observation how much all men admired and liked Hetty,--she
was never seen anywhere without one or two or three at her service: it
was the most natural thing in the world for people to think as they did.
Yet not a human being ever accused Hetty of flirting; her manner was
always as open, friendly, and cordial as an honest boy’s, and with no
more trace of self-seeking or self-consciousness about it. She was as
full of fun and mischief, too, as any boy could be. She had slid down
hill with the wildest of them, till even her father said sternly,--

“Hetty,--you’re too big. It’s a shameful sight to see a girl of your
size, out on a sled with boys.” And Hetty hung her head, and said
pathetically,--

“I wish I hadn’t grown. I’d rather be a dwarf, than not slide down
hill.”

But after the sliding was forbidden, there remained the chestnuttings
in the autumn, and the trout fishings in the summer, and the Mayflower
parties in the spring, and colts and horses and dogs. Until Hetty was
twenty-two years old, you might have been quite sure that, whenever
you found her in any out-door party, the masculine element was largely
predominant in that party. After this time, however, life gradually
sobered for Hetty: one by one her friends married; the maidens became
matrons, the young men became heads of houses. In wedding after wedding,
Hetty Gunn was the prettiest of the bridesmaids, and people whispered as
they watched her merry, kindly face,--

“Ain’t it the queerest thing in life, Hetty Gunn won’t marry. There
isn’t a fellow in town she mightn’t have.”

If anybody had said this to Hetty herself, she would probably have
laughed, and said with entire frankness,--

“You’re quite mistaken. They don’t want me,” which would only have
strengthened her hearers’ previous impressions that they did.

In process of time, after the weddings came the christenings, and at
these also Hetty Gunn was still the favorite friend, the desired guest.
Presently, there came to be so many little Hetty Gunns in the village,
that no young mother had courage to use the name more, however much she
loved Hetty. Hetty used to say laughingly that it was well she was an
only child, for she had now more nieces and nephews than she knew what
to do with. Very dearly she loved them all; and the little things all
loved her, the instant she put her arms round them: and more than one
young husband, without meaning to be in the least disloyal to his wife,
thought to himself, when he saw his baby’s face nestling down to Hetty
Gunn’s brown curls,--

“I wonder if she’d have had me, if I’d asked her. But I don’t believe
Hetty’ll ever marry,--a girl that’s had the offers she has.”

And so it had come to pass that, at the time our story begins, Hetty was
thirty-five years old, and singularly alone in the world. The death of
her mother, which had occurred first, was a great shock to her, for it
had been a sudden and a painful death. But the loss of her mother was to
Hetty a trivial one, in comparison with the loss of her father. On the
day of her grandfather’s death, she had seemed, child as she was, to
have received her father into her hands, as a sacred legacy of trust;
and he, on his part, seemed fully to reciprocate and accept without
comprehending the new relation. He unconsciously leaned upon Hetty more
and more from that hour until the hour when he died, bolstered up in
bed with his head on her shoulder, and gasping out, between difficult
breaths, his words of farewell,--strange farewell to be spoken to a
middle-aged woman, whose hair was already streaked with gray,--

“Poor little girl! I’ve got to leave you. You’ve been a good little
girl, Hetty, a good little girl.”

Neighbors and friends crowded around Hetty, in the first moments of
her grief. But they all, even those nearest and most intimate, found
themselves bewildered and baffled, nay almost repelled, by Hetty’s
manner. Her noble face was so grief-stricken that she looked years older
in a single day. But her voice and her smile were unaltered; and
she would not listen to any words of sympathy. She wished to hear no
allusions to her trouble, except such as were needfully made in the
arranging of practical points. Her eyes filled with tears frequently,
but no one saw a tear fall. At the funeral, her face wore much the
same look it had worn, twenty-three years before, at her grandfather’s
funeral. There were some present who remembered that day well, and
remembered the look, and they said musingly,--

“There ‘s something very queer about Hetty Gunn, after all. Don’t you
remember how she acted, when she was a little thing, the day old Squire
Gunn was buried? Anybody’d have thought then a funeral was Fourth of
July, and she looks much the same way now.”

Then they fell to discussing the probabilities of her future course. It
was not easy to predict.

“The Squire’s left every thing to her, just as if she was a man. She can
sell the property right off, if she wants to, and go and live where she
likes,” they said.

“Well, you may set your minds to rest on that,” said old Deacon Little,
who had been the young squire’s most intimate friend, and who knew Hetty
as well as if she were his own child, and loved her better; for his own
children, poor man, had nearly brought his gray hairs down to the grave
with distress and shame.

“Hetty Gunn’ll never sell that farm, not a stick nor a stone on’t, any
more than the old Squire himself would. You’ll see, she’ll keep it a
goin’, jest the same’s ever. It’s a thousand pities, she warn’t born a
boy.”



II.

The funeral took place late in the afternoon of a warm April day. The
roads were very muddy, and the long procession wound back to the village
about as slowly as it had gone out. One by one, wagon after wagon fell
out of the line, and turned off to the right or left, until there were
left only the Gunns’ big carryall, in which sat Hetty, with her two
house-servants,--an old black man and his wife, who had been in her
father’s house so long, that their original patronymic had fallen
entirely out of use, and they were known as “Cæsar Gunn” and “Nan Gunn”
 the town over. Behind this followed their farm wagon, in which sat the
farmer and his wife with their babies, and the two farm laborers,--all
Irish, and all crying audibly after the fashion of their race. As they
turned into the long avenue of pines which led up to the house, their
grief broke out louder and louder; and, when the wagon stopped in front
of the western piazza, their sobs and cries became howls and shrieks.
Hetty, who was just entering the front-door, turned suddenly, and
walking swiftly toward them, said, in a clear firm tone,--

“Look here! Mike, Dan, Norah, I’m ashamed of you. Don’t you see you’re
frightening the poor little children? Be quiet. The one who loved my
father most will be the first one to go about his work as if nothing had
happened. Mike, saddle the pony for me at six. I am going to ride over
to Deacon Little’s.”

The men were too astonished to reply, but gazed at her dumbly. Mike
muttered sullenly, as he drove on,--

“An’ it’s a quare way to be showin’ our love, I’m thinkin’.”

“An’ it’s Miss Hetty’s own way thin, by Jasus!” answered Dan; “an’ I’d
jist loike to see the man ‘ud say, she didn’t fairly worship the very
futsteps of ‘im.”

When Deacon Little heard Hetty Gunn’s voice at his door that night, the
old man sprang to his feet as he had not sprung for twenty years.

“Bless my soul!” he exclaimed, “what can have brought Hetty Gunn here
to-night?” and he met her in the hall with outstretched hands.

“Hetty, my dear, what is it?” he exclaimed, in a tone of anxiety. “Oh!”
 said Hetty, earnestly. “I have frightened you, haven’t I? was it wrong
for me to come to-night? There are so many things I want to talk
over with you. I want to get settled; and all the work on the farm is
belated: and I can’t have the place run behindhand; that would worry
father so.”

The tears stood in her eyes, but she spoke in as matter-of-course a tone
as if she had simply come as her father’s messenger to ask advice. The
old deacon pushed his spectacles high upon his forehead, and, throwing
his head back, looked at Hetty a moment, scrutinizingly, in silence.
Then, he said, half to himself, half to her,--

“You’re your grandfather all over, Hetty. Now let me know what I can
help you about. You can always come to me, as long as I ‘m alive, Hetty.
You know that.”

“Yes,” said Hetty, walking back and forth in the little room, rapidly.
“You are the only person I shall ever ask any thing of in that way.”

“Sit down, Hetty, sit down,” said the old man. “You must be all worn
out.”

“Oh, no! I ‘m not tired: I was never tired in my life,” replied Hetty.
“Let me walk: it does me good to walk; I walked nearly all last night;
it seems to be something to do. You see, Mr. Little,” she said,--pausing
suddenly, and folding her arms on her breast, as she looked at him,--“I
don’t quite see my way clear yet; and one must see one’s way clear
before one can be quiet. It’s horrible to grope.”

“Yes, yes, child,” said the deacon, hesitatingly. He did not understand
metaphor. “You are not thinking of going away, are you, Hetty?”

“Going away!” exclaimed Hetty. “Why, what do you mean? How could I go
away? Besides, I wouldn’t go for any thing in the world. What should I
go away for?”

“Well, I’m real glad to hear you say so, Hetty,” replied the deacon
warmly; “some folks have said, you’d most likely sell the farm, and go
away.”

“What fools! I’d as soon sell myself,” said Hetty, curtly. “But I can’t
live there all alone. And one thing I wanted to ask you about tonight
was, whether you thought it would do for your James and his wife to
come and live there with me: I would give him a good salary as a sort of
overseer. Of course, I should expect to control every thing; and that’s
not much more than I have done for three or four years: but the men will
do better with a man to give them their orders, than they will with me
alone. I could do this better with Jim than I could with a stranger.
I’ve always liked Jim.”

Deacon Little did not reply. His eyes were fixed on the ground, and his
face flushed with agitation. At last he said huskily,--

“Would you really take Jim and Sally home to your house, to live with
you, Hetty?”

“Why, certainly,” replied Hetty, in an impatient tone, “that’s what I
said: didn’t I make it plain?” and she walked faster and faster back and
forth.

“Hetty, you’re an angel,” exclaimed the old man, solemnly. “If there’s
any thing that could make him hold up his head again, it would be just
that thing. But--” he hesitated, “you know Sally?”

“Yes, yes, I know her. I know all about her. She’s a poor, weak thing,”
 said Hetty, with no shade of tenderness in her voice; “but Jim was the
most to blame, and it’s abominable the way people have treated her. I
always wished I could do something for them both, and now I’ve got the
chance: that is if you think they’d like to come.”

The deacon hesitated again, began to speak, broke off, hesitated, tried
again, and at last stammered:--“Don’t think I don’t feel your kindness,
Hetty; but, low’s Jim’s fallen, I don’t quite feel like having them go
into anybody’s kitchen, especially with black help.”

“Kitchen!” interrupted Hetty. “What do you take me for, Deacon Little?
If Jim comes to live with me as my overseer, he is just the same as my
partner in the place, so far as his position goes. How do you suppose I
thought that the men would respect him, and take orders from him, if
I meant to put him in the kitchen with Cæsar and Nan? No indeed, they
shall live with me as if they were my brother and sister. There are
plenty of rooms in the house for them to have their own sitting-room,
and be by themselves as much as they like. Kitchen indeed! I think
you’ve forgotten that Jim and I were schoolmates from the time we were
six till we were twenty. I always liked Jim, and he hasn’t had half a
chance yet: that miserable affair pulled him down when he was so young.”

“That’s so, Hetty; that’s so,” said the deacon, with tears rolling
down his wrinkled cheeks. “Jim wasn’t a bad boy. He never meant to harm
anybody, and he hasn’t had any chance at all since that happened. It
seems as if it took all the spirit right out of him; and Sally, she
hasn’t got any spirit either: she’s been nothin’ but a millstone round
his neck. It’s a mercy the baby died: that’s one thing.”

“I don’t think so at all, Mr. Little,” said Hetty, vehemently. “I think
if the baby had lived, it would have strengthened them both. It would
have made Sally much happier, at any rate. She is a motherly little
thing.”

“Yes,” said the old man, reluctantly. “Sally’s affectionate; I won’t
deny that: but”--and an expression of exceeding bitterness passed over
his face--“I wish to the Lord I needn’t ever lay my eyes on her face
again! I can’t feel right towards her, and I don’t suppose I ever
shall.”

“I wouldn’t wonder if the time came when she was a real comfort to you,
Mr. Little,” said Hetty, cheerily. “You get them to come and live with
me and see what that’ll do. I can afford to give Jim more than he can
make at surveying. I have a notion he’s a better farmer than he is
engineer, isn’t he?”

“Yes, there’s nothing Jim don’t know about a farm. I always did hope
he’d settle down here at home with us. But we couldn’t have Sally in the
house: it would have killed Mrs. Little. It gives her a day’s nervous
headache now, long ago ‘s ‘tis, whenever she sees her on the street.”

“Well, well,” said Hetty, impatiently, “she won’t give anybody nervous
headaches in my house, poor little soul, that’s certain; and the sooner
they can come the better I shall like it. So you will arrange it all for
me at once, won’t you?”

Then Hetty went on to speak of some matters in regard to the farm about
which she was in doubt,--as to certain fields, and crops, and what
should be done with the young stock from last year. Presently the old
clock in the hall struck nine, and the village bells began to ring.

Hetty sprang to her feet.

“Dear me!” she exclaimed, “I had no idea it was so late. I only meant to
stay an hour. Nan will be frightened about me.” And she was out of the
house and on her pony’s back almost before Deacon Little could say,--

“But, Hetty, ain’t you afraid to go home by yourself. I can go with you
‘s well ‘s not.”

“Bless me, no!” said Hetty. “I always ride alone. Polly knows the road
as well as I do;” and she cantered off, saying cheerily, “Goodnight,
deacon, I can’t tell you how much I’m obliged to you. Please see Jim ‘s
early ‘s you can to-morrow: I want to get settled and begin work.”

When Hetty reached home, the house was silent and dark: only one feeble
light glimmered in the hall. As she threw open the door, old Cæsar
and Nan rushed forward together from the kitchen, exclaiming, half
sobbing,--

“Oh, Miss Hetty! Miss Hetty! we made sure you was killed.”

“Nonsense, Nan!” said Hetty, goodnaturedly: “what put such an idea into
your head? Haven’t I ridden Polly many a darker night than this?”

“Yes’m,” sobbed Nan; “but to-night’s different. All our luck’s gone:
‘When the master’s dead, the house is shook,’ they say where I was
raised. Oh, Miss Hetty! it’s lonesome’s death in the kitchen.”

Hetty threw open the door into the sitting-room. “Put on a stick of
wood, Nan, and make the fire blaze up,” she said.

While Nan was doing this, Hetty lighted the lamps, drew down the
curtains, and gave the room its ordinary evening look. Then she said,--

“Now, Nan, sit down: I want to talk with you,” and Hetty herself sat
down in her father’s chair on the right hand of the fireplace.

“Oh, Miss Hetty!” cried Nan, “don’t you go set in that chair: you’ll die
before the year ‘s out if you do. Oh please, Miss Hetty! get right up;”
 and the poor old woman took forcible hold of her young mistress’s arms,
and tried to lift her from the chair.

“To please you, I will sit in another chair now, Nan, because I want
you to be quiet and listen to me. But that will be my chair to sit in
always, just as it used to be my father’s; and I shall not die before
the year ‘s out, Nan, nor I hope for a great many years to come yet,”
 said Hetty.

“Oh, no! please the Lord, Miss Hetty,” sobbed Nan: “who’d take care of
Cæsar an’ me ef you was to die.”

“But I expect you and Cæsar to take care of me, Nan,” replied Hetty,
smiling, “and I want to have a good talk with you now, and make you
understand about our life here. You want to please me, don’t you, Nan?”

“Oh, yes! Miss Hetty. You knows I do, and so does Cæsar. We wouldn’t
have no other missus, not in all these Norf States: we’d sooner go back
down where we was raised.” Hetty smiled involuntarily at this violent
comparison, knowing well that both Cæsar and Nan would have died sooner
than go back to the land where they were “raised.” But she went on,--

“Very well. You never need have any other mistress as long as I
live: and when I die you and Cæsar will have money enough to make you
comfortable, and a nice little house. Now the first thing I want you to
understand is that we are going to live on here in this house, exactly
as we did when my father was here. I shall carry on the farm exactly
as he would if he were alive; that is, as nearly as I can. Now you will
make it very hard for me, if you cry and are lonesome, and say such
things as you said to-night. If you want to please me, you will go right
on with your work cheerfully, and behave just as if your master were
sitting there in his chair all the time. That is what will please him
best, too, if he is looking on, as I don’t doubt he very often will be.”

“But is you goin’ to be here all alone, Miss Hetty? yer don’t know what
yer a layin’ out for, yer don’t,” interrupted Nan.

“No,” replied Hetty: “Mr. James Little and his wife are coming here to
stay. He will be overseer of the farm.”

“What! Her that was Sally Newhall?” exclaimed Nan, in a sharp tone.

“Yes, that was Mrs. Little’s name before she was married,” replied
Hetty, looking Nan full in the face with a steady expression, intended
to restrain any farther remarks on the subject of Mrs. Little. But Nan
was not to be restrained.

“Before she was married! Yes’m! an’ a good deal too late ‘twas she was
married too. ‘Deed, Miss Hetty, yer ain’t never going to take her in to
live with you, be yer?” she muttered.

“Yes, I am, Nan,” Hetty said firmly; “and you must never let such a word
as that pass your lips again. You will displease me very much if you do
not treat Mrs. Little respectfully.”

“But, Miss Hetty,” persisted Nan. “Yer don’t know”--

“Yes, I do, Nan: I know it all. But I pity them both very much. We have
all done wrong in one way or another; and it is the Lord’s business to
punish people, not ours. You ‘ve often told me, Nan, about that pretty
little girl of yours and Cæsar’s that died when I was a baby. Supposing
she had lived to be a woman, and some one had led her to do just as
wrong as poor Sally Little did, wouldn’t you have thought it very hard
if the whole world had turned against her, and never given her a fair
chance again to show that she was sorry and meant to live a good life?”

Nan was softened.

“‘Deed would I, Miss Hetty. But that don’t make me feel like seein’ that
gal a settin’ down to table with you, Miss Hetty, now I tell yer! Cæsar
nor me couldn’t stand that nohow!”

“Yes you can, Nan; and you will, when you know that it would make me
very unhappy to have you be unkind to her,” answered Hetty, firmly. “She
and her husband both, have done all in their power to atone for their
wrong; and nobody has ever said a word against Mrs. Little since her
marriage; and one thing I want distinctly understood, Nan, by every
one on this place,--any disrespectful word or look towards Mr. or Mrs.
Little will be just the same as if it were towards me myself.”

Nan was silenced, but her face wore an obstinate expression which gave
Hetty some misgivings as to the success of her experiment. However, she
knew that Nan could be trusted to repeat to the other servants all that
she had said, and that it would lose nothing in the recital; and, as for
the future, one of Hetty’s first principles of action was an old proverb
which her grandfather had explained to her when she was a little girl,--

“Don’t cross bridges till you come to them.”



III.

The gratitude with which James Little’s wife received Hetty’s
proposition was so great that it softened even her father-in-law’s
heart.

“I do believe, Hetty,” he said, when he gave her their answer, “I do
believe that poor girl has suffered more ‘n we’ve given her credit for.
When I explained to her that you was goin’ to take her right in to be
like one o’ your own family, she turned as white as a sheet, and says
she,--

“‘You don’t mean it, father: she won’t ever dare to:’ and when I said,
says I,--

“‘Yes, she does: Hetty Gunn ain’t a girl not to know what she means to
do. And that’s just what she says she’s goin’ to do with you and Jim,’
she broke right out crying, out loud, just like a little baby, and says
she,--

“‘If the Lord don’t bless Hetty Gunn for bein’ so good to us! she
sha’n’t ever be sorry for it’s long’s she lives.’”

“Of course I sha’n’t,” said Hetty, bluntly. “I never was sorry yet for
any thing I did which was right, and I am as sure this is right as I am
that I am alive. When will they come?”

“Sarah said she would come right over to-day, if you’d like to have her
help you; and Jim he could fix up things at home, and shut the house
up. Jim said they’d better not let the house till you had tried how
it worked havin’ ‘em here. Jim don’t seem very sanguine about it. Poor
fellow, he’s got the spirit all taken out of him.”

“Well, well, we’ll put it back again, see if we don’t, before the
year is out,” replied Hetty, with a beaming smile, which made her face
beautiful.

It happened fortunately that poor Sarah Little first came to her new
home alone, rather than with her husband. The years of solitude and
disgrace through which they had lived, had made him dogged and defiant
of manner, but had made her humble and quiet. She still kept a good
deal of the beauty of her youth; and there were few persons who could
be unmoved by the upward glance of her saddened blue eyes. In less than
five minutes, she conquered old Nan, and secured her as an ally for
ever. As she entered the house, Hetty met her, and saying cordially,--

“I’m glad to see you, Sally. It was so good of you to come right over at
once; we have a great deal to do,”--she kissed her on her forehead.

Sarah burst into tears. Nan stood by with a sullen face. Turning towards
her involuntarily, perhaps because she hardly dared to speak to Hetty,
Sarah said,--

“Oh, Nan, I’m only crying because she is so kind to me. I can’t help
it;” and the poor thing sank into a chair and sobbed. No wonder! it was
six years since she had returned to her native village, a shame-stricken
woman, bearing in her arms the child whose birth had been her disgrace.
That its father was now her husband did little or nothing to repair the
loss which her weakness and wrong-doing had entailed on her. If there be
a pitiless community in this world, it is a small New England village.
Calvinism, in its sternest aspects, broods over it; narrowness and
monotony make rigid the hearts which theology has chilled; and a grim
Pharisaism, born of a certain sort of intellectual keen-wittedness,
completes the cruel inhumanity. It was six years since poor Sarah
Little, baby in arms, had come into such an air as this,--six years, and
until this moment, when Hetty Gunn kissed her forehead and spoke to her
with affection, no woman had ever said to her a kindly word. When the
baby died, not a neighbor came to its funeral. The minister, the weeping
father and mother, and the stern-looking grandfather, alone followed the
little unwelcomed one to its grave. After that, Sarah rarely went out of
her house except at night. The tradesmen with whom she had to deal came
slowly to have a pitying respect for her. The minister went occasionally
to see her, and in his clumsy way thought he perceived what he called
“the right spirit” in her. Sarah dreaded his calls more than any thing
else. What made her isolation much harder to bear was the fact that,
only two years before, every young girl in the county had been her
friend. There was no such milliner in all that region as Sarah Newhall.
In autumn and in spring, her little shop at Lonway Four Corners was
crowded with chattering and eager girls, choosing ribbons and hats, and
all deferring to her taste. Now they all passed her by with only a cold
and silent bow. Not one spoke. To Sarah’s affectionate, mirth-loving
temperament, this was misery greater than could be expressed. She
said not a word about it, not even to her husband: she bore it as dumb
animals bear pain, seeking only a shelter, a hiding-place; but she
wished herself dead. Jim’s share of the punishment had been in some ways
lighter than hers, in others harder. He had less loneliness; but, on
the other hand, by his constant intercourse with men, he was frequently
reminded of the barrier which separated himself and his wife from
all that went on in the village. He had the same mirthful, social
temperament which she had: the thoughtless, childish, pleasure-loving
quality, which they had in common, had been the root of their sin; and
was now the instrument of their suffering. Stronger people could have
borne up better; worse people might have found a certain evil solace in
evil ways and with evil associates: but Jim and Sally were incapable
of any such course; they were simply two utterly broken-spirited and
hopeless children whose punishment had been greater than they could
bear. In a dogged way, because they must live, Jim went on earning a
little money as surveyor and draughtsman. He often talked of going away
into some new faraway place where they could have, as he said, in the
same words Hetty had used, “a fair chance;” but Sally would not go. “It
would not make a bit of difference,” she said: “it would be sure to be
found out, and strange folks would despise us even more than our own
folks do; perhaps things will come round right after a while, if we stay
here.” Jim did not insist, for he loved Sally tenderly; and he felt, to
the core of his heart, that the least he could do for her now was to let
her live where she chose to live: but he grew more sullen and dogged,
day by day; and Sally grew sadder and quieter, and things were fast
coming to a bad pass, when Hetty Gunn’s generous offer came to them,
like a great rift of sunlight in a black sky.

When Sally sank into the chair sobbing, Hetty made a quick movement
towards her, and was about to speak; but, seeing that old Nan was
hastening to do the same thing, she wisely waited, thinking to
herself,--

“If Nan will only take her under her wing, all will go well.”

Old Nan’s tenderness of heart was unlimited. If her worst enemy were
in pain or sorrow, she would succor him: ready perhaps to take up
the threads of her resentment again, as soon as his sufferings were
alleviated; but a very Samaritan of good offices as long as he needed
them. Cæsar, so well understood this trait in her, that in their
matrimonial disputes, which, it must be confessed, were frequent and
sharp, when all other weapons failed him, he fell back on the colic. He
had only to interrupt the torrent of her reproaches, with a groan, and a
twist of his fat abdomen, and “oh, honey, I’m so bad in my stomach!”
 and she was transformed, in an instant from a Xantippe into a Florence
Nightingale: the whole current of her wrath deviated from him to the
last meal he had eaten, whatever it might be.

“Now, it’s jist nothin’ but that pesky bacon you ate this mornin’,
Cæsar: you sha’n’t never touch a bit again’s long’s you live; do you
hear?” and with hot water and flannels, she would proceed to comfort and
coddle him as if no anger had ever stirred her heart.

When she saw poor Sarah Little sink crying into a chair, and heard the
humble gratefulness of her words; and, moreover, felt herself, as it
were, distinctly taken into confidence by the implied reference to the
unhappy past,--old Nan melted.

“There, there, honey: don’t ye take on so. We’re jest powerful glad to
get you here, we be. I was a tellin’ Miss Hetty yesterday she couldn’t
live here alone, noways: we couldn’t any of us stand it. Come along
into the dinin’-room, an’ Cæsar he’ll give you a glass of his blackberry
wine. Cæsar won’t let anybody but hisself touch the blackberry wine, an’
hain’t this twenty year.”

“Here, Cæsar! you, Cæsar! where be yer? Come right in here, you loafin’
niggah.” This was Nan’s most affectionate nickname for her husband; it
was always accompanied with a glance of proud admiration, which was
the key to the seemingly opprobrious epithet, and revealed that all
it really meant was a complacent satisfaction in her breast that her
husband was in a position to loaf if he liked to,--a gentleman of
leisure and dignity, so to speak, subject to no orders but her own.

Cæsar could hardly believe his ears when he heard himself called upon to
bring a glass of his blackberry wine to Mrs. Sarah Little. This was
not at all in keeping with the line of conduct which Nan had announced
beforehand that she should pursue in regard to that lady. Bewildered by
his perplexed meditations on this change of policy, he moved even more
slowly than was his wont, and was presently still more bewildered
by finding the glass snatched suddenly from his hand, with a sharp
reprimand from Nan.

“You’re asleep, ain’t you? p’raps you’d better go back to bed, seein’
it’s nigh noon.”

“There, honey, you jest drink this, an’ it’ll do you good,” came in the
next second from the same lips, in such dulcet tones, that Cæsar rubbed
his head in sheer astonishment, and gazed with open mouth and eyes upon
Nan, who was holding the glass to Sally’s mouth, as caressingly as she
would to a sick child’s.

The battle was won; won by a tone and a tear; won, as, ever since the
days of Goliath, so many battles have been won by the feebleness of
weapons, and not by their might.

When two days later, James Little, more than half unwillingly, spite
of his gratitude to Hetty, came to take his position as overseer
at “Gunn’s,” he was met at the great gate by his wife, who had been
watching there for him for an hour. He looked at her with undisguised
wonder. There was a light in her eyes, a color in her cheeks, he had not
seen there for many years. “Why, Sally!” he exclaimed, but gave no other
expression to his amazement. She understood.

“Oh, Jim!” she said, “it is like heaven here: they’re all so kind. I
told you things would come round all right if we waited.”

The new overseer found himself welcomed because he was Sally’s husband,
and the strangeness of this was a bewilderment indeed. He could hardly
understand the atmosphere of cordial good feeling which seemed in so
short time to have grown up between his wife and all the household. He
had become so used to Sally’s sweet sad face, that he did not know
how great a charm it held for others; and he had never seen in her the
manner which she now wore to every one. One day’s kindly treatment had
been to her like one day’s sunlight to a drooping plant.

Hetty was relieved and glad. All her misgivings had vanished; and she
found growing up in her heart a great tenderness toward Sally. She
recollected well the bright rosy face Sally had worn only a few years
before, and the contrast between it and her pale sorrow-stricken
countenance now smote Hetty whenever she looked at her. Her sympathy,
however, took no shape in words or caresses. She was too wise for that.
She simply made it plain that Sally’s place in the family was to be a
fixed and a busy one.

“I shall look after the out-door things, Sally,” she said. “I have done
that ever since father was so poorly, and I like it best. I shall trust
to you to keep the house going all straight. Old Nan isn’t much of a
housekeeper, though she’s a good cook: she needs looking after.”

And so the new household entered on its first summer. The crops sprang
up, abundant and green: all the cattle throve and increased: the big
garden bloomed full of its old-fashioned flowers; its wide borders of
balm and lavender made the whole road-side sweet: the doors stood open,
and the cheery sounds of brisk farm life were to be heard all day long.
To all passers-by “Gunn’s” seemed unchanged, unless it were that it had
grown even more prosperous and active. But in the hall, two knobbed old
canes which used to stand in the corner were hung by purple ribbons
from the great antlers on the wall, and would never be taken down again.
Hetty had hung them there the day after the funeral, and had laid the
squire’s riding-whip across them, saying to herself as she did so,--

“There! I’ll keep those up there as long as I live, and I wonder what
will become of them then or of the farm either,” and she had a long and
sad reverie, standing with the riding-whip in her hand in the doorway,
and tying and untying the purple ribbons. But she shook the thought off
at last, saying to herself,--

“Well, well, I don’t suppose the farm’ll go begging. There are plenty of
people that would be glad enough to have me give it to them. I expect
it will have to go to Cousin Josiah after all; but father couldn’t abide
him. It’s a great pity I wasn’t a boy, then I could have married and had
children to take it.” A sudden flush covered Hetty’s face as she said
this, and with a shamefaced, impatient twist of her expressive features,
she ran in hastily and laid the whip above the canes.

The only thing which broke in on the even tenor of this summer at Gunn’s
was Cæsar’s experiencing religion in a great revival at the Methodist
church. Cæsar had been under conviction again and again; but, as old Nan
said pathetically to her minister, there didn’t seem to be “nothin’ to
ketch hold by in Cæsar.” By the time his emotions had worked up to the
proper climax for a successful result, he was “done tired out,” and
would “jest give right up” and “let go,” and “there he was as bad’s
ever, if not wuss.” Poor old Nan was a very ardent and sincere
Christian, spite of her infirmities of temper, and she would wrestle
in prayer with and for her husband till her black cheeks shone under
streams of tears. She wrestled all the harder because the ungodly Cæsar
would sometimes turn upon her, and in the most sarcastic and ungenerous
way ask if he didn’t keep his temper better “without religion than she
did with it:” upon which Nan would groan and travail in spirit, and
beseech the Lord not to “go an’ let her be a stumbler-block in Cæsar’s
way.” The Squire’s death had produced a great impression on Cæsar: from
that day he had been, Nan declared, “quite a changed pusson;” and the
impression deepened until three months later, in the course of a great
midnight meeting in the Methodist church, Cæsar Gunn suddenly announced
that he had “got religion.” The one habit which it was hardest for Cæsar
to give up, in his new character, was the habit of swearing. Profanity
had never been strongly discountenanced at “Gunn’s.” The old Squire and
the young Squire had both been in the habit of swearing, on occasion,
as roundly as troopers! and black Cæsar was not going to be behind his
masters, not he. So he, too, in spite of old Nan’s protestations and
entreaties, had become a confirmed swearer. It had really grown into so
fixed a habit that the words meant nothing: it was no more than a trick
of physical contortion of which a man may be utterly unconscious. How to
break himself of this was Cæsar’s difficulty.

“Yer see, Nan!” he said, “I dunno when it’s a comin’: the fust I know,
it’s said and done, an’ what am I goin’ to do ‘bout it then, ‘ll yer
tell me?” At last, Cæsar hit on a compromise which seemed to him a
singularly happy one. To avoid saying “damn” was manifestly impossible:
the word slipped out perpetually without giving him warning; as soon as
he heard it, however, his righteous soul remorsefully followed up the
syllable by,--

“Bress the Lord,” in Stentorian tones. The compound ejaculation thus
formed was one which nobody’s gravity could resist; and the surprised
and grieved expression with which poor Cæsar would look round upon an
audience which he had thus convulsed was even more irresistible than
the original expression. Everybody who came to “Gunn’s” went away and
said,--

“Have you heard the new oath Cæsar Gunn swears with since he got
religion?” and “Damn bress the Lord” soon became a very by-word in the
town.



IV.

Early in the autumn, Deacon Little’s wife came one morning to the house
and asked to see Hetty alone. Hetty met her with great coolness and
remained standing, with evident purpose to regard the interview as
simply one of business. As heartily as it was in Hetty Gunn’s nature to
dislike any one, and that was very heartily, she disliked Mrs. Little.
Again and again, during the six months that James and Sally had been
living in her house, Hetty had asked Deacon and Mrs. Little to come
and spend the day with them there. The deacon always had come alone,
bringing feeble apologies for Mrs. Little, on score of headaches,
previous engagements, and so on; but privately, to Hetty, he had
confessed the truth, saying,--

“You see, Hetty, she hasn’t spoken to Sally yet; and she says she
never will: just to see her on the street, gives her a dreadful nervous
headache, sometimes for two days. Mrs. Little’s nerves are too much for
her always: she ain’t strong, you know, Hetty.”

“Nonsense!” exclaimed Hetty at last, bluntly. “It isn’t nerves, it’s
temper, and a most unchristian temper too, begging your pardon. Deacon,
I know she’s your wife. If I were Jim, I’d never go near her, never, so
long as she wouldn’t speak to Sally. I shan’t ask her again, and you may
tell her so; and you may tell her, too, that I say I’d rather take
my chance of being forgiven for what Sally’s done than for what she’s
doing.” And Hetty strode up and down her piazza wrathfully.

