by
Robert Barr
I.--BESSIE'S BEHAVIOUR.
On one point Miss Bessie Durand
agreed with Alexander von Humboldt--in fact, she even went further than that
celebrated man, for while he asserted that Thun was one of the three most
beautiful spots on earth, Bessie held that this Swiss town was absolutely the
most perfectly lovely place she had ever visited. Her reason for this
conclusion differed from that of Humboldt. The latter, being a mere man, had
been influenced by the situation of the town, the rapid, foaming river, the
placid green lake, the high mountains all around, the snow-peaks to the east,
the ancient castle overlooking everything, and the quaint streets with the
pavements up at the first floors.
Bessie had an eye for these things,
of course, but while waterfalls and profound ravines were all very well in
their way, her hotel had to be filled with the right sort of company before any
spot on earth was entirely satisfactory to Bessie. She did not care to be out
of humanity's reach, nor to take her small journeys alone; she liked to hear
the sweet music of speech, and if she started at the sound of her own, Bessie
would have been on the jump all day, for she was a brilliant and effusive
talker.
So it happened that, in touring
through Switzerland, Bessie and her mother (somehow people always placed
Bessie's name before that of her mother, who was a quiet little unobtrusive
woman) stopped at Thun, intending to stay for a day, as most people do, but
when Bessie found the big hotel simply swarming with nice young men, she told
her mother that the local guide-book asserted that Humboldt had once said Thun
was one of the three most lovely places on earth, and, therefore, they ought to
stay there and enjoy its beauties, which they at once proceeded to do. It must
not be imagined from this that Bessie was particularly fond of young men. Such was
far from being the case. She merely liked to have them propose to her, which
was certainly a laudable ambition, but she invariably refused them, which went
to show that she was not, as her enemies stated, always in love with somebody.
The fact was that Miss Bessie Durand's motives were entirely misunderstood by
an unappreciative world. Was she to be blamed because young men wanted her to
marry them? Certainly not. It was not her fault that she was pretty and sweet,
and that young men, as a rule, liked to talk with her rather than with any one
else in the neighbourhood. Many of her detractors would very likely have given
much to have had Bessie's various charms of face, figure, and manner. This is a
jealous world, and people delight in saying spiteful little things about those
more favoured by Providence than themselves. It must, however, be admitted that
Bessie had a certain cooing, confidential way with people that may have misled
some of the young men who ultimately proposed to her into imagining that they
were special favourites with the young lady. She took a kindly interest in
their affairs, and very shortly after making her acquaintance, most young men
found themselves pouring into her sympathetic ear all their hopes and
aspirations. Bessie's ear was very shell-like and beautiful as well as
sympathetic, so that one can hardly say the young men were to blame any more
than Bessie was. Nearly everybody in this world wants to talk of himself or
herself, as the case may be, and so it is no wonder that a person like Bessie,
who is willing to listen while other people talk of themselves, is popular.
Among the many billions who inhabit this planet, there are too many talkers and
too few listeners; and although Bessie was undoubtedly a brilliant talker on
occasion, there is no doubt that her many victories resulted more from her
appreciative qualities as a talented listener than from the entertaining charms
of her conversation. Those women who have had so much to say about Bessie's
behaviour might well take a leaf from her book in this respect. They would
find, if they had even passably good looks, that proposals would be more
frequent. Of course there is no use in denying that Bessie's eyes had much to
do with bringing young men to the point. Her eyes were large and dark, and they
had an entrancing habit of softening just at the right moment, when there came
into them a sweet, trustful, yearning look that was simply impossible to
resist. They gazed thus at a young man when he was telling in low whispers how
he hoped to make the world wiser and better by his presence in it, or when he
narrated some incident of great danger in which he took part, where
(unconsciously, perhaps, on the teller's part) his own heroism was shown forth
to the best possible advantage. Then Bessie's eyes would grow large and humid
and tender, and a subdued light would come into them as she hung breathlessly
on his words. Did not Desdemona capture Othello merely by listening to a
recital of his own daring deeds, which were, doubtless, very greatly
exaggerated?
