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"Don't scold. I can't--bear it. I can't bear anything more.... Please go away. I know you despise me. Leave me alone. Go away..."
"I'll do nothing of the kind. You're all upset, and you deserve a heap more than scolding.... But I like you." Hilda was always direct.
"You're more or less of a little idiot, with your insane notions and your Joan of Arc silliness, but I like you. You're not fit to be left alone. I'm in charge.... So go and dabble cold water on your eyes, so you don't look like n.a.z.imova in the last act, and come along with. me.
We'll take a drive, and then I'm coming back to stay all night with you.... Yes, I am," she said, with decision, as Ruth started to object.
"You do what I say."
Hilda drove Ruth to her own house. "I've got to tell mother I'm going to stay with you," she said. "Will you come in?"
"No--please," Ruth answered.
"I won't be but a jiffy, then." And Hilda left Ruth alone in the electric. Alone! Suddenly Ruth was afraid of being alone. She was thankful for Hilda, thankful Hilda was going to see her through.
Hilda's father and mother were in the library.
"Thought you were going some place with Bonbright and his wife," said Malcolm Lightener.
"Dad," said Hilda, with characteristic bluntness and lack of preface, "they're in a d.i.c.kens of a mess."
"Bonbright?"
"And Ruth."
"Huh!..." Lightener's grunt seemed to say that it was nothing but what he expected. "Well--go ahead."
Hilda went ahead. Her father punctuated her story with sundry grunts, her mother with exclamations of astonishment and sorrow. Hilda told the whole story from the beginning, and when she was done she said: "There it is. You wouldn't believe it. And, dad, Bonbright Foote's an angel. A regular angel with wings."
"Sometimes it's mighty hard to tell the difference between an angel and a d.a.m.n fool," said Lightener. "I suppose you want me to mix into it.
Well, I won't."
"You haven't been asked," said Hilda. "I'm doing the mixing for this family. I just came to tell you I am going to stay all night with Ruth--and to warn you not to mix in. You'd do it with a sledge hammer.
I don't suppose it's any use telling you to keep your hands off--for you won't. But I wish you would."
"You'll get your wish," he said.
"I won't," she answered.
"Poor Bonbright," Mrs. Lightener said, "it does seem as if about every misfortune had happened to him that can happen.... And he can't go to his mother for sympathy."
"He isn't the kind to go to anybody for sympathy," said Lightener.
"Then don't you go to him with any," said Hilda.
"I told you I wasn't going to have anything to do with it."
"I haven't any patience with that girl," said Mrs. Lightener. "Such notions! Wherever did she get them?... It's all a result of this Votes for Women and clubs studying sociology and that. When I was a girl--"
"You wore hoop skirts, mammy," said Hilda, "and if you weren't careful when you sat down folks saw too much stocking.... Don't go blaming Ruth too much. She thought she was doing something tremendous."
"I calc'late she was," said Malcolm Lightener, "when you come to think of it.... Too bad all cranks can't put the backbone they use in flub dub to some decent use. I sort of admire 'em."
"Father!" expostulated Mrs. Lightener.
"You've got to. They back their game to the limit.... This little girl did.... Tough on Bonbright, though."
Hilda walked to the door; there she stopped, and said over her shoulder: "Tell you what I think. I think she's mighty hard in love with him--and doesn't know it."
"Rats!" said her father, elegantly.
At that moment Bonbright was writing a letter to his wife. It was a difficult letter, which he had started many times, but had been unable to begin as it should be begun.... He did not want to hurt her; he did not want her to misunderstand; so he had to be very clear, and write very carefully what was in his heart. It was a sore heart, but, strangely, there was no bitterness in it toward Ruth. He found that strange himself, and marveled at it. He did not want to betray his misery to her--for that would hurt her, he knew. He did not want to accuse. All he wanted to do was to do what he could to set matters right for her. For him matters could never be set right again. It was the end.... The way of its coming had been a shock, but that the end had come was not such a shock. He perceived now that he had been gradually preparing himself for it. He saw that the life they had been living could have ended in nothing but a crash of happiness.... He admitted now that he had been afraid of it almost since the beginning....
"My Dear Ruth," he wrote. Then he stopped again, unable to find a beginning.
"I am writing because that will be easier for both of us," he wrote--and then scratched it out, for it seemed to strike a personal note. He did not want to be personal, to allow any emotion to creep in.
"It is necessary to make some arrangements," he began once more. That was better. Then, "I know you will not have gone away yet." That meant away with Dulac, and she would so understand it. "I hope you will consent to stay in the apartment. Everything there, of course, is yours. It is not necessary for us to discuss money. I will attend to that carefully. In this state a husband must be absent from his wife for a year before she can be released from him. I ask you to be patient for that time." That was all of it. There was nothing more to say. He read it, and it sounded bald, cold, but he could not better it.
At the end he wrote, "Yours sincerely," scratched it out, and wrote, "Yours truly," scratched that out, and contented himself by affixing merely his name. Then he copied the whole and dispatched it to his wife by messenger.
It arrived just after Ruth and Hilda returned.
"It's from him," said Ruth.
"Open it, silly, and see what he says."
"I'm afraid...."
Hilda stamped her foot. "Give it to me, then," she said.
Ruth held the note to her jealously. She opened it slowly, fearfully, and read the few words it contained.
"Oh..." she said, and held it out to Hilda. She had seen nothing but the bareness, the coldness of it.
"It's perfect," said Hilda. "It's BONBRIGHT. He didn't slop over--he was trying not to slop over, but there's love in every letter, and heartache in every word of it.... And you couldn't love him. Wish _I_ had the chance."
"You--you will have," said Ruth, faintly.
"If I do," said Hilda, shortly, "you bet I WON'T WASTE it."
CHAPTER XXVI
Hilda knew her father. He could not keep his hands off any matter that interested him, and most matters did interest him. He had grown to have an idea that he could take hold of almost any sort of tangle or enterprise or concern and straighten it out. Probably it was because he was so exceedingly human.... Therefore he was drawn irresistibly to his purchasing department and to Bonbright Foote.
"Young man," he said, gruffly, "what's this I hear?"
Bonbright looked up inquiringly.