“There are plenty of people in town who do come here, and do speak to
Sally,” she continued; “and ever so many of them have told me how much
they were coming to like her. She hasn’t got any great force I know. If
she had had, such a fellow as your Jim couldn’t have led her away as he
did: but she’s got all the force the Lord gave her; and if ever there
was a girl that repented for a sin, and atoned for it too, it’s Sally;
and I’d a good deal rather be in her place to-day, than in the place of
any of the people that set themselves up as too good to speak to her.
She’s a loving, patient-souled creature, and she’s been a real comfort
to me ever since she came into my house; and anybody that won’t speak to
her needn’t speak to me, that’s all.” Poor Deacon Little twirled his
hat in his hands, and moved about uneasily on his chair, during Hetty’s
excited speech. When he spoke, his distress was so evident in his voice
that Hetty relented and was ashamed of herself instantly.

“Don’t be too hard on Mrs. Little, Hetty,” he said, “you know Jim was
her favorite of all the children; and she can’t never see it anyways
but that Sally’s been his ruin. Now I don’t see it that way; and I ‘ve
always tried to be good to Sally, in all ways that I could be, things
being as they were at home. You know a man ain’t always free to do’s
he likes, Hetty. He can’t go against his wife, leastways not when she’s
feeble like Mrs. Little.”

“No, no, Deacon Little,” Hetty hastened to say, “I never meant to
reproach you. Sally always says you’ve been good to her. I ‘m very sorry
that I spoke so about Mrs. Little; not that I can take a word of it
back, though,” added Hetty, her anger still rising hotly at mention of
the name; “but I’ll never say a word to you about it again. It isn’t
fair.”

Deacon Little repeated this conversation to his wife, and told Hetty
that he had done so. It was therefore with great surprise that Hetty
found herself on this morning face to face in her own home with Mrs.
Little.

“What in the world can have brought her here?” thought Hetty, as she
walked slowly towards the sitting-room, “no good I’ll be bound;” and it
was with a look almost of defiance that she stood before her, waiting
for her to speak. Mrs. Little with all her immovability of prejudice was
a timid woman, and moreover was especially afraid of Hetty Gunn. Hetty’s
independent, downright, out-spoken ways were alarming to her nervous,
conservative, narrow-minded soul.

“I expect you’re surprised to see me here, Hetty,” she began.

“Very much,” interrupted Hetty curtly, in a hard tone. A long silence
ensued, which Hetty made no movement to break, but stood with her arms
folded, looking Mrs. Little in the eye.

“I came--to--tell--to let you know--Mr. Little he wanted me to come and
tell you--he didn’t like to--” she stammered.

Hetty’s quick instinct took alarm.

“If it’s any thing you’ve got to say against that poor girl out there,”
 pointing to the garden, where Sally was busy tying up chrysanthemums
“you may as well save yourself the trouble. I shan’t hear it,” and Hetty
looked her unwelcome visitor still more defiantly in the face. Mrs.
Little colored, and stung at last into a command of her organs of
speech, said, not without dignity:

“You needn’t suppose that I wish to do any thing to injure the woman my
son has married. It was Jim who asked his father to tell you--”

“For goodness’ sake, do say what it is you’ve got to say, can’t you?”
 burst out Hetty, impatiently. But Mrs. Little was not to be hurried.
Between her uneasiness at being face to face with Hetty, and her false
sense of embarrassment in speaking of the subject she had come to speak
of, it took her a long time to make Hetty understand that poor Sally,
finding that she was to be a mother again, had been afraid to tell Hetty
herself, and had taken this method of letting her know the fact.

Hetty listened breathlessly, her blue eyes opening wide, and her cheeks
growing red. She did not speak. Mrs. Little misinterpreted her silence.

“If you didn’t want the baby here, I ‘d take it,” she said almost
beseechingly, “if Sally’d let me: it would break Jim’s heart if they
should have to leave here.”

“Not want the baby!” shouted Hetty, in a voice which reached Sally in
the garden, and made her look up, thinking she was called. “I should
think you must be crazy, Mrs. Little;” and, with the involuntary words,
there entered for the first time into her mind a wonder whether Mrs.
Little’s whole treatment of her son and his wife were not so monstrous
as to warrant a doubt as to her sanity. “Not want the baby! Why I’d give
half the farm to have a baby running about here. How could Sally help
knowing I’d be glad?” and Hetty moved swiftly towards the door, to go
and seek Sally. Recollecting herself suddenly, she turned, and, halting
on the threshold, said in her hardest tone:

“Is there any thing else you wish to say?”

There was ignominious dismissal in her tone, her look, her attitude; and
Mrs. Little said hastily:

“Oh, no, nothing, nothing! I only want to tell you that I’d like to
thank you, though, for all your kindness to Jim;” and Mrs. Little’s lips
quivered, and the tears came into her eyes. Hetty was unmoved by them.

“I think more of Sally than I do of Jim,” she said severely. “It’s all
owing to Sally that he’s got a chance to hold up his head again. Good
morning, Mrs. Little;” and Hetty walked out of one door, leaving her
guest to make her own way out of the other.

Sally found it hard to believe in Hetty’s readiness to welcome her baby.

“Oh! you don’t know, Hetty, how it will set everybody to talking again,”
 said the poor girl. “You are so different from other folks. You can’t
understand. I don’t suppose my children ever would be allowed to play
with other children, do you?” she asked mournfully. “That was one thing
which comforted me when my baby died. I thought she wouldn’t live to
have anybody despise her because she had had me for a mother. Somehow it
don’t seem fair, does it, Hetty, to have people punished for what their
parents do? But the minister over at the Corners, that used to come
and see me, he said that was what it meant in the Bible, where it said:
‘Unto the third and fourth generation.’ But I can’t think it’s so bad
as that. You don’t believe, Hetty, do you, that if I should have several
children, and they should be married, that their grandchildren would
ever hear any thing about me, how wicked I had been: do you, Hetty?”
 “No, indeed, child!” said Hetty sharply, feeling as if she should cry.”
 Of course I don’t believe any such thing; and, if I did, I wouldn’t
worry over it. Why, I don’t even know my great-grandmother’s name,” she
laughed, “much less whether she were good or bad.”

“Oh, but the bad things last so!” said Sally. “Nobody says any thing
about the good things: it’s always the bad ones. I don’t see why people
like to: if they didn’t, there’d be some chance of a thing’s being
forgotten.”

“Never you mind, Sally,” said Hetty, in a tone unusually caressing for
her. “Never you mind, nobody talks about you now, except to say the good
things; and you are always going to stay with me as long as I live, and
when that baby comes we’ll just wonder how we ever got along without
him.”

“Oh, Hetty, you’re just one of the Lord’s angels!” cried Sally.

“Humph!” said Hetty. “I hope he’s got better ones. There wasn’t much
angel about me this morning when that mother-in-law of yours was here,
I can tell you. I wonder if she’ll have the heart to keep away after the
baby’s born.”

“I thought of that, too,” said Sally, timidly. “If it should be a boy,
I think maybe she’d be pleased. She always did worship Jim. That’s the
reason she hates me so,” sighed Sally.

It was the last of March before the longed-for baby came. Never did
baby have a better welcome. It was as if three mothers had awaited his
coming. Hetty’s happiness was far greater than Sally’s, and Nan’s was
hardly less. Hetty had been astonished at herself for the passionate
yearning she had felt towards the little unborn creature from the
beginning, and, when she took the little fellow in her arms, her first
thought was, “Dear me! if mothers feel any more than I feel now, how
can they bear it?” Turning to Jim, she exclaimed, “Oh, Jim! I’m sure
you ought to be happy now. We’ll name this little chap after you, James
Little, Junior.”

“No!” said Jim, doggedly, “I’ll not hand down that name. The sooner it
is forgotten the better.” All the sunshine and peace of his new home had
not been enough wholly to brighten or heal Jim’s wounded spirit. Hetty
had found herself baffled at every turn by a sort of inertia of sadness,
harder to deal with than any other form of mental depression.

“You’re very wrong, Jim,” replied Hetty, earnestly. “The name is your
own to make or to mar, and you ought to be proud to hand it down.”

“You can’t judge about that, Hetty,” said Jim. “It stands to reason that
you can’t have any idea about the feeling of being disgraced. I don’t
believe a man can ever shake it off in this world: if he can in any
other, I have my doubts. I don’t know what the orthodox people ever
wanted to get up their theory of a hell for. A man can be a worse hell
to himself, than any hell they can invent to put him into. I know that.”

“Jim!” exclaimed Hetty, “how dare you speak so, with this dear little
innocent baby’s eyes looking up at you?”

“That’s just the reason,” answered Jim, bitterly. “If this baby hadn’t
come, there seemed to be some chance of our outgrowing the memory of the
things we’d like to forget and have forgotten. But this just rakes it
all up again as bad as ever. You’ll see: you don’t know people so well
as Sally and I do.”

Before many weeks had passed, Hetty was forced to admit that Jim was
partly in the right. Neighbor after neighbor, under the guise of a
friendly interest in the baby, took occasion to go over all the details
of the first baby’s life and death; and there was, in their manner to
Sally, a certain new and pitying condescension which filled Hetty with
wrath.

“What a mercy ‘tis, ‘tis a boy,” said one visitor sanctimoniously to
Hetty, as they left Sally’s room together. Hetty turned upon her like
lightning.

“I’d like to know what you mean by that,” she said sharply. The woman
hesitated, and at last said:

“Why you know, of course, such things are not so much consequence to
men.”

“Such things as what?” said Hetty, bluntly. “I don’t understand you.”
 When at last her visitor put her meaning into unmistakable words, Hetty
wheeled (they were walking down the long pine-shaded avenue together);
stood still; and folding her arms on her bosom said:

“There! that was what I wanted. I thought if you were driven to putting
it into plain English, perhaps you ‘d see how abominable it was to think
it.”

“No, no, you needn’t try to smooth it down,” she continued, interrupting
her guest’s efforts to mollify her by a few deprecating words. “You
can’t unsay it, now it’s said; and saying it’s no worse than thinking
it. I don’t envy you your thoughts, though. I’ve always stood up for
Sally, and I always shall, and anybody that is stupid enough to suppose,
because I stand up for her, I justify what she did that was wrong, is
welcome: I don’t care. Sally is a good, patient, loving woman to-day; I
don’t know anybody more so: I, for one, respect her. I wish I could be
half as patient;” and Hetty stooped, and, picking up a handful of the
pine-needles with which the road was thickly strewn, crumbled them up
fiercely in her hands, and tossing the dust high in the air, exclaimed:

“I wouldn’t give that for the character of any woman that can’t believe
in another woman’s having thoroughly repented of having done wrong.”

“Oh! nobody doubts that Sally has repented,” said the embarrassed
visitor.

“Oh, they don’t?” said Hetty, in a sarcastic tone; “well then I’d like
to ask them what they mean by treating her as they do. I ‘d like to ask
them what the Lord does to sinners that repent. He says they are to come
and be with him in Heaven, I believe; and I’d like to know whether after
He’s taken them to Heaven, they ‘re going to be reminded every minute of
all the sins they’ve repented of. Oh, but I’ve no patience with it!”
 As Hetty was walking slowly back to the house after this injudicious
outburst, she met Dr. Eben Williams coming down the avenue. Her first
impulse was to plunge into the shrubbery, on the right hand or the left,
and escape him. The baby was now four weeks old, and yet Hetty had never
till to-day seen the doctor. It had been a very sore point between her
and Sally, that Sally would persist in having this young Dr. Williams
from the “Corners,” instead of old Dr. Tuthill, who had been the family
doctor at “Gunn’s” for nearly fifty years. It was the only quarrel that
Hetty and Sally had ever had; and it came near being a very serious one:
but Hetty suddenly recollected herself, and exclaiming:

“Why bless me, Sally, I haven’t any right to decide what doctor you’re
to have when you’re sick; I’ll never say another word about it; only you
needn’t expect me ever to speak to that Eben Williams; I never expected
to see him under my roof,” she dropped the subject and never alluded to
it again.

Her first impulse, as we said, when she saw the obnoxious doctor coming
towards her now, was to fly; her second one of anger with herself for
the first. “I’m on my own ground,” she thought with some of the old
Squire’s honest pride stirring her veins, “I think I will not run away
from the popinjay.”

It was hard to know just how such a dislike to Dr. Eben Williams had
grown up in Hetty’s friendly heart. He had come some four years before
to practise medicine at Lonway Four Corners. His bright and cordial
face, his social manner, his superior education, readiness, and
resource, had quickly won away many patients from old Dr. Tuthill, who
still drove about the country as he had driven for half a century, with
a ponderous black leather case full of calomel and jalap swung under
his sulky. A few old families, the Gunns among the number, adhered
faithfully to the old doctor, and became bitter partisans against the
new one.

“Let him stick to the Corners: if they like him there, they ‘re welcome
to him. He needn’t be trying to get all Welbury besides,” they said
angrily. “Welbury’s done very well for a doctor, these good many years:
since before Eben Williams was born, for that matter;” and words ran
high in the warfare. Squire Gunn was one of the most violent of Dr.
Williams’s opposers; and when, a few days before his death, old
Dr. Tuthill had timidly suggested that it might be well to have a
consultation, the Squire broke out with:

“Not that damned Eben Williams then. I won’t have that damned rascal set
foot in this house. You’re a fool, Tuthill, to let that young upstart
get all your practice as he’s a doing.”

The old man smiled sadly. He did not in the least share his friends’
hostility to the handsome, young, and energetic physician who was so
plainly soon to be his successor in the county.

“Ah, Squire!” he said, “you forget how old you and I are. It is nearly
my time to pass on, and make room for a younger man. Eben’s a good
doctor. I ‘d rather he’d have the circuit here than anybody I know.”

“Damned interloper! let him wait till you’re dead,” growled the Squire.
“He shan’t have a hand in finishing me off at any rate. I don’t want any
of their new-fangled notions.” And the Squire died as he had lived, on
the old plan, with the old doctor.

When Eben Williams saw that he was about to meet Hetty Gunn, his
emotions were hardly less conflicting than hers. He, too, would have
liked to escape the meeting, for he had understood clearly that his
presence in her house was most unwelcome to her. But he, too, had his
own pride, as distinct and as strong as hers, and at the very moment
that Hetty was saying to herself, “I’m on my own ground: I won’t run
away from the popinjay,” Dr. Eben was thinking in his heart, “What a
fool I am to care a straw about meeting her! I’m about my own business,
and she is an obstinate simpleton.”

The expressions of their faces as they met, and passed, with cold
bows, were truly comical; each so thoroughly conscious of the other’s
antagonism, and endeavoring to look unconscious of it.

“By Jove, she’s got a charming face, if she didn’t look so obstinate,”
 said Dr. Eben to himself, as he hurried on.

“He looked at me as he’d have looked at a snake,” thought Hetty. “I
guess he’s an honest fellow after all. He’s got a handsome beard of his
own.”

When she entered Sally’s room, Sally exclaimed, “Oh, Hetty! didn’t you
meet the doctor?”

“Yes,” said Hetty, coolly. Sally looked wistfully at her for a few
seconds. “Oh, Hetty!” she said, “I thought, perhaps, if you saw him,
you’d like him better.”

“I never said any thing against his looks, did I?” laughed Hetty. “He
is a very handsome man: he is the handsomest man I ever saw, if that’s
all!”

“But it isn’t all; it isn’t any thing!” exclaimed Sally. “If he were an
ugly dwarf, I should love him just as well. Oh, Hetty, if you only knew
how good he was to me, when I was sick seven years ago! I should have
died if it hadn’t been for him. There wasn’t a woman at the Corners that
ever came near me, except Mrs. Patrick, the Irish woman I boarded with;
and, he used to stop and make broth for me, on my stove, with his
own hands, and sit and hold the baby on his knees, and talk to me so
beautifully about her. He just kept me alive.”

Hetty’s face flushed. Sally had never told her so much before; she
could not help a glow at her heart, at the picture of the handsome young
doctor sitting with the poor, outcast baby on his knees, and comforting
the poor outcast mother. But Hetty was a Gunn; and, as Dr. Eben had
said, obstinate. She could not forget her partisanship for Dr. Tuthill.
She was even all the angrier with the young doctor for being so clever,
so kind, so skilful, so handsome, and so pleasant, that everybody wanted
him. “I dare say,” she replied. “He’d do any thing to curry favor. He’s
been determined from the first to get all the practice of the whole
county, and I suppose as soon as Doctor Tuthill dies, he’ll have it; and
he may as well, for I don’t doubt he’s a good doctor: but I think it was
a mean underhand thing to come in here and try to cut another man out.”

“Why, Hetty!” remonstrated Sally, in a tone of unusual vehemence for
her. “Why, Hetty; there wasn’t any doctor at the Corners: he didn’t cut
anybody out there; and I’m sure they needed a doctor bad enough; and it
was his native place too.”

“Oh! that’s all very well to say,” answered Hetty. “It’s a likely story,
isn’t it, that anybody’d settle in Lonway Four Corners, just for the
little practice there is in that handful of a village. He knew very well
he’d get Welbury, and Springton, and all the county.”

“But, Hetty,” persisted Sally. “He wasn’t to blame, if people in these
towns sent for him, hearing how good he was. Indeed, indeed, Hetty, he
don’t care for the money. He wouldn’t take a cent from Jim, and he never
does from poor people. I’ve heard him say a dozen times, that he should
have come home to live on the old farm, even if they hadn’t needed a
doctor there: he loves the country so, he can’t be happy in the city;
and he loves every stick and stone of the old farm.”

“Humph!” said Hetty. “He looks like a country fellow, doesn’t he, with
his fine clothes, and his gauntlet gloves! Don’t tell me! I say he is
a popinjay, with all his learning. Now don’t talk any more about it,
little woman, for your cheeks are getting too red,” and Hetty took up
the baby, and began to toss him and talk to him.

Hetty knew in her heart that she was unjust. More than she would have
owned to herself, and still more than she would have acknowledged
to Sally, she had admired Eben Williams’s honest, straightforward,
warm-hearted face. But she preferred to dislike Eben Williams: her
father had disliked him, and had said he should never set foot in the
house; and Hetty felt a certain sort of filial obligation to keep up the
animosity.

But Nature had other plans for Hetty. In fact if one were disposed to be
superstitious, one might well have said that fate itself had determined
to thwart Hetty’s resolution of hostility.



V.

Sally did not recover rapidly from her illness: her long mental
suffering had told upon her vitality, and left her unprepared for any
strain. The little baby also languished, sharing its mother’s depressed
condition. Day after day, Doctor Eben came to the house. His quick step
sounded in the hall and on the stairs; his voice rang cheery, whenever
the door of Sally’s room stood open. Hetty found herself more and more
conscious of his presence: each day she felt a half guilty desire to see
him again; she caught herself watching for his knock, listening for his
step; she even went so far as to wonder in a half impatient way why he
never sent for her, to give her the directions about Sally, instead of
giving them to the nurse. She little dreamed that Doctor Eben was as
anxious to avoid seeing her, as she had been to avoid seeing him. He had
a strangely resentful feeling towards Hetty, as if she were a personal
friend who had been treacherous to him. She was the only one of all
the partisans of Doctor Tuthill that he could not sympathize with and
heartily forgive. He would have found it very hard to explain why he
thus singled out Hetty, but he had done so from the outset. Strange
forerunning instinct of love, which uttered its prophecy in an unknown
tongue in an alien country! There came a day before long, when Doctor
Eben and Hetty were forced to forget all their prejudices, and to come
together on a common ground, where no antagonisms could exist.

Sally and the baby were both very ill. Hetty, in her inexperience of
illness, had not realized how serious a symptom Sally’s long continued
prostration was. In her own busy and active life, the days flew by
almost uncounted: she was out early and late, walking or riding over the
farm; and when she came back to Sally’s room, and found her always with
the same placid smile, and fair untroubled face, and heard always the
same patient reply, “Very comfortable, thank you, dear Hetty,” it never
occurred to her that any thing was wrong. It seemed strange to her that
the baby was so still, that he neither cried nor laughed like other
babies; and it seemed to her very hard for Sally to have to be shut up
in the house so long: but this was all; she was totally unprepared
for any thought of danger, and the shock was terrible to her, when the
thought came. It was on a sunny day in May, one of those incredible
summer days which New England sometimes flashes out like frost-set
jewels in her icy spring. Hetty had listened, as usual, to hear the
Doctor leave Sally’s room: she was more than usually impatient to have
him go, for she was waiting to take in to Sally a big basket of arbutus
blossoms which old Cæsar had gathered, and had brought to Hetty with a
characteristic speech.

“Seems’s if the Lord meant ‘em for baby’s cheeks, don’t it, Miss Hetty?
they’re so rosy.”

“Our poor little man’s cheeks are not so pink yet,” said Hetty, and as
she looked at the pearly pink bells nestling in their green leaves, she
sighed, and wished that the baby did not look so pale. “But he’ll be all
right as soon as we can get him out of doors in the June sunshine,” she
added, and turned from the dining-room into the hall, with the great
basket of arbutus in her hand. As she turned, she gave a cry, and
dropped her flowers: there sat Dr. Eben, in a big arm-chair, by the
doorway. He sprang to pick up the flowers. Hetty looked at him without
speaking. “I was waiting here to see you, Miss Gunn,” he said, as
he gave back the flowers. “I am very sorry to be obliged to speak to
you,”--here Hetty’s eyes twinkled, and a slight, almost imperceptible,
but very comic grimace passed over her face. She was thinking to
herself, “Honest, that! I expect he is very sorry,”--“I am very sorry to
have to speak to you about Mrs. Little,” he continued; “but I think it
is my duty to tell you that she is sinking very fast.”

“What! Sally! what is the matter with her?” exclaimed Hetty. “Come right
in here, doctor;” and she threw open the sitting-room door, and, leading
him in, sank into the nearest chair, and said, like a little child:

“Oh, dear! what shall I do?”

Dr. Eben looked at her for a second, scrutinizingly.

This was not the sort of person he had expected to see in Miss Hetty
Gunn. This was an impulsive, outspoken, loving woman, without a trace of
any thing masculine about her, unless it were a certain something in the
quality of her frankness, which was masculine rather than feminine; it
was more purely objective than women’s frankness is wont to be: this Dr.
Eben thought out later; at present, he only thought: “Poor girl! I’ve
got to hurt her sadly.”

“You don’t mean that Sally’s going to die, do you?” said Hetty, in a
clear, unflinching tone.

“I am afraid she will, Miss Gunn,” replied Dr. Eben, “not immediately;
perhaps not for some months: but there seems to be a general failure of
all the vital forces. I cannot rouse her, body or soul.”

“Nonsense!” said Hetty. “If rousing is all she wants, surely we can
rouse her somehow. Isn’t there any thing wrong with her anywhere?”

Dr. Eben smiled in spite of himself at this off-hand, non-professional
view of the case; but he answered, sadly:

“Not what you mean by any thing wrong; if there were, it would be easier
to cure her.”

Hetty knitted her brows, and looked at him in her turn, scrutinizingly.
“Have you had patients like her before?”

“Yes,” said Dr. Eben.

“Did they all die? Didn’t you cure one?” continued Hetty, inexorably.

“I have known persons in such a condition to recover,” said Dr. Eben,
with dignity; “but not by the help of medicine so much as by an entire
change of conditions.”

“What do you mean by conditions?” said Hetty, never having heard, in her
simple and healthful life, of anybody’s needing what is called a “change
of scene.” Dr. Eben smiled again, and, as he smiled, he noted with an
involuntary professional delight the clear, fine skin, the firm flesh,
the lustrous eye, the steady poise of every muscle in this woman,
who was catechising him, with so evident a doubt as to his skill and
information.

“I hardly think; Miss Gunn,” he went on, “that I could make you
understand, in your superb health, just all I mean by change of
conditions. It means change of food, air, surroundings; every thing in
short, which addresses itself to the senses. It means an entire new set
of nerve impressions.”

“Sally isn’t in the least nervous,” broke in Hetty. “She’s always as
quiet as a mouse.”

“You mean that she isn’t in the least fidgety,” replied the doctor.
“That is quite another thing. Some of the most nervous people I know
have absolute quiet of manner. Mrs. Little’s nervous system has been for
several years under a terrible strain. When I was first called to her, I
thought her trouble and suffering would kill her; and I didn’t think it
would take so long. But it is that which is killing her now.” Hetty was
not listening: she was thinking very perplexedly of what the doctor had
said a few moments before; interrupting him now, she said, “Would it do
Sally good to take her to another place? that is easily done.” Dr. Eben
hesitated.

“I think sea-air might help her; but I am not sure,” he replied.

“Would you go with us?” asked Hetty. “She wouldn’t go without you.” The
doctor hesitated again. He looked into Hetty’s eyes: they were fixed
on his as steadily, as unembarrassedly, as if he and Hetty had been
comrades for years. “What a woman she is,” he thought to himself, “to
coolly ask me to become their travelling physician, when for six weeks I
have been coming to the house every day, and she would not even speak to
me!”

“I am not sure that I could, Miss Gunn,” he replied. Hetty’s face
changed. A look of distress stamped every feature.

“Oh, Dr. Williams, do!” she exclaimed. “Sally would never go without
you; and she will die, you say, unless she has change.” Then hesitating,
and turning very red, Hetty stammered, “I can pay you any thing--which
would be necessary to compensate you: we have money enough.” Dr. Eben
bowed, and answered with some asperity:

“The patients that I had hesitancy about leaving are patients who pay me
nothing. It is not in the least a question of money, Miss Gunn.”

“Forgive me,” exclaimed Hetty, “I did not know--I thought--”

“Your thought was a perfectly natural one, Miss Gunn,” interrupted
the doctor, pitying her confusion. “I have never had need to make my
profession a source of income: I have no ambition to be rich; and, as
I am alone in the world, I can afford to do what many other physicians
could not.”

“When can you tell if you could go?” continued Hetty, not apparently
hearing what the doctor had said.

“She only thinks of me as she would of a chair or a carriage which would
make her friend more comfortable,” thought the doctor; “and why should
she think of me in any other way,” he added, impatient with himself for
the selfish thought.

“To-morrow,” said he, curtly. “If I can go, I will; and there is no time
to be lost.”

Hetty nodded her head, but did not speak another word: she was too near
crying; and to have cried in the presence of Dr. Eben Williams would
have mortified Hetty to the core.

“Oh, to think,” she said to herself, “that, after all, I should have to
be under such obligations to that man! But it is all for Sally’s sake,
poor dear child. How good he is to her! If he were anybody else, I
should like him with all my heart.”

The next morning, as Dr. Williams walked slowly up the avenue, he
saw Hetty standing in the doorway, shading her eyes with her hand and
looking towards him. The morning sun shone full upon her, and made
glints of golden light here and there in her thick brown curls. Hetty
had worn her hair in the same style for fifteen years; short, clustering
curls close to her head on either side, and a great mass of curls
falling over a comb at the back. If Hetty had a vanity it was of her
hair; and it was a vanity one was forced to forgive,--it had such
excellent reason for being. The picture which she made in the doorway,
at this moment, Dr. Eben never forgot: a strange pleasure thrilled
through him at the sight. As he drew near, she ran down the steps
towards him; ran down with no more thought or consciousness of the
appearance of welcoming him, than if she had been a child of seven: she
was impatient to know whether Sally could go to the sea-shore. This
man who approached held the decision in his hands; and he was, at that
moment, no more to Hetty than any messenger bringing word which she was
eager to hear. But Dr. Eben would have been more or less than man, could
he have seen, unmoved, the swift motion, the outstretched hands, the
eager eyes, the bright cheeks, the sunlit hair, of the beautiful woman
who ran to meet him.

“Well?” was all that Hetty said, as, panting for want of breath, she
turned as shortly as a wild creature turns, and began to walk by Dr.
Eben’s side. He forgot, for the instant, all the old antagonisms; he
forgot that, until yesterday, he had never spoken with Hetty Gunn; and,
meeting her eager gaze with one about as eager, he said in a familiar
tone:

“Yes; well! I am going.”

Hetty stopped short, and, looking up at him, exclaimed:

“Oh, I am so glad!”

The words were simple enough, but the tone made them electric. The
doctor felt the blood mounting in his face, under the unconscious look
of this middle-aged child. She did not perceive his expression. She did
not perceive any thing, except the fact that Sally’s doctor would help
her take Sally away, and save Sally’s life. She continued:

“We’ll take her to ‘The Runs.’ Did you ever go there, doctor? It is only
a day’s journey from here, the loveliest little sea-side place I ever
saw. It isn’t like the big sea-side places with their naked rocks, and
their great, cruel, thundering beaches. I hate those. They make me sad
and desperate. I know Sally wouldn’t like them. But this little place
is as sweet and quiet as a lake; and yet it is the sea. It is hugged in
between two tongues of land, and there are ever so many little threads
of the sea, running way up into the meadows, which are thick with high
strong grass, so different from all the grasses we have here. I buy salt
hay from there every year, and the cattle like it, just a little of it,
as well as we like a bit of broiled bacon for breakfast. There is a nice
bit of beach, too,--real beach; but there are trees on it, and it looks
friendly: not as if it were just made on purpose for wrecks to drift up
on, like the big beaches: oh, but I hate a great, long sea-beach! There
is a farm-house there, not two minutes’ walk from this beach, where they
always take summer boarders. In July it wouldn’t be pleasant, because
it is crowded; but now it will be empty, and we can have it all to
ourselves. There is a dear, old, retired, sea captain there, too, who
takes people out in such a nice sail-boat. I shall keep Sally and the
baby out on the water all day long. I am afraid you will find it very
dull, Dr. Williams. Do you like the sea? Of course you will stay with us
all the time. I don’t mean in the least, that you are to come only
once a day to see Sally, as you do here. You will be our guest, you
understand. I dare say you will do more to cure Sally than all the
sea-air and all the medicine put together. She has had so few people to
love in this world, poor girl, that those she does love are very dear to
her. She is more grateful to you than to anybody else in the world.”

“Except you, Miss Gunn,” replied the doctor, earnestly. “You have
done for her far more than I ever could. I could show only a personal
sympathy; but you have added to the personal sympathy material aid.”

“Yes, yes, I know,” said Hetty, absently. She did not wish to hear any
thing said about this. “We can set out to-morrow, if you can be ready,”
 she continued. “I shall have Cæsar drive the horses over next week. They
can’t very well be spared this week. The worst thing is, we have to set
out so early in the morning, and Sally is always so much weaker then.
Could you”--Hetty hesitated, and fairly stammered in her embarrassment.
“Couldn’t you come over here to-night and sleep, so as to be here when
she first wakes up? You might do something to help her.” Before Hetty
had finished her sentence, her face was crimson. Dr. Eben’s was full
of a humorous amusement. Already, in twenty-four hours, had it come to
this, that Hetty was urging that popinjay Dr. Ebenezer Williams, to come
and sleep under her roof? The twinkle in his face showed her plainly
what he was thinking. He began to reply:

“You are very kind, Miss Gunn”--Hetty interrupted him:

“No, I am not at all kind, Dr. Williams; and I see you are laughing at
me, because I’ve had to speak to you, after all, as if I liked you. But,
of course, you understand that it is all for Sally’s sake. If I were to
be ill myself, I should have Dr. Tuthill,” said Hetty, in a tone meant
to be very resolute and dignified, but only succeeding in being comical.

The doctor bowed ceremoniously, replying: “I will be as frank as you
are, Miss Gunn. As you say, ‘of course’ I understand that any apparent
welcome which you extend to me is entirely for Mrs. Little’s sake; and
that it is sorely against your will that you have been obliged to speak
to me; and that it is solely in my capacity as physician that I am asked
to sleep under your roof to-night; and I beg your pardon for saying that
I accept the invitation in that capacity, and no other, solely because
I believe it will be for the interest of my patient that I do so. Good
morning, Miss Gunn,” and, as at that moment they reached the house, Dr.
Eben bowed again as ceremoniously as before, sprang up the piazza steps,
and ran up the staircase, two steps at a time, to Sally’s room. Hetty
stood still in the doorway: she felt herself discomfited. She was half
angry, half amused. She did not like what the doctor had said; but she
admitted to herself that it was precisely what she would have said in
his place.

“I don’t blame him,” she thought, “I don’t blame him a bit; but, it is
horridly disagreeable. I don’t see how we’re ever to get on; and it is
so provoking, for, if he were anybody else, we’d be real good friends.
He isn’t in the least what I thought he was. I hope he won’t come over
before tea. It would be awkward enough. But then, he’s got to take all
his meals with us at ‘The Runs.’ Oh, dear!” and Hetty went about her
preparations for the journey, with feelings by no means of unalloyed
pleasure.

No danger of Dr. Eben’s coming before tea. It was very late when he
appeared, valise in hand, and said in a formal tone to Hetty, who met
him at the door, in fact had been nervously watching for him for four
whole hours:

“I am very sorry to see you still up, Miss Gunn. I ought to have
recollected to tell you that I should not be here until late: I have
been saying good-by to my patients. Will you have the kindness to let
me be shown to my room?” and like a very courteous traveller, awaiting a
landlady’s pleasure, he stood at foot of the stairs.

With some confusion of manner, and in a constrained tone, unlike her
usual cheery voice, Hetty replied:

“The next door to Sally’s, doctor.” She wished to say something more,
but she could not think of a word.

