Tessa Wadsworth's Discipline: A Story of the Development of a Young Girl's Life

Part 15

Chapter 154,604 wordsPublic domain

"Then Tessa shall be peacemaker," said Sue straightening herself.

"No; I will not," replied Tessa, gathering her work and rising. "Sue, you will find me up-stairs."

"Then I'm coming, too; I don't want to stay and be sentimental. Gerald will talk--I know him--and I will cry, and how I would look to-morrow! I want you to do a little fixing for me and to try my hair low and then high."

"I like it high," said Dr. Lake.

"I don't. I like it low. Tessa you shall try it low, like Nan Gerard's. Say, Gerald, shall I put on my dress after she has fixed my hair and come down and let you see it."

"I think I have seen it. Didn't you try it on for me and tell me that that fellow liked it? I hate that dress; if you dress to please me, you will wear the one you have on now."

"This old thing! I see myself. No, I shall wear my wedding dress. It fits to perfection. I want to look pretty once in my life."

"You will never look prettier than you do this minute! Come here," opening his arms towards her.

"No, I won't. Let me alone, Dr. Lake."

Tessa was already on the stairs; Sue ran towards her laughing and screaming, the parlor door was closed with a bang.

"Now he's angry," cried Sue, tripping on the stairs. "I don't care; he wants me to stay and talk sentiment, and I _hate_ being sentimental. And, Tessa, you sha'n't talk to me, either."

"Where is your father?" inquired Tessa, standing on the threshold of Sue's chamber.

"In the dining-room drying his feet and drinking a cup of coffee."

"Don't you want to go down and say good night? He will lose every thing when he loses you."

Sue hesitated. "I don't know how to be tender and loving, I should make a fool of myself; he isn't over and above pleased with this thing anyway; he never did pet me as your father has petted you. Your father is like a mother. He said once when I was a little girl that he wished that I had died and Freddie had lived; Freddie was two years older and as bright as a button. Father loved him. I shall never forget that; I shall never forgive him no matter how kind he is to me. And he swears at me when he is angry with me; he used to, but Gerald told him that he should not swear at _his_ wife! Father said that he didn't mean any thing by it. Gerald will be kinder to me than father has been; father swears at me in one breath and calls me the comfort of his old age in the next. You can't turn him into your father if you talk about him all night."

"But he will be glad if you go down; he will think of it some day and so will you."

"He isn't sentimental and I can't be. Besides I have some things to put into my trunk, and I want to put a ruffle into my wrapper that I may have it all ready. It's eleven o'clock now; we shall not be asleep to-night."

Tessa urged no more; it was not her father who was drying his feet and drinking his coffee down-stairs alone on the night before her wedding day. How he would look at her and take her into his arms with tears.

Sue opened her trunk. "Gerald's things are all in. It does seem queer to have his things packed up with mine. And when we come home every thing will go on just the same only I shall be Mrs. Lake instead of Miss Greyson."

As Tessa stood behind her arranging her hair, She said, "There, I like that. I almost look like Nan Gerard. What do you think she said to-day? She was here with Mary Sherwood to see father and they saw Mr. Ralph in my album. 'That's the man I intend to marry,' she said, 'eyes, money, and all.' Mary scolded her but she only laughed. She said that if she couldn't get him, she should take the professor, for he was just as handsome and could talk about something beside paregoric and postmortem examinations."

Tessa said nothing. How she had pitied Nan Gerard, and how harshly she had misjudged Dr. Towne. She was awakened in the night by Sue's voice--

"Put your arm around me, Tessa."

The long night ended at last in the dull dawn, for it was raining still. Tessa had slept fitfully; Sue had lain perfectly quiet, not speaking again or moving.

At eleven o'clock Sue and Dr. Lake were married. Dr. Greyson sat with his head in his hands, turned away from them, his broad frame shaking from head to foot; Tessa did not look at Dr. Lake: she sat on a sofa beside Mrs. Towne, with her eyes fixed on the carpet. Sue cried and laughed together when her father kissed her; she drew herself to the full height of Mrs. Gerald Lake, when Dr. Towne shook hands with her. At half past twelve the bride and bridegroom were driven to the depot; Tessa remained to give a few orders to the servants, and was then taken home in Dr. Towne's carriage.

