Read A Poor Wise Man Page 41


  CHAPTER XLIII

  The atmosphere of the Cardew house was subtly changed and very friendly.Willy Cameron found himself received as an old friend, with no tendencyto forget the service he had rendered, or that, in their darkest hour,he had been one of them.

  To his surprise Pink Denslow was there, and he saw at once that Pinkhad been telling them of the night at the farm house. Pink was himselfagain, save for a small shaved place at the back of his head, coveredwith plaster.

  "I've told them, Cameron," he said. "If I could only tell it generallyI'd be the most popular man in the city, at dinners."

  "Pair of young fools," old Anthony muttered, with his sardonic smile.But in his hand-clasp, as in Howard's, there was warmth and a sort ofenvy, envy of youth and the adventurous spirit of youth.

  Lily was very quiet. The story had meant more to her than to the others.She had more nearly understood Pink's reference to the sealed envelopeWilly Cameron had left, and the help sent by Edith Boyd. She connectedthat with Louis Akers, and from that to Akers' threat against Cameronwas only a step. She was frightened and somewhat resentful, that thisother girl should have saved him from a revenge that she knew wasdirected at herself. That she, who had brought this thing about, had satquietly at home while another woman, a woman who loved him, had savedhim.

  She was puzzled at her own state of mind.

  Dinner was almost gay. Perhaps the gayety was somewhat forced, with Pinkkeeping his eyes from Lily's face, and Howard Cardew relapsing nowand then into abstracted silence. Because of the men who served, theconversation was carefully general. It was only in the library later,the men gathered together over their cigars, that the real reason forWilly Cameron's summons was disclosed.

  Howard Cardew was about to withdraw from the contest. "I'm late incoming to this decision," he said. "Perhaps too late. But after acareful canvas of the situation, I find you are right, Cameron. UnlessI withdraw, Akers"--he found a difficulty in speaking the name--"will beelected. At least it looks that way."

  "And if he is," old Anthony put in, "he'll turn all the devils of hellloose on us."

  It was late; very late. The Cardews stood ready to flood the papers withannouncements of Howard's withdrawal, and urging his supporters to votefor Hendricks, but the time was short. Howard had asked his campaignmanagers to meet there that night, and also Hendricks and one or two ofhis men, but personally he felt doubtful.

  And, as it happened, the meeting developed more enthusiasm thanoptimism. Cardew's withdrawal would be made the most of by theopposition. They would play it up as the end of the old regime, thebeginning of new and better things.

  Before midnight the conference broke up, to catch the morning editions.Willy Cameron, detained behind the others, saw Lily in the drawing-roomalone as he passed the door, and hesitated.

  "I have been waiting for you, Willy," she said.

  But when he went in she seemed to have nothing to say. She sat in alow chair, in a soft dark dress which emphasized her paleness. To WillyCameron she had never seemed more beautiful, or more remote.

  "Do you remember how you used to whistle 'The Long, Long Trail,' Willy?"she said at last. "All evening I have been sitting here thinking what along trail we have both traveled since then."

  "A long, hard trail," he assented.

  "Only you have gone up, Willy. And I have gone down, into the valley.I wish"--she smiled faintly--"I wish you would look down from your peaknow and then. You never come to see me."

  "I didn't know you wanted me," he said bluntly.

  "Why shouldn't I want to see you?"

  "I couldn't help reminding you of things."

  "But I never forget them, anyhow. Sometimes I almost go mad,remembering. It isn't quite as selfish as it sounds. I've hurt them allso. Willy, do you mind telling me about the girl who opened that letterand sent you help?"

  "About Edith Boyd? I'd like to tell you, Lily. Her mother is dead, andshe lost her child. She is in the Memorial Hospital."

  "Then she has no one but you?"

  "She has a brother."

  "Tell me about her sending help that night. She really saved your life,didn't she?"

  While he was telling her she sat staring straight ahead, her fingersinterlaced in her lap. She was telling herself that all this couldnot possibly matter to her, that she had cut herself off, finally andforever, from the man before her; that she did not even deserve hisfriendship.

  Quite suddenly she knew that she did not want his friendship. She wantedto see again in his face the look that had been there the night he hadtold her, very simply, that he loved her. And it would never be there;it was not there now. She had killed his love. All the light in his facewas for some one else, another girl, a girl more unfortunate but lesswicked than herself.

