CHAPTER I
A
NOVEMBER NIGHTSoft
snowflakes whirled around the lonely mountain cabin under a November
sky. The wind that had rushed up the valley sighing and groaning
between the wooded walls, now roared its wild delight in the freedom
of the heights. The twilight was deepening fast. Two women were alone
in the cabin. The one who was at home stooped and put another log on
the blazing fire. The other could not have stooped, no matter how
willing her spirit, so straitly and fashionably was her ample figure
bound by artful bone and steel."Mercy,
Mary!" she ejaculated, standing stock still in the middle of the
room, fixed there by a triumphant shriek of the rioting wind. "I
never had the least desire to go up in an aeroplane. Are you well
anchored here?""Like
a lichen on a rock," returned Mary Sidney, smiling. "Take
off your hat, Isabel, and be comfy.""Do
you think we must
stay all night?" demurred the visitor. "You know I love
you, Mary, and if that wind would just let us hear ourselves think, I
wouldn't ask anything better than an evening's chat with you alone.""You
wouldn't as it is," returned Mrs. Sidney soothingly, approaching
her cousin and unpinning the veil which Mrs. Fabian had not raised.
The visitor clung to her wraps with the feeling that an entire
readiness to flee back to the haunts of men would aid her to depart.
Mary Sidney's calm amused smile carried some reassurance. It
flickered across her face as the firelight flickered across the dark
rafters above."I
told Henry I
thought the sky looked threatening before we left town,"
declared the guest while she submitted to the gentle touch, "but
nothing would do but that he should visit the mine this very
afternoon. Isn't this fearful, Mary?" as a renewed gust shook
the firelit rafters until they creaked heavily."Oh,
no, this sounds a great deal worse than it is," was the
response."You're
comforting me, I know you are"; and Mrs. Fabian, denuded of her
correct hat, permitted herself to take the offered chair by the fire.
"I hope, though, that you have a kennel of St. Bernard dogs in
the back yard. I
should like to see
Henry again, bad as he is!"Mrs.
Sidney took the other chair and rolled a blazing log to a better
position."You'll
see the men coming along in a little while—when they grow hungry,"
she returned placidly."And
how in the world do you get servants up here?" demanded the
other."We
don't. We could get a Chinaman, but if we had him we'd have to amuse
him, there's no one else for him to talk to, so we go without.""Horrors!"
ejaculated Mrs. Fabian with solemn repugnance. "And you live
here alone!"The
hostess laughed at her tone. "Not enough of the year to dislike
it. One learns a lot of things in these hills—bidding farewell to
time, for instance. You see a man with a gun tramping through the
valley and you rush to the door, and cry out, 'Hey, there, you with
the gun, what day is this?' and the man turns and shouts back, 'You
can't prove it by me!'"Mrs.
Sidney laughed again and her cousin shuddered."Thank
God for civilization!" ejaculated the latter devoutly; then, as
the window-glass sucked in and out with a cracking sound, "Give
me my hat, Mary," she said, sitting up. "If we're going
down the mountain-side, let's go decently and in order.""For
shame, you Maine woman!" was the laughing rejoinder. "Your
sea-captains would call this 'a breeze o' wind!' That's all. That's
another thing one becomes acquainted with up here: the wind. I didn't
know anything about it when I came. You should be here some nights if
you call this a storm! I used to set my dish-pans out at the door;
but when a few had whirled down the mountain-side into the valley, I
learned caution. One can't go around the corner here and buy a
dish-pan.""Mary,"
Mrs. Fabian eyed her with bewildered admiration, "you're
wonderful! You didn't used to be wonderful," she added in an
argumentative tone. "Once you'd have made just as much fuss
about this as I would. You remember—if you try, you'll remember
perfectly—that I warned you, more than twenty-five years ago, not
to marry a mining engineer. I told you then it was just as bad as
marrying an army officer. There would be no repose about it, and no
comfort. You see I was right. Here we are, to all intents and
purposes, in a shrieking balloon, and you call it home!" The
speaker kept a watchful eye on the rattling casement and drew herself
up with renewed tension at each wind blast, but nevertheless she
talked on."With
it all you haven't as many lines in your face as I have, and your
hair is as brown as ever. Mine would be white if I lived here instead
of in New York. And the calmness of your eyes, and your smile! Tell
me, Mary, tell me now honestly,—I shall sympathize with you,—is
it the calmness of despair?"Mary
Sidney did not smile. She looked into the depths of the fire and her
guest wondered what memories were unfolding themselves to her rapt
vision."No,"
she answered simply at last, "such calmness as I possess is not
of despair, but of—faith." The speaker paused before the
utterance of the last word as if hesitating for the one which should
best express her meaning."Do
you mean something religious?" asked Mrs. Fabian stiffly.The
stiffness was not disapproval. It was owing to the divided attention
she was bestowing upon the storm, lest if she took her mind off the
wind it might seize the advantage and hurl the cabin from its
moorings."I
should think a person would
have to be
religious here," she went on. "You must be reduced—simply
reduced to trusting
in Providence!"Mary
Sidney smiled at the fire. "I didn't have a trusting
disposition. I didn't have even a happy disposition, as you evidently
remember.""Well,"
returned Isabel, "it wasn't a bad one: I didn't imply anything
like that; but you were one of the spoiled-beauty sort of girls, not
a bit cut out for hardship," the speaker looked judicially at
the once familiar face, softened from its old brilliancy. "What
an advantage it is to have beautiful eyes!" she added bluntly.
