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1717^ 









Aj.^S/7;;_ 



a':^ 



THE 



LADY OF THE AKOOSTOOK 



BY 



W. D. HOWELLS, 

authoa of " a forbgonb conclusion," " a obanci aoquaxhtaxch," 

"yknitun ufk," wo. 



BOSTON: 
HOUGHTON, OSGOOD AND COMPANY. 

1879. 



/ 




COPTRIOHT, 1879, 

Bt. W. D. HOWMiLS. 



BITIBSn)!, OAMBBIDei : 

■TIBIOTTPID AND PBINTID BT 

H. 0. HOVOHTON AND OOMPANT. 



THE LADY OF THE AEOOSTOOK. 



I. 

m 

In the best room of a farm-house on the skirts of 
a Tillage in the hills of Northern Massachusetts, 
there sat one morning in August three people who 
were not strangers to the house, but who had ap* 
parently assembled in the parlor as the place most 
in accord with an unaccustomed finery in their 
dress. One was an elderly woman with a plain, 
honest face, as kindly in expression as she could be 
perfectly sure she felt, and xio more ; .she rocked 
herself softly in the haircloth arm-chair, and ad- 
dressed as father the old man who sat at one end 
of the table between the windows, and drubbed 
noiselessly upon it with his stubbed fingers, while 
his lips, puckered to a whistle, emitted no sound. 
His face had that distinctly fresh-shaven effect 
which once a week is the advantage of shaving no 
of tener : here and there, in the deeper wrinkles, a 
frosty stubble had escaped the razor. He wore an 
old-fashioned, low black satin stock, over the top 
of which the linen of his unstarched collar con- 
trived with diflBculty to make itself seen ; his high- 
crowned, lead-colored straw hat lay on the table 

1 



2 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

before him. At the other end of the table sat a 
young girl, who leaned upon it with one arm, prop- 
ping her averted face on her hand. The window 
was open beside her, and she was staring out upon 
the door-yard, where the hens were burrowing for 
coolness in the soft earth under the lilac bushes ; 
from time to time she put her handkerchief to her 
eyes. 

"I don't like this part of it, father," said the 
elderly woman, — " Lyddy's seeming to feel about 
it the way she does right at the last moment, as 
you may say." The old man made a noise in his 
throat as if he might speak ; but he only un- 
puckered his mouth, and stayed his fingers, while 
the other continued : " I don't want her to go now, 
no more than ever I did. I ain't one to think that 
eatin' up ererything on your plate keeps it from 
wastin', and I never was ; and I say that even if 
you could n't get the money back, it would cost no 
more to have her stay than to have her go." 

" I don't suppose," said the old man, in a high, 
husky treble, "but what I could get some of it 
back from the captain ; may be all. He did n't 
seem any ways graspin'. I don't want Lyddy 
should feel, any more than you do, Maria, that 
we 're glad to have her go. But what I look at is 
this : as long as she has this idea — Well, it 's 
like this — Id' know as I can express it, either." 
He relapsed into the comfort people find in giving 
ap a difficult thing. 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. ft 

"Oh, I know!" returned the woman. "I un- 
derstand .it 's an opportunity ; you might call it a 
leadin', almost, that it would be flyin' in the face of 
Providence to refuse. I presume her gifts were 
given her for improvement, and it would be the 
same as buryin' them in the ground for her to stay 
up here. But I do say that I want Lyddy should 
feel just 80 about goin', or not go at all. It ain't 
like goin' among strangers, though, if it ts in a 
strange land. They 're her father's own kin, and if 
they 're any ways like him they 're weLTm-hearted 
enough, if that 's all you want. I guess they 11 
do what 's right by Lyddy when she gets there. 
And I try to look at it this way : that long before 
that maple by the gate is red she'll be with her 
father's own sister ; and I for one don't mean to let 
it worry me." She made search for her handker- 
chief, and wiped away the tears that fell down her 
cheeks. 

" Yes," returned the old man ; " and before the 
leaves are on the ground we shall more 'n have got 
our first letter from her. I declare for't," he 
added, after a tremulous pause, " I was goin' to say 
how Lyddy would enjoy readin' it to us I I don't 
seem to get it rightly into my head that she 's goin' 
away." 