"It seems to me as lonely as a funeral," she said; "and Sue is laughing and eating chocolate cream drops this very minute. Marriage should be a leap into the sunshine."

"I hope that yours will be," her companion said in his gravest tone.

"If it ever _is_, you may rest assured that it will be. It will be the very happiest sunshine that ever shone out of heaven."

She was learning to talk to Dr. Towne as easily as she talked to her father, for he was the one man in the world that she was sure that she would never marry; she knew that he desired it as little as she did herself.

"Why will it be so happy?"

"Because I shall wait till I am _satisfied_."

"Satisfied with him? You will never be that."

"Then I shall wither in single blessedness; I shall be unhappily not married instead of unhappily married."

"Philip Towne is your ideal."

"I know it," she said. "I like to think that he is in the world. He makes me as happy as a pansy."

"Women are never happy with their ideals."

"They seldom have an opportunity of testing it; Professor Towne has a pure heart and he has brains."

Dr. Towne answered in words that she never forgot, "That is what he says of you."

"Oh, I am so glad! I like to have that said of me better than any thing."

She remembered, but she would not tell him, that a lady had said of him, having seen him but a few moments, and not having heard him speak, that he was a "rock."

"And I love rocks and know all about them," she had added.

"They give shadow in a weary land," Tessa had thought. "I have been in a weary land and he has _not_ been a shadow to me."

After a silent moment he spoke, "Don't you think that you were rather hard on me last week?"

"Yes," she said frankly, "I have thought it all over; I intended to tell you that I was sorry; I _am_ sorry; I will not do so again."

"Till next time?"

"There shall not be any next time; in my thoughts I have been very unjust to you; I have come nearer hating, really _hating_ you, than any other person I ever knew. I am sorry; I am always sorry to be unjust."

One look into the sunshiny eyes satisfied her that she was forgiven. It almost seemed as if they were on the old confidential footing.

"Have you gathered any autumn leaves?" he asked.

"Yes, some beautiful ones. I did not get any last year--" She stopped, confused.

She had lived through her year without him. Was he remembering last October, too?

About sunset it cleared; she was glad for Dr. Lake's sake; about the bride she did not think; Sue would be thankful if none of her bridal finery were spoiled.

The evening mail brought a letter from Dinah.

There were two pieces of news in it, in both of which Tessa was interested. The school-master was twenty-one years of age, "a lovable fellow, the room grows dark when he goes out of it, and he likes best the books that I do." This came first, she read on to find that Professor Towne's mother and sister had come this summer to the house over the way, that Miss Towne was "perfectly lovely" and had been an invalid for fifteen years, not having put her foot to the ground in all that time; she could move about on the first floor, but passed most of her time in a chair, reading, writing, and doing the most beautiful fancy work. She was beautiful, like Professor Towne, but the mother was only a fussy old lady. Her name was Sarepta!

Dinah's letters were rather apt to be ecstatic and incoherent. Tessa wrote five pages in her book that night and a foolscap sheet to Dinah.

She fell asleep thinking of what Professor Towne had said about her.

XVIII.--MOODS.

All through the month of October she felt cross, sometimes she looked cross, but she did not speak one cross word, not even once; she was not what we call "sweet" in her happiest moods, but she was thoroughly sound in her temper and often a little, just a very little, sharp. Never sharp to her father, however, because she reverenced him, and never to her mother because she was pitiful towards her; she could appreciate so few of life's best havings and givings, that Tessa could never make her enjoyment less by speaking the thoughts that, at times, almost forced their own utterance; therefore her mood was kept to herself all through the month.

There was no month in the year that she loved as well as she loved October; in any of its days it was a trial to be kept within doors.

She would have phrased her mood as "cross" if she had had the leisure or the inclination to keep a diary; she had kept a journal during the first year of her friendship with Ralph Towne and had burned it before the year was ended in one of her times of being ashamed of herself.

One of the happenings that irritated her was the finding in her desk a scrap of a rhyme that she had written one summer day after a talk with Ralph Towne; she dropped it into the parlor grate chiding herself for ever having been so nonsensical and congratulating herself upon having outgrown it.

