Hendrie waited for a moment. Then he drew up a chair and sat down, and deliberately removed the hands in which her face was buried.
"What is it, Mon?" he inquired anxiously, but in his firm, decided way.
"I--I don"t know," she cried, with the desperate helplessness of a child. "You--you"ve made me love you, and--and it"s all wrong--all wrong."
Hendrie smiled confidently.
"Is it? Ah, well, you do love me. That"s all that matters--really."
She stared at him with suddenly widening eyes. Then she, too, smiled a tender, shy smile that still was full of trouble.
"I"m afraid--I do," she said. "But I didn"t mean you to know----"
"Afraid?"
Hendrie"s smile was good to see. But it pa.s.sed quickly, and he went on in the manner of a man always accustomed to dictate.
"Now listen, Mon. We are going to be married without unnecessary delay.
How soon can you be ready?"
In a moment Monica realized the utter folly of what she had done. In a moment it swept over her, threatening and almost paralyzing her faculties. She paled. Then a deep flush leaped into her cheek, and, in a fever of apprehension, she pleaded for a respite.
"No, no, not yet," she cried, with a sudden energy which quite startled her lover. "I cannot marry you until--until---- You see," she blundered on, "there are so many things. I--I have responsibilities. There are----"
Hendrie mercifully broke in upon her, and perhaps saved her from betraying in her hysterical apprehension those very things she wished to keep from him.
"Don"t be scared, Mon," he said quickly. "It"s for you to say. It"s right up to you. I shan"t rush you. See. Think it over. I"ve got to go west to-morrow. Guess I"ll be away a week. Say, this day week. You"ll get it all fixed by then. I"ll get right back and you can tell me when you"ll marry me. You see, I just want you--whenever you"re ready."
It was impossible to withstand him, and, in desperation, Monica realized that it was worse than useless to pit her reason against a love she desired more than all the world. She felt utterly helpless, like one swept off her feet by an irresistible tide. There was a recklessness, too, in her blood now, a recklessness flowing hotly through veins which for so long had been left unstirred in their perfect calm, and somehow the joy of it had intoxicated her reason and left her unable to adequately control it.
Later it would be different. When he had gone she would be able to think soberly, and she knew she would have to think hard to repair the damage of these moments. She would wait till then when the toll was demanded of her, and now--now? These moments were too sweetly precious to deny. She would not, she could not deny them. So, while she knew that every fraction of the penalty would be demanded of her later, she thanked her G.o.d for this love that had come to her, and abandoned herself to its delight.
CHAPTER III
THE PENALTY
It was a changed woman who restlessly paced the narrow limits of her sitting-room four days later. Monica was awaiting another visitor; again she was awaiting the ominous clang of the bell at the front door.
But her feelings were very different now. The timid shrinking, the mere thrill of troubled apprehension with which she had awaited the coming of the man who had changed all those things into a wild, reckless joy, was nothing to the desperation with which she contemplated the coming visit. She knew that the penalty was about to be exacted, the toll, for the stolen moments when she had permitted the woman in her to taste of the sweets which surely she had a right to.
The sober moments she had antic.i.p.ated had come; oh, yes, they had come as she knew they inevitably must come. She had faced the consequences of the weakness she believed herself to have displayed in all their nakedness, and she saw before her such a tangle, the contemplation of which had set her head whirling, and filled her heart with despair.
She was torn between her loyalty to the living, and her duty to the dead. She was torn between that which she knew she owed to herself, and all those other obligations which could be summed up as part of the strong moral side of her nature. She was seeking a central path which might satisfy in some degree each of the opposing claims. She was committing that fatal mistake of seeking the easiest road, with the full knowledge that it was a mistake. She had tasted life, and now she was powerless to continue the sacrifice she had for such long years marked out for herself.
The habit of years was strong upon her. There was something almost superst.i.tious in the way she clung to the promise she had so rashly given her sister. She could no more outrage that than she could deny the love that had come to her so late. Therefore she saw nothing but that perilous middle course open before her.