" It ain't as if Lyddy was leavin' any life behind 
her that 's over and above pleasant," resumed the 
woman. " She 's a good girl, and I never want to 
see a more uncomplainin' ; but I know it 's duller 



4 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

and duller here all the while for her, with us two 
old folks, and no young company ; and I d' know as 
it 's been any better the two winters she 's taught 
in the Mill Village. That's what reconciles me, 
on Lyddy's account, as much as anything. I ain't 
one to set much store on worldly ambition, and I 
never was ; and I d' know as I care for Lyddy's ad- 
vancement, as you may call it. I believe that as 
far forth as true happiness goes she 'd be as well oflf 
here as there. But I don't say but what she would 
be more satisfied in the end, and as long as you 
can't have happiness, in this world, I say you'd 
better have satisfaction. Is that Josiah Whitman's 
hearse goin' past ? " she asked, rising from her 
chair, and craning forward to bring her eyes on 
a level with the window, while she suspended the 
agitation of the palm-leaf fan which she had not 
ceased to ply during her talk ; she remained a mo- 
ment with the quiescent fan pressed against her 
bosom, and then she stepped out of the door, and 
down the walk to the gate. " Josiah ! " she called, 
while the old man looked and listened at the win- 
dow. " Who you be'n buryin' ? " 

The man halted his hearse, and answered briefly, 
" Mirandy Holcomb." 

" Why, I thought the funeral wa' n't to be till to- 
morrow I Well, I declare," said the woman, as she 
reentered the room and sat down again in her rock- 
ing-chair, " I did n't ask him whether it was Mr. 
Goodlow or Mr. Baldwin preached the sermon. 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 6 

I was SO put out hearin' it was Mirandj, yoa might 
say I fc>rgot to ask him anything. Mirandy was 
always a well woman till they moved down to the 
Mill Village and began takin' the hands to board, 
— so many of 'em. When I think of Lyddy's 
teachin' there another winter, — well, I could al- 
most rejoice that she was goin' away. She ain't a 
mite too strong as it is." 

Here the woman paused, and the old man struck 
in with his quaint treble while she fanned herself in 
silence : " I do suppose the voyage is goin' to be 
everything for her health. She '11 be from a month 
to six weeks gettin' to Try-East, and that '11 be a 
.complete change of air, Mr. Goodlow says. And 
she won't have a care on her mind the whole way 
out. It '11 be a season of rest and quiet. I did wish, 
just for the joke of the thing, as you may say, that 
the ship had be'n goin' straight to Venus, and 
Lyddy could 'a' walked right in on 'em at breakfast, 
some morning. I should liked it to be'n a surprise. 
But there wa'n't any ship at Boston loadin' for 
Venus, and they did n't much believe I 'd find one 
at New York. So I just took up with the captain 
of the Aroostook's o£Eer, He says she can telegraph 
to her folks at Venus as soon as she gets to Try- 
East, and she 's welcome to stay on the ship till they 
come for her. I didn't think of their havin' our 
mod'n improvements out there; but he says they 
have telegraphs and railroads every wheres, the same 
«w we do ; and they 're real kind and polite wheu 



6 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

you get used to 'em. The captain, he 'a as nice a 
man as I ever see. His wife 's be'n two or three 
voyages with him in the Aroostook, and he '11 know 
just how to have Lyddy's comfort looked after. He 
showed me the state-room she 's goin' to have. Well, 
it ain't over and above large, but it 's pretty as a 
pink : all clean white paint, with a solid mahogany 
edge to the berth, and a mahogany-framed lookin'- 
glass on one side, and little winders at the top, and 
white lace curtains to the bed. He says he had it 
fixed up for his wife, and he lets Lyddy have it all 
for her own. She can set there and do her men din' 
when she don't feel like cpmin' into the cabin. The 
cabin — well, I wish you could see that cabin, Maria! 
The first mate is a fine-appearing man, too. Some 
of the sailors looked pretty rough ; but I guess it 
was as much their clothes as anything ; and I 
d' know as Lyddy 'd have a great deal to do with 
them, any way." The old man's treble ceased, and 
at the same moment the shrilling of a locust in one 
of the door-yard maples died away; both voices, 
arid, nasal, and high, lapsed as one into a common 
silence. 

The woman stirred impatiently in her chair, as if 
both voices had been repeating something heard 
many times before. They seemed to renew her dis- 
content. " Yes, I know ; I know all that, father. 
But it ain't the mahogany I think of. It 's the 
child's gettin' there safe and well." 