“What a fool I am!” she mentally ejaculated, as the doctor, with a hasty
“good-night,” entered his room. “What a fool I am to let him make me so
uncomfortable. I don’t see what it is. I wish I hadn’t asked him to go.”

“That woman’s a jewel!” the doctor was saying to himself the other side
of the door: “she is as honest as a man could be. I didn’t know there
could be any thing so honest in shape of a woman under fifty: she
doesn’t look a day over twenty-five; but, they say she’s nearly forty;
it’s the strangest thing in life she’s never married. I’ll wager any
thing, she’s wishing this minute I was in Guinea; but she’ll put it
through bravely for sake of Sally, as she calls her, and I’ll keep out
of her way all I can. If it weren’t for the confounded notion she’s
taken up against me, I’d like to know her. She’s a woman a man could
make a friend of, I do believe,” and Dr. Eben jumped into bed, and was
fast asleep in five minutes, and dreamed that Hetty came towards him,
dressed like an Indian, with her brown curls stuck full of painted
porcupine quills, and a tomahawk brandished in her hand.



VI.

The journey was a hard one, though so short. How many times an hour did
Hetty bless the good fortune which had given them Dr. Williams for an
escort! Sally had been so much excited and pleased at the prospect
of the trip to the sea-shore, that she had seemed in the outset far
stronger than she really was. Before mid-day a reaction had set in, and
she had grown so weak that the doctor was evidently alarmed. The baby
disturbed, and frightened by the noise and jar, had wailed almost
incessantly; and Hetty was more nearly at her wits’ end than she had
ever been in her life. It was piteous to see her,--usually so brisk, so
authoritative, so unhesitating,--looking helplessly into the face of the
doctor, and saying:

“Oh, what shall we do! what shall we do!” At last, the weary day came
to an end; and when Hetty saw her two sufferers quietly asleep in snowy
beds, in a great airy room, with a blazing log-fire on the hearth, she
drew a long breath, and said to the doctor:

“This is the most awful day I ever lived through.”

Dr. Eben smiled. “You have had a life singularly free from troubles,
Miss Gunn.”

“No!” said Hetty, “I’ve had a great deal. But there has always been
something to do. The only things one can’t bear, it seems to me, are
where one can’t do any thing, like to-day: that poor little baby crying,
crying, and nothing to be done, but to wait for him to stop; and Sally
looking as if she would die any minute; and that screaming steam-engine
whirling us all along as if we were only dead freight. I suppose if
Sally had died, we should have had to keep right on, shouldn’t we?”

“Yes,” said the doctor. Something in his tone arrested Hetty’s ear. She
looked at him inquiringly; then she said slowly:

“I understand you. I am ashamed. We were only three people out of
hundreds: it is just like life, isn’t it: how selfish we are without
realizing it! It isn’t of any consequence how or where or when any one
of us dies: the train must keep right on. I see.”

“Yes,” said the doctor again: and this monosyllable meant even more than
the other. Dr. Eben was a philosopher. Epictetus, and that most royal of
royal emperors, Marcus Aurelius, had been his masters: their words
were ever present with him. “It is not possible that the nature of the
universe, either through want of power or want of skill, has made a
mistake;” “nothing happens to any man which he is not formed by nature
to bear,”--were hourly watchwords of thought with him. In this regard he
and Hetty were alike, though they had reached their common standpoint
by different roads: he by education and reasoning, and a profound
admiration for the ancient classics; she by instinct and healthfulness
of soul, and a profound love for that old Massachusetts militia-man, her
grandfather.

“The Runs” was, as Hetty had said, one of the loveliest of sea-side
places. Dr. Eben, who was familiar with all the well-known sea-side
resorts in America, was forced to admit that this little nook had a
charm of its own, unlike all the others. The epithet “hugged in,” which
Hetty had used, was the very phrase to best convey it. It was at the
mouth of a small river, which, as it drew near the sea, widened so
suddenly that it looked like a lake. The country, for miles about, was
threaded by little streams of water: which of them were sea making up,
and which were river coming down, it was hard to tell. In early morning
they were blue as the sky overhead; at sunset they glowed like a fiery
net, suddenly flung over the grasses and rushes. Great flocks of marsh
birds dwelt year after year in these cool, green labyrinths, and made
no small part of the changeful beauty of the picture, rising sometimes,
suddenly, in a dusky cloud, and floating away, soaring, and sinking, and
at last dropping out of sight again, as suddenly as they had risen.
The meadows were vivid green in June, vivid claret in October: no other
grass spreads such splendor of tint on so superb a palette, as the
salt-marsh grasses on the low, wide stretches of some of New England’s
southern shores. Sailing down this river, and keeping close to the
left-hand bank, one came almost unawares on a sharp bend to the left:
here the river suddenly ended, and the sea began; the rushes and reeds
and high grasses ceased; a low, rocky barrier stayed them. Rounding this
point, lo, your boat swayed instantly to the left: a gentle surf-wave
took possession of you, and irresistibly bore you towards a yellow
sand beach, which curved inward like a reaper’s sickle, not more than a
quarter of a mile long, from the handle to the shining point; smooth and
glistening, strewn with polished pebbles and tiny shells, it seemed some
half-hidden magic beach on which shallops of fairies might any moment
come to moor. On the farther point, so close to the sea that it
seemed to rise out of the water, stood a high stone lighthouse, with
a revolving light, whose rays swept the open sea for many miles. The
opposite river bank was a much higher one, and ran farther out to sea.
On this promontory was Safe Haven, a small, thickly settled town, whose
spires and house-tops, as seen from the beach at “The Runs,” looked
always like a picture, painted on the sky; white on gray in the morning,
gray on crimson at sunset. The farmhouse of which we have spoken stood
only a few rods back from the beach, and yet it had green fields on
either hand; and a row of Balm of Gilead trees in front; an old and
sandy road, seldom disturbed by wheels, ran between these trees and the
house, and rambled down towards the light-house. Wild pea and pimpernel
made this road gay; white clover and wild rose made it fragrant; and
there branched off from it a lane, on which if you turned and strayed
back into the fields, a mile or so, you came to thickets of wild azalia,
and tracts of pink laurel; and, a little way farther in, you came to
fresh-water ponds which in July were white with lilies. No storm ever
lashed the water high on the beach at “The Runs”; no sultriest summer
calm ever stilled it; the even rhythm and delightsome cooling of its
waves seemed to obey a law of their own, quite independent of the great
booming sea outside the light-house bar.

In the quiet, and the beauty, and the keen salt air of this charmed
spot, poor Sally Little lifted up her head, and began to live again,
like a flower taken from desert sands and set by a spring. The baby also
bloomed like a rose. In an incredibly short time, both mother and child
had so altered that one would hardly have known them. The days went by,
to them all, as days go by for children: unnamed, uncounted; only marked
by joy of sleep, and the delight of waking. In after years, when Hetty
looked back upon these weeks, they seemed to her, not like a dream,
which is usually the heart’s first choice of a phrase to describe the
swift flight of a happy time, but like a few days spent on some other
planet, where, for the interval, she had been changed into a sort of
supernatural child. Except at night, they were never in the house. The
harsh New England May laid aside for them all its treacheries, and was
indeed the month of spring. Their mornings they spent on the water,
rowing or sailing; their afternoons in driving through the budding
and blossoming country. Always the baby lay in Hetty’s lap: from the
beginning, his nurse had found herself perpetually set aside by Hetty’s
imperious affection. As Eben Williams looked, day after day, on the
picture which Hetty and the baby made, he found himself day after day
more and more bewildered by Hetty. She had adopted towards him a uniform
manner of cordial familiarity, which had in it, however, no shade of
intimacy. If Hetty had been the veriest coquette living, she could
not have devised a more effectual charm to a man of Eben Williams’s
temperament. He had come out unscathed from many sieges which had
been laid to him by women. He knew very well the ordinary methods, the
atmosphere of the average wooing or wooable woman, and he was proof
against them all. He was thirty years old and he had never yet been in
love. But this woman, who treated him with the same easy, unconscious
frankness with which men treat men, who never seemed to observe his
going or his coming, otherwise than as it might affect her friend’s need
of him as a physician; this woman who seemed all mother while she was
holding the baby, and all boy while she was trying, under old Captain
Mayhew’s guidance to learn to sail a boat; this woman who was a spinster
in years, and a child in simplicity and directness; who was beautiful,
and never once thought of her beauty; who was alone, and never seemed
lonely: she was a perpetual problem and fascination to him. Dr. Eben
was not usually given to concerning himself much as to other people’s
opinion of him: but he found himself for ever wondering what Hetty
Gunn thought of him; whether she were beginning to lose any of her old
prejudice against him; and whether, after this seaside idyl were over,
he should ever see her again. The more he pondered, the less he could
solve the question. No wonder. The simple truth was that Hetty was not
thinking about him at all. She had accepted the whole situation with
frankness and good sense: she found him kind, helpful, cheery, and
entertaining; the embarrassments she had feared, did not arise, and
she was very glad of it. She often said to herself: “The doctor is very
sensible. He does not show any foolish feeling of resentment;” and she
felt a sincere and increasing gratitude to him, because Sally and her
child were fast regaining health under his care. But, beyond this, Hetty
did not occupy her thoughts with Dr. Eben. It had never been her way to
think about men, as most women think about them: good comradeship seemed
to be all that she was capable of towards a man. Dr. Eben said this to
himself hundreds of times each day; and then hundreds of other times
each day, as he watched the looks which she bent on the baby in her
arms, he knew that he had said what was not true; that there must be
unstirred depths in her nature, which only the great forces of love
could move. All this time Dr. Eben fancied that he was simply analyzing
Hetty as a psychological study. He would have admitted frankly to any
one, that she interested him more than any woman he had ever seen,
puzzled him more, occupied his thoughts more; but that he could be in
love with this rather eccentric middle-aged woman, beautiful though she
was, Dr. Eben would have warmly denied. His ideal maiden, the woman whom
he had been for ten years confidently expecting some day to find, woo,
and win, was quite unlike Hetty; unlike even what Hetty must have been
in her youth: she was to be slender and graceful; gentle as a dove;
vivacious, but in no wise opinionated, gracious and suave and versed in
all elegancies; cultured too, and of a rare, fine wit: so easy is it for
the heart to garnish its unfilled chambers, and picture forth the sort
of guest it will choose to entertain. Meanwhile, by doors which the
heart knows not of, quietly enters a guest of quite different presence,
takes up abode, is lodged and fed by angels, till grown a very monarch
in possession and control, it suddenly surprises the heart into an
absolute and unconditional allegiance; and this is like what the apostle
meant, when he said,--

“The kingdom of God cometh not by observation.”

When Hetty said to Dr. Eben, one night, “I really think we must go home.
Sally seems perfectly well, and baby too: do you not think it will be
quite safe to take them back?” he gave an actual start, and colored.
Professionally, Dr. Eben was more ashamed of himself in that instant
than he had ever been in his life. He had absolutely forgotten, for many
days, that it was in the capacity of a physician that he was living on
this shore of the sea. They had been at “The Runs” now two months; and,
except in his weekly visits to Lonway Corners, he had hardly recollected
that he was a physician at all. The sea and the wind had been Sally’s
real physicians, and the baby’s; and as for the other two, in the happy
quartette, had they needed a physician? Perhaps; but no physician was
there for them.

“Certainly! certainly!” he stammered, “it will be safe;” and his face
grew redder and redder, as he spoke. Hetty looked at him in honest
amazement. She could put but one interpretation on his manner.

“Why, there is no need of our going yet, if it isn’t best. Don’t look
so! Sally can stay here all summer if it will do her good.”

“You misunderstood me, Miss Gunn,” said the doctor, now himself again.
“It will really be perfectly safe for Mrs. Little to go home. She is
entirely well.”

“What did you mean then?” said Hetty, looking him straight in the eye
with honest perplexity in her face. “You looked as if you didn’t think
it best to go.”

“No, Miss Gunn,” replied Dr. Eben. “I looked as if I did not want to go.
It has been so pleasant here: that was all.”

“Oh,” said Hetty, in a relieved tone, “was that it? I feel just so, too:
it has been delightful; it is the only real play-spell I ever had in my
life. But for all that I’m really impatient to get home: they need me on
the farm; the men have not been doing just as they ought to. Jim Little
is all right when I’m there; but they take advantage of him when I’m
away. I really must get home before haying. I think we must certainly go
some day next week.”

Dr. Eben was just going over to town for the letters. As he walked
slowly down to the beach, he said to himself:

“Haying! By Jove!” and this was pretty much all he thought during the
whole of the hour that he spent in rowing to and from the Safe Haven
wharf. “Haying!” he ejaculated again, and again. “What a woman that is!
I believe if we were all dead, she’d have just as keen an eye to that
haying!”

By “we all” in that sentence of his soliloquy, Dr. Eben really meant
“I.” He was beginning to be half aware of a personal unhappiness,
because Hetty showed no more consciousness of his existence. Her few
words this morning about returning home had produced startling results
in his mind; like those a chemist sometimes sees in his crucible, when,
on throwing in a single drop of some powerful agent, he discovers by
its instantaneous and infallible test, the presence of things he had not
suspected were there. Dr. Eben Williams clenched his hands as he paced
up and down the beach. He did not wish to love Hetty Gunn. He did
not approve of loving Hetty Gunn; but love her he did with the whole
strength of his soul. In this one brief hour, he had become aware of it.
What would be its result, in vain he tried to conjecture. One moment, he
said to himself that it was not in Hetty’s nature to love any man; the
next moment, with a lover’s inconsistency, he reproached himself for a
thought so unjust to her: one moment, he rated himself soundly for his
weakness, and told himself sternly that it was plain Hetty cared no more
for him than she did for one of her farm laborers; the next moment, he
fell into reverie full of a vague and hopeful recalling of all the kind
and familiar things she had ever done or said. The sum and substance of
his meditations was, however, that nothing should lead him to commit the
folly of asking Hetty to marry him, unless her present manner toward him
changed.

“I dare say she would laugh in my face,” thought he; “I don’t know but
that she would in any man’s face who should ask her,” and, armed and
panoplied in this resolution, Dr. Eben walked up to the spot where Hetty
sat under one of the old Balm of Gilead trees sewing, with the baby
in its cradle at her feet. It was still early morning: the Safe Haven
spires shone in the sun, and the little fishing schooners were racing
out to sea before the wind. This was one of the prettiest sights from
the beach at “The Runs.” Every morning scores of little fishing vessels
came down the river, shot past like arrows, and disappeared beyond the
bar. At night they came home again slowly; sometimes with their sails
cross-set, which made them look like great white butterflies skimming
the water. Hetty never wearied of watching them: still pictures never
wholly pleased her. The things in nature which had motion, evident aim,
purpose, arrested her eye, and gave her delight.

“I haven’t learned to sail a boat yet, after all,” she said regretfully,
as the doctor came up. “Only see how lovely they are. I wish I could buy
this whole place, and carry it home. I think we will all come here again
next summer.”

“Not all,” said Dr. Eben; “I shall not be here with you.”

“No, I hope not,” replied Hetty, unconsciously. Dr. Eben laughed
outright: her tone was so unaffectedly honest.

“Oh, you know what I mean,” exclaimed Hetty, “I mean, I hope Sally will
not have to bring you as a physician. Of course, there is nothing to
hinder your coming here at any time, if you like,” she added, in a
kindly but indifferent tone.

“But I should not want to come alone,” said the doctor.

“No,” said Hetty, reflectively. “It would be dull, I shouldn’t like it
myself, to be here all alone. The sea is the loneliest of things in the
universe, I think. The fields and the woods and the hills all look as
if they had good fellowship with each other perpetually; but the great,
blank, bare sea, looks for ever alone; and sometimes the waves seem
to me to run up on the shore as fiercely as starved wolves leaping on
prey!”

“Not on this little comfortable beach, though,” said Dr. Eben.

“Oh, no!” replied Hetty, “I did not mean such sea-shore as this. But
even here, I should find it sad if I were alone.”

“All places are sad if one is alone, Miss Gunn,” replied the doctor, in
a pensive tone, rare with him. Hetty turned a surprised glance at him,
and did not speak for a moment. Then she said:

“Yes; but nobody need be alone: there are always plenty of people to
take into one’s house. If you are lonely, why don’t you get somebody
to live with you, or you might be married,” she added, in as purely
matter-of-fact a tone, as she would have said, “you might take a
journey,” or “you might build on a wing to your house.”

This suggestion sounded oddly enough, coming so soon from the lips of
the woman whom the doctor had just been ardently wishing he could marry;
but its cool and unembarrassed tone was sufficient to corroborate his
utmost disheartenment.

“Ah!” he thought, “I knew she didn’t care any thing for me!” and he fell
into a silent brown study which Hetty did not attempt to break. This was
one among her many charms to Dr. Eben, that she was capable of sitting
quietly by a person’s side for long intervals of silence. The average
woman, when she is in the company of even a single person, seems to
consider herself derelict in duty, if conversation is not what she calls
“kept up;” an instinctive phrase, which, by its universal use, is the
bitterest comment on its own significance. Men have no such feeling. Two
men will sit by each other’s side, it may be for hours, in silence,
and feel no derogation from good comradeship. Why should not women? The
answer is too evident. Women have a perpetual craving to be recognized,
to be admired; and a large part of their ceaseless chatter is no more
nor less than a surface device to call your attention to them; as little
children continually pull your gown to make you look at them. Hetty was
incapable of this. She was a vivacious talker when she had any thing to
say; but a most dogged holder of her tongue when she had not. In this
instance she had nothing to say, and she did not speak: the doctor had
so much to say that he did not speak, and they sat in silence till the
shrill bell from the farm-house door called them to dinner. As they
walked slowly up to the house, the doctor said:

“You don’t wonder that I hate to go away from this lovely place, do you,
Miss Gunn?”

Any other woman but Hetty would have felt something which was in his
tone, though not in his words. But Hetty answered bluntly:

“Yes, I do wonder; it is very lovely here: but I should think you’d want
to be at work; I do. I think we’ve had play-spell enough; for, after
all, it hasn’t been any thing but play-spell for you and me.”

“Now she despises me,” thought poor Dr. Eben. “She hasn’t any tolerance
in her, anyhow,” and he was grave and preoccupied all through dinner.



VII.

It was settled that they should set out for home a week from that day.
“Only seven days left,” said the doctor. “What can I do in that time?”

Never was man so baffled in attempts to woo. Hetty saw nothing, heard
nothing, understood nothing; unwittingly she defeated every project he
made for seeing her alone; unconsciously she chilled and dampened and
arrested every impulse he had to speak to her, till Dr. Eben’s temper
was tried as well as his love. Sally, the baby, the nurse, all three,
were simply a wall of protection around Hetty. Her eyes, her ears, her
hands were full; and as for her heart and soul, they were walled about
even better than her body. Nothing can be such a barrier to love’s
approach as an honest nature’s honest unconsciousness. Dr. Eben was
wellnigh beside himself. The days flew by. He had done nothing, gained
nothing. How he cursed his folly in having let two whole months slip
away, before he found out that he loved this woman, whom now he could
no more hope to impress in a few hours’ time than a late afternoon sun
might think to melt an iceberg.

“It would take a man a lifetime to make her understand that he loved
her,” groaned the doctor, “and I’ve only got two days;” and more than
ever his anxiety deepened as he wondered whether, after they returned
home, she would allow him to continue these friendly and familiar
relations. This uncertainty led to a most unfortunate precipitation on
his part. The night before they were to go, he found Hetty at sunset
sitting under the trees, and looking dreamily out to sea. Her attitude
and her look were pensive. He had never seen such an expression on
Hetty’s face or figure, and it gave him a warmer yearning towards her
than he had ever yet dared to let himself feel. It was just time for the
lamp in the lighthouse to be lit, and Hetty was watching for it. As the
doctor approached her, she said, “I am waiting for the lighthouse light
to flash out. I like so to see its first ray. It is like seeing a new
planet made.” Dr. Eben sat down by her side, and they both waited in
silence for the light. The whole western and southern sky glowed red; a
high wind had been blowing all day, and the water was covered with foamy
white caps; the tall, slender obelisk of the lighthouse stood out black
against the red sky, and the shining waves leaped up and broke about
its base. But all was quiet in the sheltered curve of the beach on which
Hetty and Dr. Eben were sitting: the low surf rose and fell as gently as
if it had a tide of its own, which no storm could touch. Presently the
bright light flashed from the tower, shone one moment on the water of
the river’s mouth, then was gone.

“Now it is lighting the open sea,” said Hetty. In a few moments more the
lantern had swung round, and again the bright rays streamed towards the
beach, almost reaching the shore.

“And now it is lighting us,” said Dr. Eben: “I wish it were as easy
to get light upon one’s path in life, as it is to hang a lantern in a
tower.”

Hetty laughed.

“Are you often puzzled?” she asked lightly.

“No,” said the doctor, “I never have been, but I am now.”

“What about?” asked Hetty, innocently: “I don’t see what there is to
puzzle you here.”

“You, Miss Gunn,” stoutly answered Dr. Eben, feeling as if he were
taking a header into unfathomed waters. “Me!” exclaimed Hetty, in a tone
of utmost surprise. “Why, what do you mean?”

Dr. Eben hesitated a single instant. He had not intended to do this
thing, but the occasion had been too much for him. “I may as well do
it first as last,” he said; “she can but refuse me:” and, in a very few
manly words, Dr. Eben Williams straightway asked Hetty Gunn to marry
him. He was not prepared for what followed, although in a soliloquy,
only a few days before, he had predicted it to himself. Hetty laughed
merrily, unaffectedly, in his very face.

“Why, Dr. Williams!” she said, “you can’t know what you’re saying. You
can’t want to marry me: I’m not the sort of woman men want to marry”--

He interrupted her. His voice was husky with deep feeling.

“Miss Gunn,” he said, “I implore you not to speak in this way. I do know
what I am saying, and I do love you with all my heart.”

“Nonsense,” answered Hetty in the kindliest of tones; “of course you
think you do: but it is only because you have been shut up here two
whole months, with nothing else to do but fancy that you were in love.
I told you it was time we went home. Don’t say any thing more about it.
I’ll promise you to forget it all,” and Hetty laughed again, a merry
little laugh. A sharp suspicion crossed the doctor’s mind that she was
coquetting with him. In a constrained tone he said:

“Miss Gunn, do you really wish me to understand that you reject me?”

“Not at all,” said Hetty, gayly. “I wish you to understand that I
haven’t permitted you to offer yourself. I have simply assured you that
you are mistaken: you’ll see it for yourself as soon as we get home. Do
you suppose I shouldn’t know if you were really in love with me?”

“I didn’t know it myself till a week ago,” replied Dr. Eben: “I did not
understand myself. I never loved any woman before.”

“And no man ever asked me to marry him before,” answered the honest
Hetty, like a child, and with an amused tone in her voice. “It is very
odd, isn’t it?”

Dr. Eben was confounded. In spite of himself, he felt the contagion of
Hetty’s merry and unsentimental view of the situation; and it was with
a trace of obstinacy rather than of a lover’s pain in his tones that he
continued:

“But, Miss Gunn, indeed you must not make light of this matter in this
way. It is not treating me fairly. With all the love of a man’s heart I
love you, and have asked you to be my wife: are you sure that you could
not love me?”

“I don’t really think I could,” said Hetty; “but I shall not try,
because I am sure you are mistaken. I am too old to be married, for one
thing: I shall be thirty-seven in the fall. That’s reason enough, if
there were no other. A man can’t fall in love with a woman after she’s
as old as that.”

Dr. Eben laughed outright. He could not help it.

“There!” said Hetty, triumphantly; “that’s right; I like to hear you
laugh now; for goodness’ sake, let’s forget all this. I will, if you
will; and we will be all the better friends for it perhaps. At any rate,
you’ll be all the more friend to me for having saved you from making
such a blunder as thinking you were in love with me.”

Dr. Eben was on the point of persisting farther; but he suddenly thought
to himself:

“I’d better not: I might make her angry. I’ll take the friendship
platform for the present: that is some gain.”

“You will permit me then to be your friend, Miss Gunn,” he said. “Why,
certainly,” said Hetty, in a matter-of-fact way: “I thought we were very
good friends now.”

“But you recollect, you distinctly told me I was to come only as
physician to Mrs. Little,” retorted the doctor.

Hetty colored: the darkness sheltered her.

“Oh! that was a long time ago,” she said in a remorseful tone: “I should
be very ungrateful if I had not forgotten that.”

And with this Dr. Eben was forced to be contented. When he thought the
whole thing over, he admitted to himself that he had fared as well as
he had a right to expect, and that he had gained a very sure vantage,
in having committed the loyal Hetty to the assertion that they were
friends. He half dreaded to see her the next morning, lest there should
be some change, same constraint in her manner; not a shade of it. He
could have almost doubted his own recollections of the evening before,
if such a thing had been possible, so absolutely unaltered was Hetty’s
treatment of him. She had been absolutely honest in all she said: she
did honestly believe that his fancied love for her was a sentimental
mistake, a caprice born of idleness and lack of occupation, and she did
honestly intend to forget the whole thing, and to make him forget it.
And so they went back to the farm, where the summer awaited them with
overflowing harvests of every thing, and Hetty’s hands were so full that
very soon she had almost ceased to recollect the life at “The Runs.”
 Sally and the baby were strong and well. The whole family seemed newly
glad and full of life. All odd hours they could snatch from work, Old
Cæsar and Nan roamed about in the sun, following the baby, as his nurse
carried him in her arms. He had been christened Abraham Gunn Little;
poor James Little having persistently refused to let his own name be
given to the child, and Hetty having been cordially willing to give her
father’s. To speak to a baby as Abraham was manifestly impossible, and
the little fellow was called simply “Baby” month after month, until,
one day, one of Norah’s toddlers, who could not speak plain, hit upon a
nickname so fortunate that it was at once adopted by everybody.
“Raby,” little Mike called him, by some original process of compounding
“Abraham” and “Baby;” and “Raby” he was from that day out. He was a
beautiful child: his mother’s blue eyes, his father’s dark hair, and a
skin like a ripe peach, but not over fair,--made a combination of color
which was rarely lovely. He was a joyous child, as joyous as if no
shadow had ever rested on his mother’s heart. Sally watched him day by
day with delight; but the delight was never wholly free from pain: the
wound she had received, the wound she had inflicted on herself, could
never wholly heal. A deep, moral hurt must for ever leave its trace, as
surely as a deep wound in a man’s flesh must leave its scar. It is of
no use for us to think to evade this law; neither is it a law wholly
of retribution. The scar on the flesh is token of nature’s process of
healing: so is the scar of a perpetual sorrow, which is left on a soul
which has sinned and repented. Sally and Jim were leading healthful and
good lives now; and each day brought them joys and satisfactions: but
their souls were scarred; the fulness of joy which might have been
theirs they could never taste. And the loss fell where it could never
be overlooked for a moment,--on their joy in their child. In the very
holiest of holies, in the temple of the mother’s heart, stood for ever a
veiled shape, making ceaseless sin-offering for the past.

As the winter set in, an anxiety fell on the family which had passed so
sunny a summer. With the first sharp cold winds, little Raby developed a
tendency to croup. Neither Sally nor Hetty had ever seen a case of this
terrible and alarming disease; and, in Raby’s first attack of it, they
had both thought the child dying. Now was Doctor Eben brought again
into close and intimate relations with Hetty. During the months of the
summer, he had, in spite of all his efforts, in spite of his frequent
visits to her house, in spite of all Hetty’s frank cordiality of manner,
felt himself slowly slipping away from the vantage-ground he hoped he
had gained with her. This was the result of two things,--one which he
knew, and one which he did not dream of: the cause which he knew, was a
very simple and evident one, Hetty’s constant preoccupation. Hetty was
a very busy woman: what with Raby, the farm, the house, her social
relations with the whole village, she had never a moment of leisure.
Often when Dr. Eben came to the house, he found her away; and often when
he found her at home, she was called away before he had talked with her
half an hour. The other reason, which, if Dr. Eben had only known it,
would have more than comforted him for all he felt he had lost on the
surface, was that Hetty, in the bottom of her heart, was slowly growing
conscious that she cared a great deal about him.

No woman, whatever she may say and honestly mean, can entirely dismiss
from her thoughts the memory of the words in which a man has told her he
loves her. Especially is this true when those words are the first words
of love which have ever been spoken to her. Morning and night, as Hetty
came and went, in her brisk cheery way, in and out of the house and
about the farm, she wore a new look on her face. The words, “I love you
with all my heart,” haunted her. She did not believe them any more now
than before; but they had a very sweet sound. She was no nearer now than
then to any impulse to take Dr. Williams at his word: nothing could be
deeper implanted in a soul than the conviction was in Hetty’s that
no man was likely to love her. But she was no longer so sure that she
herself could not love. Vague and wistful reveries began to interrupt
her activity. She would stand sometimes, with her arms folded, leaning
on a stile, and idly watching her men at work, till they wondered what
had happened to their mistress. She lost a little of the color from her
cheeks, and the full moulded lines of her chin grew sharper.

“Faith, an’ Miss Hetty’s goin’ off, sooner ‘n she’s any right to,”
 said Mike to Norah one day. “What puts such a notion in your head thin,
Mike?” retorted Norah, “sure she’s as foine a crayther as’s in all the
county, an’ foiner too.”

“Foine enough, but I say for all that that she’s a goin’ off in her
looks mighty fast,” replied the keen-eyed Mike. “You don’t think she’d
be a pinin’ for anybody, do you?”

Norah gave a hearty Irish laugh.

“Miss Hetty a pinin’!” she repeated over and over with bursts of
merriment:

“Ah, but yez are all alike, ye men. Miss Hetty a pinin’! I’d like to see
the man Miss Hetty wud pine fur.”

Mike and Norah were both right. There was no “pining” in Hetty’s busy
and sensible soul; but there had been planted in it a germ of new
life, whose slow quickening and growth were perplexing and disturbing
elements: not as yet did she recognize them; she only felt the
disturbance, and its link with Dr. Eben was sufficiently clear to make
her manner to him undergo an indefinable change. It was no less cordial,
no less frank: you could not have said where the change was; but it was
there, and he felt it. He ought to have understood it and taken heart.
But he was ignorant like Hetty, only felt the disturbance, and taking
counsel of his fears believed that things were going wrong. Sometimes
he would stay away for many days, and then watch closely Hetty’s
manner when they met. Never a trace of resentment or even wonder at
his absence. Sometimes he would go there daily for an interval; never
a trace of expectation or of added familiarity. But now things were
changed. Little Raby’s illness seemed to put them all back where they
were during the days of the sea-side idyl. Now the doctor felt himself
again needed. Both Hetty and Sally lived upon his words, even his looks.
Again and again the child’s life seemed hanging in even balances, and
it was with a gratitude almost like that they felt to God that the two
women blessed Dr. Eben for his recovery. Night after night, the three,
watched by the baby’s bed, listening to his shrill and convulsive
breathings.

Morning after morning, Dr. Eben and Hetty went together out of the
chamber, and stood in the open door-way, watching the crimson dawn on
the eastern hills. At such times, the doctor felt so near Hetty that
he was repeatedly on the point of saying again the words of love he had
spoken six months before. But a great fear deterred him.

“If she refuses me once more, that would settle it for ever,” he said to
himself, and forced the words back.

One morning after a night of great anxiety and fear, they left Sally’s
room while it was yet dark. It was bitterly cold; the winter stars shone
keen and glittering in the bleak sky. Hetty threw on a heavy cloak, and
opening the hall-door, said:

“Let us go out into the cold air; it will do us good.”

Silently they walked up and down the piazza. The great pines were
weighed down to the ground by masses of snow. Now and then, when the
wind stirred the upper branches, avalanches slid noiselessly off, and
built themselves again into banks below. There was no moon, but the
starlight was so brilliant that the snow crystals glistened in it. As
they looked at the sky, a star suddenly fell. It moved very slowly, and
was more than a minute in full sight.

“One light-house less,” said Dr. Eben.

“Oh,” exclaimed Hetty, “what a lovely idea! who said that? Who called
the stars lighthouses?”

“I forget,” said the doctor; “in fact I think I never knew; I think
it was an anonymous little poem in which I saw the idea, years ago. It
struck me at the time as being a singularly happy one. I think I can
repeat a stanza or two of it.”

  GOD’S LIGHT-HOUSES.

  When night falls on the earth, the sea
  From east to west lies twinkling bright
  With shining beams from beacons high,
  Which send afar their friendly light.

  The sailors’ eyes, like eyes in prayer,
  Turn unto them for guiding ray:
  If storms obscure their radiance,
  The great ships helpless grope their way.

  When night falls on the earth, the sky
  Looks like a wide, a boundless main;
  Who knows what voyagers sail there?
  Who names the ports they seek and gain?

  Are not the stars like beacons set,
  To guide the argosies that go
  From universe to universe,
  Our little world above, below?

  On their great errands solemn bent,
  In their vast journeys unaware
  Of our small planet’s name or place
  Revolving in the lower air.

  Oh thought too vast! oh thought too glad:
  An awe most rapturous it stirs.
  From world to world God’s beacons shine:
  God means to save his mariners!

Hetty was silent. The mention of light-houses had carried her thoughts
back to that last night at “The Runs,” when, with Dr. Eben by her side,
she had watched the great revolving light in the stone tower on the bar.

Dr. Eben was thinking of the same thing; he wondered if Hetty were not:
after a few moments’ silence, he became so sure of it that he said:

“You have not forgotten that night, have you?”