"They don't desert you when other things go;—not that it
matters a bit what sort of eyes a woman has, living the life you
have.""Oh,
Allan thinks it does," returned Mary in her restful manner."Does
he appreciate you?" Mrs. Fabian asked the question almost
angrily.Mrs.
Sidney smiled. "We don't talk much about that, but we're better
companions, happier, dearer, than we were twenty-five years ago."Her
cousin gazed curiously. "Then it did turn out all right. You've
written so little to your friends. How could your relatives tell?""You
see, now, why," returned the other. "There's not much
letter-material here, and even when we're living in town, all our
friends and our pursuits are so foreign to the people at home. Little
by little one gets out of the way of writing.""Don't
you ever long for Fifth Avenue?" asked Mrs. Fabian suddenly, her
cousin's exile impressing her more and more as utter forlornity."Oh,
no, not for many years.""You
never could have kept your figure there as you have here,"
admitted the other in a spirit of justice. "I must say that,"
and the speaker composed her own rigid armor into a less
uncomfortable position."Do
your own housework, Isabel," advised the hostess with a smile."Heavens!
it is too late to talk to me about that. I've enough to do without
housework, I should hope. You've no idea how much worse things have
grown in twenty-five years, Mary. A woman has so much on her mind now
that nothing but regular massage from the crown of her head to her
heels will offset it. The modistes and milliners are in a conspiracy
to change styles so often that it takes active thought to keep
abreast of them. Then you no sooner settle down really to learn
Bridge, for instance, and feel that you can hold your own, than
everybody begins playing Auction! And to know what people are talking
about at luncheons you must see plays, and skim through books,
reading at least enough so you can express an opinion; not that
anybody listens. They all talk at once, their one and only object
seems to be to get their own ideas out of their systems. I was glad
to send Kathleen off to school. It does seem as if the girls had to
go to college to escape as great a rush as we grownups live in. Then
when they come back, having had another environment for four years,
they adjust themselves to their own homes with such a sense of
superiority that it makes you
tired; that's what
it does, Mary,
tired. I've had a
taste of it this summer. Kathleen has another year to go, but already
she is perfectly changed. She cares no more for my advice, I assure
you, than if I had just come down from Mars and had no judgment as to
the things of this world. She's well-bred, of course,—I hope no
daughter of mine could be less than well-bred,—but when I give her
directions, or try to guide her in any way, there's a twinkle in her
eye that I resent, Mary, I resent it distinctly. So there you are!"
Mrs. Fabian gestured with a perfectly kept hand whereon a blazing gem
flashed in the firelight. "There we are between Scylla and
Charybdis. We either have to send our girls to college and let the
little upstarts think they've outgrown us, or else have them rushed
to death at home, keep them up on tonics, and let them sleep till
noon!"With
this dismal peroration Mrs. Fabian sat as far back in her chair as
disciplined adipose would permit, and shuddered again at the wind."Is
a son an easier proposition then, in that madding crowd of yours?""A
boy does seem to have his life more plainly mapped out than a girl.
Edgar is in his father's office." The speaker sighed
unconsciously. "What is your boy like, Mary?"Mrs.
Sidney kept silence for a thoughtful moment before answering."He
is like Pegasus harnessed to a coal-wagon," she said at last
slowly."How
very extraordinary. What do you mean?"Instead
of replying, Mrs. Sidney went to a table in the far corner of the
cabin and brought therefrom a portfolio which she opened on the chair
beside her guest.A
mass of sketches was disclosed,—charcoal, water-color, oil. Mrs.
Sidney lifted one, and held it before the other's eyes.Mrs.