The young men at the big hotel in
Thun were clad mostly in knickerbockers, and many of them had alpenstocks of
their own. It soon became their delight to sit on the terrace in front of the
hotel during the pleasant summer evenings and relate to Bessie their hairbreath
escapes, the continuous murmur of the River Aare forming a soothing chorus to
their dramatic narrations. At least a dozen young men hovered round the girl,
willing and eager to confide in her; but while Bessie was smiling and kind to
them all, it was soon evident that some special one was her favourite, and then
the rest hung hopelessly back. Things would go wonderfully well for this lucky
young fellow for a day or two, and he usually became so offensively conceited
in his bearing towards the rest, that the wonder is he escaped without personal
vengeance being wreaked upon him; then all at once he would pack up his
belongings and gloomily depart for Berne or Interlaken, depending on whether
his ultimate destination was west or east. The young men remaining invariably
tried not to look jubilant at the sudden departure, while the ladies staying at
the hotel began to say hard things of Bessie, going even so far as to assert
that she was a heartless flirt. How little do we know the motives of our
fellow- creatures! How prone we are to misjudge the actions of others! Bessie
was no flirt, but a high-minded, conscientious girl, with an ambition-- an
ambition which she did not babble about to the world, and therefore the world
failed to appreciate her, as it nearly always fails to appreciate those who do
not take it into their confidence.
It came to be currently reported in
the hotel that Bessie had refused no less than seven of the young men who had
been staying there, and as these young men had, one after another, packed up
and departed, either by the last train at night or the earliest in the morning,
the proprietor began to wonder what the matter was, especially as each of the
departing guests had but a short time before expressed renewed delight with the
hotel and its surroundings. Several of them had stated to the proprietor that
they had abandoned their intention of proceeding further with their Swiss tour,
so satisfied were they with Thun and all its belongings. Thus did the flattering
opinion of Alexander von Humboldt seem about to become general, to the great
delight of the hotel proprietor, when, without warning, these young men had
gloomily deserted Thun, while its beauty undoubtedly remained unchanged.
Naturally the good man who owned the hotel was bewildered, and began to think
that, after all, the English were an uncertain, mind-changing race.
Among the guests there was one young
fellow who was quite as much perplexed as the proprietor. Archie Severance was
one of the last to fall under the spell of Bessie--if, indeed, it is correct to
speak of Archie falling at all. He was a very deliberate young man, not given
to doing anything precipitately, but there is no doubt that the charming
personality of Bessie fascinated him, although he seemed to content himself
with admiring her from a distance. Bessie somehow did not appear to care about
being admired from a distance, and once, when Archie was promenading to and fro
on the terrace above the river, she smiled sweetly at him from her book, and he
sat down beside her. Jimmy Wellman had gone that morning, and the rest had not
yet found it out. Jimmy had so completely monopolised Miss Durand for the last
few days that no one else had had a chance, but now that he had departed,
Bessie sat alone on the terrace, which was a most unusual state of things.
"They tell me," said
Bessie, in her most flattering manner, "that you are a famous climber, and
that you have been to the top of the Matterhorn."
"Oh, not famous; far from
it," said Archie modestly. "I have been up the Matterhorn three or
four times; but then women and children make the ascent nowadays, so that is
nothing unusual."
"I am sure you must have had
some thrilling escapes," continued Bessie, looking with admiration at
Archie's stalwart frame. "Mr. Wellman had an awful experience----"
"Yesterday?" interrupted
Archie. "I hear he left early this morning."
"No, not yesterday," said
Miss Durand coldly, drawing herself up with some indignation; but as she
glanced sideways at Mr. Severance, that young man seemed so innocent that she
thought perhaps he meant nothing in particular by his remark. So, after a
slight pause, Bessie went on again. "It was a week ago. He was climbing
the Stockhorn and all at once the clouds surrounded him."
"And what did Jimmy do? Waited
till the clouds rolled by, I suppose."
"Now, Mr. Severance, if you are
going to laugh at me, I shall not talk to you any more."
