When Robert returned Rosalie to her place near Mrs. Nixon, a number of men who had experienced a clinching of their admiration by the view of her dancing, hastened to approach. Many of the same people came to the inn, season after season, and Irving knew most of them. Some were Harvard men known to Robert as well, and he at last being alive to Helen’s situation, the group around the two girls soon became extremely animated. Amidst the strife of tongues Irving made his way to Rosalie. “This is ours?” he said. As they moved away, she spoke: “I hope I sha’n’t offend any one. I haven’t the least idea what I’ve promised to do.” In a sort of dream she started in the dance. This was Fairport. In fifteen minutes she could be standing in Mrs. Pogram’s kitchen, where the clock ticked loud above the oilcloth What a gulf had lain between this inn, with its airily dressed girls and their cavaliers, and the chill, dusky room where at dawn she had made Loomis’s coffee before he took the early train to Portland. Her hand tightened on Irving’s arm while she recalled the amorous advances of Mrs. Pogram’s brother, and his change, after her repulsion, to anger and a mean revenge. A long, inaudible breath came quivering to her lips as she glided on under her partner’s perfect guidance. Rosalie loved dancing as only the artistic nature can love it, and the rising and falling waves of music went to her brain like wine. “Cruel Betsy! Wise Betsy!” she thought. “Do you remember,” said Irving, “the last time I held you like this?” “I’m afraid I’m very dull,” she replied. “Did we dance together in some previous incarnation?” “Don’t you wish to remember, Rosalie?” “Indeed I do,” she rejoined brightly. “Your dancing couldn’t be improved.” Irving kept silence. He was entirely aware “Betsy will end by making a conceited ass out of me,” he reflected, with the relief human nature finds in discovering some one else to blame for its discomfort. The dance over, he took his partner out on the veranda, where couples were promenading in the damp coolness. He found some chairs in a remote corner. “These are tolerably dry,” he said. “Shall we sit here?” “I mustn’t,” she answered. “Why not? Too cold?” “Not for me, but too damp for my gown.” Irving glanced over it in the dusk. “I have an idea that that is something pretty fine,” he said. “I want to see the black one.” Rosalie colored. “Shame on Betsy!” she said, laughing. “Has she told everybody?” “No one but me, you may be sure. Betsy knows that I am so perfectly trustworthy, “Yes—No—I don’t know. Let’s go into the house, Mr. Bruce. This gown must last me for years, and years.” Irving obediently led the girl within doors, where, in a corner of the hall, in lieu of palms, were set Christmas trees in tubs. Into a seat behind these he ushered her. “I’m afraid my next partner can’t find me here,” she said doubtfully. “We have the next together.” “Oh, I don’t think so, Mr. Bruce!” “I know it, Rosalie. I wonder why I venture to call you Rosalie.” As he spoke Irving took up her fan and began to use it as he gazed at her girlish profile. “I don’t know,” she returned, a little pulse beating in her throat. “I think, myself, Miss Vincent would sound better.” “Ah, Betsy!” thought Irving, closing his teeth. “I’ll pay you for this.” “What need of formality between sworn friends?” he asked. “I’m starting out on a new life, Mr. Bruce,” she said, turning and looking at him with a direct gaze. She seemed to him enchanting. He knew, better than she, that she was starting out in a new life; and he begrudged it, strangely. He knew her to be all unconscious as yet of her own charm and power. He dreaded the opening of those clear eyes that as yet were so modest—the windows through which one perceived her innocence. While he was justly angry with Betsy for rousing unthought-of suspicion and caution, he could not deny the justice of her sympathy. He met the blue gaze with a smile that set the pulse to beating faster. “You don’t intend to forget old friends for new, do you?” he asked. “‘There is no friend like the old friend, who has shared our morning days,’ you know. This little audience was enthusiastic over you, and audiences always will be; but— “‘Fame is the scentless sunflower, with gaudy crown of gold,’ remember.” “It’s unkind to laugh at me,” returned the girl, with surprising heat. “You know I have no thought of fame.” “Rosalie, Rosalie!” he exclaimed and seized her hand protectingly. “I’m not laughing at you. I believe you could have fame if you wish and work; but somehow I don’t want the people to have a right to gaze at you, and listen, and applaud.” A strange film came over her eyes as she still looked at him. It was as if she withdrew herself as she took her hand away. “I suppose,” she said, “that people who have always had their own way are subject to such fancies.” “Betsy said that to you!” he exclaimed, acutely. She shook her head but did not speak. “Betsy knows nothing of our compact.” He leaned toward her, and she shrank, but kept her golden head proudly lifted. “Betsy knows nothing of the moment when we stood above the eagles and knew what in life was— “‘the breathing rose, with sweets in every fold.’ Why do I call you Rosalie? Because it means you. It is one of the ‘sweets’ that came to me then—” “Mr. Bruce,” the girl interrupted him, “Betsy does know nothing of it; but if she did, “The tough fibre of the human heart,” repeated Irving. “Yes,” returned the girl. “It is a slow growth,—but it holds.” A black-coated biped hovering before the Christmas trees, now retreating and now advancing undecidedly, heard his name with relief. “Is that you, Mr. Ames?” asked Rosalie, rising with decision. The young man addressed “I didn’t intend to hide,” laughed the girl. Irving rose also, and when the two had gone, sank back on the seat, playing absently with the fan he still held. His thoughts were busy, and his teeth tightly closed. “What do I want, anyway?” he reflected. “Which is Betsy: a meddlesome busybody, or a guardian angel? I’ll take no chances on the angel proposition. She’s a busybody. I’ll see her to-morrow.” Irving shook his head threateningly, and a sudden nervous twist of his strong fingers broke a couple of sticks of the pretty fan. He frowned in dismay, and fitted them together in the futile manner inseparable from the occasion. “Must last her years and years,” he reflected. “Well, it’s up to me to get her another fan, that’s evident.” And with a clearing of the countenance as if this consideration presented distinct consolation, he rose and wandered out of the arbor. “I wonder where Madama is,” he reflected. She had not come into his mind since her refusal of his request As soon as Mrs. Bruce had made her perfunctory acknowledgment to Rosalie, she slipped from Robert’s side, unnoticed by a culprit absorbed in his own misdemeanors, and with one glance after Irving and Mrs. Nixon, who were returning to the other end of the room, she moved into the hall, and up the stairs of the inn. She made no effort to curb the hot resentment that possessed her in every fibre. Her one desire was to reach the cause of her suffering, and wreak her sense of outrage upon her. It was half an hour after Captain Salter’s departure, and Betsy was smiling to herself as she wound the living-room clock. Her thoughts were with Rosalie; confident of the girl’s success, yet half-frightened by the chance of fortune which had united the Yellowstone party to witness her dÉbut. She imagined the scene in the spacious living-room of the hotel. Had the rain not fallen, she had meant to ask Hiram to take her over there, that she might look in through the windows and see the dear child standing, the cynosure She felt certain of Mr. Derwent’s satisfaction in her. As a contraband guest at the Canyon Hotel, Rosalie had recited for him in her room, and to-night Betsy’s heart swelled in the realization that he was seeing the first fruits of his generosity. Doubts of Mrs. Bruce’s approval did sweep occasionally, like filmy clouds, across the clear happiness of her mind; but the importance of Rosalie’s good fortune was paramount, and Betsy was able to sweep them away. Suddenly she heard the sound of wheels stopping before the gate. She glanced at the clock. “So early?” she thought. “They can’t be comin’ home now.” In a minute more some one ran up the steps, and Mrs. Bruce, in a long light wrap, a chiffon scarf falling from her elaborately dressed hair, came swiftly into the room. Betsy met the flashing eyes in dismay. She hurried to meet her. “Mercy! Mrs. Bruce—” she said, nerving herself for some disaster. “How white you are! Has something happened? Or are you ill?” With her care-taking impulse Betsy tried to remove her mistress’s wrap, but the lady twitched away from her. She had been nursing her wrath to keep it warm, and it was very warm indeed; but something in Betsy’s presence, in the gaze of those honest eyes, threatened to make the enormity of the latter’s offense shrink. Mrs. Bruce was obliged to remember the attitude of Irving’s head as he walked away with Mrs. Nixon, careless of her own opinions or feelings, forgetful of her,—utterly forgetful of her for the first time in her remembrance. Her narrow mind, tenacious of its two idols,—her own importance and her boy,—suffered intensely. “Stand away from me!” she cried; and Betsy, too dumfounded to move, stared mutely while the vials of Mrs. Bruce’s wrath began to pour out. “We have been too kind to you. You forget your place. What right had you to do such a thing as to place Rosalie Vincent where she must be accepted as a companion by people of our class? What right had you to interfere so with the pleasure of our summer? Ask yourself why you told me nothing about it. You will say, if you are honest, that it was because She paused, panting. Betsy stood in the same spot, but her anxious face had settled into lines of stony stillness. Only her eyes kept fixed on Mrs. Bruce’s face. “Speak!” cried the latter, hysterically. “How did you dare do this thing?” There was another space of silence, then Betsy did speak. “Is there anything more you want to say about it, Mrs. Bruce?” The lady shrugged her shoulders angrily, and moving to the divan dropped off her downy wrap. “I suppose nothing that I can say will She paused again, and looking up found Betsy’s grave eyes following her. There was another short silence, then Betsy spoke. “Mrs. Bruce, when you are thinkin’ this evenin’ over, as you will, there’s just one thing I’ll ask you to remember. It’s an old sayin’ out o’ the far east: ‘Of the unspoken word you are master. The spoken word is master o’ you.’ Good-night.” With this Betsy walked out of the room without one backward look, and Mrs. Bruce stood, baffled, and trembling with her own excitement. Alone, she sank on the divan with her face buried in the pillows. It was quite within the range of possibility that at this moment Irving was dancing with Rosalie Vincent, and did not even observe her own absence from the room. She sobbed, stifling the sound in the pillows lest Betsy should hear and return to her assistance, believing her to be repentant. It was like Betsy to refuse to answer her; to treat her like a child; to throw upon her, by her manner, the blame of all that occurred. It was infuriating; unbearable. Her breath came in spasms, and she fought for her self-control. |