“Oh, no!” replied Hetty, in a low voice.

“I should like to think that you did not wish to forget it,” said the
doctor, in a tender tone.

“Oh, don’t, please don’t say any thing about it,” exclaimed Hetty, in a
tone so full of emotion, that Dr. Eben’s heart gave a bound of joy. In
that second, he believed that the time would come when Hetty would
love him. He had never heard such a tone from her lips before. Her hand
rested on his arm. He laid his upon it,--the first caressing touch he
had ever dared to offer to Hetty; the first caressing touch which Hetty
had ever received from hand of man.

“I will not, Hetty, till you are willing I should,” he said. He had
never called her “Hetty” before. A tumult filled Hetty’s heart; but all
she said was, in a most matter-of-fact tone: “That’s right! we must go
in now. It is too cold out here.”

Dr. Eben did not care what her words were: nature had revealed herself
in a tone.

“I’ll make her love me yet,” he thought. “It won’t take a great while
either; she’s beginning, and she doesn’t know it.” He was so happy that
he did not know at first that Hetty had left him alone in front of the
fire. When he found she had gone, he drew up a big arm-chair, sank back
in its depths, put his feet on the fender, and fell to thinking how, by
spring, perhaps, he might marry Hetty. In the midst of this lover-like
reverie, he fell asleep in the most unlover-like way. He was worn out
with his long night’s watching. In a few minutes, Hetty came back with
hot broth which she had prepared for him. Her light step did not
rouse him. She stood still by his chair, looking down on his face. His
clear-cut features, always handsome, were grand in sleep. The solemnity
of closed eyes adds to a noble face something which is always very
impressive. He stirred uneasily, and said in his sleep, “Hetty.” A great
wave of passionate feeling swept over her face, as, standing there, she
heard this tender sound of her name on his unconscious lips.

“Oh what will become of me if I love him after all,” she thought.

“Why not, why not?” answered her heart; wakened now and struggling for
its craved and needed rights. “Why not, why not?” and no answer came to
Hetty’s mind.

Moving noiselessly, she set the broth on a low table by the doctor’s
side, covered him carefully with her own heavy cloak, and left the room.
On the threshold, she turned back and looked again at his face. Her
conscious thoughts were more than she could bear. In sudden impatience
with herself, she exclaimed, “Pshaw! how silly I am!” and hastened
upstairs, more like the old original Hetty than she had been for many
days. Love could not enthrone himself easily in Hetty’s nature: it was
a rebellious kingdom. “Thirty-seven years old! Hetty Gunn, you’re a
goose,” were Hetty’s last thoughts as she fell asleep that night. But
when she awoke the next morning, the same refrain, “Why not, why not?”
 filled her thoughts; and, when she bade Dr. Eben good-morning, the rosy
color that mounted to her very temples gave him a new happiness.

Why prolong the story of the next few days? They were just such days as
every man and every woman who has loved has lived through, and knows far
better than can be said or sung. Love’s beginnings are varied, and
his final crises of avowal take individual shape in each individual
instance: but his processes and symptoms of growth are alike in all
cases; the indefinable delight,--the dreamy wondering joy,--the half
avoidance which really means seeking,--the seeking which shelters itself
under endless pleas,--the ceaseless questioning of faces,--the mute
caresses of looks, and the eloquent caresses of tones,--are they not
written in the books of the chronicles of all lovers? What matter how
or when the crowning moment of full surrender comes? It came to Eben and
Hetty, however, more suddenly at last than it often comes; came in a
way so characteristic of them both, that perhaps to tell it may not be a
sin, since we aim at a complete setting forth of their characters.



VIII.

For three days little Raby had been so ill that the doctor had not
left the house day nor night, except for imperative calls from other
patients. Each night the paroxysms of croup returned with great
severity, and the little fellow’s strength seemed fast giving way under
them. Sally and Hetty, his two mothers, were very differently affected
by the grief they bore in common. Sally was speechless, calm, almost
dogged in her silence. When Dr. Eben trying to comfort her, said:

“Don’t feel so, Mrs. Little: I think we shall pull the boy through all
right.” She looked up in his face, and shook her head, speaking no
word. “I am not saying it merely to comfort you; indeed, I am not, Mrs.
Little,” said the doctor. “I really believe he will get well. These
attacks of croup seem much worse than they really are.”

“I don’t know that it comforts me,” replied Sally, speaking very slowly.
“I don’t know that I want him to live; but I think perhaps he might be
allowed to die easier, if I didn’t need so much punishing. It is worse
than death to see him suffer so.”

“Oh, Mrs. Little! how can you think thus of God?” exclaimed the doctor.
“He never treats us like that, any more than you could Raby.”

“The minister at the Corners said so,” moaned Sally. “He said it was
till the third and fourth generations.”

At such moments, Dr. Eben, in his heart, thought undevoutly of
ministers. “A bruised reed, he will not break,” came to his mind, often
as he looked at this anguish-stricken woman, watching her only child’s
suffering, and morbidly believing that it was the direct result of her
own sin. But Dr. Eben found little time to spare for his ministrations
to Sally, when Hetty was in such distress. He had never seen any thing
like it. She paced the house like a wounded lioness. She could not bear
to stay in the room: all day, all night, she walked, walked, walked; now
in the hall outside his door; now in the rooms below. Every few moments,
she questioned the doctor fiercely: “Is he no better?” “Will he have
another?” “Can’t you do something more?” “Do you think there is a
possibility that any other doctor might know something you do not?”
 “Shan’t I send Cæsar over to Springton for Dr. Wilkes; he might think of
something different?” These, and a thousand other such questions, Hetty
put to the harassed and tortured Dr. Eben, over and over, till even his
loving patience was wellnigh outworn. It was strengthened, however,
by his anxiety for her. She did not eat; she did not drink; she looked
haggard and feverish. This child had been to her from the day of his
birth like her own: she loved him with all the pent-up forces of the
great womanhood within her, which thus far had not found the natural
outlet of its affections.

“Doctor,” she would cry vehemently, “why should Raby die? God never
means that any children should die. It is all our ignorance and
carelessness; all the result of broken law. I’ve heard you say a hundred
times, that it is a thwarting of God’s plan whenever a child dies: why
don’t you cure Raby?”

“That is all true, Hetty,” Dr. Eben would reply; “all very true: it is a
thwarting of God’s plan whenever any human being dies before he is fully
ripe of old age. But the accumulated weight of generations of broken law
is on our heads. Raby’s little life has been all well ordered, so far
as we can see; but, farther back, was something wrong or he would not be
ill today. I have done my best to learn, in my little life, all that is
known of methods of cure; but I have only the records of human ignorance
to learn from, and I must fail again and again.”

At last, on the fourth night, Raby slept: slept for hours, quietly,
naturally, and with a gentle dew on his fair forehead. The doctor sat
motionless by his bed and watched him. Sally, exhausted by the long
watch, had fallen asleep on a lounge. The sound of Hetty’s restless
steps, in the hall outside, had ceased for some time. The doctor sat
wondering uneasily where she had gone. She had not entered the room for
more than an hour; the house grew stiller and stiller; not a sound was
to be heard except little Raby’s heavy breathing, and now and then one
of those fine and mysterious noises which the timbers of old houses have
a habit of making in the night-time. At last the lover got the better
of the physician. Doctor Eben rose, and, stealing softly to the door,
opened it as cautiously as a thief. All was dark.

“Hetty,” he whispered. No answer. He looked back at Raby. The child was
sleeping so soundly it seemed impossible that he could wake for some
time. Doctor Eben groped his way to the head of the great stairway, and
listened again. All was still.

“Hetty!” he called in a low voice, “Hetty!” No answer.

“She must have fallen asleep somewhere. She will surely take cold,” the
doctor said to himself; persuading his conscience that it was his duty
to go and find her. Slowly feeling his way, he crept down the staircase.
On the last step but one, he suddenly stumbled, fell, and barely
recovered himself by his firm hold of the banisters, in time to hear
Hetty’s voice in a low imperious whisper:

“Good heavens, doctor! what do you want?”

“Oh Hetty! did I hurt you?” he exclaimed; “I never dreamed of your being
on the stairs.”

“I sat down a minute to listen. It was all so still in the room, I was
frightened; and I must have been asleep a good while, I think, I am so
cold,” answered Hetty; her teeth beginning to chatter, and her whole
body shaking with cold. “Why, how dark it is!” she continued; “the hall
lamp has gone out: let me get a match.”

But Dr. Eben had her two cold hands in his. “No, Hetty,” he said, “come
right back into the room: Raby is so sound asleep it will not wake him;
and Sally is asleep too;” and he led her slowly towards the door. The
night-lamp was burning low; its pale flame, and the flickering blaze of
the big hickory logs on the hearth, made a glimmering twilight, whose
fantastic lights and shadows shot out through the door-way into the
gloom of the hall. As the first of these lights fell on Hetty’s face,
Dr. Eben started to see how white it was. Involuntarily he put his arm
around her; and exclaimed “How pale you are, my poor Hetty! you are all
worn out;” and, half supporting her with his arm, he laid his free hand
gently on her hair.

Hetty was very tired; very cold; half asleep, and half frightened. She
dropped her head on his shoulder for a second, and said: “Oh, what a
comfort you are!”

The words had hardly left her lips when Doctor Eben threw both his arms
around her, and held her tightly to his breast, whispering:

“Indeed, I will be a comfort to you, Hetty, if you will only let me.”

Hetty struggled and began to speak.

“Hush! you will wake Raby,” he said, and still held her firmly, looking
unpityingly down into her face. “You do love me, Hetty,” he whispered
triumphantly.

The front stick on the fire broke, fell in two blazing upright brands to
right and left, and cast a sudden flood of light on the two figures
in the door-way. Sally and Raby slept on. Still Doctor Eben held Hetty
close, and looked with a keen and exultant gaze into her eyes.

“It isn’t fair when I am so cold and sleepy,” whispered Hetty, with a
half twinkle in her half-open eyes.

“It is fair! It is fair! Any thing is fair! Every thing is fair,”
 exclaimed the doctor in a whisper which seemed to ring like a shout,
and he kissed Hetty again and again. Still Sally and Raby slept on: the
hickory fire leaped up as in joy; and a sudden wind shook the windows.

Hetty struggled once more to free herself, but the arms were like arms
of oak.

“Say that you love me, Hetty,” pleaded the doctor.

“When you let me go, perhaps I will,” whispered Hetty.

Instantly the arms fell; and the doctor stood opposite her in the
door-way, his head bent forward and his eyes fixed on her face.

Hetty cast her eyes down. Words did not come. It would have been easier
to have said them while she was held close to Doctor Eben’s side.
Suddenly, before he had a suspicion of what she was about to do, she had
darted away, was lost in the darkness, and in a second more he heard her
door shut at the farther end of the hall.

Dr. Eben laughed a low and pleasant laugh. “She might as well have said
it,” he thought: “she will say it to-morrow. I have won!” and he sank
into the great white dimity-covered chair, at the head of Raby’s bed,
and looked into the fire. The very coals seemed to marshal themselves
into shapes befitting his triumph: castles rose and fell; faces grew,
smiled, and faded away smiling; roses and lilies and palms glowed ruby
red, turned to silver, and paled into spiritual gray. The silence of the
night seemed resonant with a very symphony of joy. Still Sally and Raby
slept on. The boy’s sweet face took each hour a more healthful tint;
and, as Doctor Eben watched the blessed change, he said to himself:

“What a night! what a night! Two lives saved! Raby’s and mine.” As the
morning drew near, he threw up the shades of the eastern window, and
watched for the dawn. “I will see this day’s sun rise,” he said with a
thrill of devout emotion; and he watched the horizon while it changed
like a great flower calyx from gray to pearly yellow, from yellow to
pale green, and at last, when it could hold back the day no longer, to a
vast rose red with a golden sun in its centre.



IX.

That morning’s light could have fallen on no happier house, the world
over, than “Gunn’s.” A little child brought back to life, out of the
gates of death; two hearts entering anew on life, through the gates of
love; half a score of hearts, each glad in the gladness of each other,
and in the gladness of all,--what a morning it was!

Doctor Eben and Hetty met at the head of the stairs.

“Oh, Hetty!” exclaimed the doctor.

“Well?” said Hetty, in a half-defiant tone, without looking up. He came
nearer, and was about to kiss her.

She darted back, and lifting her eyes gave him a glance of such mingled
love and reproof that he was bewildered.

“Why, Hetty, surely I may kiss you?” he exclaimed.

“I was asleep last night,” she answered gravely, “and you did very
wrong,” and without another word or look she passed on.

Doctor Eben was thoroughly angry.

“What does she mean?” he said to himself. “She needn’t think I am to be
played with like a boy;” and the doctor took his seat at the breakfast
table, with a sterner countenance than Hetty had ever seen him wear. In
a few moments she began to cast timid and deprecating looks at him. His
displeasure hurt her indescribably. She had not intended to offend or
repel him. She did not know precisely what she had intended: in fact
she had not intended any thing. If the doctor had understood more about
love, he would have known that all manifestations in Hetty at this time
were simply like the unconscious flutterings of a bird in the hand in
which it is just about to nestle and rest. But he did not understand,
and when Hetty, following him into the hall, stood shyly by his side,
and looking up into his face said inquiringly, “Doctor?” he answered
her as she had answered him, a short time before, with the curt
monosyllable, “Well?” His tone was curter than his words. Hetty colored,
and saying gently, “No matter; nothing now,” turned away. Her whole
movement was so significant of wounded feeling that it smote Doctor
Eben’s heart. He sprang after her and laid his hand on her arm. “Hetty,”
 he said, “do tell me what it was you were going to say; I did not mean
to hurt your feelings: but I don’t know what to make of you.”

“Not--know--what--to--make--of--me!” repeated Hetty, very slowly, in a
tone of the intensest astonishment.

“You wouldn’t say you loved me,” replied the doctor, beginning to feel a
little ashamed of himself.

Hetty’s eyes were fixed on his now, with no wavering in their gaze. She
looked at him, as if her life lay in the balance of what she might read
in his face.

“Did you not know that I loved you before you asked me to say so?” she
said with emphasis. It was the doctor’s turn now to color. He answered
evasively:

“A man has no right to know that, Hetty, until a woman tells him so.”

“Did you not think that I loved you,” repeated Hetty, with the same
emphasis, and a graver expression on her face.

Dr. Eben hesitated. Already, he felt a sort of fear of the incalculable
processes and changes in this woman’s mind. Would she be angry if he
said, he had thought she loved him? Would she be sure to recognize any
equivocation, and be angrier at that?

“Hetty,” he said, taking her hand in his, “I did hope very strongly that
you loved me, or else I should never have asked you to say so; but you
ought to be willing to say so, if it be true. Think how many times I
have said it to you.”

Hetty’s eyes did not leave his: their expression deepened until they
seemed to darken and enlarge. She did not speak.

“Will you not say it now, Hetty?” urged the doctor.

“I can’t,” replied Hetty, and turned and walked slowly away. Presently
she turned again, and walked swiftly back to him, and exclaimed:

“What do you suppose is the reason it is so hard for me to say it?”

Dr. Eben laughed. “I can’t imagine, Hetty. The only thing that is hard
for me, is not to keep saying it all the time.”

Hetty smiled.

“There must be something wrong in me. I think I shall never say it. But
I suppose”--She hesitated, and her eyes twinkled. “I suppose you might
come to be very sure of it without my ever saying it?”

“I am sure of it now, you darling,” exclaimed the doctor; and threw both
his arms around her, and this time Hetty did not struggle.

When Welbury heard that Hetty Gunn was to marry Doctor Ebenezer
Williams, there was a fine hubbub of talk. There was no half-way opinion
in anybody’s mind on the question. Everybody was vehement, one way or
the other. All Doctor Eben’s friends were hilarious; and the greater
part of Hetty’s were gloomy. They said, he was marrying her for her
money; that Hetty was too old, and too independent in all her ways, to
be married at all; that they would be sure to fall out quickly; and
a hundred other things equally meddlesome and silly. But nobody so
disapproved of the match that he stayed away from the wedding, which was
the largest and the gayest wedding Welbury had ever seen. It went sorely
against the grain with Hetty to invite Mrs. Deacon Little, but Sally
entreated for it so earnestly that she gave way.

“I think if she once sees me with Raby in my arms, may be she’ll feel
kinder,” said Sally. James Little had carried the beautiful boy, and
laid him in his grandmother’s arms many times; but, although she showed
great tenderness toward the child, she had never yet made any allusion
to Sally; and James, who had the same odd combination of weakness and
tenacity which his mother had, had never broken the resolution which
he had taken years ago: not to mention his wife’s name in his mother’s
presence. Mrs. Little had almost as great a struggle with herself before
accepting the invitation, as Hetty had had before giving it. Only her
husband’s earnest remonstrances decided her wavering will.

“It’s only once, Mrs. Little,” he said, “and there’ll be such a crowd
there that very likely you won’t come near Sally at all. It don’t look
right for you to stay away. You don’t know how much folks think of Sally
now. She’s been asked to the minister’s to tea, she and James, with
Hetty and the doctor, several times.”

“She hain’t, has she?” exclaimed Mrs. Little, quite thrown off her
balance by this unexpected piece of news, which the wary deacon had been
holding in reserve, as a good general holds his biggest guns, for some
special occasion. “You don’t tell me so! Well, well, folks must do as
they like. For my part, I call that downright countenancing of iniquity.
And I don’t know how she could have the face to go, either. I must say,
I have some curiosity to see how she behaves among folks.”

“She’s as modest and pretty in her ways as ever a girl could be,”
 replied the deacon, who had learned during the past year to love his
son’s wife; “you won’t have any call to be ashamed of her. I can tell
you that much beforehand.”

When Mrs. Little’s eyes first fell upon her daughter-in-law, she gave
an involuntary start. In the two years during which Mrs. Little had not
seen her, Sally had changed from a timid, nervous, restless woman to a
calm and dignified one. Very much of her old girlish beauty had returned
to her, with an added sweetness from her sorrow. As she moved among the
guests, speaking with gentle greeting to each, all eyes followed her
with evident pleasure and interest. She wore a soft gray gown, which
clung closely to her graceful figure: one pale pink carnation at her
throat, and one in her hair, were her only ornaments. When Raby, with
his white frock and blue ribbons, was in her arms, the picture was one
which would have delighted an artist’s eye. Mrs. Little felt a strange
mingling of pride and irritation at what she saw. Very keenly James
watched her: he hovered near her continually, ready to forestall any
thing unpleasant or to assist any reconciliation. She observed this;
observed, also, how his gaze followed each movement of Sally’s: she
understood it. “You needn’t hang round so, Jim,” she said: “I can see
for myself. If it’s any comfort to you, I’ll say that your wife’s the
most improved woman I ever saw; and I ‘m very glad on’t. But I ain’t
going to speak to her: I ‘ve said I won’t, and I won’t. People must lie
on their beds as they make ‘em.”

James made no reply, but walked away. It seemed to him that, at that
instant, a chord in his filial love snapped, and was for ever lost.

Moment by moment, Sally watched and waited for the recognition which
never came. Bearing Raby in her arms, she passed and repassed, drawing
as near Mrs. Little as she dared. “Surely she must see that nobody else
here wholly despises me,” thought the poor woman; and, whenever any one
spoke with especial kindness to her, she glanced involuntarily to see if
her mother-in-law were observing it. But all in vain. Mrs. Little’s pale
and weak blue eyes roamed everywhere, but never seemed to rest on Sally
for a second. Gradually Sally comprehended that all her hopes had been
unfounded, and a deep sadness settled on her expressive face. “It’s no
use,” she thought, “she’ll never speak to me in the world, if she won’t
to-night.”

Even during the moments of the marriage ceremony, Hetty observed the woe
on Sally’s countenance; and, strange as it may seem,--or would seem in
any one but Hetty,--while the minister was making his most impressive
addresses and petitions, she was thinking to herself: “The hard-hearted
old woman! She hasn’t spoken to Sally. I wish I hadn’t asked her. I’ll
pay her off yet, before the evening is over.”

After the ceremony was done, and the guests were crowding up to
congratulate Hetty, she whispered to James:

“Bring Sally up here.”

When Sally came, Hetty said:

“Stand here close to me, Sally. Don’t go away.”

Presently Deacon Little approached with Mrs. Little. Hetty kissed the
good old man as heartily as if he had been her father; then, turning to
Mrs. Little, she said in a clear voice:

“I am very glad to see you in my house at last, Mrs. Little. Have you
seen Sally yet? She has been so busy receiving our friends, that I
am afraid you have hardly had a chance to talk with her. Sally,” she
continued, turning and taking Sally by the hand, “I shall be at liberty
now to attend to my friends, and you must devote yourself to Mrs.
Little;” and, with the unquestioning gesture of an empress, Hetty passed
Mrs. Little over into Sally’s charge.

Nobody could read on Hetty’s features at this moment any thing except
most cordial good-will and the tender happiness of a bride; but her
heart was fighting like a knight in a tournament for rescue of one
beset, and she was inwardly saying: “If she dares to refuse speak to her
now, I’ll expose her before this whole roomful of people.”

Mrs. Little did not dare. More than ever she dreaded Hetty at this
moment, and her surprise and fear added something to her manner towards
Sally which might almost have passed for eagerness, as they walked
away together; poor Sally lifting one quick deprecating look at Hetty’s
smiling and inexorable face. Deacon Little hastily retreated to a
corner, where he stood wiping his forehead, endeavoring not to look
alarmed, and thinking to himself:

“Well, if Hetty don’t beat all! What’ll Mrs. Little do now, I wonder?”
 And presently, as cautiously as a man stalking a deer, he followed the
couple, and tried to judge, by the expression of his wife’s face, how
things were going. Things were going very well. Mrs. Little had, in
common with all weak and obstinate persons, a very foolish fear of
ever being supposed to be dictated to or controlled by anybody. She
was distinctly aware that Hetty had checkmated her. She had strong
suspicions that there might be others looking on who understood the
game; and the only subterfuge left her, the only shadow of pretence
of not having been outwitted, was to appear as if she were glad of the
opportunity of talking with Sally. Sally’s appealing affectionateness
of manner went very far to make this easy. She had no resentment to
conceal: all these years she had never blamed Jim’s mother; she had only
yearned to win her love, to be permitted to love her. She looked up in
her face now, and said, as they walked on:

“Oh! I did so want to speak to you, but I did not dare to.”

It consoled weak Mrs. Little, for her present consciousness of being
very much afraid of Hetty, to hear that she herself had inspired a great
terror in some one else; and she answered, condescendingly:

“I have always wished you well,”--she hesitated for a word, but finally
said,--“Sally.”

“Thank you,” said Sally. “I know you did. I never wondered.”

Mrs. Little was much appeased. She had not counted on such humility.
At this moment they were met by the nurse, carrying Raby; and he was a
fruitful subject of conversation. Presently he began to cry; and Sally,
taking him in her arms, said, as if by a sudden inspiration, “I think
I had better take him upstairs. Wouldn’t you like to go up with me, and
see what lovely rooms Hetty has given to Jim and me?”

The friendliness of the bedroom, the disarming presence of the baby,
completed Mrs. Little’s surrender; and when James Little, missing his
wife, went to her room to seek her, he stood still on the threshold,
mute with surprise. There sat his mother with Raby on her lap; Sally
on her knees by an opened bureau-drawer, was showing her all Raby’s
clothes, and the two women’s faces were aglow with pleasure. James stole
in softly, came behind his mother, and kissed her as he had not kissed
her since he was a boy. Neither of the three spoke; but little Raby
crowed out a sudden and unexplained laugh, which seemed a fitting sign
and seal of the happy moment, and set them all at ease. When Sally
described the scene to Hetty, she said:

“Oh, I was so frightened when Jim came in! I thought he’d be sure to say
something to his mother that would spoil every thing. But the Lord put
it into Raby’s head to go off in one of his great laughs at nothing, and
that made us all laugh, and the first thing that came into my head was
that verse, ‘And a little child shall lead them.’”

“Dear me, Sally, does any thing happen that doesn’t put you in mind of
some verse in the Bible?” laughed Hetty.

“Not many things, Hetty,” replied Sally. “Those years that I was alone
all the time, I used to read it so much that it ‘s always coming into my
head now, whatever happens.”

After the last guest had gone, Doctor Eben and Hetty stood alone before
the blazing fire. Hetty was beautiful on this night: no white lace, no
orange blossoms, to make the ill-natured sneer at the middle-aged bride
attired like a girl; no useless finery to be laid away in chests and
cherished as sentimental mementos of an occasion. A substantial heavy
silk of a useful shade of useful gray was Hetty Gunn’s wedding gown; and
she wore on her breast and in her hair white roses, “which will do for
my summer bonnets for years,” Hetty had said, when she bought them.

But her cheeks were pink, her eyes bright, and her brown curls lovelier
than ever. Dr. Eben might well be pardoned the pride and delight with
which he drew her to his side and exclaimed, “Oh, Hetty! are you really
mine? How beautiful you look!”

“Do you think so?” said Hetty, taking a survey of herself in the
old-fashioned glass slanted at a steep angle above the mantel-piece. “I
don’t. I hate fine gowns and flowers on me. If I’d have dared to, I’d
have been married in my old purple.”

“I shouldn’t have cared,” replied her husband. “But it is better as it
is. Welbury people would have never left off talking, if you had done
that.”

They were a beautiful sight, the two, as they stood with their arms
around each other, in the fire-light. Dr. Eben was tall and of a
commanding figure; his head was almost too massive for even his broad
shoulders; his black hair was wellnigh shaggy in its thickness; and his
dark gray eyes looked out from under eyebrows which were like projecting
eaves, and threw shadows on his cheeks below. Hetty’s fair, rosy face,
and golden-brown curls, were thrown out into relief by all this dark
coloring so near, as a sunbeam is when it plays on a dark cloud. The
rooms were full of the delicate fragrance of apple blossoms. The corners
were filled with them; the walls were waving with them. Sally had begged
permission to have, for once, all the apple blossoms she desired; and,
despite groans and grumblings from Mike, she had rifled the orchards.

“Faith, an’ a good tin bushel she’s taken off the russets,” Mike said to
Norah; “an’ as for thim gillies yer was so fond of, there’s none left to
spake of on any o’ the trees. Now if she’d er tuk thim old blue pearmain
trees, I wouldn’t have said a word. But, ‘Oh no!’ sez she, ‘I must have
all pink uns;’ an’ it was jest the pink uns that was our best trees;
that’s jest as much sinse as ye wimmin ‘s got.”

“Wull, thin, an’ I’m thinkin’ yer wouldn’t have grudged Miss Hetty
her own apples, if it was in barrls ye had ‘em,” replied the practical
Norah, “an’ I don’t see where ‘s the differ.”

“Yer don’t!” said Mike, angrily. “If it had ha plazed God to make a man
o’ yer, ye’d ha known more ‘n yer do;” and with this characteristically
masculine shifting of his premises, Mike turned his back on Norah.

Neither Hetty nor Doctor Eben had ever heard that lovers should not
wed in May; and, as they looked up at the great fragrant pink and white
boughs on the walls, Hetty exclaimed: “Nobody ought to be married except
when apple-trees are in bloom. Nothing else could have been half so
lovely in the rooms, and the fire-light makes them all the prettier.
What a genius Sally has for arranging flowers. Who would have thought
common stone jars could look so well?”

Sally had taken the largest sized gray stone jars she could buy in
Welbury, and in these had set boughs six and seven feet long, looking
like young trees. On the walls she had placed deep wooden boxes with
shield-shaped fronts; these fronts were covered with gray lichens from
the rocks; the rosy blossoms waved from out these boxes, looking as much
at home as they did above the lichen-covered trunks of the trees in the
orchard.

“Poor dear Sally!” Hetty continued, “she had a hard time the first part
of the evening. That stony old woman wouldn’t speak to her. But I took
her in hand afterward. Did you observe?”

“Observe!” shouted Dr. Eben. “I should think so. You hardly waited till
the minister had got through with us.”

“I didn’t wait till then,” replied Hetty, demurely. “I was planning it
all the while he was telling me about my duty to you. I didn’t believe
he could tell me much about that, anyway; and the duty that weighed on
my mind most at that minute was my duty to Sally.”

And thus, in the flickering fire-light and the apple-blossom fragrance,
the two wedded lovers sat talking and dreaming, and taking joy of each
other while the night wore on. There was no violent transition, no great
change of atmosphere, in the beginnings of their wedded life. Dr. Eben
had now lived so much at “Gunn’s,” that it seemed no strange thing for
him to live there altogether. If it chafed him sometimes that it was
Hetty’s house and not his, Hetty’s estate, Hetty’s right and rule, he
never betrayed it. And there was little reason that it should chafe him;
for, from the day of Hetty Gunn’s marriage, she was a changed woman in
the habits and motives of her whole life. The farm was to her, as if it
were not. All the currents of her being were set now in a new channel,
and flowed as impetuously there as they had been wont to flow in the old
ones. Her husband, his needs, his movements, were now the centre around
which her fine and ceaseless activity revolved. There was not a trace
of sentimental expression to this absorption. A careless observer might
have said that her manner was deficient in tenderness; that she was
singularly chary of caresses and words of love. But one who saw deeper
would observe that not the smallest motion of the doctor’s escaped her
eye; not his lightest word failed to reach her ear; and every act of
hers was planned with either direct or indirect reference to him. In
his absence, she was preoccupied and uneasy; in his presence, she was
satisfied, at rest, and her face wore a sort of quiet radiance hard to
describe, but very beautiful to see. As for Dr. Eben, he thought he had
entered into a new world. Warmly as he had loved and admired Hetty, he
had not been prepared for these depths in her nature. Every day he said
to her, “Oh, Hetty, Hetty! I never knew you. I did not dream you
were like this.” She would answer lightly, laughingly, perhaps almost
brusquely; but intense feeling would glow in her face as a light shines
through glass; and often, when she turned thus lightly away from him,
there were passionate tears in her eyes. It very soon became her habit
to drive with him wherever he went. Old Doctor Tuthill had died some
months before, and now the county circuit was Doctor Eben’s. His love
of his profession was a passion, and nothing now stood in the way of his
gratifying it to the utmost. Books, journals, all poured in upon him.
Hetty would have liked to be omniscient that she might procure for him
all he could desire. Every morning they might be seen dashing over the
country with a pair of fleet, strong gray horses. In the afternoon, they
drove a pair of black ponies for visits nearer home. Sometimes, while
the doctor paid his visits, Hetty sat in the carriage; and, when she
suspected that he had fallen into some discussion not relative to the
patient’s case, she would call out merrily, with tones clear and ringing
enough to penetrate any walls: “Come, come, doctor! we must be off.” And
the doctor would spring to his feet, and run hastily, saying: “You see I
am under orders too: my doctor is waiting outside.” Under the seat,
side by side with the doctor’s medicine case, always went a hamper which
Hetty called “the other medicine case;” and far the more important it
was of the two. Many a poor patient got well by help of Hetty’s soups
and jellies and good bread. Nothing made her so happy as to have the
doctor come home, saying: “I’ve got a patient to-day that we must feed
to cure him.” Then only, Hetty felt that she was of real help to her
husband: of any other help that she might give him Hetty was still
incredulous; intangible things were a little out of Hetty’s range.
Even her great and passionate love had not fully opened her eyes to all
love’s needs and expressions. All that it meant to her was a perpetual
doing, ministration, a compelling of the happiness of the loved object.
And here, as everywhere else in her life, she was fully content only
when there was something evident and ready to be done. If her husband
had taken the same view of love,--had insisted on perpetual ministerings
to her in tangible forms,--she would have been bewildered and
uncomfortable; and would, no doubt, have replied most illogically: “Oh,
don’t be taking so much trouble about me. I can take care of myself; I
always have.” But Doctor Eben was in no danger of disturbing Hetty in
this way. Without being consciously a selfish man, he had a temperament
to which acceptance came easy. And really Hetty left him no time,
no room, for any such manifestations towards her, even had they been
spontaneously natural. Moreover, Hetty was a most difficult person for
anybody to help in any way. She never seemed to have needs or wants: she
was always well, brisk, cheery, prepared for whatever occurred. There
really seemed to be nothing to do for Hetty but to kiss her; and that
Doctor Eben did most heartily, and of persistence; and Hetty liked it
better than any thing in this world. With his whole heart and strength,
Eben Williams loved his wife; and he loved her better and better, day
by day. But she herself, by her peculiar temperament, her habits of
activity, and disinterestedness, made it, in the outset, out of the
question that any man living with her as her husband should ever fully
learn a husband’s duties and obligations.



X.

And now we shall pass over an interval of eight years in the history of
“Gunn’s.” For it is only the “strange history” of Eben and Hetty that
was to be told in this story, and in these years’ history was nothing
strange; unless, indeed, it might be said that they were strangely happy
years. The household remained unchanged, except that there were three
more babies in Mike’s cottage, and Hetty had been obliged to build on
another room for him. Old Nan and Cæsar still reigned. Cæsar’s head
was as white and tight-curled as the fleece of a pet lamb. He was now
a shining light in the Methodist meeting; but he had not yet broken
himself of his oaths. “Damn--bress de Lord” was still heard on occasion:
but everybody, even Nan, had grown so used to it that it did not pass
for an oath; and, no doubt, even the recording angel had long since
ceased to put it down. James Little and his wife were now as much a part
of the family as if they had had the old Squire’s blood in their veins;
and nobody thought about the old time of their disgrace,--nobody but Jim
and Sally themselves. From their thoughts it was never absent, when they
looked on the beautiful, joyous face of Raby. He had grown beyond his
years, and looked like a boy of twelve. He was manly, frank, impulsive;
a child after Hetty’s own heart, and much more like her than he was like
his father or his mother. It was a question, also, if he did not love
her more than he loved either of his parents: all his hours with her
were unclouded; over his intercourse with them, there always hung the
undefined cloud of an unexpressed sadness.