She had sent for her boy, the man--yes, he was a man now--whom she had been at such pains to bring up with lofty aspirations, and a fine sense of love, and honor, and duty. She told herself she was going to lie to him, lie to him with all the heartless selfishness of an utterly weak and worthless woman. She tried to smother her conscience by reminding herself that she had always seen the necessity of ultimately lying to him, and now only the motive of the lies was changed. She told herself these things, but she did not convince herself. She knew that originally her contemplated lies were that he might be kept from the knowing of his mother"s shame, and as such might even have found justification in the eyes of the Recording Angel. Now it was different; their motive was purely one of self, and for such there could be no justification.
So she was desperate. All that was best in her was warring with the baser human side of a really fine nature. She suffered agonies of torture while she waited for the coming of the man who would gaze at her with wide, frank, trusting eyes, while she lied something of his simple faith and youthful happiness away.
Was there wonder that she dreaded his coming? Could it be otherwise?
She could see no other course than the one she had decided upon. She was blinded by her newly found love for the man, Hendrie; she was blinded by her promise to a dead woman. Frank must be persuaded into the background. He must remain hidden, lest the breath of scandal reach Hendrie, and she be robbed of the happiness she so yearned for. He must be made the sacrifice for her selfish desires.
In the midst of her desperate thought, the signal rang out through the apartments. Oh, that bell; how she hated its brazen note. But now that the moment of her trial had come there was no shrinking, no hesitation.
She pa.s.sed swiftly to the door and opened it, and, in a moment, was engulfed in a bear-like embrace by a great, fair-haired young giant who, tall as Monica was, quite towered over her.
"Why, mother," he cried, as he finally released her, "I never had such a rush to get here so soon. Guess your wire set me on the dead jump. I drove twenty-five miles to the depot in under three hours, to catch the east-bound mail, and nearly foundered old Bernard"s best team. But I"d made up my mind to----"
Monica"s eyes shone with admiration and love.
"That"s so like you, Frank, dear," she cried. "Come right in and sit down. You"re such an impulsive boy. But I"m glad you"ve come--so glad."
The delight at the sight of her beloved boy had almost died out of Monica"s eyes as she finished speaking. It had all come back to her--the meaning of his visit.
Frank flung himself into the same rocking chair in which Alexander Hendrie had sat, and gazed up at the beautiful woman he called "mother"
with a radiant smile on his handsome, ingenuous face.
"Gee, I"m tired," he exclaimed. "Two nights and a day in the train. I didn"t come sleeper. I didn"t want to rush you too much. So I just dozed in the ordinary car where I sat."
In spite of everything Monica"s delight in this fatherless boy was wonderful. All her love was shining in her eyes again as she exclaimed--
"Oh, Frank! You didn"t come sleeper? Why not? You shouldn"t have considered the expense."
The boy laughed joyously.
"That"s so like you, Mon, dear," he promptly retorted. He always called her "Mon" in his playful moods, declaring that she was far too young and pretty to be called "mother." "You really are an extravagant woman to have a growing and expensive family."
"Growing?" Monica laughed happily. "I hope not. Goodness! You always find it more convenient to sit down when you"re talking to me."
The boy nodded.
"That"s because I"m tired--and hungry," he said lightly. "You see I haven"t eaten since breakfast. Got any lunch?"
"Lunch? Of course. Oh, Frank, really you"re not to be trusted looking after yourself. Of course I"ve a lunch ready for you. It"s just cold. I don"t trust the janitor"s cooking except for breakfast."
"Bully! I know your lunches. Come along."
The boy sprang from his seat, and, seizing Monica about the waist, was for rushing her off to the dining-room.
Monica abandoned herself to the delights of the moment. The boy could not have been more to her if he had really been her son. Her eyes were full of a maternal adoration. He was so tall, she thought; and his bright, shrewd, good-natured blue eyes full of half-smiling seriousness. Was there ever such a face on a boy? How handsome he was with his finely cut, regular features, his abundant fair hair, which, since he had been on the farm, had been allowed to run riot. And then his hugely muscular body. Eighteen! Only eighteen! Little wonder, she thought, this Phyllis Raysun was ready to dance so often with him.
"You"re much too boisterous," she chided him, smiling happily.
"Never mind. Mon," he cried, "take me to the ban---- Oh, I forgot. Your wire was "rushed." You wanted to see me at once. That"s why I nearly killed Bernard"s team. There"s--there"s nothing wrong, is there?"
The blue eyes were serious enough now. He had come to a standstill, with his arms still about Monica"s waist, half way across the room.