"I assure you, Miss Durand, I
was not laughing at you. I was laughing at Jimmy. I never regarded the Stockhorn
as a formidable peak. It is something like 7,195 feet high, I believe, not to
mention the inches."
"But surely, Mr. Severance, you
know very well that the danger of a mountain does not necessarily bear any
proportion to its altitude above the sea."
"That is very true. I am sure
that Jimmy himself, with his head in the clouds, has braved greater dangers at
much lower levels than the top of the Stockhorn."
Again Miss Durand looked searchingly
at the young man beside her, but again Archie was gazing dreamily at the
curious bell-shaped summit of the mountain under discussion. The Stockhorn
stands out nobly, head and shoulders above its fellows, when viewed from the
hotel terrace at Thun.
There was silence for a few moments
between the two, and Bessie said to herself that she did not at all like this
exceedingly self-possessed young man, who seemed to look at the mountains in
preference to gazing at her--which was against the natural order of things. It
was evident that Mr. Severance needed to be taught a lesson, and Bessie, who
had a good deal of justifiable confidence in her own powers as a teacher,
resolved to give him the necessary instruction. Perhaps, when he had acquired a
little more experience, he would not speak so contemptuously of "Jimmy,"
or any of the rest. Besides, it is always a generous action towards the rest of
humanity to reduce the inordinate self-esteem of any one young man to something
like reasonable proportions. So Bessie, instead of showing that she was
offended by his flippant conversation and his lack of devotion to her, put on
her most bewitching manner, and smiled the smile that so many before her latest
victim had found impossible to resist. She would make him talk of himself and
his exploits. They all succumbed to this treatment.
"I do so love to hear of narrow
escapes," said Bessie confidingly. "I think it is so inspiring to
hear of human courage and endurance being pitted against the dangers of the
Alps, and coming out victorious."
"Yes, they usually come out
victorious, according to the accounts that reach us; but then, you know, we
never get the mountain's side of the story."
"But surely, Mr.
Severance," appealed Bessie, "you do not imagine that a real climber
would exaggerate when telling of what he had done."
"No; oh no. I would not go so
far as to say that he would exaggerate exactly, but I have known cases
where--well--a sort of Alpine glow came over a story that, I must confess,
improved it very much. Then, again, curious mental transformations take place
which have the effect of making a man, what the vulgar term, a liar. Some years
ago a friend of mine came over here to do a few ascents, but he found sitting
on the hotel piazza so much more to his taste that he sat there. I think myself
the verandah climber is the most sensible man of the lot of us; and, if he has
a good imagination, there is no reason why he should be distanced by those you
call real climbers, when it comes to telling stories of adventures. Well, this
man, who is a most truthful person, took one false step. You know, some
amateurs have a vile habit of getting the names of various peaks branded on
their alpenstocks--just as if any real climber ever used an alpenstock."
"Why, what do they use?"
asked Bessie, much interested.
"Ice-axes, of course. Now,
there is a useful individual in Interlaken, who is what you might call a
wholesale brander. He has the names of all the peaks done in iron at his shop,
and if you take your alpenstock to him, he will, for a few francs, brand on it
all the names it will hold, from the Ortler to Mont Blanc. My friend was weak
enough to have all the ascents he had intended to make, branded on the
alpenstock he bought the moment he entered Switzerland. They always buy an
alpenstock the first thing. He never had the time to return to the mountains,
but gradually he came to believe that he had made all the ascents recorded by
fire and iron on his pole. He is a truthful man on every other topic than
Switzerland."
"But you must have had some
very dangerous experiences among the Alps, Mr. Severance. Please tell me of the
time you were in the greatest peril."
"I am sure it would not
interest you."
"Oh, it would, it would. Please
go on, and don't require so much persuasion. I am just longing to hear the
story."
"It isn't much of a story,
because, you see, there is no Alpine glow about it."