Hetty was changed. Her hair was gray; her fair skin weather-beaten; and
the fine wrinkles around the corners of her merry eyes radiated like the
spokes of a wheel. She had looked young at thirty-seven; she looked
old at forty-five. The phlegmatic and lazy sometimes seem to keep their
youth better than the sanguine and active. It is a cruel thing that
laughter should age a woman’s face almost as much as weeping; but it
does. Sunny as Hetty’s face was, it had come to have a look older than
it ought, simply because the kindly eyes had so often twinkled and half
closed in merry laughter.

Time had dealt more kindly with Doctor Eben. He was a handsomer man at
forty-one than he had been at thirty-three: the eight years had left no
other trace upon him. Face, figure, step, all were as full of youth
and vigor as upon the day when Hetty first met him walking down
the pine-shaded road. The precise moment when the first pang of
consciousness of the discrepancy between her husband’s looks and her own
entered Hetty’s mind would be hard to determine. It began probably in
some thoughtless jest of her own, or even of his; for, in his absolute
loyalty of love, his unquestioning and long-established acceptance of
their relation as a perfect one, it would never have crossed Doctor
Eben’s mind that Hetty could possibly care whether she looked older
or younger than he. He never thought about her age at all: in fact, he
could not have told either her age or his own with exactness; he was
curiously forgetful of such matters. He did not see the wrinkles around
her eyes. He did not know that her skin was weather-beaten, her figure
less graceful, her hair fast turning gray. To him she was simply
“Hetty:” the word meant as it always had meant, fulness of love,
delight, life. Doctor Eben was a man of that fine fibre of organic
loyalty, to which there is not possible, even a temptation to forsake or
remove from its object. Men having this kind of uprightness and loyalty,
rarely are much given to words or demonstrations of affection. To them
love takes its place, side by side with the common air, the course of
the sun, the succession of days and nights, and all other unquestioned
and unalterable things in the world. To suggest to such a man the
possibility of lessening in his allegiance to a wife, is like proposing
to him to overthrow the whole course of nature. He simply cannot
conceive of such a thing; and he has no tolerance for it. He is by the
very virtue of his organic structure incapable of charity for men who
sin in that way. There are not many such men, but the type exists; and
well may any woman felicitate herself to whom it is given to rest
her life on such sure foundations. If there be some lack of the daily
manifestations of tenderness, the ready word, the ever-present caress,
she may recollect that these are often the first fruits of a passion
whose early way-side harvest will be scorched and shrivelled as soon as
the sun is high; while the seed which bringeth forth a hundred, nay
a thousand fold, of true grain, sleeps in long silence, and grows up
noiseless and slow.

Doctor Eben did not know that he was in many small ways an unloverlike
husband. He did not know that his absorption in his professional studies
made him often seem unaware of Hetty’s presence for hours together,
when she was watching and waiting for a word. He did not know that he
sometimes did not hear when she spoke, and did not answer when he heard.
He did not know a hundred things which he would have known, if he
had been a less upright and loyal man, and if Hetty had been a less
unselfish woman. Neither did Hetty know any of these things, or note
them, until the poisoned consciousness awoke in her mind that she was
fast growing old, and her face was growing less lovely. This was the
first germ of Hetty’s unhappiness. It had been very hard for her in the
beginning to believe herself loved: now all her old incredulity returned
with fourfold strength; and now it was not met as then by constant and
vehement evidence to conquer it. Here again, had Hetty been like other
women, she might have been spared her suffering. Had it been possible
for her to demand, to even invite, she would have won from her husband,
at any instant, all that her anxiety could have asked; but it was not
possible. She simply went on silently, day after day, watching her
husband more intently; keeping record, in her morbid feeling, of every
moment, every look, every word which she misapprehended. Beyond this
morbidness of misapprehension, there was no other morbidness in Hetty’s
state. She did not pine or grieve; she only began slowly to wonder what
she could do for Eben now. Her sense of loss and disappointment, in that
she had borne him no children, began to weigh more heavily upon her. “If
I were mother of his children,” she said to herself, “it would not
make so much difference if I did grow old and ugly. He would have the
children to give him pleasure.” “I don’t see what there is left for me
to do,” she said again and again. Sometimes she made pathetic attempts
to change the simplicity of her dress. “Perhaps if I wore better
clothes, I should look younger,” she thought. But the result was not
satisfactory. Her severe style had always been so essentially her own
that any departure from it only made her look still more altered. All
this undercurrent of annoyance and distress added continually to the
change in her face: gradually its expression grew more grave; she smiled
less frequently; had fits of abstraction and reverie, which she had
never been known to have before.

In a vague way, Doctor Eben observed these, and wondered what Hetty was
thinking about; but he never asked. Often they drove for a whole day
together, without a dozen words being spoken; but the doctor was buried
in meditations upon his patients, and did not dislike the silence. Hetty
did not realize that the change here was more in her than in him: in the
old days it had been she who talked, not the doctor; now that she was
silent, he went on with his trains of thought undisturbed, and was
as content as before, for she was by his side. He felt her presence
perpetually, even when he gave no sign of doing so.

Many months went by in this way, a summer, a winter, part of a spring,
and Hetty’s forty-fifth birthday came, and found her a seriously unhappy
woman. Yet, strange to say, nobody dreamed of it. So unchanged was the
external current of her life: such magnificent self-control had she, and
such absolute disinterestedness. Little Raby was the only one who ever
had a consciousness that things were not right. He was Hetty’s closest
comrade and companion now. All the hours that she did not spend driving
with the doctor (and she drove with him less now than had been her
custom) she spent with Raby. They took long rambles together, and long
rides, Raby being already an accomplished and fearless little rider. By
the subtle instinct of a loving child, Raby knew that “Aunt Hetty” was
changed. A certain something was gone out of the delight they used to
take together. Once, as they were riding, he exclaimed:

“Aunt Hetty, you haven’t spoken for ever so long! What’s the matter? you
don’t talk half so much as you used to.”

And Hetty, conscience-stricken, thought to herself: “Dear me, how
selfish it makes one to be unhappy! Here I am, letting it fall on this
dear, innocent darling. I ought to be ashamed.” But she answered gayly:

“Oh, Raby! Aunty is growing old and stupid, isn’t she? She must look
out, or you’ll get tired of her.”

“I shan’t either: you’re the nicest aunty in the whole world,” cried
Raby. “You ain’t a bit old; but I wish you’d talk.”

Then and there, Hetty resolved that never again should Raby have
occasion to think thus; and he never did. Before long he had forgotten
all about this conversation, and all was as before. This was in May. One
day, in the following June, as Hetty and the doctor were driving through
Springton, he said suddenly:

“Oh, Hetty! I want you to come in with me at one place this morning.
There is the most perfectly beautiful creature there I ever saw,--the
oldest daughter of a Methodist minister who has just come here to
preach. Poor child! she cannot sit up, or turn herself in bed; but she
is an angel, and has the face of one, if ever a human creature had. They
are very poor and we must help them all we can. I have great hopes
of curing the child, if she can be well fed. It is a serious spinal
disease, but I believe it can be cured.”

When Hetty first looked on the face of Rachel Barlow, she said in her
heart: “Eben was right. It is the face of an angel;” and when she heard
Rachel’s voice, she added, “and the voice also.” Some types of spinal
disease seem to have a marvellously refining effect on the countenance;
producing an ethereal clearness of skin, and brightness of eye, and a
spiritual expression, which are seen on no other faces. Rachel Barlow
was a striking instance of this almost abnormal beauty. As her fair
face looked up at you from her pillow, your impulse was to fall on your
knees. Not till she smiled did you feel sure she was human; but when she
smiled, the smile was so winningly warm, you forgot you had thought her
an angel. For two years she had not moved from her bed, except as she
was lifted in the strong arms of her father. For two years she had not
been free from pain for a moment. Often the pain was so severe that she
fainted. And yet her brow was placid, unmarked by a line, and her face
in repose as serene as a happy child’s.

Doctor Eben and Hetty sat together by the bed.

“Rachel,” said the doctor, “I have brought my wife to help cure you. She
is as good a doctor as I am.” And he turned proudly to Hetty.

Rachel gazed at her earnestly, but did not speak. Hetty felt herself
singularly embarrassed by the gaze.

“I wish I could help you,” she said; “but I think my husband will make
you well.”

Rachel colored.

“I never permit myself to hope for it,” she replied. “If I did, I should
be discontented at once.”

“Why! are you contented as it is?” exclaimed Hetty impetuously.

“Oh, yes!” said Rachel. “I enjoy every minute, except when the pain
is too hard: you don’t know what a beautiful thing life seems to me.
I always have the sky you know” (glancing at the window), “and that
is enough for a lifetime. Every day birds fly by too; and every day my
father reads to me at least two hours. So I have great deal to think
about.”

“Miss Barlow, I envy you,” said Hetty in a tone which startled even
herself. Again Rachel bent on her the same clairvoyant gaze which had so
embarrassed her before. Hetty shrank from it still more than at first,
and left the room, saying to her husband: “I will wait for you outside.”

As they drove away, Hetty said:

“Eben, what is it in her look which makes me so uneasy? I don’t like to
have her look at me.”

“Now that is strange,” replied the doctor. “After you had left the room,
the child said to me: ‘What is the matter with your wife? She is not
well,’ and I laughed at the idea, and told her I never knew any woman
half so well or strong. Rachel is a sort of clairvoyant, as persons in
her condition are so apt to be; but she made a wrong guess this time,
didn’t she?”

Hetty did not answer; and the doctor turning towards her saw that her
eyes were fixed on the sky with a dreamy expression.

“Why, Hetty!” he exclaimed. “Why do you look so? You are perfectly well,
are you not, dear?”

“Oh, yes! oh, yes!” Hetty answered, quickly rousing herself. “I am
perfectly well; and always have been, ever since I can remember.”

After this, Hetty went no more with her husband to see Rachel. When he
asked her, she said: “No, Eben: I am going to see her alone. I will not
go with you again. She makes me uncomfortable. If she makes me feel
so, when I am alone with her, I shall not go at all. I don’t like
clairvoyants.”

“Why, what a queer notion that is for you, wife!” laughed the doctor,
and thought no more of it.

Hetty’s first interview with Rachel was a constrained one. Nothing in
Hetty’s life had prepared her for intercourse with so finely organized
a creature: she felt afraid to speak, lest she should wound her; her
own habits of thought and subjects of interest seemed too earthy to be
mentioned in this presence; she was vaguely conscious that all Rachel’s
being was set to finer issues than her own. She found in this an
unspeakable attraction; and yet it also withheld her at every point and
made her dumb. In spite of these conflicting emotions, she wanted to
love Rachel, to help her, to be near her; and she went again and again,
until the constraint wore off, and a very genuine affection grew up
between them. Never, after the first day, had she felt any peculiar
embarrassment under Rachel’s gaze, and her memory of it had nearly died
away, when one day, late in the autumn, it was suddenly revived with
added intensity. It was a day on which Hetty had been feeling unusually
sad. Even by Rachel’s bedside she could not quite throw off the sadness.
Unconsciously, she had been sitting for a long time silent. As she
looked up, she met Rachel’s eyes fixed full on hers, with the same
penetrating gaze which had so disturbed her in their first interview.
Rachel did not withdraw her gaze, but continued to look into Hetty’s
eyes, steadily, piercingly, with an expression which held Hetty
spell-bound. Presently she said:

“Dear Mrs. Williams, you are thinking something which is not true. Do
not let it stay with you.”

“What do you mean, Rachel?” asked Hetty, resentfully. “No one can read
another person’s thoughts.”

“Not exactly,” replied Rachel, in a timid voice, “but very nearly. Since
I have been ill, I have had a strange power of telling what people were
thinking about: I can sometimes tell the exact words. I cannot tell how
it is. I seem to read them in the air, or to hear them spoken. And I
can always tell if a person is thinking either wicked thoughts or untrue
ones. A wicked person always looks to me like a person in a fog. There
have been some people in this room that my father thought very good; but
I knew they were very bad. I could hardly see their faces clear. When a
person is thinking mistaken or untrue thoughts, I see something like a
shimmer of light all around them: it comes and goes, like a flicker from
a candle. When you first came in to see me, you looked so.”

“Pshaw, Rachel,” said Hetty, resolutely. “That is all nonsense. It is
just the nervous fancy of a sick girl. You mustn’t give way to it.”

“I should think so too,” replied Rachel, meekly. “If it did not so often
come exactly true. My father will tell you how often we have tried it.”

“Well, then, tell me what I was thinking just now,” laughed Hetty.

Rachel colored. “I would rather not,” she replied, in an earnest tone.

“Oh! you’re afraid it won’t prove true,” said Hetty. “I’ll take the
risk, if you will.”

Rachel hesitated, but finally repeated her first answer. “I would rather
not.”

Hetty persisted, and Rachel, with great reluctance, answered her as
follows:

“You were thinking about yourself: you were dissatisfied about something
in yourself; you are not happy, and you ought to be; you are so good.”

Hetty listened with a wonder-struck face. She disliked this more than
she had ever in her life disliked any thing which had happened to her.
She did not speak.

“Do not be angry,” said Rachel. “You made me tell you.”

“Oh! I am not angry,” said Hetty. “I’m not so stupid as that; but it’s
the most disagreeable thing, I ever knew. Can you help seeing these
things, if you try?”

“Yes, I suppose I might,” said Rachel. “I never try. It interests me to
see what people are thinking about.”

“Humph!” said Hetty, sarcastically. “I should think so. You might make
your fortune as a detective, if you were well enough to go about in the
world.”

“If I were that, I should lose the power,” replied Rachel. “The doctors
say it is part of the disease.”

“Rachel,” exclaimed Hetty, vehemently, “I’ll never come near you again,
if you don’t promise not to use this power of yours upon me. I should
never feel comfortable one minute where you are, if I thought you were
reading my thoughts. Not that I have any special secrets,” added Hetty,
with a guilty consciousness; “but I suppose everybody thinks thoughts he
would rather not have read.”

“I’ll promise you, indeed I will, dear Mrs. Williams,” cried Rachel,
much distressed. “I never have read you, except that first day. It
seemed forced upon me then, and to-day too. But I promise you, I will
not do it again.”

“I suppose I shouldn’t know if you were doing it, unless you told me,”
 said Hetty, reflectively.

“I think you would,” answered Rachel. “Do I not look peculiarly? My
father tells me that I do.”

“Yes, you do,” replied Hetty, recollecting that, in each of these
instances, she had been much disturbed by Rachel’s look. “I will trust
you, then, seeing that you probably can’t deceive me.”

When Hetty told the doctor of this, expecting that he would dismiss
it as unworthy of attention, she was much surprised at the interest he
showed in the account. He questioned her closely as to the expression of
Rachel’s face, her tones of voice, during the interval.

“And was it true, Hetty?” he asked; “was what she said true? Were you
thinking of something in yourself which troubled you?”

“Yes, I was,” said Hetty, in a low voice, fearing that her husband would
ask her what; but he was only studying the incident from professional
curiosity.

“You are sure of that, are you?” he asked.

“Yes, very sure,” replied Hetty.

“Extraordinary! ‘pon my word extraordinary!” ejaculated the doctor. “I
have read of such cases, but I have never more than half believed them.
I’d give my right hand to cure that girl.”

“Your right hand is not yours to give,” said Hetty, playfully.
The doctor made no reply. He was deep in meditation on Rachel’s
clairvoyance. Hetty looked at him for some moments, as earnestly as
Rachel had looked at her. “Oh if I could only have that power Rachel
has!” she thought.

“Eben,” she said, “is it impossible for a healthy person to be a
clairvoyant?”

“Quite,” answered the doctor, with a sudden instinct of what Hetty
meant. “No chance for you, dear. You’ll never get at any of my secrets
that way. You might as well try to make yourself Rachel’s age as to
acquire this mysterious power she has.”

Unlucky words! Hetty bore them about with her. “That showed that he
feels that I am old,” she said, as often as she recalled them.

A month later, as she was sitting with Rachel one morning, there was a
knock at the door. Hetty was sitting in such a position that she could
not be seen from the door, but could see, in the looking-glass at the
foot of Rachel’s bed, any person entering the room. As the door opened,
she looked up, and, to her unspeakable surprise, saw her husband coming
in; saw, in the same swift second’s glance, the look of gladness and
welcome on his face, and heard him say, in tones of great tenderness:

“How are you to-day, precious child?” In the next instant, he had seen
his wife, and was, in his turn, so much astonished, that the look
of glad welcome which he had bent upon Rachel, was instantaneously
succeeded by one of blank surprise, bent upon Hetty; surprise, and
nothing else, but so great surprise that it looked almost like dismay
and confusion. “Why, Hetty!” he said, “I did not expect to see you
here.”

“Nor I you,” said Hetty, lightly; but the lightness of tone had a
certain something of constraint in it. This incident was one of those
inexplicably perverse acts of Fate which make one almost believe
sometimes in the depravity of spirits, if not in that of men. When Dr.
Eben had left home that morning, Hetty had said to him:

“Are you going to Springton, to-day?”

“No, not to-day,” was the reply.

“I am very sorry,” answered Hetty. “I wanted to send some jelly to
Rachel.”

“Can’t go to-day, possibly,” the doctor had said. “I have to go the
other way.”

But later in the morning he had met a messenger from Springton, riding
post-haste, with an imperative call which could not be deferred. And, as
he was in the village, he very naturally stopped to see Rachel. All of
this he explained with some confusion; feeling, for the first time in
his long married life, that it was awkward for a man to have to account
for his presence in any particular spot at any particular time. Hetty
betrayed no annoyance or incredulity: she felt none. She was too
sensible and reasonable a woman to have felt either, even if it had been
simply a change of purpose on the doctor’s own part which had brought
him to Springton. The thing which had lent the shade of constraint to
Hetty’s voice, and which lay like an icy mountain on Hetty’s heart, was
the look which she had seen on his face, the tone which she had heard in
his voice, as he greeted Rachel. In that instant was planted the second
germ of unhappiness in Hetty’s bosom. Of jealousy, in the ordinary
acceptation of the term; of its caprices, suspicions, subterfuges; and,
above all, of its resentments,--Hetty was totally incapable. If it
had been made evident to her in any one moment, that her husband loved
another woman, her first distinct thoughts would have been of sorrow for
him rather than for herself, and of perplexity as to what could be done
to make him happy again. At this moment, however, nothing took distinct
shape in Hetty’s mind. It was merely the vague pain of a loving woman’s
sensitive heart, surprised by the sight of tender looks and tones given
by her husband to another woman. It was wholly a vague pain, but it
was the germ of a great one; and, falling as it did on Hetty’s
already morbid consciousness of her own loss of youth and beauty
and attractiveness, it fell into soil where such germs ripen as in a
hot-bed. In a less noble nature than Hetty’s there would have grown
up side by side with this pain a hatred of Rachel, or, at least, an
antagonism towards her. In the fine equilibrium of Hetty’s moral nature,
such a thing was impossible. She felt from that day a new interest in
Rachel. She looked at her, often scrutinizingly, and thought: “Ah, if
she were but well, what a sweet young wife she might make! I wish Eben
could have had such a wife! How much better it would have been for him
than having me!” She began now to go oftener with her husband to visit
Rachel. Closely, but with no sinister motive, no trace of ill-feeling,
she listened to all which they said. She observed the peculiar
gentleness with which the doctor spoke, and the docility with which
Rachel listened; and she said to herself: “That is quite unlike Eben’s
manner to me, or mine to him. I wonder if that is not more nearly the
way it ought to be between husbands and wives. The wife ought to look
up to her husband as a little child does.” Now, much as Hetty loved Dr.
Eben, passionately as her whole life centred around him, there had never
been such a feeling as this: they were the heartiest of comrades, but
each life was on a plane of absolute independence. Hetty pondered much
on this.



XI.

One day, as they sat by Rachel’s bed, the doctor had been counting her
pulse. Her little white hand looked like a baby’s hand in his. Holding
it up, he said to Hetty:

“Look at that hand. It couldn’t do much work, could it!”

Involuntarily Hetty stretched out her large, well-knit brown hand,
and put it by the side of Rachel’s. There are many men who would have
admired Hetty’s hand the more of the two. It was a much more significant
hand. To one who could read palmistry, it meant all that Hetty was; and
it was symmetrical and firm. But, at that moment, to Dr. Eben it looked
large and masculine.

“Oh, take it away, Hetty!” he said, thoughtlessly. “It looks like a
man’s hand by the side of this child’s.”

Hetty laughed. She thought so too. But the words remained in her mind,
and allied themselves to words that had gone before, and to things that
had happened, and to thoughts which were restlessly growing, growing in
Hetty’s bosom.

If Rachel had remained an invalid, probably Hetty’s thoughts of her,
as connected with her husband, would never have gone beyond this vague
stage which we have tried to describe. She would have been to Hetty only
the suggestion of a possible ideal wife, who, had she lived, and had
she entered into Dr. Eben’s life, might have made him happier than
Hetty could. But Rachel grew better and stronger every day. Early in the
spring she began to walk,--creeping about, at first, like a little child
just learning to walk, by pushing a chair before her. Then she walked
with a cane and her father’s arm; then with the cane alone; and at
last, one day in May,--oddly enough it was the anniversary of Hetty’s
wedding-day,--Dr. Eben burst into her room, exclaiming: “Hetty! Hetty!
Rachel has walked several rods alone. She is cured! She is going to be
as well as anybody.”

The doctor’s face was flushed with excitement. Never had he had what
seemed to him so great a professional triumph. It was the physician
and not the man that felt so intensely. But Hetty could not wholly know
this. She had shared his deep anxiety about the case; and she had shared
much of his strong interest in Rachel, and it was with an unaffected
pleasure that she exclaimed: “Oh, I’m so thankful!” but her next
sentence was one which arrested her husband’s attention, and seemed to
him a strange one.

“Then there is nothing to hinder her being married, is there?”

“Why, no,” laughed the doctor, “nothing, except the lack of a man fit
to marry her! What put such a thought as that into your head, Hetty? I
don’t believe Rachel Barlow will ever be married. I’m sure I don’t know
the man that’s worthy to so much as kiss the child’s feet!” and the
unconscious Dr. Eben hastened away, little dreaming what a shaft he had
sped.

Hetty stood at the open window, watching him, as far as she could see
him, among the pines. The apple orchard, near the house, was in full
bloom, and the fragrance came in at every window. A vase of the blossoms
stood on Hetty’s bureau: it was one of her few, tender reminiscences,
the love which she had had for apple blossoms ever since the night of
her marriage. She held a little cluster of them now in her hand, as she
leaned on the window-sill; they had been gathered for some days, and, as
a light wind stirred the air, all the petals fell, and slowly fluttered
down to the ground. Hetty looked wistfully at the bare stems. A distinct
purpose at that moment was forming in her mind; a purpose distinct
in its aim, but, as yet, very vague in its shape. She was saying to
herself: “If I were out of the way, Eben might marry Rachel. He needn’t
say, he doesn’t know a man fit to do it. He is fit to marry any woman
God ever made, and I believe he would be happier with such a wife as
that, and with children, than he can ever be with me.”

Even now there was in Hetty no morbid jealousy, no resentment, no
suspicion that her husband had been disloyal to her even in thought.
There had simply been forced upon her, by the slow accumulations of
little things, the conviction that her husband would be happier with
another woman for his wife than with her. It is probably impossible to
portray in words all the processes of this remarkable woman’s mind and
heart during these extraordinary passages of her life. They will seem,
judged by average standards, morbid and unhealthy: yet there was no
morbidness in them; unless we are to call morbid all the great and
glorious army of men and women who have laid down their own lives for
the sake of others. That same fine and rare quality of self-abnegation
which has inspired missionaries’ lives and martyrs’ deaths, inspired
Hetty now. The morbidness, if there were any, was in the first entering
into her mind of the belief that her husband’s happiness could be
secured in any way so well as by her. But here let us be just to Hetty.
The view she took was the common-sense view, which probably would have
been taken by nine out of ten of all Dr. Eben’s friends. Who could say
that it did not stand to reason, that a man would be happier with a
wife, young, beautiful, of angelic sweetness of nature, and the mother
of sons and daughters, than with an old, childless, and less attractive
woman. The strange thing was that any wife could take this common-sense
view of such a situation. It was not strange in Hetty, however. It
was simply the carrying out of the impulses and motives which had
characterized her whole life.

About this time, Hetty began with Raby to practise rowing on Welbury
Lake. This lake was a beautiful sheet of water, lying between Welbury
and Springton. It was some two miles long, and one wide; and held two or
three little wooded islands, which were much resorted to in the summer.
On two sides of the lake, rose high, rocky precipices; no landing was
possible there: the other two sides were thick wooded forests of pines
and hemlocks. Nothing could exceed in loveliness the situation of this
lake. Two roads led to it: one from the Springton, the other from the
Welbury side; both running through the hemlock forests. In the winter
these were used for carrying out ice, which was cut in great quantities
on the lake. In the summer, no one crossed these roads, except parties
of pleasure-seekers who went to sail or row on the lake. In a shanty on
the Welbury side, lived an old man, who made a little money every summer
by renting a few rather leaky boats, and taking charge of such boats as
were kept moored at his beach by their owners.

Hetty had promised Raby that when he was ten years old he should have a
fine boat, and learn to row. The time had come now for her to keep this
promise. Every Saturday afternoon during the summer following Rachel’s
recovery, Hetty and Raby spent on the lake. Hetty was a strong and
skilful oars-woman. Little Raby soon learned to manage the boat as well
as she did. The lake was considered unsafe for sail-boats, on account of
flaws of wind which often, without any warning, beat down from the hills
on the west side; but rowing there was one of the chief pleasures of the
young people of Welbury and Springton. In Hetty’s present frame of mind,
this lonely lake had a strange fascination for her. In her youth she had
never loved it: she had always been eager to land on one of the islands,
and spend hours in the depths of the fragrant woods, rather than on the
dark and silent water. But now she never wearied of rowing round and
round its water margin, and looking down into its unsounded depths.
It was believed that Welbury Lake was unfathomable; but this notion
probably had its foundation in the limited facilities in that region for
sounding deep waters.

One day Hetty rowed across the lake to the point where the Springton
road came down to the shore. Pushing the boat up on the beach, she
sprang out; and, telling Raby to wait there till she returned, she
walked rapidly up the road. A guide-post said, “Six miles to Springton.”
 Hetty stood some time looking reflectingly at this sign: then she walked
on for half a mile, till she came to another road running north; here
a guide-post said, “Fairfield, five miles.” This was what Hetty was in
search of. As she read the sign, she said in a low tone: “Five miles;
that is easily walked.” Then she turned and hastened back to the
shore, stopping on the way to gather for Raby a big bunch of the snowy
Indian-pipes, which grew in shining clumps in the moist dark hemlock
woods. A strange and terrible idea was slowly taking possession of
Hetty. Day and night it haunted her. Once having been entertained as
possible, it could never be banished from her mind. How such an impulse
could have become deep-seated in a nature like Hetty’s will for ever
remain a mystery. One would have said that she was the last woman in
the world to commit a morbid or ill-regulated act. But the act she was
meditating now was one which seemed like the act of insanity. Yet had
Hetty never in her life seemed farther removed from any such tendency.
She was calm, cheerful, self-contained. If any one saw any change in
her, it seemed like nothing more than the natural increase of quiet and
decorum coming with her increased age. Even her husband, when he looked
back on these months, trying in anguish to remember every day, every
hour, could recall no word or deed or look of hers which had seemed to
him unnatural. And yet there was not a day, hardly an hour, in which her
mind was not occupied with the details of a plan for going away secretly
from her house, under such circumstances as to make it appear that she
had been drowned in the lake. That she must leave her husband free to
marry Rachel Barlow had become a fixed idea in Hetty’s mind. She was too
conscientious to kill herself for this purpose: moreover, she did not in
the least wish to die. She was very unhappy in this keen conviction that
she no longer sufficed for her husband’s happiness; that she was, as she
would have phrased it, “in the way.” But she was not heart-broken over
it, as a sentimental and feeble woman would have been. “There is plenty
to do in the world,” she said to herself. “I’ve got a good many years’
work left in me yet: the thing is how to get at it.” For many weeks she
had revolved the matter hopelessly, till one day, as she was rowing with
Raby on the lake, she heard a whistle of a steam-engine on the Springton
side of the lake. In that second, her whole plan flashed upon her brain.
She remembered that a railroad, leading to Canada, ran between Springton
and the lake. She remembered that there was a station not many miles
from Springton. She remembered that far up in Canada was a little French
village, St. Mary’s, where she had once spent part of a summer with her
father. St. Mary’s was known far and near for its medicinal springs, and
the squire had been sent there to try them. She remembered that there
was a Roman Catholic priest there of whom her father had been very fond.
She remembered that there were Sisters of Charity there, who used to go
about nursing the sick. She remembered the physician under whose
care her father was. She remembered all these things with a startling
vividness in the twinkling of an eye, before the echoes of the
steam-engine’s whistle had died away on the air. She was almost
paralyzed by the suddenness and the clearness with which she was
impressed that she must go to St. Mary’s. She dropped the oars, leaned
forward, and looked eagerly at the opening in the woods where the
Springton road touched the shore.

“What is it, aunty? What do you see!” asked Raby. The child’s voice
recalled her to herself.

“Nothing! nothing! Raby. I was only listening to the car-whistle. Didn’t
you hear it?” answered Hetty.

“No,” said Raby. “Where are they going? Can’t you take me some day.”

The innocent words smote on Hetty’s heart. How should she leave Raby?
What would her life be without him? his without her? But thinking about
herself had never been Hetty’s habit. That a thing would be hard for
her had never been to Hetty any reason for not doing it, since she was
twelve years old. From all the pain and loss which were involved to
her in this terrible step she turned resolutely away, and never thought
about them except with a guilty sense of selfishness. She believed with
all the intensity of a religious conviction that it would be better for
her husband, now, to have Rachel Barlow for his wife. She believed, with
the same intensity, that she alone stood in the way of this good for
him. Call it morbid, call it unnatural, call it wicked if you will, in
Hetty Williams to have this belief: you must judge her conduct from its
standpoint, and from no other. The belief had gained possession of
her. She could no more gainsay it, resist it, than if it had been
communicated to her by supernatural beings of visible presence and
actual speech. Given this belief, then her whole conduct is lifted to a
plane of heroism, takes rank with the grand martyrdoms; and is not to be
lightly condemned by any who remember the words,--“Greater love hath no
man than this, that a man lay down his life for his friend.”

The more Hetty thought over her plan, the simpler and more feasible
it appeared. More and more she concentrated all her energies on the
perfecting of every detail: she left nothing unthought of, either in her
arrangements for her own future, or in her arrangements for those she
left behind. Her will had been made for many years, leaving unreservedly
to her husband the whole estate of “Gunn’s,” and also all her other
property, except a legacy to Jim and Sally, and a few thousand dollars
to old Cæsar and Nan. Hetty was singularly alone in the world. She
had no kindred to whom she felt that she owed a legacy. As she looked
forward to her own departure, she thought with great satisfaction of
the wealth which would now be her husband’s. “He will sell the farm, no
doubt,--it isn’t likely that he will care to live on here; and when
he has it all in money he can go to Europe, as he has so often said he
would,” she said to herself, still, as ever, planning for her husband’s
enjoyment.

As the autumn drew near, she went oftener with Raby to row on the Lake.
A spell seemed to draw her to the spot. She continually lived over,
in her mind, all the steps she must take when the time came. She rowed
slowly back and forth past the opening of the Springton road, and
fancied her own figure walking alone up that bank for the last time.
Several times she left Raby in the boat, and walked as far as the
Fairfield guide-post, and returned. At last she had rehearsed the
terrible drama so many times that it almost seemed to her as if it had
already happened, and she found it strange to be in her own house with
her husband and Jim and Sally and her servants. Already she began to
feel herself dissevered from them. When every thing was ready, she
shrank from taking the final step. Three times she went with Raby to the
Lake, having determined within herself not to return; but her courage
failed her, and she found a ready excuse for deferring all until the
next day. She had forgotten some little thing, or the weather looked
threatening; and the last time she went back, it was simply to kiss her
husband again. “One day more or less cannot make any difference,” she
said to herself. “I will kiss Eben once more.” Oh, what a terrible thing
is this barrier of flesh, which separates soul from soul, even in the
closest relation! Our nearest and dearest friend, sitting so near that
we can hear his every breath, can see if his blood runs by a single
pulse-beat faster to his cheek, may yet be thinking thoughts which, if
we could read them, would break our hearts. When the time came in which
Eben Williams tried to recall the last moments in which he had seen his
wife, all he could recollect was that she kissed him several times with
more than usual affection. At the time he had hardly noted it: he was
just setting off to see a patient, and Raby was urging Hetty to make
haste; and their good-byes had been hurried.