It was called _The Silent Side_ and was the story of a maiden wandering in the twilight up a lane bordered with daisies, somebody didn't come and her eyes grew tired of watching and her heart beat faint with waiting, so she wandered down the daisy-bordered lane! She did feel a little tender over the last lines even if she were laughing over it:

"'Father,' she said, 'I may not say, But will _you_ not tell him I love him so?"

Had any one in all the world of maidenhood beside her ever prayed such a prayer? Old words came to her: "Thou knowest my foolishness."

The rhyme was dated the afternoon that Ralph Towne had said--but what right had she to remember anything that he had said? He had forgotten and despised her for remembering; but he could not despise her as much as she despised herself!

Why was it that understanding him as she certainly did understand him, that she knew that she would fly to the ends of the earth with him if he should take her hand and say, "Come"; that is, she was _afraid_ that she would. It was no marvel that the knowledge gave her a feeling of discomfort, of intense dissatisfaction with herself; how woefully wrong she must be for such a thing to be true!

On the blank side of a sheet of manuscript, she scribbled a stanza that haunted her; it gave expression to the life she had lived during the two years just passed.

"A nightingale made a mistake; She sang a few notes out of tune; Her heart was ready to break, And she hid from the moon."

In this month her book was accepted; that check for two hundred and six dollars gave pleasure that she and others remembered all their lives; with this check came one for fifteen dollars for Dinah; she almost laughed her crossness away over Dine's little check.

Dine's reply was characteristic:

"Thus endeth my first and last venture upon the literary sea; I follow in your wake no longer.

"If it were matrimony now--

"John (isn't John a grand, strong name?) doesn't like literary women. He reads Owen Meredith to me, and Miss Mulock. He says that I am like Miss Mulock's _Edna_."

Each letter of Dine's teemed with praises of John Woodstock; she thought that he was like Adam Bede, or Ninian in "Head of the Family," or perhaps Max in "A Life for a Life"; she was lonely all day long without him, and as happy as she could be on earth with him all the long evenings.

Tessa frowned over the letters; Dine made no allusion to him in letters written to her father and mother; her whole loving, girlish heart she poured out to Tessa. And Tessa cried over them and prayed over them.

Sue returned from her bridal tour undeniably miserable; even the radiant mood of Dr. Lake was much subdued. Tessa met them together at Mrs. Towne's one evening, two days after the coming home, and was cut to the heart by their manner towards each other: she was defiant; he, imploring.

"I'm sorry I'm married any way," she exclaimed.

"Don't say that," he remonstrated, his face flushing painfully.

"I will say it--I _do_ say it! I _am_ sorry!"

"You know that you don't mean it."

"Yes, I do mean it, too."

Dr. Towne glanced at Tessa and gave an embarrassed laugh. Mrs. Towne's expression became severe; Tessa could have shaken Sue. Nan Gerard turned on the music stool with her most perfect laugh; Tessa could have shaken _her_ for the enlightenment that ran through it.

"We will have no more music after that," said Professor Towne.

Sue bade Tessa good night holding both her hands. "I wish I had married Stacey," she whispered.

"Don't tell Dr. Lake, I beg of you."

"Oh, he knows it. Come and see me."

"No, I will not. You shall not talk to me about your husband."

"I will if I want to. You must come."

"Do come," urged Dr. Lake coming towards them. But she would not promise.

The last Saturday evening in October found Tessa alone before the fire in Mrs. Towne's sitting-room; Mrs. Towne was not well, and had sent for her to come; she had gone to her sleeping room immediately after tea, and asked Tessa to come to her in two hours.

She was in a "mood"; so she called it to herself, a mood in which self-analysis held the prominent place; her heart was aching, she knew not for what, she hardly cared, if the aching might be taken away and she could go to sleep and then awake to find the sun shining.

For the last hour she had been curled up in a crimson velvet chair, part of the time with her head bowed upon the arm; there were tears on her eyelashes, on her fingers, and on the crimson velvet. In the low light, she was but a gray figure crowned with chestnut braids, and only that Ralph Towne saw when he entered noiselessly through the half open door.