Archie glanced at the girl, and it
flashed across his mind that he was probably then in the greatest danger he had
ever been in, in his life. She bent forward toward him, her elbows on her
knees, and her chin-- such a pretty chin!--in her hands. Her eyes were full
upon him, and Archie had sense enough to realise that there was danger in their
clear pellucid depths, so he turned his own from them, and sought refuge in his
old friend, the Stockhorn.
"I think the narrowest escape I
ever had was about two weeks ago. I went up----"
"With how many guides?"
interrupted Bessie breathlessly.
"With none at all,"
answered Archie, with a laugh.
"Isn't that very unsafe? I
thought one always should have a guide."
"Sometimes guides are
unnecessary. I took none on this occasion, because I only ascended as far as
the Chateau in Thun, some three hundred feet above where we are sitting, and as
I went by the main street of the town, the climb was perfectly safe in all
weathers. Besides, there is generally a policeman about."
"Oh!" said the girl,
sitting up suddenly very straight.
Archie was looking at the mountains,
and did not see the hot anger surge up into her face.
"You know the steps leading
down from the castle. They are covered in, and are very dark when one comes out
of the bright sunlight. Some fool had been eating an orange there, and had
carelessly thrown the peel on the steps. I did not notice it, and so trod on a
bit. The next thing I knew I was in a heap at the foot of that long stairway,
thinking every bone in my body was broken. I had many bruises, but no hurt that
was serious; nevertheless, I never had such a fright in my life, and I hope
never to have such another."
Bessie rose up with much dignity.
"I am obliged to you for your recital, Mr. Severance," she said
freezingly. "If I do not seem to appreciate your story as much as I
should, it is perhaps because I am not accustomed to being laughed at."
"I assure you, Miss Durand,
that I am not laughing at you, and that this pathetic incident was anything but
a laughing matter to me. The Stockhorn has no such danger lying in wait for a
man as a bit of orange-peel on a dark and steep stairway. Please do not be
offended with me. I told you my stories have no Alpine glow about them, but the
danger was undoubtedly there."
Archie had risen to his feet, but
there was no forgiveness in Miss Durand's eyes as she bade him
"Good-morning," and went into the hotel, leaving him standing there.
During the week that followed,
Archie had little chance of making his peace with Miss Durand, for in that week
the Sanderson episode had its beginning, its rise, and its culmination. Charley
Sanderson, emboldened by the sudden departure of Wellman, became the constant
attendant of Bessie, and everything appeared to be in his favour until the
evening he left. That evening the two strolled along the walk that borders the
north side of the river, leading to the lake. They said they were going to see
the Alpine glow on the snow mountains, but nobody believed that, for the glow
can be seen quite as well from the terrace in front of the hotel. Be that as it
may, they came back together, shortly before eight o'clock, Bessie looking her
prettiest, and Sanderson with a black frown on his face, evidently in the worst
of tempers. He flung his belongings into a bag, and departed by the 8:40 train
for Berne. As Archie met the pair, Bessie actually smiled very sweetly upon
him, while Sanderson glared as if he had never met Severance before.
"That episode is evidently
ended," said Archie to himself, as he continued his walk toward Lake Thun.
"I wonder if it is pure devilment that induces her to lead people on to a
proposal, and then drop them. I suppose Charley will leave now, and we'll have
no more games of billiards together. I wonder why they all seem to think it the
proper thing to go away. I wouldn't. A woman is like a difficult peak--if you
don't succeed the first time, you should try again. I believe I shall try half
a dozen proposals with Bessie myself. If I ever come to the point, she won't
find it so easy to get rid of me as she does of all the rest."