  When he stopped she was silent. Then:

  "I wonder if you know how much you have told me that you did not intendto tell?"

  "That I didn't intend to tell? I have made no reservations, Lily."

  "Are you sure? Or don't you realize it yourself?"

  "Realize what?" He was greatly puzzled.

  "I think, Willy," she said, quietly, "that you care a great deal morefor Edith Boyd than you think you do."

  He looked at her in stupefaction. How could she say that? How could shefail to know better than that? And he did not see the hurt behind hercareful smile.

  "You are wrong about that. I--" He made a little gesture of despair. Hecould not tell her now that he loved her. That was all over.

  "She is in love with you."

  He felt absurd and helpless. He could not deny that, yet how could shesit there, cool and faintly smiling, and not know that as she sat thereso she sat enshrined in his heart. She was his saint, to kneel and prayto; and she was his woman, the one woman of his life. More woman thansaint, he knew, and even for that he loved her. But he did not know thebarbarous cruelty of the loving woman.

  "I don't know what to say to you, Lily," he said, at last. "She--it ispossible that she thinks she cares, but under the circumstances--"

  "Ellen told Mademoiselle you were going to marry her. That's true, isn'tit?"

  "Yes."

  "You always said that marriage without love was wicked, Willy."

  "Her child had a right to a name. And there were other things. I can'tvery well explain them to you. Her mother was ill. Can't you understand,Lily? I don't want to throw any heroics." In his excitement he hadlapsed into boyish vernacular. "Here was a plain problem, and a simpleway to solve it. But it is off now, anyhow; things cleared up withoutthat."

  She got up and held out her hand.

  "It was like you to try to save her," she said.

  "Does this mean I am to go?"

  "I am very tired, Willy."

  He had a mad impulse to take her in his arms, and holding her close torest her there. She looked so tired. For fear he might do it he held hisarms rigidly at his sides.

  "You haven't asked me about him," she said unexpectedly.

  "I thought you would not care to talk about him. That's over and done,Lily. I want to forget about it, myself."

  She looked up at him, and had he had Louis Akers' intuitive knowledge ofwomen he would have understood then.

  "I am never going back to him, Willy. You know that, don't you?"

  "I hoped it, of course."

  "I know now that I never loved him."

  But the hurt of her marriage was still too fresh in him for speech. Hecould not discuss Louis Akers with her.

  "No," he said, after a moment, "I don't think you ever did. I'll come insome evening, if I may, Lily. I must not keep you up now."

  How old he looked, for him! How far removed from those busy, cheerfuldays at the camp! And there were new lines of repression in his face;from the nostrils to the corners of his mouth. Above his ears his hairshowed a faint cast of gray.

  "You have been having rather a hard time, Willy, haven't you'?" shesaid, suddenly.

  "I have been busy, of course."

  "
And worried?"

  "Sometimes. But things are clearing up now."

  She was studying him with the newly opened eyes of love. What was it heshowed that the other men she knew lacked? Sensitiveness? Kindness? Buther father was both sensitive and kind. So was Pink, in less degree. Inthe end she answered her own question, and aloud.

  "I think it is patience," she said. And to his unspoken question: "Youare very patient, aren't you?"

  "I never thought about it. For heaven's sake don't turn my mind in onmyself, Lily. I'll be running around in circles like a pup chasing histail."

  He made a movement to leave, but she seemed oddly reluctant to let himgo.

  "Do you know that father says you have more influence than any other manin the city?"

  "That's more kind than truthful."

  "And--I think he and grandfather are planning to try to get you, whenthe mills reopen. Father suggested it, but grandfather says you'd havethe presidency of the company in six months, and he'd be sharpening yourlead pencils."

  Suddenly Willy Cameron laughed, and the tension was broken.

  "If he did it with his tongue they'd be pretty sharp," he said.

  For just a moment, before he left, they were back to where they had beenmonths ago, enjoying together their small jokes and their small mishaps.The present fell away, with its hovering tragedy, and they were boy andgirl together. Exaltation and sacrifice were a part of their love, asof all real and lasting passion, but there was always between them alsothat soundest bond of all, liking and comradeship.

  "I love her. I like her. I adore her," was the cry in Willy Cameron'sheart when he started home that night.