It was on a warm hazy day in October. The woods through which Hetty and
Raby walked to the lake were full of low dogwood bushes, whose leaves
were brilliant; red, pink, yellow, and in places almost white. Raby
gathered boughs of these, and carried them to the boat. It was his
delight to scatter such bright leaves from the stern of the boat,
and watch them following in its wake. They landed on the small island
nearest the Springton shore, and looked for wild grapes, which were now
beginning to be ripe. After an hour or two here, Hetty told Raby that
they must set out: she had errands to do in the town before going home.
She rowed very quickly to the beach, and, just as they were leaving the
boat, she exclaimed:

“Oh, Raby, I have left my shawl on the island; way around on the other
side it is too. I must row back and get it.”

Raby was about to jump into the boat, but she exclaimed:

“No, you stay here, and wait. I can row a great deal quicker with
only one in the boat. Here, dear,” she said, taking off her watch, and
hanging it round his neck, “you can have this to keep you from being
lonely, and you can tell by this how long it will be before I get back.
Watch the hands, and that will make the time seem shorter, they go
so fast. It will take me about half an hour; that will be--let me
see--yes--just five o’clock. There is a good long daylight after that;”
 and, kissing him, she jumped into the boat and pushed off. What a moment
it was. Her arms seemed to be paralyzed; but, summoning all her will,
she drove the boat resolutely forward, and looked no more back at Raby.
As soon as she had gained the other side of the island, where she was
concealed from Raby’s sight by the trees, she pulled out vigorously
for the Springton shore. When she reached it, she drew the boat up
cautiously on the beach, fastened it, and hid herself among the trees.
Her plan was to wait there until dusk, then push the boat adrift in the
lake, and go out herself adrift into the world. She dared not set out
on her walk to Fairfield until it was dark; she knew, moreover, that
the northern train did not pass until nearly midnight. These hours that
Hetty spent crouched under the hemlock-trees on the shore of the lake
were harder than any which she lived through afterward. She kept her
eyes fixed on the opposite shore, on the spot where she knew the patient
child was waiting for her. She pictured him walking back and forth,
trying by childish devices to while away the time. As the sun sank
low she imagined his first anxious look,--his alarm,--till it seemed
impossible for her to bear the thoughts her imagination called up. He
would wait, she thought, about one hour past the time that she had set
for her return: possibly, for he was a brave child, he might wait until
it began to grow dark; he would think that she was searching for the
shawl. She hoped that any other explanation of her absence would not
occur to him until the very last. As the twilight deepened into dusk,
the mysterious night sounds began to come up from the woods; strange
bird notes, stealthy steps of tiny creatures. Hetty’s nerves thrilled
with the awful loneliness: she could bear it no longer; she began to
walk up and down the beach; the sound of her footsteps drowned many
of the mysterious noises, and made her feel less alone. At last it was
dark. With all her strength she turned her boat bottom side up, shoved
it out into the lake, and threw the oars after it. Then she wrapped
herself in a dark cloak, and walked at a rapid pace up the Springton
road. When she reached the road which led to Fairfield, she stopped,
leaned against the guide-post, and looked back and hesitated. It seemed
as if the turning northward were the turning point of every thing. Her
heart was very heavy: almost her purpose failed her. “It is too late to
go back now,” she said, and hurried on.



XII.

The station-master at Fairfield, if he had been asked whether a woman
took the midnight train north at Fairfield that night, would have
unhesitatingly said, “No.” An instinctive wisdom seemed to direct
Hetty’s every step. She waited at some little distance from the station
till the train came up: then, without going upon the station platform at
all, she entered the rear car from the opposite side of the road. No one
saw her; not even a brakeman. When the train began to move, the sense of
what she had done smote her with a sudden terror, and she sprang to
her feet, but sank down again, before any of the sleepy passengers had
observed her motion. In a few moments she was calm. Her long habits of
firm, energetic action began to resume sway: she compelled herself to
look forward into the future, and not backward into the past she was so
resolutely leaving behind her. Strangely enough, it was not her husband
that she found hardest to banish from her thoughts now, but Raby. She
could not escape from the vivid imagination of the dear child running in
terror alone through the long stretch of woods.

“I wonder if he will cry,” thought poor Hetty: “I hope not.” And the
tears filled her eyes. Then she fell to wondering if there would be any
doubt in anybody’s mind that her boat had suddenly capsized. “They will
think I leaned over to pick something off the bushes on the edge of the
island,” said she. “I have come very near capsizing that way more than
once, and I have always told Eben when it had happened. That is the
first thing he will think of.” And thus, in a maze of incoherent
crowding conjectures and imaginings, all making up one great misery,
Hetty sat whirling away from her home. By and by, her brain grew less
active; thought was paralyzed by pain. She sat motionless, taking no
note of the hours of the night as they sped by, and roused from her
dull reverie only when she saw the first faint red tinge of dawn in the
eastern sky. Then she started up, with a fresh realization of all.
“Oh, it is morning!” she said. “Have they given over looking for me, I
wonder. I suppose they have been looking all night. By this time, they
must be sure I am drowned. After I know all that is over, I shall feel
easier. It can’t be quite so hard to bear as this.”

In all Hetty’s imaginings of her plan, she had leaped over the interval
of transition from the life she left to the life she proposed to lead.
She had pictured herself always as having attained the calm rest of the
shelter she would seek, the strong moral support of the work she would
do. She had not dwelt on this wretched interval of concealment and
flight; she had not thought of this period of being an unknown outcast.
A sense of ignominy began to crush her. It was a new thing for her
to avoid a human eye: she felt guilty, ashamed, terror-stricken; and,
doubly veiling her face, she sat with her eyes closed, and her head
turned away, like one asleep or ill. The day dragged slowly on. Now and
then she left the train, and bought a new ticket to carry her farther.
Even had there been suspicions of her flight, it would have been
impossible to have traced her, so skilfully had she managed. She had
provided herself with a time-table of the entire route, and bought
new tickets only at points of junction where several roads met, and no
attention could possibly be drawn to any one traveller.

At night she reached the city, where she had planned to remain for some
days, to make purchases. When she entered the hotel, and was asked to
register her name, no one who saw the quick and ready signature which
she wrote would have dreamed that it was not her own:

“MRS. HIBBA SMAILLI, St. Mary’s, Canada.”

“One of those Welsh women, from St. Mary’s, I guess,” said the clerk;
“they all have those fresh, florid skins when they first come over
here.” And with this remark he dismissed Hetty from his mind, only
wondering now and then, as he saw her so often coming in, laden with
parcels, “what a St. Mary’s woman wanted with so many things.”

During these days, while Hetty was unflinchingly going forward with all
her preparations for her new home, the home she had left was a scene of
terrible dismay and suffering.

It was long after dark when little Raby, breathless and sobbing, had
burst open the sitting-room door, crying out:

“Auntie’s drowned in the lake. I know she is; or else a bear’s eaten her
up. She said she’d be back in an hour. And here’s her watch,”--opening
his little hot hand, in which he had held the watch tight through all
his running,--“she gave it to me to hold till she came back. And she
said it would be five; and I stayed till seven, and she never came;
and a man brought me home.” And Raby flung himself on the floor, crying
convulsively.

His father and mother tried to calm him, and to get a more exact
account from him of what had happened; but, between their alarm and his
hysterical crying, all was confusion.

Presently, the man entered who had brought Raby home in his wagon. He
was a stranger to them all. His narrative merely corroborated Raby’s,
but threw no light on what had gone before. He had found the child on
the main road, running very fast, and crying aloud. He had asked him to
jump into his wagon; and Raby had replied: “Yes, sir: if you will whip
your horse and make him run all the way to my house? My auntie’s drowned
in the lake;” and this was all the child had said.

Poor Raby! his young nerves had entirely given way under the strain of
those hours of anxious waiting. He had borne the first hour very well.
When the watch said it was five o’clock, and Hetty was not in sight,
he thought, as she had hoped he would, that she was searching for the
shawl; but, when six o’clock came, and her boat was not in sight, his
childish heart took alarm. He ran to the shanty where the old boatman
lived; and pounded furiously on the door, shouting loud, for the man was
very deaf. The door was locked; no one answered. Raby pushed logs under
the windows, and, climbing up, looked in. The house was empty. Then the
little fellow jumped into the only boat which was there, and began to
row out into the lake in search of Hetty.

Alas! the boat leaked so fast that it was with difficulty he got back to
the shore. Perhaps, if Hetty, from her hiding-place, had seen the dear,
brave child rowing to her rescue, it might have been a rescue indeed. It
might have changed for ever the current of her life. But this was not
to be. Wet and chilled, and clogged by his dripping shoes, Raby turned
towards home. The woods were dark and full of shadows. The child had
never been alone in them at night before; and the gloom added to his
terrors. His feet seemed as if they would fail him at every step, and
his sobbing cries left him little breath with which to run.

Jim and Sally turned helplessly to the stranger, as he concluded his
story.

“Oh, what shall we do! what shall we do!” they said. “Oh, take us right
back to the lake, won’t you? and the rest will follow: we may find her.”

“There isn’t any boat,” cried Raby, from the floor. “I tried to go for
her, and the boat is all full of holes, and she must have been drowned
ever so long by this time; she told me it only took half an hour, that
nobody could be brought to life after that,” and Raby’s cries rose
almost to shrieks, and brought old Cæsar and Nan from the kitchen. As
the first words of what had happened reached their ears, they broke into
piercing lamentations. Nan, with inarticulate groans, and Cæsar with,
“Damn! damn! bress de Lord! No, damn! damn! dat lake. Haven’t I always
told Miss Hetty not to be goin’ there. Oh, damn! damn! no, no, bress de
Lord!” and the old man, clasping both hands above his head, rushed
to the barn to put the horses into the big farm-wagon. With anguished
hearts, and hopelessly, Jim and Sally piled blankets and pillows into
the wagon, and took all the restoratives they could think of. They
knew in their hearts all would be of no use. As they drove through the
village they gave the alarm; and, in an incredibly short time, the whole
shore of the lake was twinkling with lights borne high in the hands
of men who were searching. Two boats were rowing back and forth on the
lake, with bright lights at stern and prow; and loud shouts filled
the air. No answer; no clew: at last, from the island, came a pistol
shot,--the signal agreed on. Every man stood still and listened. Slowly
the boats came back to shore, drawing behind them Hetty’s boat; bringing
one of the oars, and also Hetty’s shawl, which they had found, just
where Raby had told them they would, in the wild-grape thicket.

“Found it bottom-side up,” was all that the men said, as they shoved the
boat high up on the sand. Then they all looked in each other’s faces,
and said no more. There was nothing more to be done: it was now ten
o’clock. Slowly the sad procession wound back to town through the
rayless hemlock woods. Midway in them, they met a rider, riding at the
maddest gallop. It was the doctor! No one had known where to send for
him; and there was no time to be lost. Coming home, and wondering, as he
entered, at the open doors and the unlighted windows, he had found Norah
sitting on the floor by the weeping Raby, and trying to comfort him.
Barely comprehending, in his sudden distress what they told him, the
doctor had sprung upon his horse and galloped towards the lake. As he
saw the group of people moving towards him, looking shadowy and dim
in the darkness, his heart stood still. Were they bearing home Hetty’s
body? Would he see it presently, lying lifeless and cold in their
arms? He dashed among them, reining his horse back on his haunches, and
looking with a silent anguish into face after face. Nobody spoke. That
first instant seemed a century long. Nobody could speak. At a glance the
doctor saw that they were not bearing the sad burden he had feared.

“Not found her?” he gasped.

“No, doctor,” replied one nearest him, laying his hand on his arm.

“Then by God what have you come away for! have you got the souls of men
in you?” exclaimed Eben Williams, in a voice which seemed to shake the
very trees, as he plunged onward.

“It’s no use, doctor,” they replied sadly.

“We found her boat bottom up, and one of the oars; and it was hours
since it capsized.”

“What then!” he shouted back. “My wife was as strong as any man: she
can’t have drowned; Hetty can’t have drowned;” and his horse’s hoofs
struck sparks from the stones as he galloped on. A few of the younger
men turned back and followed him; but, when they reached the lake, he
was nowhere to be seen. Old Cæsar, who was sitting on the ground, his
head buried on his knees, said:

“He wouldn’t hear a word. He jest jumped into one of thim boats, and he
was gone like lightning: he’s ‘way across the lake by this time.”

Silently the young men re-entered their boats and rowed out, carrying
torches. Presently they overtook the doctor.

“Oh, thank God for that light!” he exclaimed, “Give one to me; let me
have it here in my boat: I shall find her.”

Like a being of superhuman strength, the doctor rowed; no one could keep
up with him. Round and round the lake, into every inlet, close under
the shadows of the islands; again and again, over every mile of that
treacherous, glassy, beautiful water, he rowed, calling every few
moments, in heart-breaking tones, “Hetty! Hetty! Hetty! I am here,
Hetty!”

As the hours wore on, his strength began to flag; he rowed more and more
slowly: but, when they begged him to give over the search, and return
home, he replied impatiently. “Never! I’ll never leave this lake till I
find her.” It was useless to reason with him. He hardly heard the words.
At last, his friends, worn out by the long strain, rowed to the shore,
and left him alone. As he bade them good-by, he groaned, “Oh, God! will
it never be morning? If only it were light, I am sure I should find
some trace of her.” But, when the morning broke, the pitiless lake shone
clear and still, and all the hopelessness of his search flashed on the
bereaved man’s mind: he dropped his oars, and gazed vacantly over
the rippleless surface. Then he buried his face in his hands, and sat
motionless for a long time: he was trying to recall Hetty’s last looks,
last words. He recollected her last kisses. “It was as if they were to
bid me good-bye,” he thought. Presently, he took up the oars and rowed
back to the shore. Old Cæsar still sat there on the ground. The doctor
touched him on the shoulder. He lifted a face so wan, so altered, that
the doctor started.

“My poor old fellow,” he said, “you ought not to have sat here all
night. We will go home now. There is nothing more to be done.”

“Oh, yer ain’t a goin’ to give up, doctor, be yer?” cried Cæsar. “Oh,
don’t never give up. She must be here somewheres. Bodies floats allers
in fresh water: she’ll come to shore before long. Oh, don’t give up!
I’ll set here an’ watch, an’ you go home an’ git somethin’ to eat. You
looks dreadful.”

“No, no, Cæsar,” the doctor replied, with the first tears he had felt
yet welling up in his eyes, “you must come home with me. There is no
hope of finding her.”

Cæsar did not move, but fixed a sullen gaze on the water. The doctor
spoke again, more firmly:

“You must come, Cæsar. Your mistress would tell you so herself.” At this
Cæsar rose, docile, and the two went home in silence through the hemlock
woods.

For three days the search for Hetty continued. It was suggested that
possibly she might have gone over to the Springton shore for some
purpose, and there have met with some accident or assault. This
suggestion opened up new vistas of conjecture, almost more terrible than
the certainty of her death would have been. Parties of three and four
scoured the woods in all directions. Again and again Dr. Eben passed
over the spot where she had lain crouched so long: the bushes which had
been brushed back as she passed, bent back again to let him go over her
very footsteps; but nothing could speak to betray her secret. Nature
seems most mute when we most need her help: she keeps, through all
our distresses, a sort of dumb and faithful neutrality, which is not,
perhaps, so devoid of sympathy as it appears.

After the third day was over, it was accepted by tacit consent that
farther search would be useless. Hetty was mourned as dead: in every
home her name was tenderly and sorrowingly spoken; old memories of her
gay and mirthful youth, of her cheery and busy womanhood, were revived
and dwelt upon. But in her own home was silence that could be felt. The
grief there was grief that could not speak. Only little Raby, of all the
household, found words to use; and his childish and inconsolable laments
made the speechless anguish around him all the greater. To Dr. Eben, the
very sight of the child was a bitter and unreasonable pain. Except for
Raby, he thought, Hetty would still be alive. He had never approved of
her taking him on the water; had remonstrated with her in the beginning,
but had been overruled by her impetuous confidence in her own strength
and skill. Now, as often as he saw the poor little fellow’s woe-begone
face, he had a strange mixture of pity and hatred towards him. In vain
he reasoned against it. “He has lost his best friend, as well as I,” he
said to himself; “I ought to try to comfort him.” But it was impossible:
the child’s presence grew more and more irksome to him, until, at last,
he said to Sally, one day:

“Sally, you and Raby are both looking very ill. I want you to go away
for a time. How would you like to go to ‘The Runs,’ for a month?”

“Oh, not there, dear doctor! please do not send us there!” cried Sally.
“Indeed I could not bear it. We might go to father’s for a while. That
would be change enough; and Raby would have children to play with there,
in the village, all the time, and that would be the best thing for him.”

So Jim and Sally went to Deacon Little’s to stay for a time. Mrs. Little
welcomed them with a cordiality which it would have done Hetty’s heart
good to see. Her old aversion to Sally had been so thoroughly conquered
that she was more than half persuaded in her own mind it had never
existed. When the doctor was left alone in the house, he found it easier
to bear the burden of his grief. It is only after the first shock of
a great sorrow is past that we are helped by faces and voices and the
clasping of hands. At the first, there is but one help, but one healing;
and that is solitude.

Dr. Eben came out from this grief an altered man. Poor Hetty! How little
she had understood her value to her husband! Could she have seen him
walking slowly from house to house, his eyes fixed on the ground, his
head bent forward; all his old elasticity of tread gone; his ready
smile gone; the light, glad look of his eyes gone,--how would she have
repented her rash and cruel deed! how would the scales have fallen from
her eyes, revealing to her the monstrous misapprehension to which she
had sacrificed her life and his! Even long after people had ceased to
talk about Hetty’s death, or to remember it unless they saw the doctor,
the first sight of his tall bowed figure recalled it all; and again
and again, as he passed men on the street, they turned and said to each
other, with a sad shake of the head:

“He’s never got over it.”

“No, nor ever will.”

On the surface, life seemed to be going on at “Gunn’s” much as before.
Jim and Sally and Raby made a family centre, to which the lonely doctor
attached himself more and more. He came more and more to feel that Raby
was a legacy left by Hetty to him. He had ceased to have any unjust
resentment towards the child from his innocent association with her
death: he knew that she had loved the boy as if he were her own; and,
in his long sad reveries about the future, he found a sort of melancholy
pleasure in planning for Raby as he would have done had he been Hetty’s
child. These plans for Raby, and his own devotion to his profession,
were Dr. Eben’s only pleasure. He was fast becoming a physician of note.
He was frequently sent for in consultation to all parts of the county;
and his contributions to medical journals were held in high esteem. The
physician, the student, had gained unspeakably by the loss which had so
nearly crushed the man.

Development and strength, gained at such cost, are like harvests
springing out of land which had to be burned black with fire before it
would yield its increase.



XIII.

Hetty first entered the village of St. Mary’s at sunset. The chapel bell
was ringing for the Angelus, and as the nondescipt little vehicle, half
diligence half coach, crept through the sandy streets, Hetty, looking
eagerly out, saw men, women, and children falling on their knees by the
road-side. She recollected having noted this custom when she was in
St. Mary’s before: then it had seemed to her senseless mummery; now it
seemed beautiful. Hetty had just come through dark places, in which she
had wanted help from God more than she had ever in her life wanted it;
and these evident signs of faith, of an established relation between
earth and heaven, fell most gratefully upon her aching heart. The
village of St. Mary’s is a mere handful of houses, on a narrow stretch
of sandy plain, lying between two forests of firs. Many years ago,
hunters, finding in the depths of these forests springs of great
medicinal value, made a little clearing about them, and built there
a few rough shanties to which they might at any time resort for the
waters. Gradually, the fame of the waters was noised abroad, and drew
settlers to the spot. The clearing was widened; houses were built;
a village grew up; line after line, as a new street was needed, the
forests were cut down, but remained still a solid, dark-green wall and
background to the east and the west. On the outskirts of the village, in
the edge of the western forest, stood the Roman Catholic chapel,--a low
wooden building, painted red, and having a huge silver cross on the top.

At the moment of Hetty’s arrival, a burial service was just about
to take place in this little chapel, and the procession was slowly
approaching: the priest walking in front, lifting up a high gilt
crucifix; a little white-robed acolyte carrying holy water in a silver
basin; a few Sisters of Charity with their long black gowns and flapping
white bonnets; behind these the weeping villagers, bearing the coffin on
a rude sort of litter. As Hetty saw this procession, she was seized with
an irresistible desire to join it. She was the only passenger in the
diligence, and the door was locked. She called to the driver, and at
last succeeded in making him hear, and also understand that she wished
to be set down immediately: she would walk on to the inn. She wished
first to go into the church. The driver was a good Catholic; very
seriously he said: “It is bad luck to say one’s prayers while there is
going on the mass for the dead; there is another chapel which Madame
would find less sad at this hour. It is only a short distance farther
on.”

But Hetty reiterated her request; and the driver, shrugging his
shoulders, and saying in an altered tone:

“As Madame pleases; it is all the same to me: nevertheless, it is bad
luck;” assisted her to alight.

The procession had just entered the church. Dim lights twinkled on the
altar, and a smell of incense filled the place. Hetty fell on her knees
with the rest, and prayed for those she had left behind her. Her prayer
was simple and short, repeated many times: “Oh God, make them happy!
make them happy!” When the mass was over, Hetty waited near the door,
and watched anxiously to see if the priest were the same whom her father
had known so well twenty years before. Yes, it was--no--could this be
Father Antoine? This fat, red-faced, jovial-looking old man? Father
Antoine had been young, slender and fair; but there was no mistaking the
calm and serious hazel eyes. It was Father Antoine, but how changed!

“If I have changed as much as that,” thought Hetty, “he’ll never believe
I am I; and I dare say I have. Dear me, what a frightful thing is this
old age!”

Hetty had resolved, in the outset, that she would take Father Antoine
into her confidence. She knew the sacredness of secrecy in which Roman
Catholic priests are accustomed to hold all confessions made to them.
She felt that her secret would be too heavy to bear unshared, and that
times might arise when she would need advice or help from one knowing
all the truth.

Early the next morning, she went to Father Antoine’s house. The good old
man was at work in his garden. His little cottage was surrounded by beds
which were gay with flowers from June till November. Nothing was left
in bloom now, except asters and chrysanthemums: but there was no flower,
not even his July carnations, in which he took such pride, as in his
chrysanthemums. As he heard the little gate shut, he looked up; saw that
it was a stranger; and came forward to meet her, bearing in his hand one
great wine-colored chrysanthemum blossom, as large as a blush rose:

“Is it to see me, daughter?” he said, with his inalienable old French
courtesy. Father Antoine had come of a race which had noble blood in its
veins. His ancestry had worn swords, and lived at courts, and Antoine
Ladeau never once, in his half century of work in these Canadian
forests, forgot that fact. Hetty looked him full in the face, and
colored scarlet, before she began to speak.

“You do not remember me,” she said.

Father Antoine shook his head. “It is that I see so many faces each
year,” he replied apologetically, “that it is not possible to remember;”
 and he gazed earnestly into Hetty’s expressive face.

“It is twenty years since I was here,” Hetty continued. She felt a great
longing that Father Antoine should recollect her. It would seem to make
her task easier.

A reminiscence dawned on the priest’s mind. “Twenty years?” he said,
“ah, but that is long! we were both young then. Is it--ah, is it
possible that it is the daughter with the father that I see?” Father
Antoine had never forgotten the beautiful relation between Hetty and her
father.

“Yes, I came with my father: you knew him very well,” replied Hetty,
“and I always thought then that, if I had any trouble, I would like to
have you help me.”

Father Antoine’s merry face clouded over instantly. “And have you
trouble, my daughter? If the good God permits that I help you, I shall
be glad. I had a love for your father. He is no longer alive, or you
would not be in trouble;” and, leading Hetty into his little study,
Father Antoine sat down opposite her, and said:

“Tell me, my daughter.”

Hetty’s voice trembled, and tears filled her eyes: sympathy was harder
to bear than loneliness. The story was hard to tell, but she told it,
without pause, without reserve. Father Antoine’s face grew stern as she
proceeded. When she ceased speaking, he said:

“My daughter, you have sinned; sinned grievously: you must return
to your husband. You have violated a holy sacrament of the Church. I
command you to return to your husband.”

Hetty stared at him in undisguised wonder. At last she said:

“Why do you speak to me like that, sir? I can obey no man: only my own
conscience is my law. I will never return to my husband.”

“The Church is the conscience of all her erring children,” replied
Father Antoine, “and disobedience is at the peril of one’s soul. I lay
it upon you, as the command of the Church, that you return, my daughter.
You have sinned most grievously.”

“Oh,” said Hetty, with apparent irrelevance. “I understand now. You took
me for a Catholic.”

It was Father Antoine’s turn to stare.

“Why then, if you are not, came you to me?” he said sternly. “I am here
only as priest.”

Hetty clasped her hands, and said pleadingly:

“Oh no! not only as priest: you are a good man. My father always said
so. We were not Catholics; and I could not be of any other religion than
my father’s, now he is dead,” (here Hetty unconsciously touched a
chord in Antoine Ladeau’s breast, which gave quick response): “but I
recollected how he trusted you, and I said, if I can hide myself in that
little village, Father Antoine will be good to me for my father’s sake.
But you must not tell me to go back to my home: no one can judge about
that but me. The thing I have done is best: I shall not go back. And, if
you will not keep my secret and be my friend, I will go away at once and
hide myself in some other place still farther away, and will ask no one
again to be my friend, ever till I die!”

Father Antoine was perplexed. All the blood of ancient knighthood which
was in his veins was stirred with chivalrous desire to help Hetty:
but, on the other hand, both as man and as priest, he felt that she
had committed a great wrong, and that he could not even appear to
countenance it. He studied Hetty’s face: in spite of its evident marks
of pain, it was as indomitable as rock.

“You have the old Huguenot soul, my daughter,” he said. “Antoine Ladeau
knows better than to try to cause you to swerve from the path you have
chosen. But the good God can give you light: it may be that he has
directed you here to find it in his true Church. Be sure that your
father was a good Catholic at heart.”

“Oh, no! he wasn’t,” exclaimed Hetty, impetuously. “There was nothing
he disliked so much as a Catholic. He always said you were the only
Catholic he ever saw that he could trust”

Father Antoine’s rosy face turned rosier. He was not used among his
docile Canadians to any such speech as this. The unvarnished fashions of
New England honesty grated on his ear.

“It is not well for men of one religion to rail at the men of another,”
 he said gravely. “I doubt not, there are those whom the Lord loves in
all religions; but there is but one true Church.”

“Forgive me,” said Hetty, in a meeker tone. “I did not mean to be rude:
but I thought I ought not to let you have such a mistaken idea about
father. Oh, please, be my friend, Father Antoine!”

Father Antoine was silent for a time. Never had he been so sorely
perplexed. The priest and the man were arrayed against each other.

Presently he said:

“What is it that you would have me do, my daughter? I do not see that
there is any thing; since you have so firm a will and acknowledge not
the Church.”

“Oh!” said Hetty, perceiving that he relented, “there is not any thing
that I want you to do, exactly. I only want to feel that there is one
person who knows all about me, and will keep my secret, and is willing
to be my friend. I shall not want any help about any thing, unless it is
to get work; but I suppose they always want nurses here. There will be
plenty to do.”

“Daughter, I will keep your secret,” said Father Antoine, solemnly:
“about that you need have had no fear. No man of my race has ever
betrayed a trust; and I will be your friend, if you need aught that I
can do, while you choose to live in this place. But I shall pray daily
to the good God to open your eyes, and make you see that you are living
in heinous sin each day that you live away from your husband;” and
Father Antoine rose with the involuntary habit of the priest of
dismissing a parishioner when there was no more needful to be said.
Hetty took her leave with a feeling of meek gratitude, hitherto unknown
in her bosom. Spite of Father Antoine’s disapproval, spite of his
arbitrary Romanism, she trusted and liked him.

“It is no matter if he does think me wrong,” she said to herself. “That
needn’t disturb me if I know I am right. I think he is wrong to pray to
the Virgin and the saints.”

Hetty had brought with her a sum of money more than sufficient to buy
a little cottage, and fit it up with all needful comforts. She had no
sentimental dispositions towards deprivation and wretchedness. All her
plannings looked toward a useful, cheery, comfortable life. Among her
purchases were gardening utensils, which she could use herself, and
seeds and shrubs suited to the soil of St. Mary’s. Strangely enough, the
only cottage which she could find at all adapted to her purpose was one
very near Father Antoine’s, and almost precisely like it. It stood in
the edge of the forest, and had still left in its enclosure many of the
stumps of recently felled trees. All Hetty’s farmer’s instincts revived
in full force; and, only a few days after Father Antoine’s conversation
with her, he found her one morning superintending the uprooting of these
stumps, and making preparations for grading the land. As he watched her
active movements, energetic tones, and fresh open face, he fell into a
maze of wondering thought. This was no morbid sentimentalist; no pining,
heart-broken woman. Except that truthfulness was stamped on every
lineament of Hetty’s countenance, Father Antoine would have doubted her
story; and, except that her every act showed such vigorous common sense,
he would have doubted her sanity. As it was, his perplexity deepened;
so also did his interest in her. It was impossible not to admire this
brisk, kindly, outspoken woman, who already moved about in the village
with a certain air of motherly interest in every thing and everybody;
had already begun to “help” in her own sturdy fashion, and had already
won the goodwill of old and young.

“The good God will surely open her eyes in his own time,” thought Father
Antoine, and in his heart he pondered much what a good thing it would
be, if, when that time came, Hetty could be persuaded to become the Lady
Superior of the Convent of the Bleeding Heart, only a few miles from St.
Mary’s. “She is born for an abbess,” he said to himself: “her will is
like the will of a man, but she is full of succor and tender offices.
She would be a second Angelique, in her fervor and zeal.” And the good
old priest said rosaries full of prayers for Hetty, night and day.

There were two “Houses of Cure” in St. Mary’s, both under the care of
skilful physicians, who made specialties of treatment with the waters of
the springs. One of these physicians was a Roman Catholic, and employed
no nurses except the Sisters from the Convent of the Bleeding Heart.
They came in turn, in bands of six or eight; and stayed three months
at a time. In the other House, under the care of an English physician,
nurses were hired without reference to their religion. As soon as
Hetty’s house was all in order, and her shrubs and trees set out,
she went one morning to this House, and asked to see the physician in
charge. With characteristic brevity, she stated that she had come to
St. Mary’s to earn her living as a nurse, and would like to secure a
situation. The doctor looked at her scrutinizingly.

“Have you ever nursed?”

“No, sir.”

“What do you know about it then?”

“I have seen a great many sick people.”

“How was that?”

Hetty hesitated, but with some confusion replied:

“My husband was a doctor, and I often went with him to see his
patients.”

“You are a widow then?”

“No, sir.”

“What then?” said the physician, severely.

Poor Hetty! She rose to her feet; but, recollecting that she had no
right to be indignant, sat down, and replied in a trembling voice:

“I cannot tell you, sir, any thing about my trouble. I have come here to
live, and I want to be a nurse.”

“Father Antoine knows me,” she added, with dignity.

Father Antoine’s name was a passport. Doctor Macgowan had often wished
that he could have all his nurses from the convent.

“You are a Catholic, then?” he said.

“No, indeed!” exclaimed Hetty, emphatically. “I am nothing of the sort.”

“How is it that you mention Father Antoine, then?”

“He knew my father well, and me also, years ago; and he is the only
friend I have here.”

Dr. Macgowan had an Englishman’s instinctive dislike of unexplained
things and mysterious people. But Hetty’s face and voice were better
than pedigrees and certificates. Her confident reference to Father
Antoine was also enough to allay any immediate uneasiness, and, “for
the rest, time will show,” thought the doctor; and, without any farther
delay, he engaged Hetty as one of the day nurses in his establishment.
In after years Dr. Macgowan often looked back to this morning, and
thought, with the sort of shudder with which one looks back on a danger
barely escaped:

“Good God! what if I had let that woman go?”

All Hetty’s native traits especially adapted her to the profession of
nursing; and her superb physical health was of itself a blessing to
every sick man or sick woman with whom she came in contact. Before she
had been in Dr. Macgowan’s house one week, all the patients had learned
to listen in the morning for her step and her voice: they all wanted
her, and begged to be put under her charge.

“Really, Mrs. Smailli, I shall have to cut you up into parcels,” said
the doctor one day: “there is not enough of you to go round. You have
a marvellous knack at making sick people like you. Did you really never
nurse before?”

“Not with my hands and feet,” replied Hetty, “but I think I have always
been a nurse at heart. I have always been so well that to be sick seems
to me the most dreadful thing in the world. I believe it is the only
trouble I couldn’t bear.”

“You do not look as if you had ever had any very hard trouble of any
kind,” said the doctor in a light tone, but watching keenly the effect
of his words.

Dr. Macgowan was beginning to be tormented by a great desire to know
more in regard to his new nurse. Father Antoine’s guarded replies to all
his inquiries about her had only stimulated his curiosity.

“She is a good woman. You may trust her with all your house,” Father
Antoine had said; and had told the doctor that he had known both her and
her father twenty years ago. More than this he would not say, farther
than to express the opinion that she would live and die in St. Mary’s,
and devote herself to her work so long as she lived.

“She has for it a grand vocation, as we say.”

Father Antoine exclaimed, “A grand vocation! Ah! if we but had her in
our convent!”

“You’ll never get her there as long as I’m alive, Father Antoine!” Dr.
Macgowan had replied. “You may count upon that.”

