"MARA--Will you grant me one more interview--the last, unless you freely concede others. I have something important to say to you, something that relates far more to your happiness than to my own. In excuse for my request, I have nothing better to plead than my love which you have rejected, and yet which ent.i.tles me to some consideration. I think my motive is unselfish--as unselfish as can be possible under the circ.u.mstances. You may treat me as you please, but your welfare will always be dear to me. I shall not seek to change your convictions, nor shall I plead for myself, for I know that all this would be useless; but I wish to see you face to face once more alone in your own home. I must also request that Mrs. Hunter will not interfere with our interview. You are not a child, and you know that I am a gentleman, and that I am incapable of saying a word at variance with my profound respect for you. OWEN CLANCY."
Mara was deeply agitated by this missive. Her first emotion was that of anger, as much at herself as at him--a confused resentment that his words, his very handwriting, should so move her, and that he should venture to write at all. Had she not made it sufficiently plain that he had no right to take, or, at least, to manifest any such interest in her affairs? Were all her efforts futile to hide her love? In spite of her habit of reserve and repression she had a pa.s.sionate heart, and this fact had been forced upon her by vain and continuous struggles. Had he the penetration to learn the truth? She could not tell, and this uncertainty touched her pride to the very quick. After hours of wavering purpose, impulses to ignore him and his request, moments of tenderness in which will, pride, and every consideration were almost overwhelmed, she at last arrived at a fixed resolution. "I _will_ see him," she murmured. "He has virtually told me that he will not give up what he terms his principles for love. I shall not acknowledge my secret, but if he has discovered it, he shall learn that I also will not give up my principles for love."
The next morning she quietly handed Clancy"s note to Mrs. Hunter.
"Shameful!" e.j.a.c.u.l.a.t.ed the lady. "Of course you will pay no attention to him, or else write a curt refusal. I insist on one course or the other."
Mara looked steadfastly at her aunt until the worthy lady was somewhat disconcerted, and asked fretfully, "What do you mean by that look, Mara?"
"Aunty, can"t you realize that I am no longer a child, as he says?"
"Well, but in a case like this--"
"In a case like this which concerns me so personally, I must act according to my own judgment. You can be in the adjoining room. Indeed I have no objection to your hearing what is said, but I would rather you should not.
You have no occasion to fear. Mr. Clancy has alienated me forever. I have no doubt that before the summer is over he will be engaged to Miss Ainsley, if he is not already engaged virtually. I have reasons for granting this final interview which are personal--which my self-respect requires, and, since they are personal, I need not mention them. There shall be no want of respect and affection for you, aunty, but you must realize that I have become an independent woman, and I have the entire right to decide certain questions for myself."
"Well, I wash my hands of it all," said Mrs. Hunter, coldly, "and since my strong convictions have no weight with you, and you intend to act independently of me, of course I shall not permit myself to hear a word of your conversation."
"That will be the more delicate and honorable course, aunty."
"Well, Mara, I only wish I need not be in the house at the time."
"Aunty, that is the same as saying that your enmity toward Mr. Clancy is greater than your love for me."
"But I don"t see the use of this intensely disagreeable interview. This is the only home I have."
"And the only home I have also, aunty."
"Oh, well, if you will, you will, I reckon."
"Yes, if I will, I _will_, and Mr. Clancy shall learn that I have a will."
As Aun" Sheba was departing that morning, Mara followed her into the hallway, and, placing a note in her hand, said, "Give that to Mr. Clancy and to no other. Say nothing to him or to any one else. Do you understand, Aun" Sheba?"
"I does, honey. Wen you talk dataway you"se heah an eyster shoutin" "fore Aun" Sheba speak."
Clancy only said, "Thank you," as he thrust a half-dollar into the old woman"s hand.
Aun" Sheba laid it on the desk, and remarked with great dignity, "I does some tings widout money."
He paid no heed to her, but read eagerly, "Mr. Clancy--Come this evening.
Mara Wallingford."
With a long breath he thought, "It will be my last chance. I fear it will be useless, but at no future day shall she think in bitterness of heart, "He might have done more to save me.""
There was no sudden, involuntary illumination of her face on this occasion when he entered her little parlor, and she could not help noticing that his face was pale. She also saw from his expression that his spirit was as high as hers; that there was not a trace of the lover, eager to plead his cause. "He has pleaded successfully elsewhere," she thought, and, in spite of all other conflicting feelings, she was curious to know what his motive could be in seeking the interview.
"Good-evening, Mr. Clancy. Will you sit down?" she said, coldly.
"Yes, Mara. Pardon me for calling you Mara. I am beyond any affectation of formality with you, and you know there is no lack of respect on my part."
She merely bowed and waited in silence.
"When you learn my motive for making my request, for coming here to-night, you will probably resent it, but you have taught me to expect little else except resentment from you."
"Mr. Clancy, there is no cause for such language. Certainly I was quietly pursuing the even tenor of my way."
"Do you understand fully whither that way is leading?"
"Truly, Mr. Clancy, that is a singular question for you to ask."
"I understand you, Mara. You mean that it is no affair of mine."
He knew that her silence gave a.s.sent to this view, and he answered as if she had spoken.
"Nevertheless you are mistaken. It _is_ an affair of mine. There could be no peace for me in the future if I failed you now, for it seems to me I am the only true friend you have in the world."
"Mr. Clancy," she said hotly, "we have differed so greatly before that I might have been saved the pain of this interview, but we never differed as we do at this moment. I cannot listen to you any longer. It would be disloyalty to those who _are_ true friends--friends that I love and honor."
"Do you love Captain Bodine?"
"Certainly I do. He was my father"s friend; he is my honored friend."
"Do you _love_ Captain Bodine?"
"What do you mean?" she asked angrily, flushing to her very brow.
"Mara, be calm. Listen to me as you value your life, as you value your own soul. Do you think I would come here for slight cause at such cost to us both?"
"I think you are strangely mistaken in coming here, and using language which makes me doubt your sanity."
"Please do me the justice to note that there is nothing wild in my manner, nor any excitement in my words."
"Noting this, I find it more difficult to explain your course, or to pardon it."
"It is not necessary at present, that you should do either. Please be patient a few minutes longer and my mission is ended. I am not pleading for myself, but for you. Please listen, or a time may come when in a bitterness beyond words you may regret that you did not hear me. Thank Heaven! it is clear that I have not come too late. Captain Bodine is more than your friend in _his_ feelings; he is your lover, and you are so morbid, unfriended, unguided, that you are capable of sacrificing yourself--"
"Hush! you are wronging a man whom you are unworthy to name. He has never dreamed of such love as you suggest."
"I am right. Oh, I have learned too deeply in the school of experience not to know. My warning may be of no avail, but you shall not drift unawares into this thing, you shall not enter into it, nor be persuaded into it from a false spirit of self-sacrifice--"
"Mr. Clancy, I will not listen a moment longer to such preposterous language. You are pa.s.sing far beyond the limits of my forbearance. If your conscience is burdened on my account because I am so "unfriended," I absolve you fully. You will and do know how to console yourself. Our interview must end here and now. It were disloyalty for me to listen a moment longer. We are strangers from this day forth, Mr. Clancy." And she rose flushed and trembling.
He also rose, and with an intent look which held her gaze, said gently: "There is that which will speak although I am banished."
"What?"
"Your heart."