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"I shall try to be your friend.... I shall try not to fail you."
"As if you could fail any one!"
Now he looked at her with a very curious expression--as he had looked at her the evening he played for her. He hesitated a moment; then the words rushed:
"Forgive me ... but it's not an easy thing to be the friend of the woman one has loved.... Are you very angry with me?"
It came like a real shock to Sophy. Her absorption in her own troubles had blinded her to this possibility. She could not think of the right word to say--murmured nervously: "No ... no. I'm not angry ... only...."
"'Only'?" he took it up.
With tears in her eyes, she said:
"Oh, Amaldi ... your friends.h.i.+p meant so much to me!... It meant so much!..."
This cut him cruelly. He exclaimed with pa.s.sion:
"How can you speak as if it were past ... over?... I'm honest with you.
I confess that it is a struggle for me ... to feel ... to act only as your friend. But I tell you that I shall try ... and you turn from me...."
"No, Amaldi.... No.... That isn't just ... it isn't fair...."
"You said 'meant' ... that my friends.h.i.+p meant much to you ... as if it were over...."
"No, no. But I...."
She broke off, and they stood in unhappy silence. Then all at once she turned to him.
"Listen, Amaldi," she said impetuously. "I can't tell you ... but if you knew...."
"I do know," he said.
They stood silent again. At last she said, under her breath:
"Then ... if you know ... you must feel that everything is over for me ... but friends.h.i.+p.... You must feel that.... The mere idea of ...
'love'...."
She broke off again, s.h.i.+vering.
Amaldi said in a constrained voice:
"I was not speaking of you, but of myself. I don't think that you can imagine how intensely I want to be a real friend to you. As I said, not to fail you...."
"And you think," she returned, her lips again quivering, "that I would take your friends.h.i.+p at such cost to you? You think I'm as selfish ...
as unfeeling as that?"
Amaldi looked at her almost indignantly. "You know I think nothing but the highest of you," he said. Then his voice shook, the look in his eyes changed. "Forgive me...." he said. "It's I who am selfish."
But Sophy couldn't speak. She put up one hand to s.h.i.+eld her face from him, and he saw that her wedding ring was gone. He flushed, struggled with himself; then, going close to her, he said in a vehement whisper:
"I will be what you want ... only what you want. And if the time comes when ... when I find I can't hold out ... I will tell you, and go away."
Still she could not speak. She held out her other hand to him in silence. The tears were running over down her face.
He took her hand, hesitated a moment; then lifted it to his lips.
"I swear that I will be your true friend," he said.
She put up the hand that he had kissed with the other, over her face.
"Go now...." she managed to whisper.
"But you believe me? You will still call me your friend?"
"Yes ... my dear, dear friend."
He went quickly from the room. He vowed to himself that he would be her true friend at no matter what cost to his own feelings. But he had never loved her as he loved her in that hour. And underneath it all there was hope, hope, hope---- He could wait. Yes, he could wait long years more, if need be.
x.x.xVII
Sophy stood by the open window of her old nursery bedroom at Sweet-Waters. It was only ten o'clock, but she had come up early this first evening. She wanted to be alone. Now that she had told Charlotte and the Judge how things were with her, it was a strain to live up to their pained conception of the situation. She felt it a reproach that in spite of all, such an irrepressible fount of glee bubbled within her. It was not happiness certainly, yet too much akin to it not to be out of keeping with her present outward state. Her heart would sing in spite of her. It was like a naughty, overexuberant child shouting week-a-day songs at a funeral. It sang: "I am free! I am free! I am free!" The sky was spread with clouds. Behind these clouds was a hidden moon. Its rays filtered through, and this soft, grey moonlight was eerily lovely--elfin-like.
From this pale fleece of cloud fell a light shower, trilling on the roof of the east wing beneath her window. And from field and wood and hill went up another trilling, exquisitely musical and plaintive--the clear, sweet, myriad flutes of autumn crickets. So that heaven and earth seemed doubly woven together by this interlacing of lovely sound, the one descending, the other ascending.
The rain came softly in her face. She held up her face to it, loving the delicate, cool touch upon her lips and eyelids.
As usual, Sweet-Waters had given her to herself again. She was just Sophy Taliaferro once more. Sophy Chesney and Sophy Loring were poor, wind-driven waifs, somewhere far away in the outer deserts of her mind.
To-morrow Charlotte and Joe wished "to talk _very_ seriously with her."
This had been Charlotte's parting word that night. Well--to-morrow was twelve hours away. Now she would just be Sophy Taliaferro.
But she waked up next morning to find herself unmistakably Sophy Loring once more.
Her heart was very heavy. Life had no taste. The future rose before her like a cyclopean wall, which could not be scaled or dug under and in which there was no door.
Her heart winced and shrank from the long, painful scenes with Morris that she apprehended. She was quite sure that he had no real love left for her, yet she knew his nature. She feared that the very fact of finding himself about to lose her would kindle in him a fict.i.tious ardour. It might well be that, as the unattainable, she would once more seem his heart's desire.
After breakfast she went with Joe and Charlotte to Joe's study. Bobby and Winks were having a gorgeous time playing "Indians" all over the place. As she sat in the open window, Sophy could hear the voices of the two "Braves," rising in shrill, ecstatic warwhoops from the straw-stack near the stables. She smiled. At least Bobby was thoroughly happy in the new state of things.
She was seated on the low window-ledge, Charlotte opposite her. The Judge had established himself in the revolving chair before his desk. He felt the need of some strong, dignified background during the coming interview. His sombre, official-looking desk, with its piles of legal doc.u.ments and tomes, afforded him this spiritual sustainment. He was very nervous. Sophy was so "hard to tackle" sometimes. "Rash" was the disconcerting adjective that kept rising in his mind. Sophy was so "almighty rash"! He thanked his stars that rashness was not Charlotte's characteristic. "Firmness" described his helpmeet. He felt that this firmness would indeed make her a true helpmeet in the present case.
There was certainly no help coming from Sophy herself. She was (they both thought) most inconsiderately waiting for them to "begin."
The day was exquisitely temperate and golden after last night's showers.
She had put on one of her old duck skirts and thin white blouses. Her hair was "clubbed" and fastened with a black bow as of old. She was, outwardly at least, even defiantly Sophy Taliaferro. Charlotte felt that it was almost improper of Sophy to look so like her former self, so "unmarried," as it were, "after all she had been through." But Sophy was Sophy. The most that they could hope was by great "tactfulness" to persuade her to be "reasonable" on certain points.