When Dr. Macgowan said to Hetty:

“You do not look as if you had ever had any very hard trouble of any
kind,” Hetty looked in his face eagerly, and answered:

“Do I not, really? I am so thankful, doctor! I have always had such
a dread of looking woe-begone, and making everybody around me
uncomfortable. I think that’s a sin, if one can possibly help it.”

And by no sudden surprise of remark or question, could the doctor ever
come any nearer to Hetty’s trouble than this. Her words always glanced
off from direct personal issues, as subtlely and successfully as if she
had been a practised diplomatist. Sometimes these perpetual evadings and
non-committals seemed to Dr. Macgowan like art; but they were really the
very simplicity of absolute unselfishness; and, gradually, as he came to
perceive and understand this, he came to have a reverence for Hetty. He
began to be ashamed of the curiosity he had felt as to the details of
the sorrow which had driven her to this refuge of isolation and hard
work. He began to feel about her as Father Antoine did, that there was
a certain sacredness in her vocation which almost demanded a recognition
of title, an investiture of office. Hetty would have been astonished,
and would have very likely laughed, had she known with what a halo
of sentiment her daily life was fast being surrounded in the minds of
people. To her it was simply a routine of good, wholesome work; of a
kind for which she was best fitted, and which enabled her to earn a
comfortable living most easily to herself, and most helpfully to others;
and left her “less time to think,” as she often said to herself, “than
any thing else I could possibly have done.” “Time to think” was the one
thing Hetty dreaded. As resolutely as if they were a sin, she strove to
keep out of her mind all reminiscences of her home, all thoughts of her
husband, of Raby. Whenever she gave way to them, she was unfitted for
work; and, therefore, her conscience said they were wrong. While she was
face to face with suffering ones, and her hands were busy in ministering
to their wants, such thoughts never intruded upon her. It was literally
true that, in such hours, she never recollected that she was any other
than Hibba Smailli, the nurse. But, when her day’s work was done, and
she went home to the little lonely cottage, memories flocked in at the
silent door, shut themselves in with her, and refused to be banished.
Hence she formed the habit of lingering in the street, of chatting with
the villagers on their door-steps, playing with the children, and
often, when there was illness in any of the houses, going into them, and
volunteering her services as nurse.

The St. Mary’s people were, almost without exception, of French descent,
and still kept up many of the old French customs of out-door _fêtes_
and ceremonies. Hetty found their joyous, child-like ways and manners
singularly attractive and interesting. After the grim composure, and
substantial, reflective methods of her New England life, the _abandon_
and unthinkingness of these French-Canadians were bewildering and
delightful to her.

“The whole town is every night like a Sunday-school picnic in our
country,” she said once to Father Antoine. “What children all these
people are!”

“Yes, daughter, it is so,” replied the priest; “and it is well. Does not
our good Lord say that we cannot enter into His kingdom except we become
as little children?”

“Yes, I know,” replied Hetty; “but I don’t believe this is exactly what
he meant, do you?”

“A part of what he meant,” answered the priest; “not all. First,
docility; and, second, joy: that is what the Church teaches.”

“Your Church is better than ours in that respect,” said Hetty candidly:
“ours doesn’t teach joy; it is pretty much all terror.”

“Should a child know terror of its mother?” asked Father Antoine. “The
Church is mother, and the Holy Virgin is mother. Ah, daughter! it will
be a glad day when I see you in the beautiful sheltering arms.”

Tears sometimes came to Hetty’s eyes at such words as these; and
good Father Antoine went with renewed fervor to his prayers for her
conversion.

In the centre of the village was a square laid out in winding paths, and
surrounded by fir trees. In the middle of this square was a great stone
basin, in which a spring perpetually bubbled up; the basin had a broad
brim, on which the villagers sat when they came of an evening to fill
jugs and bottles with the water. On a bright summer night, the circle
would often widen and widen, by men throwing themselves on the ground;
children toddling from knee to knee; groups standing in eager talk here
and there, until it seemed as if the whole village were gathered around
the spring. These were the times when all the village affairs were
discussed, and all the village gossip retailed from neighbor to
neighbor. The scene was as gay and picturesque as you might see in a
little town of Brittany; and the jargon of the Canadian _patois_ much
more confusing than any dialect one would hear on French soil. Hetty’s
New England tongue utterly refused to learn this new mode of speech; but
her quick and retentive ear soon learned its meanings sufficiently to
follow the people in their talk. She often made one of this evening
circle at the spring, and it was a pleasant sight to see the quick stir
of welcome with which her approach was observed.

“Here comes the good Aunt Hibba from the Doctor’s House,” and mothers
would push children away, and gossips would crowd, and men would stand
up, all to make room for Hetty: then they would gather about her, and
those who could speak English would translate for those who could not;
and everybody would have something to tell her. It was an odd thing that
lovers sought her more than any one else. Many a quarrel Aunt Hibba’s
good sense healed over; and many a worthless fellow was sent about his
business, as he deserved to be, because Aunt Hibba took his sweetheart
in hand, and made her see the rights of things. If a traveller,
strolling about St. Mary’s of a June night, had come upon these
chattering groups, and seen how they centred around the sturdy,
genial-faced woman, in a straight gray gown and a close white cap, he
would have been arrested by the picture at once; and have wondered much
who and what Hetty could be: but if you had told him that she was a
farmer’s daughter from Northern New England, he would have laughed in
your face, and said, “Nonsense! she belongs to some of the Orders.” Very
emphatically would he have said this, if it had chanced to be on one
of the evenings when Father Antoine was walking by Hetty’s side. Father
Antoine knew her custom of lingering at the great spring, and sometimes
walked down there at sunset to meet her, to observe her talk with the
villagers, and to walk home with her later. Nothing could be stronger
proof of the reverence in which the whole village held Hetty, than the
fact that it seemed to them all the most fitting and natural thing that
she and Father Antoine should stand side by side speaking to the people,
should walk away side by side in earnest conversation with each other.
If any man had ventured upon a jest or a ribald word concerning them,
a dozen quick hands would have given him a plunge headforemost into
the great stone basin, which was the commonest expression of popular
indignation in St. Mary’s; a practice which, strangely enough, did not
appear to interfere with anybody’s relish of the waters.

Father Antoine had an old servant woman, Marie, who had lived in the
Ladeau family since before he was born. She had been by the deathbed of
his mother, his father, his grandmother, and of an uncle who had died
at some German watering-place: wherever a Ladeau was in any need of
service, thither hasted Marie; and if the need were from illness, Marie
was all the happier; to lie like a hound on the floor all night, and
watch by a sick and suffering Ladeau, was to Marie joy. When the young
Antoine had set out for the wildernesses of North America, Marie had
prayed to be allowed to come with him; and when he refused she had wept
till she fell ill. At the last moment he relented, and bore the poor
creature on board ship, wondering within himself if he would be able to
keep her alive in the forests. But as soon as there was work to do for
him she revived; and all these years she had kept his house, and cared
for him as if he were her son. From the day of Hetty’s first arrival,
old Marie had adopted her into her affections: no one, not born
a Ladeau, ever had won such liking from Marie. Much to Hetty’s
embarrassment, whenever she met her, she insisted on kissing her hand,
after the fashion of the humble servitors of great houses in France.
Probably, in all these long years of solitary service with Father
Antoine, Marie had pined for the sight of some one of her own sex, to
whom she could give allegiance, for she was fond of telling long stories
about the beautiful ladies of the house of Ladeau; and how she had
attired them for balls, and had seen them ride away with cavaliers.
There was neither splendor nor beauty in Hetty to attract Marie’s fancy;
but Marie had a religious side to her nature, almost as strong as the
worldly and passionate one. She saw in Hetty’s labors an exaltation of
devotion which reminded her of noble ladies who had done penances and
taken pilgrimages in her own country. Father Antoine’s friendship for
Hetty, so unlike any thing Marie had seen him feel towards any woman he
had met in these wilds, also stimulated her fancy.

“Ah! but it is good that he has at last a friend to whom he may speak as
a Ladeau should speak. May the saints keep her! she has the good heart
of one the Virgin loves,” said Marie, and many a candle did she buy
and keep burning on the convent’s shrines for Hetty’s protection and
conversion.

One night Marie overheard Father Antoine say to Hetty, as he bade her
good-night at the garden gate:

“My daughter, you look better and younger every day.”

“Do I?” replied Hetty, cheerfully: “that’s an odd thing for a woman so
old as I am. My birthday is next month. I shall be forty-six.”

“Youth is not a matter of years,” replied Father Antoine. “I have known
very young women much older than you.” Hetty smiled sadly, and walked
on. Father Antoine’s words had given her a pang. They were almost the
same words which Dr. Eben had said to her again and again, when she had
reasoned with him against his love for her, a woman so much older
than himself. “That is all very well to say,” thought Hetty in her
matter-of-fact way, “and no doubt there are great differences in people:
but old age is old age, soften it how you will; and youth is youth; and
youth is beautiful, and old age is ugly. Father Antoine knows it just as
well as any man. Don’t I see, good as he is, every day of my life, with
what a different look he blesses the fair young maidens from that with
which he blesses the wrinkled old women. There is no use minding it.
It can’t be helped. But things might as well be called by their right
names.”

Marie sat down on a garden bench, and reflected. So the good Aunt
Hibba’s birthday was next month, and there would be nobody to keep it
for her in this strange country. “How can we find out?” thought Marie,
“and give her a pleasure.”

In summer weather, Father Antoine took his simple dinners on the porch.
It was cool there, and the vines and flowers gave to the little nook a
certain air of elegance which Father Antoine enjoyed without recognizing
why. On this evening Marie lingered after she had removed the table.
She fidgeted about, picking up a leaf here and there, and looking at her
master, till he perceived that she had something on her mind.

“What is it, Marie?” he asked.

“Oh, M’sieur Antoine!” she replied, “it is about the good Aunt Hibba’s
birthday. Could you not ask her when is the day? and it should be a
_fête_ day, if we only knew it; there is not one that would not be glad
to help make it beautiful.”

“Eh, my Marie, what is it then that you plan? The people in the country
from which she comes have no _fêtes_. It might be that she would think
it a folly,” answered Father Antoine, by no means sure that Hetty would
like such a testimonial.

“All the more, then, she would like it,” said Marie. “I have watched
her. It is delight to her when they dance about the spring, and she has
the great love for flowers.”

So Father Antoine, by a little circumlocution, discovered when the
birthday would come, and told Marie; and Marie began straightway to go
back and forth in the village, with a pleased air of mystery.



XIV.

The birthday fell on a day in June. It so happened that Hetty was later
than usual in leaving her patients that night; and her purpose had been
to go home by the nearest way, and not pass through the Square. The
villagers had feared this, and had forestalled her; at the turning
where she would have left the main road, she found waiting for her the
swiftest-footed urchin in all St. Mary’s, little Pierre Michaud. The
readiest witted, too, and of the freest tongue, and he was charged to
bring Aunt Hibba by the way of the Square, but by no means to tell her
the reason.

“And if she say me nay, what is it that I am to tell her, then?” urged
Pierrre.

“Art thou a fool, Pierre?” said his mother, sharply. “Thou’rt ready
enough with excuses, I’ll warrant, for thy own purposes: invent one now.
It matters not, so that thou bring her here.” And Pierre, reassured by
this maternal _carte blanche_ for the best lie he could think of, raced
away, first tucking securely into a niche of the stone basin the little
pot with a red carnation in it which he had brought for his contribution
to the birthday _fète_.

When Hetty saw Pierre waiting at the corner, she exclaimed:

“What, Pierre, loitering here! The sunset is no time to idle. Where are
your goats?”

“Milked an hour ago, Tantibba,[1] and in the shed,” replied Pierre, with
a saucy air of having the best of the argument, “and my mother waits in
the Square to speak to thee as thou passest.”

“I was not going that way, to-night,” replied Hetty. “I am in haste.
What does she wish? Will it not do as well in the morning?”

Alarmed at this suggestion, young Pierre made a master-stroke of
invention, and replied on the instant:

“Nay, Bo Tantibba,[2] that it will not; for it is the little sister of
Jean Cochot which has been badly bitten by a fierce dog, and the mother
has her there in her arms waiting for thee to dress her wounds. Oh, but
the blood doth run! and the little one’s cries would pierce thy heart!”
 And the rascally Pierre pretended to sob.

[Footnote 1: “Tante Hibba.”]

[Footnote 2: The French Canadians often contract “bonne” and “bon” in
this way. “Bo Tantibba” is contraction for “Bonne Tante Hibba.”]

“Eh, eh, how happened that?” said Hetty, hurrying on so swiftly towards
the Square that even Pierre’s brisk little legs could hardly keep up
with her. Pierre’s inventive faculty came to a halt.

“Nay, that I do not know,” he replied; “but the people are all gathered
around her, and they all cry out for thee by thy name. There is none
like thee, Tantibba, they say, if one has a wound.”

Hetty quickened her pace to a run. As she entered the Square, she
saw such crowds around the basin that Pierre’s tale seemed amply
corroborated. Pressing in at the outer edge of the circle, she
exclaimed, looking to right and left, “Where is the child? Where is Mère
Michaud?” Every one looked bewildered; no one answered. Pierre, with an
upward fling of his agile legs, disappeared to seek his carnation;
and Hetty found herself, in an instant more, surrounded by a crowd of
children, each in its finest clothes, and each bearing a small pot with
a flowering-plant in it.

“For thee! For thee! The good saints bless the day thou wert born!” they
all cried, pressing nearer, and lifting high their little pots. “See
my carnation!” shouted Pierre, struggling nearer to Hetty. “And
my jonquil!” “And my pansies!” “And this forget-me-not!” cried the
children, growing more and more excited each moment; while the chorus,
“For thee! For thee! The good saints bless the day thou wert born!” rose
on all sides.

Hetty was bewildered.

“What does all this mean?” she said helplessly.

Then, catching Pierre by the shoulder so suddenly that his red carnation
tottered and nearly fell, she exclaimed:

“You mischievous boy! Where is the child that was bitten? Have you told
me a lie?”

At this moment, Pierre’s mother, pushing through the crowd, exclaimed:

“Ah! but thou must forgive him. It was I that sent him to lie to thee,
that thou shouldst not go home. We go with thee, to do our honor to the
day on which thou wert born!”

And so saying, Mère Michaud turned, and swinging high up in the air one
end of a long wreath of feathery ground-pine, led off the procession.
The rest followed in preconcerted order, till some forty men and women,
all linked together by the swinging loops of the pine wreath, were in
line. Then they suddenly wheeled and surrounded the bewildered Hetty,
and bore her with them. The children, carrying their little pots of
flowers, ran along shouting and screaming with laughter to see the good
“Tantibba” so amazed. Louder and louder rose the chorus:

“For thee! For thee! May the good saints bless the day thou wert born!”

Hetty was speechless: her cheeks flushed. She looked from one to the
other, and all she could do was to clasp her hands and smile. If she
had spoken, she would have cried. When they came to Father Antoine’s
cottage, there he stood waiting at the gate, wearing his Sunday robes,
and behind him stood Marie, also in her best, and with her broad silver
necklace on, which the villagers had only two or three times seen her
wear. Marie had her hands behind her, and was trying to hold out her
narrow black petticoat on each side to hide something. Mysterious and
plaintive noises struggled through the woollen folds, and, at each
sound, Marie stamped her foot and exclaimed angrily:

“Bah! thou silly beast, be quiet! Wilt thou spoil all our sport?”

The procession halted before the house, and Father Antoine advanced,
bearing in his hands a gay wreath of flowers. The people had wished that
this should be placed on Hetty’s head, but Father Antoine had persuaded
them to waive this part of the ceremony. He knew well that this would be
more than Hetty could bear. Holding the wreath in his hands, therefore,
he addressed a few words to Hetty, and then took his place by her side.
Now was Marie’s moment of joy. Springing to one side as quickly as her
rheumatic old joints would permit, she revealed what she had been trying
to hide behind her scant petticoat. It was a white lamb, decorated from
ears to tail with knots of ribbon and with flowers. The poor little
thing tugged hard at the string by which it was held, and shook its
pretty head in restless impatience under its load of finery, and bleated
piteously: but for all that it was a very pretty sight; and the broken
English with which Marie, on behalf of the villagers, presented the
little creature to Hetty, was prettier still. When they reached Hetty’s
gate, all the women who had hold of the long pine wreath gave their
places to men; and, in the twinkling of an eye, the lithe vigorous
fellows were on the fences, on the posts of the porch, nailing the
wreath in festoons everywhere; from the gateway to the door in long
swinging loops, above the porch, in festoons over the windows, under the
eaves, and hanging in long waving ends on the walls. Then they hung upon
the door the crown which Hetty had not worn, and the little children set
their gay pots of flowers on the window-sills and around the porch;
and all was a merry hubbub of voices and laughter. Hetty grasped Father
Antoine by the arm.

“Oh, do you speak to them, and thank them for me! I can’t!” she said;
and Father Antoine saw tears in her eyes.

“But you must speak to them, my daughter,” he replied, “else they will
be grieved. They cannot understand that you are pleased if you say no
word. I will speak first till you are more calm.”

When Father Antoine had finished his speech, Hetty stepped forward, and
looking round on all their faces, said:

“I do not know how to thank you, friends. I never saw any thing like
this before, and it makes me dumb. All I can say is that you have filled
my heart with joy, and I feel no more a stranger: your village is my
home.”

“Thanks to thee, then, for that! Thanks to thee! And the good saints
bless the day thou wert born,” shouted the people, and the little
children catching the enthusiasm, and wanting to shout something,
shouted: “Bo Tantibba! Bo Tantibba!” till the place rang. Then they
placed the pet lamb in a little enclosed paddock which had been built
for him during the day, and the children fed him with red clover
blossoms through the paling; and presently, Father Antoine considerately
led his flock away, saying,--“The good Aunt is weary. See you not that
her eyes droop, and she has no words? It is now kind that we go away,
and leave her to rest.”

As the gay procession moved away crying, “Good-night, good-night!” Hetty
stood on the porch and watched them. She was on the point of calling
them back. A strange dread of being left alone seized upon her. Never
since she had forsaken her home had she felt such a sense of loneliness,
except when she was crouched under the hemlock-trees by the lake. She
watched till she could no longer see even a fluttering motion in the
distance. Then she went into the house. The silence smote her. She
turned and went out again, and went to the paddock, where the little
lamb was bleating.

“Poor little creature!” she said, “wert thou torn from thy mother?
Dost thou pine for one thou see’st not?” She untied it, led it into the
house, and spread down hay and blankets for it, in one corner of her
kitchen. The little creature seemed cheered by the light and warmth;
cuddled down and went to sleep.

Hetty’s heart was full of thoughts. “Oh! what would Eben have said if he
could have seen me to-night?” “How Raby would have delighted in it all!”
 “How long am I to live this strange life?” “Can this be really I?” “What
has become of my old life, of my old self?” Like restless waves driven
by a wind too powerful to be resisted, thoughts and emotions surged
through Hetty’s breast. She buried her face in her hands and wept;
wept the first unrestrained tears she had wept. Only for a few moments,
however. Like the old Hetty Gunn of the old life, she presently sprang
to her feet, and said to herself, “Oh, what a selfish soul I am to
be spending all my strength this way! I shan’t be fit for any thing
to-morrow if I go on so.” Then she patted the lamb on its head, and
said with a comforting sense of comradeship in the little creature’s
presence, “Good-night, little motherless one! Sleep warm,” and then she
went to bed and slept till morning.

I have dwelt on the surface details of Hetty’s life at St. Mary’s, and
have said little about her mental condition and experiences: this is
because I have endeavored to present this part of her life, exactly as
she lived it, and as she would tell it herself. That there were many
hours of acute suffering; many moments when her courage wellnigh failed;
when she was almost ready to go back to her home, fling herself at her
husband’s feet, and cry, “Let me be but as a servant in thy house,”--it
is not needful to say.

Hearts answer to hearts, and no heart could fail to know that a woman in
Hetty’s position must suffer keenly and constantly. But this story would
do great injustice to her, and would be essentially false, if it spoke
often of, or dwelt at any length upon the sufferings which Hetty herself
never mentioned, and put always away from her with an unflinching
resolution. Year after year, the routine of her days went on as we
have described; unchanged except that she grew more and more into the
affections of the villagers among whom she came and went, and of the
hundreds of ill and suffering men and women whom she nursed. She was no
nearer becoming a Roman Catholic than she had been when she sat in the
Welbury meeting-house: even Father Antoine had given over hoping for her
conversion; but her position in St. Mary’s was like the position of a
Lady Abbess in a religious community; her authority, which rarely took
on an authoritative shape, was great; and her influence was greater than
her authority. In Dr. Macgowan’s House of Cure, she was second only to
the doctor himself; and, if the truth were told, it might have been said
she was second to none.

Patients went away from St. Mary’s every year who stoutly ascribed
their cure to her, and not to the waters nor to the physicians. Her
straightforward, kindly, common sense was a powerful tonic, morally and
physically, to all invalids whom she nursed. She had no tolerance for
any weakness which could be conquered. She had infinite tenderness for
all weakness which was inevitable; and her discriminations between the
two were always just. “I’d trust more to Mrs. Smailli’s diagnosis of any
case than I would to my own,” said Dr. Macgowan to his fellow-physicians
more than once. And, when they scoffed at the idea, he replied: “I
do not mean in the technicalities of specific disease, of course. The
recognition of those is a matter of specific training; but, in all those
respects, a physician’s diagnosis may be faultless; and yet he be much
mistaken in regard to the true condition of the patient. In this finer,
subtler diagnosis of general conditions, especially of moral conditions,
Mrs. Smailli is worth more than all the doctors in Canada put together.
If she says a patient will get well, he always does, and _vice versa_.
She knows where the real possibility of recuperation lies, and detects
it often in patients I despair of.”



XV.

And now this story must again pass over a period of ten years in the
history of Eben and Hetty Williams. During all these years, Hetty had
been working faithfully in St. Mary’s; and Dr. Eben had been working
faithfully in Welbury. Hetty was now fifty-six years old. Her hair was
white, and clustered round her temples in a rim of snowy curls, peeping
out from under the close lace cap she always wore. But the snowy curls
were hardly less becoming than the golden brown ones had been. Her
cheeks were still pink, and her lips red. She looked far less old for
her age at fifty-six than she had looked ten years before.

Dr. Eben, on the other hand, had grown old fast. His work had not been
to him as complete and healthful occupation as Hetty’s had been to her.
He had lived more within himself; and he had never ceased to sorrow. His
sorrow, being for one dead, was without hope; save that intangible hope
to which our faith so pathetically clings, of the remote and undefined
possibilities of eternity. Hetty’s sorrow was full of hope, being
persuaded that all was well with those whom she did not see.

Dr. Eben loved no one warmly or with absorption. Hetty loved every
suffering one to whom she ministered. Dr. Eben had never ceased living
too much in the past. Hetty had learned to live almost wholly in the
present. Hetty had suffered, had suffered intensely; but all that she
had suffered was as nothing in comparison with the sufferings of her
husband. Moreover, Hetty had kept through all these years her superb
health. Dr. Eben had had severe illnesses, which had told heavily upon
his strength. From all these things it had come to pass, that now he
looked older and more worn than Hetty. She looked vigorous; he looked
feeble; she was still comely, he had lost all the fineness of color
and outline, which had made him at forty so handsome a man. He had been
growing restless, too, and discontented.

Raby was away at college; old Cæsar and Nan had both died, and their
places were filled by new white servants, who, though they served Dr.
Eben well, did not love him. Deacon Little had died also, and Jim and
Sally had been obliged to go back to the old homestead to live, to take
care of Mrs. Little, who was now a helpless paralytic.

“Gunn’s,” as it was still called, and always would be, was no longer
the brisk and cheerful place which it had once been. The farm was slowly
falling off, from its master’s lack of interest in details; and the old
stone house had come to wear a certain look of desolation. The pines met
and interlaced their boughs over the whole length of the road from the
gate to the front-door; and, in a dark day, it was like an underground
passage-way, cold and damp. If Hetty could have been transported to
the spot, how would her heart have ached! How would she have seen, in
terrible handwriting, the record of her mistaken act; the blight which
her one wrong step had cast, not only upon hearts and lives, but even
upon the visible face of nature. But Hetty did not dream of this.
Whenever she permitted her fancy to dwell upon imaginings of her old
home, she saw it bright with sunshine, merry with the voices of little
children: and her husband handsome still, and young, walking by the side
of a beautiful woman, mother of his children. At last Dr. Eben took
a sudden resolution; the result, partly, of his restless discontent;
partly of his consciousness that he was in danger of breaking down and
becoming a chronic invalid. He offered “Gunn’s” for sale, and announced
that he was going abroad for some years. Spite of the dismay with which
this news was received throughout the whole county, everybody’s second
thought was: “Poor fellow! I’m glad of it. It’s the best thing he can
do.”

Hetty’s cousin, Josiah Gunn, the man that she had so many years ago
predicted would ultimately have the estate, bought it in, out-bidding
the most determined bidders (for “Gunn’s” was much coveted); and paying
finally a sum even larger than the farm was really worth. Dr. Eben was
now a rich man, and free. The world lay before him. When all was done,
he felt a strange unwillingness to leave Welbury. The travel, the
change, which had looked so desirable and attractive, now looked
formidable; and he lingered week after week, unable to tear himself
away from home. One day he rode over to Springton, to bid Rachel Barlow
good-by. Rachel was now twenty-eight years old, and a very beautiful
woman. Many men had sought to marry her, but Dr. Eben’s prediction
had been realized. Rachel would not marry. Her health was perfectly
established, and she had been for years at the head of the Springton
Academy. Doctor Eben rarely saw her; but when he did her manner had
the same child-like docility and affectionate gratitude that had
characterized it when she was seventeen. She had never ceased to feel
that she owed her life, and more than her life, to him: how much more
she felt, Dr. Eben had never dreamed until this day. When he told her
that he was going to Europe, she turned pale, but said earnestly:

“Oh, I am very glad! you have needed the change so much. How long will
you stay?”

“I don’t know, Rachel,” he replied sadly. “Perhaps all the rest of my
life. I have done my best to live here; but I can’t. It’s no use: I
can’t bear it. I have sold the place.”

Rachel’s lips parted, but she did not speak; her face flushed scarlet,
then turned white; and, without a moment’s warning or possibility
of staying the tears, she buried her face in her hands, and wept
convulsively. In the same instant, a magnetic sense of all that this
grief meant thrilled through Doctor Eben’s every nerve. No such thought
had ever crossed his mind before. Rachel had never been to him any thing
but the “child” he had first called her. Very reverently seeking now to
shield her womanhood from any after pain of fear, lest she might have
betrayed her secret, he said:

“Why, my child! you must not feel so badly about it. I ought not to have
spoken so. Of course, you must know that my life has been a very lonely
one, and always must be. But I should not give up and go away, simply
for that. I am not well, and I am quite sure that I need several years
of a milder climate. I dare say I shall be home-sick, and come back
after all.”

Rachel lifted her eyes and looked steadily in his. Her tears stopped.
The old clairvoyant gaze, which he had not seen on her face for many
years, returned.

“No. You will never come back,” she said slowly. Then, as one speaking
in a dream, she said still more slowly, and uttering each word with
difficulty and emphasis:

“I--do--not--believe--your--wife--is--dead.” Much shocked, and thinking
that these words were merely the utterance of an hysterical excitement,
Dr. Eben replied:

“Not to me, dear child; she never will be: but you must not let yourself
be excited in this way. You will be ill. I must be your doctor again and
prescribe for you.”

Rachel continued to watch him, with the same bright and unflinching
gaze. He turned from her, and, bringing her a glass of water in which he
had put a few drops from a vial, said in his old tone:

“Drink this, Rachel.”

She obeyed in silence; her eyes drooped; the tension of her whole figure
relaxed; and, with a long sigh, she exclaimed:

“Oh, forgive me!”

“There is nothing to forgive, my child,” said the doctor, much moved,
and, longing to throw his arms around her as she sat there, so gentle,
appealing, beautiful, loving. “Why can I not love her?” “What else is
there better in life for me to do?” he thought, but his heart refused.
Hetty, the lost dead Hetty, stood as much between him and all other
women to-day, as she had stood ten years before.

“I must go now, Rachel,” he said. “Good-by.”

She put her cold hand in his. As he took it, by a curious freak of his
brain, there flashed into his mind the memory of the day when, by the
side of this fragile white little hand lying in his, Hetty, laughingly,
had placed her own, broad and firm and brown. The thought of that hand
of Hetty’s, and her laugh at that moment, were too much for him, and he
dropped Rachel’s hand abruptly, and moved toward the door. She gave a
low cry: he turned back; she took a step towards him.

“I shall never see you again,” she said, taking his hand in hers. “I
owe my life to you,” and she carried his hand to her lips, and kissed
it again and again. “God bless you, child! Good-by! good-by!” he said.
Rachel did not speak, and he left her standing there, gazing after him
with a look on her face which haunted him as long as he lived.

Why Doctor Eben should have resolved to sail for England in a Canadian
steamer, and why, having reached Canada, he should have resolved to
postpone his voyage, and make a trial of the famous springs of St.
Mary’s, are mysteries hid in that book of Fate whose leaves no mortal
may turn. We prate in our shallow wisdom about causes, but the most that
we can trace is a short line of incidental occasions. A pamphlet which
Doctor Eben found in the office of a hotel was apparently the reason of
his going to St. Mary’s; all the reason so far as he knew, or as any man
might know. But that man is to be pitied who lives his life out under
the impression that it is within his own guidance. Only one remove from
the life of the leaf which the winds toss where they list would be such
a life as that.

It was with no very keen interest that Doctor Eben arrived in St.
Mary’s. He had some faint hope that the waters might do him good: but he
found the sandy stretches and long lines of straight firs in Canada very
monotonous; and he was already beginning to be oppressed by the sense of
homelessness. His quiet and domestic life had unfitted him for being a
wanderer, and he was already looking forward to the greater excitements
of European travel; hoping that they would prove more diverting and
entertaining than he had thus far found travel in America.

He entered St. Mary’s as Hetty had done, just at sunset. It was a warm
night in June; and, after his tea at the little inn, Dr. Eben sauntered
out listlessly. The sound of merry voices in the Square repelled him;
unlike Hetty, he shrank from strange faces: turning in the direction
where it seemed stillest, he walked slowly towards the woods. He looked
curiously at the little red chapel, and at Father Antoine’s cottage, now
literally imbedded in flowers. Then he paused before Hetty’s tiny house.
A familiar fragrance arrested him; leaning on the paling he looked over
into the garden, started, and said, under his breath: “How strange! How
strange!” There were long straight beds of lavender and balm, growing
together, as they used to grow in the old garden at “Gunn’s.” Both the
balm and the lavender were in full blossom; and the two scents mingled
and separated and mingled in the warm air, like the notes of two
instruments unlike, yet in harmony. The strong lemon odor of the balm,
was persistently present like the mastering chords of the violoncello,
and the fine and subtle fragrances from the myriad cells of the
pale lavender floated above and below, now distant, now melting and
disappearing, like a delicate melody. Dr. Eben was borne away from the
present, out of himself. He thrust his hand through the palings, and
gathered a crushed handful of the lavender blossoms: eagerly he inhaled
their perfume. Drawers and chests at “Gunn’s” had been thick strewn with
lavender for half a century. All Hetty’s clothes--Hetty herself--had
been full of the exquisite fragrance. The sound of quick pattering steps
roused him from his reverie. A bare-footed boy was driving a flock of
goats past. The child stopped and gazed intently at the stranger.

“Child, who lives in this little house?” said Dr. Eben, cautiously
hiding his stolen handful of lavender.

“Tantibba,” replied the boy.

“What!” exclaimed the doctor. “I don’t understand you. What is the
name?”

“Tantibba! Tantibba!” the child shouted, looking back over his shoulder,
as he raced on to overtake his goats. “Bo Tantibba.”

“Some old French name I suppose,” thought Dr. Eben: “but, it is very odd
about the herbs; the two growing together, so exactly as Hetty used
to have them;” and he walked reluctantly away, carrying the bruised
lavender blossoms in his hand, and breathing in their delicious
fragrance. As he drew near the inn, he observed on the other side of
the way a woman hurrying in the opposite direction. She had a sturdy
thick-set figure, and her step, although rapid, was not the step of a
young person. She wore on her head only a close white cap; and her gray
gown was straight and scant: on her arm she carried a basket of scarlet
plaited straw, which made a fine bit of color against the gray and
white of her costume. It was just growing dusk, and the doctor could not
distinguish her features. At that moment, a lad came running from the
inn, and darted across the road, calling aloud, “Tantibba! Tantibba!”
 The woman turned her head, at the name, and waited till the lad came
to her. Dr. Eben stood still, watching them. “So that is Tantibba?”
 he thought, “what can the name be?” Presently the lad came back with a
bunch of long drooping balm-stalks in his hand.

“Who was that you spoke to then?” asked the doctor.

“Tantibba!” replied the lad, hurrying on. Dr. Eben caught him by the
shoulder. “Look here!” he exclaimed, “just tell me that name again. This
is the fourth time I’ve heard it tonight. Is it the woman’s first name
or what?” The lad was a stupid English lad, who had but recently come
to service in St. Mary’s, and had never even thought to wonder what the
name “Tantibba,” meant. He stared vacantly for a moment, and then said:

“Indeed, sir, and I don’t know. She’s never called any thing else that
I’ve heard.”

“Who is she? what does she do?” asked the doctor.