Fabian raised her lorgnette."Why,
it's you, Mary; and it's capital!" she ejaculated.Another
and another sheet was offered for her inspection."Why,
they're all of you. The artist must be in love with you."Mary
Sidney gave her a slight smile. "I hope so, a little, but it was
Hobson's choice when it came to models. Phil seldom could get any one
beside me. Here's one of his father. He had to do it slyly behind a
newspaper, for Allan is rather impatient of Phil's tendency.""So
that is what your boy is at! It's real talent, isn't it?""Yes,
it is," returned the mother with quiet conviction."And
where is he studying?""He
has never studied anything but mining engineering. He is working with
his father here."The
unconscious sadness of the speaker's tone impressed her listener."He
does landscapes, too," went on the mother, lifting one after
another of the sketches of mountain, valley, and streamlet, "a
little of everything, you see." Mrs. Sidney regarded the work
wistfully."Why,
they're lovely," declared Mrs. Fabian. "Why don't you pin
them up on the walls?""Because
it rather annoys Phil's father, to see them, and it only tantalizes
the boy.""So
Mr. Sidney isn't willing he should study?""I
don't think he would thwart us if he saw any hope in it, but one
can't enter on the life of an art-student without any capital. Allan
knows there is a living for Phil in the work of a mining engineer, so
he has discouraged the boy's talent.""It
is a great responsibility to thwart a child's bent," declared
Mrs. Fabian impressively."I
have always felt so. I used to be very restless and anxious about it.
My husband seemed to feel that because Phil was a strapping boy, a
natural athlete, that painting was a womanish profession for him. He
had the ability to help him into mining engineering lines, and he
always pooh-poohed the idea of Phil's attempting to be an artist."
Mrs. Sidney gave a little shrug. "We didn't have the money
anyway, so Allan naturally has had his way.""One
can't blame him," returned Mrs. Fabian, who had relaxed as the
wind ceased to shake the cabin. "Painting is even more
precarious than acting; yet what a talent the boy has!"She
held before her a bold sketch in charcoal of the mountain-side in the
winter—few in strokes, but striking in its breadth and power."He
has had an offer from a newspaper in Denver to take the position of
cartoonist. His ability for caricature is good. See these of Allan."Mrs.
Fabian laughed as she examined the small sheets. "I haven't seen
your husband for ten years, Mary, but these recall his clean-cut face
better than a photograph would, I believe. Phil rather gets back at
his father in these, doesn't he?""Oh,
Allan laughed at them too. He's secretly proud of Phil's cleverness,
even while he discourages it. He tells him it is all right for an
accomplishment, but a forlorn hope for a living.""And
right he is," responded Mrs. Fabian, laying down the sketches.
"Look at Aunt Mary's experience. There she has lived alone all
these years and given her life to the attempt to make a name in the
artistic world. I go sometimes to see her, of course, for there she
is right in town, but her pictures"—Mrs. Fabian lifted her
eyes to the rafters—"they're daubs!""I
know," returned Mary Sidney, looking back into the fire. "She
sent me one on my last birthday. She never forgets her name-child."Mrs.
Fabian laughed. "I fancy you wished she would, for that time.""No,"
returned the hostess, slowly, "I think Aunt Mary sees more than
she has the technique to express. She gets an effect."Mrs.
Fabian raised her eyebrows. "She certainly does. She makes me
want to run a mile.""The
gift led to our having a little correspondence. I sent her a couple
of Phil's sketches and she was delighted with them.""She
might well be," was the answer. There was a brief silence, then
the visitor continued: "So Phil is something of a bone of
contention between you and his father?""It
is our only difference. Yet it can scarcely even be called that,
because it is a fact that we haven't the money to give him the start
he should have."Mrs.
Fabian looked at her cousin curiously."So
this new calmness of yours—this repose. It is resignation, at
least, if not despair."Mary
Sidney smiled at the fire. "No," she returned, "I told
you. It is faith.""Religion?""Yes,
religion. Not the sort of ideas we were brought up in, Isabel.