Meditating thus, he sat down on a
bench under the trees facing the lake. Archie wondered if the momentous
question had been asked at this spot. It seemed just the place for it, and he
noticed that the gravel on the path was much disturbed, as if by the iron-shod
point of an agitated man's cane. Then he remembered that Sanderson was carrying
an iron-pointed cane. As Archie smiled and looked about him, he saw on the seat
beside him a neat little morocco-bound book with a silver clasp. It had
evidently slipped from the insecure dress-pocket of a lady who had been sitting
there. Archie picked it up and turned it over and over in his hands. It is a
painful thing to be compelled to make excuse for one of whom we would fain
speak well, but it must be admitted that at this point in his life Severance
did what he should not have done--he actually read the contents of the book,
although he must have been aware, before he turned the second leaf, that what
was there set down was meant for no eye save the writer's own. Archie excuses
himself by maintaining that he had to read the book before he could be sure it
belonged to anybody in particular, and that he opened it at first merely to see
if there were a name or card inside; but there is little doubt that the young
man knew from the very first whose book it was, and he might at least have
asked Miss Durand if it were hers before he opened it. However, there is little
purpose in speculating on what might have been, and as the reading of the
note-book led directly to the utterly unjustifiable action of Severance
afterwards, as one wrong step invariably leads to another, the contents of the
little volume are here given, so that the reader of this tragedy may the more
fully understand the situation.
II.--BESSIE'S CONFESSION.
"Aug. 1st.--The keeping of a
diary is a silly fashion, and I am sure I would not bother with one, if my
memory were good, and if I had not a great object in view. However, I do not
intend this book to be more than a collection of notes that will be useful to
me when I begin my novel. The novel is to be the work of my life, and I mean to
use every talent I may have to make it unique and true to life. I think the New
Woman novel is a thing of the past, and that the time has now come for a story
of the old sort, yet written with a fidelity to life such as has never been
attempted by the old novelists. A painter or a sculptor uses a model while
producing a great picture or a statue. Why should not a writer use a model
also? The motive of all great novels must be love, and the culminating point of
a love-story is the proposal. In no novel that I have ever read is the proposal
well done. Men evidently do not talk to each other about the proposals they
make, therefore a man-writer has merely his own experience to go upon, so his
proposals have a sameness--his hero proposes just as he himself has done or
would do. Women-writers seem to have more imagination in this matter, but they
describe a proposal as they would like it to be, and not as it actually is. I
find that it is quite an easy thing to get a man to propose. I suppose I have a
gift that way, and, besides, there is no denying the fact that I am handsome,
and perhaps that is something of an aid. I therefore intend to write down in
this book all my proposals, using the exact language the man employed, and thus
I shall have the proposals in my novel precisely as they occurred. I shall also
set down here any thoughts that may be of use to me when I write my book.
"Aug. 2nd.--I shall hereafter
not date the notes in this book; that will make it look less like a diary,
which I detest. We are in Thun, which is a lovely place. Humboldt, whoever he
is or was, said it is one of the three prettiest spots on earth. I wonder what
the names are of the other two. We intended to stay but one night at this
hotel, but I see it is full of young men, and as all the women seem to be
rather ugly and given to gossip, I think this is just the place for the
carrying out of my plans. The average young man is always ready to fall in love
while on his vacation--it makes time pass so pleasantly; and as I read
somewhere that man, as a general rule, proposes fourteen times during his life,
I may as well, in the interests of literature, be the recipient of some of
these offers. I have hit on what I think is a marvellous idea. I shall arrange
the offers with some regard to the scenery, just as I suppose a stage-manager
does. One shall propose by the river--there are lovely shady walks on both
sides; another, up in the mountains; another, in the moonlight on the lake, in
one of the pretty foreign-looking rowing boats they have here, with striped
awnings. I don't believe any novelist has ever thought of such a thing. Then I
can write down a vivid description of the scenery in conjunction with the
language the young man uses. If my book is not a success, it will be because
there are no discriminating critics in England.
"First proposal--This came on
rather unexpectedly. His name is Samuel Caldwell, and he is a curate here for
his health. He is not in the least in love with me, but he thinks he is, and
so, I suppose, it comes to the same thing. He began by saying that I was the
only one who ever understood his real aspirations, and that if I would join my
lot with his he was sure we should not only bring happiness to ourselves, but
to others as well. I told him gently that my own highest aspiration was to
write a successful novel, and this horrified him, for he thinks novels are
wicked. He has gone to Grindelwald, where he thinks the air is more suitable
for his lungs. I hardly count this as a proposal, and it took me so much by
surprise that it was half over before I realised it was actually an offer of
his heart and hand. Besides, it took place in the hotel garden, of all unlikely
spots, where we were in constant danger of interruption.