Tessa thought that no one in the world moved so gently or touched her so lightly as Ralph Towne. He stood an instant beside her before she stirred, then she raised her head slowly, ashamed of her flushed, wet cheeks. She could not hide from the moon.

"Well?" she said, thinking of her eyes and cheeks.

"Are you dreaming dreams alone, here in the dark?"

"I'm afraid so; I dream too many dreams; I want something real; I do not like the stuff that dreams are made of."

"You are real enough." He leaned against the low mantel with one elbow resting upon it; she did not lift her eyes; she was afraid. Had he come to say something to her?

"Miss Tessa."

She did not reply, she was rubbing her fingers over the crimson velvet.

"I have been thinking of something that I wish to say to you."

"Well, I am approachable," in a light, saucy voice.

"Think well before you speak; it is a question that, middle-aged as I am, I never asked any woman before; I want to ask you to become my wife."

She had raised her eyes in surprise, unfeigned surprise.

"You need not look like that," he said irritably; "you look as if you had never thought of it."

"I have not--for a long time; perhaps I did once--before I became old and wise. I _am_ surprised, I can not understand it; I was so sure that you could never care for me."

"Why should I not? It is the most natural thing in the world."

"I do not think so; I can not understand."

"Accept it upon my testimony, do not try to understand it."

He betrayed no feeling, except in his quickened tone; she was too bewildered to be conscious of any feeling at all; she listened to the sound of her own voice, as if another were speaking; she remembered afterward, that for once in her life she had heard the sound of her own voice. She was thinking, "My voice _is_ pleasant, only so cold and even."

"Will you not answer me?"

She was thinking; she had forgotten to answer.

"Why should you like me?" she said at last.

"There's reason enough, allow me to judge; but you do not come to the point."

"I do not know how."

"I thought that coming to the point was one of your excellences."

"Your question--your assertion rather--is something very new."

She could see the words; she was reciting them from a printed page.

"Don't you know whether you like me or not?" he asked in the old assured, boyish way.

"No, I do not know that; if I did I should care for what you are saying, and now I do not care. Once, in that time when I loved you and you did not care, I would have died with joy to hear you say what you have said; my heart would have stopped beating; I should have been too glad to live; but perhaps when _that_ you went away and died, the Tessa that loved you went away and died, too. I think that I _did_ die--of shame. Now I hear you speak the words that I used to pray then every night that you might speak to me, and now I do not care! When I was little I cried myself sick once for something I wanted, and when mother gave it to me I was too sick and tired to care. No, I do not want to marry you, Dr. Towne, I am too sick and tired to love you."

"Why do you not want to marry me?"

"Because--because--" she looked up into his grave eyes--"I do not want to; I am not satisfied with you."

"Why are you not satisfied with me?"

"I do not know."

"Are you disappointed in me? Have I changed?"

"Oh, no," she said sorrowfully, "you have not changed--not since I have known you this time. It is like this, as if I were blind when I knew you before, and I loved you for what you were to me; but as I could not see you, I loved you for what I imagined you to be, and now, I am not blind, my eyes are wide, wide open, and I look at you and wonder 'where is the one I knew?' I do not know you; you are a stranger to me; I would love you if I could; I can not say _yes_ and not love you. I have never told any one, but I may tell you now. While you were away at St. Louis, I promised to marry some one; he had loved me all my life, and I was so heart-broken because of the mistake that I had made about you; and I wanted some one to care for me, so that I might forget how I loved somebody that did not love me. And then I was wild when I knew what I had done! I did not love him; I felt as if I were bound in iron; I shall never forget that. I do not want to feel bound in iron to you. Why did you not ask me last year when you knew how I cared for you?"

He dropped his eyes, the hot color flushing even to his forehead. "I could not--sincerely."

"Why did you act as if you liked me?"

"I did like you. I did not love you. I did not understand. I can not tell you how unhappy I was when I found that you had misunderstood me. I would not have hurt you for all the universe; I did not dream that you could misunderstand me; I was attracted to you; I did not know that I manifested any stronger feeling. Surely you have forgiven me."