Something quite different.""What
is it, then? Where did you find it?""It
found me.""How
mysterious! Is that wind coming up again, Mary?""How
it blew that night!" said Mary Sidney thoughtfully, still
looking into the fire. "It was just before Thanksgiving, I
remember, five years ago. Allan and I had come up to the mine, Phil
had gone back to college, and one night a belated traveller,
overtaken by the storm which came up as suddenly as this, stopped at
the door and asked if he could stay all night with us. He was one of
these vital men, full of energy, who seem to exhale good cheer. Allan
thoroughly enjoyed a talk with him that evening, and when we went to
bed I remember his sighing and remarking that a man must be either a
fool or a philosopher who could keep such an optimistic outlook on
life as this Mr. Tremaine. I returned that perhaps our guest had
struck a gold-mine here in the mountains, and I remember how Allan
grumbled—'Either that, or the pot of gold at the end of the
rainbow.'"Allan
came in here once, where we had left the guest to sleep on the couch,
to see if he wanted anything; and he found him reading in front of
the embers. When he came back he remarked: 'That fellow has a smile
that doesn't usually last beyond the tenth year.' The next morning
dawned bright and our guest was in haste to depart. He tried in the
nicest way to pay us for taking in a stranger, and we quite honestly
told him that if any money were to pass it should go from us to him
for cheering our exile. He took from his pocket a small black book
and held it out to me. 'Then,' he said, 'may I leave with you a
little book which has broken up the clouds of life for me, and let
the light stream through? You have time up here to read,—and to
think?' He made the addition with that smile which had roused Allan's
curiosity, shook hands with us both, thanked us again, mounted his
horse and rode away. We never saw him afterward. I often wish I knew
where he was, that I might thank him.""What
was the book?" asked Mrs. Fabian, impressed by the fervor of the
other's tone."A—a
commentary on the Bible. A new light on the meaning of the Bible.""How
queer! I'm sure I thought our family knew as much about the Bible as
the average of decent people."Mrs.
Fabian's tone was slightly resentful."We
did," returned Mary Sidney."So
that's what you meant a few minutes ago by the calm of faith."Mrs.
Sidney nodded. "I know now what that sentence means: 'Cast your
burden on the Lord.' Phil is the most precious thing on earth to me.
The years seem to be slipping by without showing us a possible path
to what we wish. 'Wait patiently on the Lord' doesn't mean inaction
either. I've learned that. I know that at the right time—the right
moment—circumstances will arise to show us if Phil is to—"A
sudden blast of wind brought a start and a muffled exclamation from
the guest, and at the same instant a stamping sounded outside. The
lamp-flames rose wildly, and smoked in the instant of opening the
door wide enough to admit the lithe form of a man whose shoulders and
soft felt hat glistened with snow. He quickly closed the door and
stamped again, taking off the hat from his short damp locks and
shaking it vigorously."Phil,
this is my cousin, Mrs. Fabian," said Mrs. Sidney. "You
used to call her Aunt Isabel when you were a little chap and we went
to visit her once. Do you remember?""When
a cousin is once removed she becomes an aunt," declared Mrs.
Fabian, looking the young man over with approval."My
hand is too wet to shake," he said, meeting her interested gaze,
his own luminous in the firelight."Lucky
boy! You have your mother's eyes!" she exclaimed."Oh,
no," said Mary Sidney; "Phil's are blue.""Dark
with terror, then!" exclaimed Mrs. Fabian, again anxious. "Isn't
the storm frightful?"Phil's
amused glance sought his mother's."It's
sort of spitting outside," he returned, unbuttoning his corduroy
coat."You're
making fun of a tenderfoot," said Mrs. Fabian, watching his keen
face admiringly. "Don't pretend. What have you done with my poor
innocent husband?""He'll
be up here in a few minutes with my poor innocent father who has been
showing him why he'll never be a millionaire out of that mine.""What
do I care if he isn't, so long as he isn't lost in this storm!""I
came on ahead because the mail had just been brought in." As he
spoke, the young man brought a small bunch of letters and papers from
an inner pocket."A
great excitement, Isabel," said the hostess. "Only twice a
week, you know.""There's
another letter from the Denver paper," went on Phil, looking at
his mother steadily."You'll
forgive us if we open everything, won't you, Isabel?" asked Mrs.
Sidney."Indeed,
yes. Don't mind me." Mrs. Fabian returned to her chair by the
fire and regarded the pair who seated themselves by the table.Phil
had slipped off the damp coat, and his arm in its striped linen
sleeve was thrown around his mother's shoulders.The
visitor's eyes filled with something like envy. Kathleen and Edgar
were her step-children, the boy had been five years of age when she
began to be, to use her own declaration, the best stepmother in the
world. Edgar would never think of reading his letters with her in
this frankly affectionate attitude. Must one live on a mountain-top,
she wondered, to win the sort of look she had seen in this son's
eyes?"I've
been showing your Aunt Isabel your sketches, Phil," said Mrs.