"Second proposal--Richard King
is a very nice fellow, and was tremendously in earnest. He says his life is
blighted, but he will soon come to a different opinion at Interlaken, where
Margaret Dunn writes me it is very gay, and where Richard has gone. Last
evening we strolled down by the lake, and he suggested that we should go out on
the water. He engaged a boat with two women to row, one sitting at the stern,
and the other standing at the prow, working great oars that looked like
cricket-bats. The women did not understand English, and we floated on the lake
until the moon came up over the snow mountains. Richard leaned over, and tried
to take my hand, whispering, in a low voice, 'Bessie.' I confess I was rather
in a flutter, and could think of nothing better to say than 'Sir!' in a tone of
surprise and indignation. He went on hurriedly--
"'Bessie,' he said, 'we have
known each other only a few days, but in those few days I have lived in
Paradise.'
"'Yes,' I answered, gathering
my wits about me; 'Humboldt says Thun is one of the three--'
"Richard interrupted me with
something that sounded remarkably like 'Hang Thun!' Then he went on, and said
that I was all the world to him; that he could not live without me. I shook my
head slowly, and did not reply. He spoke with a fluency that seemed to suggest
practice, but I told him it could never be. Then he folded his arms, sitting
moodily back in the boat, saying I had blighted his life. He did look handsome
as he sat there in the moonlight, with a deep frown on his brow; but I could
not help thinking he sat back purposely, so that the moonlight might strike his
face. I wish I could write down the exact language he used, for he was very
eloquent; but somehow I cannot bring myself to do it, even in this book. I am
sure, however, that when I come to write my novel, and turn up these notes, I
shall recall the words. Still, I intended to put down the exact phrases. I wish
I could take notes at the time, but when a man is proposing he seems to want
all your attention.
"A fine, stalwart young man
came to the hotel to-day, bronzed by mountain climbing. He looks as if he would
propose in a manner not so much like all the rest. I have found that his name
is Archibald Severance, and they say he is a great mountaineer. What a splendid
thing a proposal on the high Alps would be from such a man, with the gleaming
snow all around! I think I shall use that idea in the book.
"Third, fourth, fifth, and
sixth proposals. I must confess that I am amazed and disappointed with the men.
Is there no such thing as originality among mankind? You would think they had
all taken lessons from some proposing master; they all have the same formula.
The last four began by calling me 'Bessie,' with the air of taking a great and
important step in life. Mr. Wellman varied it a little by asking me to call him
Jimmy, but the principle is just the same. I suppose this sameness is the result
of our modern system of education. I am sure Archie would act differently. I am
not certain that I like him, but he interests me more than any of the others. I
was very angry with him a week ago. He knows it, but he doesn't seem to care.
As soon as Charley Sanderson proposes, I will see what can be done with Mr.
Archie Severance.
"I like the name Archie. It
seems to suit the young man exactly. I have been wondering what sort of scenery
would accord best with Mr. Severance's proposal. I suppose a glacier would be
about the correct thing, for I imagine Archie is rather cold and sneering when
he is not in very good humour. The lake would be too placid for his proposal;
and when one is near the rapids, one cannot hear what the man is saying. I
think the Kohleren Gorge would be just the spot; it is so wild and romantic,
with a hundred waterfalls dashing down the precipices. I must ask Archie if he
has ever seen the Kohleren Falls. I suppose he will despise them because they
are not up among the snow-peaks."
III.--BESSIE'S PROPOSAL.
After reading the book which he had
no business to read, Archie closed the volume, fastened the clasp, and slipped
it into his inside pocket. There was a meditative look in his eyes as he gazed
over the blue lake.