"Yes, I have forgiven you; I did not really blame you; I knew that you did not understand. You are a stupid fellow about women.--You are only a stupid, dear, big boy."

"But you do not answer me."

"I _have_ answered you. Do you ask me sincerely now?" she asked curiously.

"You know I do," he said angrily.

"Do you ask me because Miss Gerard has refused you?" with a flash of merriment crossing her face.

"I never asked Miss Gerard."

"Did you flirt with her?"

"I suppose you give it that name. I was attracted towards her, of course, but I soon found that she had no depth; she would cling to me, I could not shake her off. I took her to Mayfield this morning; she asked to go, I could not refuse the girl. She has made several pretty things for me; I showed my appreciation by buying pieces of jewelry for her; was that flirting? I never kissed her, or said I loved her, or talked any nonsense to her."

"Of course not. You do not know how."

"I know how to talk sense, Miss Tessa."

"Are you asking me because your mother loves me so much?"

"Is it so hard for you to believe that I love you?"

"Yes," she said, her eyes filling at his tone, "I can not believe it. It is as if you had put both hands around my throat and choked my breath away and then said politely, 'Excuse me.'"

"Is my love so little to you as that?"

"I have not seen it yet; you _say_ you love me, that is all."

"Is not that enough?"

"It can not be enough, for it does not satisfy me. I have believed so long that you despised me; one word from you can not change it all."

"Is there something wrong about me?"

"Wrong? Oh, no. How could there be? I do believe that you are a _good_ man."

"You think that you can not be happy with me?" he asked patiently.

"I am happy enough always, everywhere; I was as happy as a bird in a tree before I knew you; you set me to crying for something, and then held out your hand empty."

"I love you; isn't that full enough?"

"No, that is not full enough. I want you to _be_ all that I believed you to be. I shall not be satisfied till then. When you think of me you may think of me hungering and thirsting for you to be all that I can dream of your being--all that God is willing to make you."

The light had died out of his eyes.

"Do you know some one that does satisfy you?"

"I know good people, but they do not satisfy me."

"Philip Towne?"

"I should as soon think of loving St. John."

"Tell me, _do_ you love him?"

"Dr. Towne, I never thought of such a thing!" she said with quick indignation.

"You are a Mystic; Dr. Lake has named you true. Come, be sensible and don't talk riddles; don't talk like a book; talk plain, good sense; say _yes_, and leave all your whims behind you forever."

"Loving you was a whim; shall I leave that behind forever?"

"Yes."

"Then I could not endure your presence; it is that that keeps you near me now. It is not enough for you to love me; I should die of hunger if I did not love you."

"Love me, then."

Her head went down upon the arm of the chair; she covered her face with both hands; a childish attitude she often assumed when alone.

"I can't, I can't! I want to; I would if I could! it's too late; I can't go back and see you as you were--"

"I have asked you to forgive me."

"I do, I do; but I do not love you as I want to love you. I shall never marry any one, you may be sure of that; I do not want to be married. Why must I? Who says I must?"

"I say so."

"Your authority I do not recognize. The voice must come from God to my own heart."

"Lift your head. Look at me."

She obeyed.

"I wish you to understand that I am not to be trifled with; this is definite; this is final; I have asked and you have refused. You need not play with me thinking that I shall ask you again, _I never shall_. Remember, I never shall."

"I do not wish you to ask me again."

"Then this ends the matter."

"This ends the matter," she repeated.

"My mother is not well, she will miss you; you will stay with her just the same. She will not surmise any thing. She loves you as I did not know that one woman could love another."

"Is that why you wish to marry me?"

"No. I know my own mind. I have loved you ever since I knew you, but I was not aware of it; I did not know it until I knew that Miss Gerard was not like you."

"Oh, I am so sorry! This is the hardest of all. But I might grow not to like you at all; I might rush away from you; it takes so much love and confidence and sympathy to be willing to give one's self."

"I am not in a frame of mind to listen to such things; you forget that you have thrown me away for the sake of a whim!"

"I want to tell your mother; I can not bear for her to be so kind to me--"

"It isn't enough to hurt me, but you must hurt her, also. She would not understand--any more than I do--why you throw me away."