“Oh, sir! she’s a great nurse, from foreign parts: she has a power of
healing-herbs in her garden, and she goes each day to the English House
to heal the sick. There’s nobody like her. If she do but lay her hand on
one, they do say it is a cure.”

“She is French, I suppose,” said the doctor; thinking to himself, “Some
adventuress, doubtless.”

“Ay, sir, I think so,” answered the lad; “but I must not stay to speak
any more, for the mistress waits for this balm to make tea for the cook
Jean, who is like to have a fever;” and the lad disappeared under the
low archway of the basement.

Dr. Eben walked back and forth in front of the inn, still crushing in
his fingers the lavender flowers and inhaling their fragrance. Idly he
watched “Tantibba’s” figure till it disappeared in the distance.

“This is just the sort of place for a tricky old French woman to make
a fortune in,” he said to himself: “these people are simple enough
to believe any thing;” and Dr. Eben went to his room, and tossed the
lavender blossoms down on his pillow.

When he waked in the morning, his first thoughts were bewildered:
nothing in nature is so powerful in association as a perfume. A sound, a
sight, is feeble in comparison; the senses are ever alert, and the mind
is accustomed always to act promptly on their evidence. But a subtle
perfume, which has been associated with a person, a place, a scene, can
ever afterward arrest us; can take us unawares, and hold us spell-bound,
while both memory and knowledge are drugged by its charm.

Dr. Eben did not open his eyes. In an ecstasy of half consciousness
he murmured, “Hetty.” As he stirred, his hand came in contact with the
withered flowers. Touch was more potent than smell. He roused, lifted
his head, saw the little blossoms now faded and gray lying near his
cheek; and saying, “Oh, I remember,” sank back again into a few moments’
drowsy reverie.

The morning was clear and cool, one window of the doctor’s room looked
east; the splendor of the sunrise shone in and illuminated the whole
place. While he was dressing, he found himself persistently thinking of
the strange name, “Tantibba.” “It is odd how that name haunts me,” he
thought. “I wish I could see it written: I haven’t the least idea how it
is spelled. I wonder if she is an impostor. Her garden didn’t look like
it.” Presently he sauntered out: the morning stir was just beginning in
the village. The child to whom he had spoken at “Tantibba’s” gate,
the night before, came up, driving the same flock of goats. The little
fellow, as he passed, pulled the ragged tassel of his cap in token of
recognition of the stranger who had accosted him. Without any definite
purpose, Dr. Eben followed slowly on, watching a pair of young kids,
who fell behind the flock, frolicking and half-fighting in antics so
grotesque that they looked more like gigantic grasshoppers than like
goats. Before he knew how far he had walked, he suddenly perceived that
he was very near “Tantibba’s” house.

“I’ll walk on and steal another handful of the lavender,” he thought;
“and if the old woman’s up, perhaps I’ll get a sight of her. I’d like to
see what sort of a face answers to that outlandish name.”

As the doctor leaned over the paling, and looked again at Hetty’s
garden, he saw something which had escaped his notice before, and at
which he started again, and muttered--this time aloud, and with
an expression almost of terror,--“Good Heavens, if there isn’t a
chrysanthemum bed too, exactly like ours! what does this mean?” Hetty
had little thought when she was laying out her garden, as nearly as
possible like the garden she had left behind her, that she was writing a
record which any eye but her own would note.

“I believe I’ll go in and see this old French woman,” he thought: “it
is such a strange thing that she should have just the same flowers Hetty
had. I don’t believe she’s an adventuress, after all.”

Dr. Eben had his hand on the latch of the gate. At that instant, the
cottage door opened, and “Tantibba,” in her white cap and gray gown, and
with her scarlet basket on her arm, appeared on the threshold. Dr. Eben
lifted his hat courteously, and advanced.

“I was just about to take the liberty of knocking at your door, madame,”
 he said, “to ask if you would give me a few of your lavender blossoms.”

As he began to speak, “Tantibba’s” basket fell from her hand. As he
advanced towards her, her eyes grew large with terror, and all color
left her cheeks.

“Why do I terrify her so?” thought Dr. Eben, quickening his steps, and
hastening to reassure her, by saying still more gently:

“Pray forgive me for intruding. I”--the words died on his lips: he stood
like one stricken by paralysis; his hands falling helplessly by his
side, and his eyes fixed in almost ghastly dread on this gray-haired
woman, from whose white lips came, in Hetty’s voice, the cry:

“Eben! oh! Eben!”

Hetty was the first to recover herself. Seeing with terror how rigid and
pale her husband’s face had become; how motionless, like one turned to
stone, he stood--she hastened down the steps, and, taking him by the
hand, said, in a trembling whisper:

“Oh, come into the house, Eben.”

Mechanically he followed her; she still leading him by the hand, like
a child. Like a child, or rather like a blind man, he sat down in the
chair which she placed for him. His eyes did not move from her face; but
they looked almost like sightless eyes. Hetty stood before him, with her
hands clasped tight. Neither spoke. At last Dr. Eben said feebly:

“Are you Hetty?”

“Yes, Eben,” answered Hetty, with a tearless sob. He did not speak
again: still with a strange unseeing look, his eyes roved over her
face, her figure. Then he reached out one hand and touched her gown;
curiously, he lifted the soft gray serge, and fingered it; then he said
again:

“Are you Hetty?”

“Oh, Eben! dear Eben! indeed I am,” broke forth Hetty. “Do forgive me.
Can’t you?”

“Forgive you?” repeated Dr. Eben, helplessly. “What for?”

“Oh, my God! he thinks we are both dead: what shall I do to rouse him?”
 thought Hetty, all the nurse in her coming to the rescue of the woman
and wife.

“For going away and leaving you, Eben,” she said in a clear resolute
voice. “I wasn’t drowned. I came away.”

Dr. Eben smiled; a smile which terrified Hetty more than his look or
voice or words had done.

“Eben! Eben!” she cried, putting both her hands on his shoulders, and
bringing her face close to his. “Don’t look like that. I tell you I
wasn’t drowned. I am alive: feel me! feel me! I am Hetty;” and she knelt
before him, and laid her arms across his knees. The touch, the grasp,
the warmth of her strong flesh, penetrated his inmost consciousness, and
brought back the tottering senses. His eyes lost their terrifying and
ghastly expression, and took on one searching and half-stern. “You were
not drowned!” he said. “You have not been dead all these years! You went
away! You are not Hetty!” and he pushed her arms rudely from his knees.
Then, in the next second, he had clasped her fiercely in his arms,
crying aloud:

“You are Hetty! I feel you! I know you! Oh Hetty, Hetty, wife, what does
this all mean? Who took you away from me?” And tears, blessed saving
tears, filled Dr. Eben’s eyes.

Now began the retribution of Hetty’s mistake. In this moment, with her
husband’s arms around her, his eyes fixed on hers, the whole cloud of
misapprehension under which she had acted was revealed to her as by a
beam of divine light from heaven. Smitten to the heart by a sudden
and overwhelming remorse, Hetty was speechless. She could only look
pleadingly into his face, and murmur:

“Oh, Eben! Eben!”

He repeated his questions, growing calmer with each word, and with each
moment’s increasing realization of Hetty’s presence.

“Who took you away?”

“Nobody,” answered Hetty. “I came alone.”

“Did you not love me, Hetty?” said Dr. Eben in sad tones, struck by a
new fear. This question unsealed Hetty’s lips.

“Love you!” she exclaimed in a piercing voice. “Love you! oh, Eben!” and
then she poured out, without reserves or disguises, the whole story
of her convictions, her decision, and her flight. Her husband did not
interrupt her by word or gesture. As she proceeded with her narrative,
he slowly withdrew his eyes from her face, and fixed them on the floor.
It was harder for her to speak when he thus looked away from her.
Timidly she said:

“Do not turn your eyes away from me, Eben. It makes me afraid. I cannot
tell you the rest, if you look so.”

With an evident effort, he raised his eyes again, and again met her
earnest gaze. But it was only for a few seconds. Again his eyes drooped,
evaded hers, and rested on the floor. Again Hetty paused; and said still
more pleadingly:

“Please look at me, Eben. Indeed I can’t talk to you if you do not.”

Like one stung suddenly by some insupportable pain, he wrenched her
hands from his knees, sprang to his feet, and walked swiftly back and
forth. She remained kneeling by the chair, looking up at him with a most
piteous face. “Hetty,” he exclaimed, “you must be patient with me. Try
and imagine what it is to have believed for ten years that you were
dead; to have mourned you as dead; to have spent ten whole years of
weary, comfortless days; and then to find suddenly that you have been
all this time living,--voluntarily hiding yourself from me; needlessly
torturing me! Why, Hetty! Hetty! you must have been mad. You must be mad
now, I think, to kneel there and tell me all these details so calmly,
and in such a matter-of-fact way. Do you realize what a monstrous thing
you have been doing?” And Dr. Eben’s eyes blazed with a passionate
indignation, as he stopped short in his excited walk and looked down
upon Hetty. Then, in the next second, touched by the look on her
uplifted face, so noble, so pure, so benevolent, he forgot all his
resentment, all his perplexity, all his pain; and, stooping over her,
he lifted her from her knees, and, folding her close to his bosom,
exclaimed:

“Oh, my Hetty, my own; forgive me. I am the one that is mad. How can I
think of any thing except the joy of having found you again? No wonder
I thought at first we were both dead. Oh, my precious wife, is it
really you? Are you sure we are alive?” And he kissed her again and
again,--hair, brow, eyes, lips,--with a solemn rapture.

A great silence fell upon them: there seemed no more to say. Suddenly,
Dr. Eben exclaimed:

“Rachel said she did not believe you were dead.”

At mention of Rachel’s name, a spasm crossed Hetty’s face. In the
excitement of her mingled terror and joy, she had not yet thought of
Rachel.

“Where is Rachel?” she gasped, her very heart standing still as she
asked the question.

“At home,” answered the doctor; and his countenance clouded at the
memory of his last interview with her. Hetty’s fears misinterpreted the
reply and the sudden cloud on his face.

“Is she--did you--where is her home?” she stammered.

A great light broke in on Dr. Eben’s mind.

“Good God!” he cried. “Hetty, it is not possible that you thought I
loved Rachel?”

“No,” said Hetty. “I only thought you could love her, if it were right;
and if I were dead it would be.”

A look of horror deepened on the doctor’s face. The idea thus suggested
to his mind was terrible.

“And supposing I had loved her, thinking you were dead, what then? Do
you know what you would have done?” he said sternly.

“I think you would have been very happy,” replied Hetty, simply. “I have
always thought of you as being probably very happy.”

Dr. Eben groaned aloud.

“Oh, Hetty! Hetty! How could God have let you think such thoughts?
Hetty!” he exclaimed suddenly, with the manner of one who has taken a
new resolve: “Hetty, listen. We must not talk about this terrible past.
It is impossible for me to be just to you. If any other woman had done
what you have done, I should say she must be mad, or else wicked.”

“I think I was mad,” interrupted Hetty. “It seems so to me now. But,
indeed, Eben, oh, indeed, I thought at the time it was right.”

“I know you did, my darling,” replied the doctor. “I believe it fully;
but for all that I cannot be just to you, when I think of it. We must
put it away from us for ever. We are old now, and have perhaps only a
few years to live together.”

Here Hetty interrupted him with a sudden cry of dismay:

“Oh! oh! I forgot every thing but you. I ought to have been at Dr.
Macgowan’s an hour ago. Indeed, Eben, I must go this minute. Do not try
to hinder me. There is a patient there who is so ill. I fear he will not
live through the day. Oh, how selfish of me to have forgotten him for a
single moment! But how can I leave you! How can I leave you!”

As she spoke, she moved hastily about the room, making her preparations
to go. Her husband did not attempt to delay her. A strange feeling was
creeping over him, that, by Hetty’s removal of herself from him, by her
new life, her new name, new duties, she had really ceased to be his.
He felt weak and helpless: the shock had been too great, and he was not
strong. When Hetty was ready, he said:

“Shall I walk with you, Hetty?”

She hesitated. She feared to be seen talking in an excited way with this
stranger: she dreaded to lose her husband out of her sight.

“Oh, Eben!” she exclaimed, “I do not know what to do. I cannot bear to
let you go from me for a moment. How shall I get through this day! I
will not go to Dr. Macgowan’s any more. I will get Sister Catharine from
the convent to come and take my place at once. Yes, come with me. We
will walk together, but we must not talk, Eben.”

“No,” said her husband.

He understood and shared her feeling. In silence they took their way
through the outskirts of the town. Constantly they stole furtive looks
at each other; Hetty noting with sorrow the lines which grief and
ill-health had made in the doctor’s face; he thinking to himself:

“Surely it is a miracle that age and white hair should make a woman more
beautiful.”

But it was not the age, the white hair: it was the transfiguration of
years of self-sacrifice and ministering to others.

“Hetty,” said Dr. Eben, as they drew near Dr. Macgowan’s gate, “what
is this name by which the village people call you? I heard it on
everybody’s lips, but I could not make it out.”

Hetty colored. “It is French for Aunt Hibba,” she replied. “They speak
it as if it were one word, ‘Tantibba.’”

“But there was more to it,” said her husband. “‘Bo Tantibba,’ they
called you.”

“Oh, that means merely ‘Good Aunt Hibba,’” she said confusedly. “You
see some of them think I have been good to them; that’s all: but usually
they call me only ‘Tantibba.’”

“Why did you call yourself ‘Hibba’?” he said.

“I don’t know,” replied Hetty. “It came into my head.”

“Don’t they know your last name?” asked her husband, earnestly.

“Oh!” said Hetty, “I changed that too.”

Dr. Eben stopped short: his face grew stern.

“Hetty,” he said, “do you mean to tell me that you have put my very name
away from you all these years?”

Tears came to Hetty’s eyes.

“Why, Eben,” she replied, “what else could I do? It would have been
absurd to keep my name. Any day it might have been recognized. Don’t you
see?”

“Yes, I see,” answered Dr. Eben, bitterly. “You are no longer mine, even
by name.”

Hetty’s tears fell. She was dumb before all resentful words, all
passionate outbreaks, from her husband now. All she could say was:

“Oh, Eben! Eben!” Sometimes she added piteously: “I never meant to do
wrong; at least, no wrong to you. I thought if there were wrong, it
would be only to myself, and on my own head.” When they parted, Dr. Eben
said:

“At what hour are you free, Hetty?”

“At six,” she replied. “Will you wait for me at the house? Do not come
here.”

“Very well,” he answered; and, making a formal salutation as to a
stranger, he turned away.



XVI.

With a heavy heart, in midst of all her joy, Hetty went about her
duties: vague fears oppressed her. What would Eben do now? What had he
meant when he said: “You are no longer mine, even in name”?

Now that Hetty perceived that she had been wrong in leaving him; that,
instead of providing, as she had hoped she should, for his greater
happiness, she had only plunged him into inconsolable grief,--her one
desire was to atone for it; to return to him; to be to him, if possible,
more than she had ever been. But great timidity and apprehension filled
her breast. He seemed to be angry with her. Would he forgive her? Would
he take her home? Had she forfeited her right to go home? Hour after
hour, as the weary day went on, she tortured herself with these
thoughts. Wistfully her patients watched her face. It was impossible for
her to conceal her preoccupation and anxiety. At last the slow sun
sank behind the fir-trees, and brought her hour of release. Seeking Dr.
Macgowan, she told him that she would send Sister Catharine on the next
day “to take my place for the present, perhaps altogether,” said Hetty.

“Good heavens! Mrs. Smailli!” exclaimed the doctor. “What is the matter?
Are you ill? You shall have a rest; but we can’t give you up.”

“No, I am not ill,” replied Hetty, “but circumstances have occurred
which make it impossible for me to say what my plans will be now.”

“What is it? Bless my soul, what shall we do?” said Dr. Macgowan,
looking very much vexed. “Really, Mrs. Smailli, you can’t give up your
post in this way.”

The doctor forgot himself in his dismay.

“I would not leave it, if there were no one to fill it,” replied Hetty,
gently; “but Sister Catharine is a better nurse than I am. She will more
than fill my place.”

“Pshaw! Mrs. Smailli,” ejaculated the doctor. “She can’t hold a candle
to you. Is it any thing about the salary which is taking you away? I
will raise it: you shall fix your own price.”

Flushing red with shame, Hetty said hotly:

“I have never worked for the money, Dr. Macgowan; only for enough for my
living. Money has nothing to do with it. Good-morning.”

“That’s just what comes of depending on women,” growled Dr. Macgowan.
“They’re all alike; no stability to ‘em! What under heaven can it be?
She’s surely too old to have got any idea of marrying into her head.
I’ll go and see Father Antoine, and see if he can’t influence her.”

But when Dr. Macgowan, a few days later, reached Father Antoine’s
cottage, he was met by news which slew on the instant all his hopes of
ever seeing Mrs. Hibba Smailli in his House again as a nurse. Hetty and
her husband had spent the previous evening with Father Antoine, and had
laid their case fully before him. Hetty had given him permission to tell
all the facts to Dr. Macgowan, under the strictest pledges of secrecy.

“‘Pon my word! ‘pon my word!” said the doctor, “the most extraordinary
thing I ever heard of! Who’d have thought that calm, clearheaded woman
would ever have committed such a folly? It’s a case of monomania; a real
monomania, Father Antoine; never can be sure of such a brain’s that;
may take another, any day; clear case of monomania; most uncomfortable!
uncomfortable! so embarrassing! don’t you know? eh? What’s going to be
done now? How does the man take it? Is he a gentleman? Hang me, if
I wouldn’t let a woman stay where she was, that had served me such a
trick!”

Father Antoine laughed a low pleasant laugh.

“And that would be by how much you had loved her, is it not?” he said.
“He is a physician also, the good Aunt’s husband, and he understands. He
will take her with him; and, if he did not, she would die; for, now that
it is plain to her, how grievously she hath caused him to sorrow, her
love is like a fever till she can make amends for all.”

“Amends!” growled Dr. Macgowan, “that’s just like a woman too. Amends!
I’d like to know what amends there can be for such a scandal, such a
disgrace: ‘pon my word she must have been mad; that’s the only way of
accounting for it.”

“It is not that there will be scandal,” replied Father Antoine. “I am
to marry them in the chapel, and there is no one in all the wide world,
except to you and to me, that it will be known that they have been
husband and wife before.”

“Eh! What! Married again!” exclaimed Dr. Macgowan. “Well, that’s like
a woman too. Why, what damned nonsense! If she was ever his wife, she’s
his wife now, isn’t she? I shouldn’t think you’d lend yourself, Father
Antoine, to any such transaction as that.”

“Gently, gently!” replied Father Antoine: “rail not so at womankind. It
is she who wishes to go with him at once; and who says as thou, that she
is still his wife: but it is he who will not. He says that she hath for
ten years borne a name other than his; that in her own country she hath
been ten years mourned for as dead; that he hath by process of law, on
account of her death, inherited and sold all the estate that she did
own.”

“Rich, was she rich!” interrupted Dr. Macgowan. “Well, ‘pon my word,
it’s the most extraordinary thing I ever did hear of: never could have
happened in England, sir, never!”

“I know not if it were a large estate,” continued Father Antoine, “it
would be no difference: if it had been millions she would have left it
and come away. She was full of renunciation. Ah! but she must be beloved
of the Virgin.”

“So you are really going to marry them over again, are you?” broke
in the impatient doctor. “I have said that I would,” replied Father
Antoine, “and it is great joy to me: neither should it seem strange to
you. Your church doth not recognize the sacrament of baptism, when
it has been performed by unconsecrated hands of dissenters: you
do rebaptize all converts from those sects. So our church does not
recognize the sacrament of marriage, when performed by any one outside
of its own priesthood. I shall with true gladness of heart administer
the holy sacrament of marriage to these two so strangely separated, and
so strangely brought together. They have borne ten years of penance for
whatever of sin had gone before: the church will bless them now.”

“Hem,” said Dr. Macgowan, gruffly, unable to controvert the logic of
Father Antoine’s position in regard to the sacraments; “that is all
right from your point of view: but what do they make of it; I don’t
suppose they admit that their first marriage was invalid, do they?”

Dr. Macgowan was in the worst of humors. He was about to lose a nurse
who had been to him for ten years, like his right hand; and he was
utterly discomfited and confused in all his confirmed impressions of her
character, by these startling revelations of her history. He would not
have been a Briton if these untoward combinations of events had not made
him surly.

“Nay, nay!” said Father Antoine, placably. “Not so. It is only the
husband; and he has but one thing to say: that she who was his wife died
to him, to her country, to her friends, to the law. There is even in her
village a beautiful and high monument of marble which sets forth all the
recountal of her death. She would go back to that country with him,
and confess to every man the thing she had done. She prayed him that he
would take her. But he will not. He says it would be shame; and the name
of his wife that died shall never be shamed. It is a narrow strait for
a man who loves a woman. I cannot say that it is clear to me what my own
will would be in such a case. I am much moved by each when I hear them
talk of it. Ah, but she has the grand honesty! Thou shouldst have heard
her cry out when he said that to confess all would be a shame.

“‘Nay, nay!’ cried she, ‘to conceal is a shame.’ “‘Ay!’ replied her
husband, ‘but thou hast thought it no shame to conceal thyself for these
ten years, and to lie about thy name.’ He speaketh with a great anger
to her at times, spite of his love. “‘Ah,’ she answered him, in a voice
which nigh set me to weeping: ‘Ah, my husband, I did think it shame: but
I bore it, for sake of my love to thee; and now that I know I was wrong,
all the more do I long to confess all, both that and this, and to stand
forgiven or unforgiven, as I may, clear in the eyes of all who ever knew
me.’

“But he will not, and I have counselled her to pray him no more. For he
has already endured heavy things at her hands; and, if this one thing
be to her a grievous burden, all the more doth it show her love, if she
accept it and bear it to the end.”

“Well, well,” said Dr. Macgowan, somewhat wearied with Father Antoine’s
sentiments and emotions, “I have lost the best nurse I ever had, or
shall have. I’ll say that much for her; but I can’t help feeling that
there was something wrong in her brain somewhere, which might have
cropped out again any day. Most extraordinary! most extraordinary!” And
Dr. Macgowan walked away with a certain lofty, indifferent air, which
English people so well understand, of washing one’s hands of matters
generally.

There had, indeed, been a sore struggle between Hetty and her husband
on this matter of their being remarried by Father Antoine. When Dr. Eben
first said to her: “And now, what are we to do, Hetty?” she looked at
him in an agony of terror and gasped:

“Why, Eben, there is only one thing for us to do; don’t we belong to
each other? don’t you love me? don’t you mean to take me home with you?”

“Would you go home with me, Hetty?” he asked emphatically; “go back
to Welbury? let every man, woman, and child in the county, nay, in the
State, know that all my grief for you had been worse than needless,
that I had been a deserted husband for ten years, and that you had been
living under an assumed name all that time? Would you do this?”

Hetty’s face paled. “What else is there to do?” she said.

He continued:

“Could you bear to have your name, your father’s name, my name,
all dragged into notoriety, all tarnished by being linked with this
monstrous tale of a woman who fled--for no reason whatever--from her
home, friends, husband, and hid herself, and was found only by an
accident?”

“Oh, Eben! spare me,” moaned Hetty.

“I can’t spare you now, Hetty,” he answered. “You must look the thing in
the face. I have been looking it in the face ever since the first hour
in which I found you. What are we to do?”

“I will stay on here if you think it best,” said Hetty. “If you will be
happier so. Nobody need ever know that I am alive.”

Doctor Eben threw his arms around her. “Leave you here! Why, Hetty, will
you never understand that I love you?” he exclaimed; “love you, love
you, would no more leave you than I would kill myself?”

“But what is there, then, that we can do?” asked Hetty.

“Be married again here, as if we had never been married! You under your
new name,” replied Doctor Eben rapidly.

Hetty’s face expressed absolute horror. “We--you and I--married again!
Why Eben, it would be a mockery,” she exclaimed.

“Not so much a mockery,” her husband retorted, “as every thing that I
have done, and every thing that you have done for ten whole years.”

“Oh, Eben! I don’t think it would be right,” cried Hetty. “It would be a
lie.”

“A lie!” ejaculated her husband, scornfully. Poor Hetty! The bitter
harvest of her wrong deed was garnered for her, poured upon her head
at every turn, by the pitilessness of events. Inexorable seasons, surer
than any other seedtime and harvest, are those uncalendared seasons in
which souls sow and reap with meek patience.

Hetty replied:

“I know I have lived, acted, told a lie, Eben. Don’t taunt me with it.
How can you, if you really believe all I have told you of the reasons
which led me to it?”

“My Hetty,” said Dr. Eben, “I don’t taunt you with it. I do believe all
you have told me. I do know that you did it for love of me, monstrous
though it sounds to say so. But when you refuse now to do the only thing
which seems to me possible to be done to repair the mistake, and say
your reason for not doing it is that it would be a lie, how can I help
pointing back to the long ten years’ lie you have lived, acted, told?
If your love for me bore you up through that lie, it can bear you up
through this.”

“Shall we never go home, Eben?” asked Hetty sadly. “To Welbury? to New
England? never!” replied her husband with a terrible emphasis. “Never
will I take you there to draw down upon our heads all the intolerable
shame, and gossiping talk which would follow. I tell you, Hetty, you are
dead! I am shielding your name, the name of my dead wife! You don’t seem
to comprehend in the least that you have been dead for ten years. You
talk as if it would be nothing more to explain your reappearance than if
you had been away somewhere for a visit longer than you intended.”

The longer they discussed the subject, the more vehement Dr. Eben grew,
and the feebler grew Hetty’s opposition. She could not gainsay his
arguments. She had nothing to oppose to them, except her wifely instinct
that the old bond and ceremony were by implication desecrated in
assuming a second: “But what right have I to fall back on that old
bond,” thought poor Hetty, wringing her hands as the burden of her long,
sad ten years’ mistake weighed upon her.

Not until Hetty had yielded this point was there any real joy between
her and her husband. As soon as it was yielded, his happiness began to
grow and increase, like a plant in spring-time.

“Now you are mine again! Now we will be happy! Life and the world are
before us!” he exclaimed.

“But where shall we live, Eben?” asked the practical Hetty.

“Live! live!” he cried, like a boy; “live anywhere, so that we live
together!”

“There is always plenty to do, everywhere,” said Hetty, reflectively:
“we should not have to be idle.”

Dr. Eben looked at her with mingled admiration and anger.

“Hetty!” he exclaimed, “I wish you’d leave off ‘doing,’ for a while. All
our misery came of that. At any rate, don’t ever try to ‘do’ any thing
for me again as long as you live! I’ll look out for my own happiness,
the rest of the time, if you please.”

His healing had begun when he could make an affectionate jest, like
this; but healing would come far slower to Hetty than to him. Complete
healing could perhaps never come. Remorse could never wholly be banished
from her heart.

When it had once been settled that the marriage should take place,
there seemed no reason for deferring it; no reason, except that Father
Antoine’s carnations were for some cause or other, not yet in full
bloom, and both he and Marie were much discontented at their tardiness.
However, the weather grew suddenly hot, with sharp showers in the
afternoons, and both the carnations and the Ayrshire roses flowered out
by scores every morning, until even Marie was satisfied there would be
enough. There was no tint of Ayrshire rose which could not be found in
Father Antoine’s garden,--white, pink, deep red, purple: the bushes grew
like trees, and made almost a thicket, along the western boundary of the
garden. Early on the morning of Hetty’s wedding, Marie carried heaped
basketfuls of these roses, into the chapel, and covered the altar with
them. Pierre Michaud, now a fine stalwart fellow of twenty-one, just
married to that little sister of Jean Cochot, about whom he had once
told so big a lie, had begged for the privilege of adorning the rest of
the chapel. For two days, he and Jean, his brother-in-law, had worked in
the forests, cutting down young trees of fir, balsam, and dogwood. The
balsams were full of small cones of a brilliant purple color; and the
dogwoods were waving with showy white flowers. Pierre set each tree in
a box of moist earth, so that it looked as thriving and fresh as it had
done in the forest; first, a fir, and then a dogwood, all the way from
the door to the altar, reached the gay and fragrant wall. Great masses
of Linnea vines, in full bloom, hung on the walls, and big vases of
Father Antoine’s carnations stood in the niches, with the wax saints.
The delicate odor of the roses, the Linnea blossoms, and carnations,
blended with the spicy scent of the firs, and made a fragrance as strong
as if it had been distilled from centuries of summer. The villagers had
been told by Father Antoine, that this stranger who was to marry their
good “Tantibba,” was one who had known and loved her for twenty years,
and who had been seeking her vainly all these years that she had lived
in St. Mary’s. The tale struck a warm chord in the breasts of the
affectionate and enthusiastic people. The whole village was in great
joy, both for love of “Tantibba,” and for the love of romance, so
natural to the French heart. Every one who had a flower in blossom
picked it, or brought the plant to place in the chapel. Every man,
woman, and child in the town, dressed as for a _fête_, was in the
chapel, and praying for “Tantibba,” long before the hour for the
ceremony. When Eben and Hetty entered the door, the fragrance, the
waving flowers, the murmuring crowd, unnerved Hetty. She had not been
prepared for this.

“Oh, Eben!” she whispered, and, halting for a moment, clung tighter to
his arm. He turned a look of affectionate pride upon her, and,
pressing her hand, led her on. Father Antoine’s face glowed with loving
satisfaction as he pronounced the words so solemn to him, so significant
to them. As for Marie, she could hardly keep quiet on her knees: her
silver necklace fairly rattled on her shoulders with her excitement.

“Ah, but she looks like an angel! may the saints keep her,” she
muttered; “but what will comfort M’sieur Antoine for the loss of her,
when she is gone?”

After the ceremony was over, all the people walked with the bride and
bridegroom to the inn, where the diligence was waiting in which they
were to begin their journey; the same old vehicle in which Hetty had
come ten years before alone to St. Mary’s, and Doctor Eben had come a
few weeks ago alone to St. Mary’s, “not knowing the things which should
befall him there.”

It was an incongruous old vehicle for a wedding journey; and the flowers
at the ancient horses’ heads, and the knots of green at the cracked
windows, would have made one laugh who had no interest in the meaning of
the decorations. But it was the only four-wheeled vehicle in St. Mary’s,
and to these simple villagers’ way of thinking, there was nothing
unbecoming in Tantibba’s going away in it with her husband.

“Farewell to thee! Farewell to thee! The saints keep thee, Bo Tantibba
and thy husband! and thy husband!” rose from scores of voices as the
diligence moved slowly away.

Dr. Macgowan, who had somewhat reluctantly persuaded himself to be
present at the wedding, and had walked stiffly in the merry procession
from the chapel to the inn, stood on the inn steps, and raised his hat
in a dignified manner for a second. Father Antoine stood bareheaded by
his side, waving a large white handkerchief, and trying to think only of
Hetty’s happiness, not at all of his own and the village’s loss. As the
shouts of the people continued to ring on the air, Dr. Macgowan turned
slowly to Father Antoine.

“Most extraordinary scene!” he said, “‘pon my word, most extraordinary
scene; never could happen in England, sir, never.”

“Which is perfectly true; worse luck for England,” Father Antoine might
have replied; but did not. A few of the younger men and maidens ran for
a short distance by the side of the diligence, and threw flowers into
the windows.

“Thou wilt return! thou wilt return!” they cried. “Say thou wilt
return!”

“Yes, God willing, I will return,” answered Hetty, bending to the right
and to the left, taking loving farewell looks of them all. “We will
surely return.” And as the last face disappeared from sight, and the
last merry voice died away, she turned to her husband, and, laying her
hand in his, said, “Why not, Eben? Will not that be our best home,
our best happiness, to come back and live and die among these simple
people?”

“Yes,” answered Dr. Eben, “it will. Tantibba, we will come back.”

       *       *       *       *       *

And now is told all that I have to tell of the Strange History of Eben
and Hetty Williams. If there be any who find the history incredible, I
have for such a few words more.

First: I myself have seen, in the old graveyard at Welbury, the
“beautiful and high monument of marble,” of which Father Antoine spoke
to Dr. Macgowan. It bears the following inscription:

              “SACRED TO THE MEMORY
                       OF
                 HENRIETTA GUNN,
       BELOVED WIFE OF DR. EBENEZER WILLIAMS,
         Who was drowned in Welbury Lake.”

The dates, which I have my own reasons for not giving, come below; and
also a verse of the Bible, which I will not quote.

Second: I myself was in Welbury when there was brought to the town
by some traveller a copy of a Canadian newspaper, in which, among the
marriages, appeared this one:

  “In the parish of St. Mary’s, Canada, W., by Rev.
  Antoine Ladeau, Mrs. Hibba Smailli to Dr. Ebenezer
  Williams.”

The condition of Welbury, when this piece of news was fairly in
circulation in the town, could be compared to nothing but the buzz of a
beehive at swarming time. A letter which was received by the Littles,
a few days later, from Dr. Williams himself, did not at first allay the
buzzing. He wrote, simply: “You will be much surprised at the slip which
I enclose” (it was the newspaper announcement of his marriage). “You can
hardly be more surprised than I am myself; but the lady is one whom I
knew and loved a great many years ago. We are going abroad, and shall
probably remain there for some years. When I shall see Welbury again is
very uncertain.”

Thirdly: Since neither of these facts proves my “Strange History” true,
I add one more.

I know Hetty Williams.





*** End of this LibraryBlog Digital Book "Hetty's Strange History" ***

Copyright 2023 LibraryBlog. All rights reserved.



Home