"I can't return it to
her--now," Archie said to himself. "Perhaps I should not have read
it. So she is not a flirt, after all, but merely uses us poor mortals as
models." Archie sighed. "I think that's better than being a
flirt--but I'm not quite sure. I suppose an author is justified in going to
great lengths to ensure the success of so important a thing as a book. It may
be that I can assist her with this tremendous work of fiction. I shall think
about it. But what am I to do about this little diary? I must think about that
as well. I can't give it to her and say I did not read it, for I am such a poor
hand at lying. Good heavens! I believe that is Bessie coming alone along the
river-bank. I'll wager she has missed the book and knows pretty accurately
where she lost it. I'll place it where I found it, and hide."
The line of trees along the path
made it easy for Archie to carry out successfully his hastily formed
resolution. He felt like a sneak, a feeling he thoroughly merited, as he dodged
behind the trees and so worked his way to the main road. He saw Bessie march
straight for the bench, pick up the book, and walk back towards the hotel,
without ever glancing round, and her definite action convinced Archie that she
had no suspicion any one had seen her book. This made the young man easier in
his mind, and he swung along the Interlaken road towards Thun, flattering
himself that no harm had been done. Nevertheless, he had resolved to revenge
Miss Bessie's innocent victims, and as he walked, he turned plan after plan
over in his mind. Vengeance would be all the more complete, as the girl had no
idea that her literary methods were known to any one but herself.
For the next week Archie was very
attentive to Bessie, and it must be recorded that the pretty young woman seemed
to appreciate his devotion thoroughly and to like it. One morning, beautifully
arrayed in walking costume, Bessie stood on the terrace, apparently scanning
the sky as if anxious about the weather, but in reality looking out for an
escort, the gossips said to each other as they sat under the awnings busy at
needlework and slander, for of course no such thought was in the young lady's
mind. She smiled sweetly when Archie happened to come out of the billiard-room;
but then she always greeted her friends in a kindly manner.
"Are you off for a walk this
morning?" asked Archie, in the innocent tone of one who didn't know, and
really desired the information.
He spoke for the benefit of the
gossips; but they were not to be taken in by any such transparent device. They
sniffed with contempt, and said it was brazen of the two to pretend that they
were not meeting there by appointment.
"Yes," said Bessie, with a
saucy air of defiance, as if she did not care who knew it; "I am going by
the upper road to the Kohleren Falls. Have you ever seen them?"
"No. Are they pretty?"
"Pretty! They are grand--at
least, the gorge is, although, perhaps, you would not think either the gorge or
the falls worth visiting."
"How can I tell until I have
visited them? Won't you be my guide there?"
"I shall be most happy to have
you come, only you must promise to speak respectfully of both ravine and
falls."
"I was not the man who spoke
disrespectfully of the equator, you know," said Archie, as they walked off
together, amidst the scorn of the gossips, who declared they had never seen
such a bold-faced action in their lives. As their lives already had been
somewhat lengthy, an idea may be formed of the heinousness of Bessie's conduct.
It took the pair rather more than an
hour by the upper road, overlooking the town of Thun and the lake beyond, to
reach the finger- board that pointed down into the Kohleren valley. They
zigzagged along a rapidly falling path until they reached the first of a series
of falls, roaring into a deep gorge surrounded by a dense forest. Bessie leaned
against the frail handrail and gazed into the depths, Severance standing by her
side.
The young man was the first to
speak, and when he spoke it was not on the subject of the cataract.
"Miss Durand," he said,
"I love you. I ask you to be my wife."
"Oh, Mr. Severance,"
replied Bessie, without lifting her eyes from the foaming chasm, "I hope
that nothing in my actions has led you to----"
"Am I to understand that you
are about to refuse me?" cried Archie, in a menacing voice that sounded
above the roar of the falling waters.
Bessie looked quickly up at him,
and, seeing a dark frown on his brow, drew slightly away from him.
"Certainly I am going to refuse
you. I have known you scarcely more than a week!"
"That has nothing to do with
it. I tell you, girl, that I love you. Don't you understand what I say?"
"I understand what you say well
enough; but I don't love you. Is not that answer sufficient?"