Sidney, holding open a letter they had just read. "I told her
about the Denver paper. This is another offer from them, Isabel, an
increased offer.""I'm
sure that's very flattering," returned Mrs. Fabian.Phil
did not speak. His straight brows were knit in perplexity, and his
lips were set in the look of longing that his mother knew."I
don't know this writing from New York," said Mrs. Sidney,
opening the next letter.Glancing
over it she gave a startled exclamation."Whew!"
breathed the boy, reading over her shoulder. "Poor Aunt Mary!""Isabel,
Aunt Mary has gone!" exclaimed Mrs. Sidney."What!
I didn't know she was ill. She wasn't ill. Who is there to attend to
things? Who wrote you?""Eliza
Brewster. This is from her. It was very sudden. She had been at work
at her easel an hour before. How sad it seems! How lonely! I wish we
had both been there, Isabel. There is the letter." Phil took it
across to Mrs. Fabian. "You see. She was buried day before
yesterday. Oh, I'm glad we had that little interchange in the summer.
Eliza loves her, but, after all, she is not her own."Phil
mechanically opened another letter. His thoughts were with that
unknown relative with cravings like to his, working through the
gathering years toward a goal which had ever retreated before her. He
unfolded a business letter. It enclosed a small sealed envelope
addressed to himself in another handwriting."Aunt
Mary's!" said his mother. The son's arm was again around her as
with heads close together they perused the following:—My
dear Grand-Nephew, Philip Sidney:—When
you open this letter, I shall have gone to a world where surely I
shall be permitted to come nearer to the source of beauty.My
family all consider me a failure. I know it. They have laughed at my
poor efforts. I know it; but since your mother wrote to me a month
ago, sending me your sketches and telling me your longings, I have
felt that out in the free Western country, there lives one with my
blood in his veins, who will understand the thirst that has led me
on, and nerved me to untiring effort—that has made it my only hope
of happiness to live as I have lived, and work as I have worked. He
will also understand, perhaps, that few as my rewards have been, I
have occasionally felt that some beauty has crept through my brain
and been fixed to the canvas, and that such moments have given me the
highest bliss this world could bestow.For
a month, then, I have taken comfort in my artist-boy, no matter if
you are known to others as an engineer. I have kept on my easel the
photograph your mother sent me, and every day while I work, I look
from time to time into your eyes, your mother's lovely eyes. I
rejoice in your thick hair, and your splendid chin and firm,
full-curved mouth. It isn't often that a head wanders from the Louvre
and becomes set on a pair of modern shoulders. I, the old woman,
peering through her spectacles, and painting with a hand that is
often far from steady, have found a joy in studying the harmony of
your promise. You have my blood in your veins, but you will succeed
where I have failed. A happy failure, Philip. Don't feel sad for me.
I've had moments of joy that no one knew. No one took the trouble to
know; but nobody is to blame. Lives are very full in these rushing
days.I
believe in you, and I long for you to get started toward that land
where you fain would be. Your mother says that the door hasn't opened
yet. Looking into your young eyes, a great thought came to me.
Supposing I, the ineffectual, could set that door ajar! With the
thought came the first great regret for my poverty. Never mind,
thought I stoutly; if I can set that door a wee bit open, his young
strength can do the rest!I
have had warnings that soon the great door will be opened for me; the
door that ushers in to the heart's desire. Mine has been for Truth
and Beauty, O God, Thou knowest!So
I am making my will—such a poor little short will; but all for you,
my kindred spirit, my knight who will deliver from failure, my Philip
Sidney.The
faithful maid Eliza will take care of my effects for you. You will
find some useful things among the paraphernalia here. I look at my
old easel and wonder if it will ever be promoted to hold a canvas of
yours.This
letter will be enclosed to you in one from my lawyer, telling you the
business side of my wishes. The heart side no one can tell. I swell
with longing for your success, and happiness; and so good-bye.The
mother who never had a son, gains one in you. The painter who never
was an artist, becomes one in you!And
so, dear, I am your happyAunt
Mary.Mary
Sidney and her boy exchanged a look. With unsteady hands Phil
straightened the legal letter, and they read it together. Then they
rose from the table with one accord.Mrs.
Fabian, wrapped in thought, looked up at the sudden movement.Phil's
concentrated gaze went past her to the fire, and he stood motionless,
one hand leaning on the table, the other arm around his mother. Mary
Sidney clasped the rustling paper to her breast. All the
self-forgetfulness of mother-love shone in her wet eyes as she met
Mrs. Fabian's questioning look."Isabel,
I told you it would come," she said. "I told you we should
know. The light is here. Phil is going to New York."