"It would be sufficient if it
were true. It is not true. You do love me. I have seen that for days; although
you may have striven to conceal your affection for me, it has been evident to
every one, and more especially to the man who loves you. Why, then, deny what
has been patent to all on-lookers? Have I not seen your face brighten when I
approached you? Have I not seen a welcoming smile on your lips, that could have
had but one meaning?"
"Mr. Severance," cried
Bessie, in unfeigned alarm, "have you gone suddenly mad? How dare you
speak to me in this fashion?"
"Girl," shouted Archie,
grasping her by the wrist, "is it possible that I am wrong in supposing
you care for me, and that the only other inference to be drawn from your
actions is the true one?"
"What other inference?"
asked Bessie, in a trembling voice, trying unsuccessfully to withdraw her wrist
from his iron grasp.
"That you have been trifling
with me," hissed Severance; "that you have led me on and on, meaning
nothing; that you have been pretending to care for me when in reality you
merely wanted to add one more to the many proposals you have received. That is
the alternative. Now, which is the fact? Are you in love with me, or have you
been fooling me?"
"I told you I was not in love
with you; but I did think you were a gentleman. Now that I see you are a
ruffian, I hate you. Let go my wrist; you are hurting me."
"Very good, very good. Now we
have the truth at last, and I will teach you the danger of making a plaything
of a human heart."
Severance released her wrist and
seized her around the waist. Bessie screamed and called for help, while the man
who held her a helpless prisoner laughed sardonically. With his free hand he
thrust aside the frail pine pole that formed a hand-rail to guard the edge of
the cliff. It fell into the torrent and disappeared down the cataract.
"What are you going to
do?" cried the girl, her eyes wide with terror.
"I intend to leap with you into
this abyss; then we shall be united for ever."
"Oh, Archie, Archie, I love
you!" sobbed Bessie, throwing her arms around the neck of the astonished
young man, who was so amazed at the sudden turn events had taken, that, in
stepping back, he nearly accomplished the disaster he had a moment before
threatened.
"Then why--why," he
stammered, "did you--why did you deny it?"
"Oh, I don't know. I suppose
because I am contrary, or because, as you said, it was so self-evident. Still,
I don't believe I would ever have accepted you if you hadn't forced me to. I
have become so wearied with the conventional form of proposal."
"Yes, I suppose it does get
rather tiresome," said Archie, mopping his brow. "I see a bench a
little further down; suppose we sit there and talk the matter over."
He gave her his hand, and she
tripped daintily down to the bench, where they sat down together.
"You don't really believe I was
such a ruffian as I pretended to be?" said Archie at last.
"Why, yes; aren't you?"
she asked simply, glancing sideways at him with her most winning smile.
"You surely didn't actually
think I was going to throw you over the cliff?"
"Oh, I have often heard or read
of it being done. Were you only pretending?"
"That's all. It was really a
little matter of revenge. I thought you ought to be punished for the way you
had used those other fellows. And Sanderson was such a good hand at billiards.
I could just beat him."
"You--you said--you cared for
me. Was that pretence too?" asked Bessie, with a catch in her voice.
"No. That was all true, Bessie,
and there is where my scheme of vengeance goes lame. You see, my dear girl, I
never thought you would look at me; some of the other fellows are ever so much
better than I am, and of course I did not imagine I had any chance. I hope you
will forgive me, and that you won't insist on having a real revenge by
withdrawing what you have said."
"I shall have revenge enough on
you, Archie, you poor, deluded young man, all your life. But never say anything
about 'the other fellows,' as you call them. There never was any other fellow
but you. Perhaps I will show you a little book some day that will explain
everything, although I am afraid, if you saw it, you might think worse of me
than ever. I think, perhaps, it is my duty to show it to you before it is too
late to draw back. Shall I?"
"I absolutely refuse to look at
it--now or any other time," said Archie magnanimously, drawing her towards
him and kissing her.
And Bessie, with a sigh of relief,
wondered why it was that men have so much less curiosity than women. She was
sure that if he had hinted at any such secret she would never have rested until
she knew what it was.
No comments:
Post a Comment