" Well," said the old man, " I asked the captain 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 7 

about the seasickness, and he says she ain't nigh so 
Ukely to be sick as she would on the steamer ; the 
motion's more regular, and she won't have tho 
smell of the machinery. That's what he said. 
And he said the seasickness would do her good, any 
way. I 'm sure I don't want her to be sick any 
more than you do, Maria." He added this like one 
who has been unjustly put upon his defense. 

They now both remained silent, the woman rock- 
ing herself and fanning, and the old man holding 
his fingers suspended from their drubbing upon the 
table, and looking miserably from the woman in the 
rocking-chair to the girl at the window, as if a strict 
inquiry into the present situation might convict him 
of it in spite of his innocence. The girl still sat 
with her face turned from them, and still from time 
to time she put her handkerchief to her eyes and 
wiped away the tears. The locust in the maple be- 
gan again, and' shrilled inexorably. Suddenly the 
girl leaped to her feet. 

" There 's the stage I " she cried, with a tumult 
in her voice and manner, and a kind of choking 
sob. She showed, now that she stood upright, the 
slim and elegant shape which is the divine right of 
American girlhood, clothed with the stylishness that 
instinctive taste may evoke, even in a hill town, 
from study of paper patterns. Harper's Bazar, and 
the costume of summer boarders. Her dress was 
carried with spirit and e£Eect. 

'' Lydia Blood I " cried the other woman, spring. 



8 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

ing responsively to her feet, also, and starting to- 
ward the girl, " don't you go a step without you feel 
just like it 1 Take off your things this minute and 
stay, if you wouldn't jus' as lives go. It's hard 
enough to have you go, child, without seemin' to 
force you 1 " 

" Oh, aunt Maria," answered the girl, piteously, 
" it almost kills me to go ; but I^m doing it, not 
you. I know how you 'd like to hjlve me stay. 
But don't say it again, or I could n't bear up; and 
I 'm going now, if I have to be carried." 

The old man had risen with the others ; he was 
shorter than either, and as he looked at them he 
seemed half awed, half bewildered, by so much 
drama. Yet it was comparatively very little. The 
girl did not offer to cast herself upon her aunt's 
neck, and her aunt did not offer her an embrace 
it was only their hearts that clung together as they 
simply shook hands and kissed each other. Lydia 
whirled away for her last look at herself in the- 
glass over the table, and her aunt tremulously 
began to put to rights some slight disorder in the 
girl's hat. 

" Father," she said sharply, " are Lyddy's things 
all ready there by the door, so 's not to keep Ezra 
Perkins waitin' ? You know he always grumbles 
so. And then he gets you to the cars so 't you have 
to wait half an hour before they start." She con- 
tinued to pin and pull at details of Lydia's dress, to 
which she descended from her hat. " It sets real 
nice on you, Lyddy. I guess you '11 think of the 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 9 

time we had gettiu' it made up, when you wear it 
out there." Miss Maria Latham laughed nervously. 

With a harsh banging and rattling, a yellow 
Concord coach drew up at the gate where Miss 
Maria had stopped the hearse. The driver got 
down, and without a word put Lydia's boxes and 
bags into the boot, and left two or three light par- 
cels for her to take into the coach with her. 

Miss Maria went down to the gate with her fa- 
ther and niece. " Take the back seat, father ! " she 
said, as the old man offered to take the middle 
place. " Let them that come later have what 's 
left. You '11 be home to-night, father ; I '11 set up 
for you. Good-by again, Lyddy." She did not 
kiss the girl again, or touch her hand. Their de- 
cent and sparing adieux had been made in the 
house. As Miss Maria returned to the door, the 
hens, cowering conscience-stricken under the lilacs, 
sprang up at sight of her with a screech of guilty 
alarm, and flew out over the fence. 

"Well, I vow," soliloquized Miss Maria, "from 
where she set Lyddy must have seen them pests 
under the lilacs the whole time, and never said a 
word." She pushed the loosened soil into place 
with the side of her ample slipper, and then went 
into the house, where she kindled a fire in the 
feitchen stove, and made herself a cup of Japan 
tea : a variety of the herb which our country peo- 
ple prefer, apparently because it affords the same 
stimulus with none of the pleasure given by the 
Chinese leaf. 



n. 

Lydia and her grandfather reached Boston at 
four o'clock, and the old man made a bargain, as he 
fancied, with an expressman to carry her baggage 
across the city to the wharf at which the Aroostook 
lay. The expressman civilly offered to take their 
small parcels without charge, and deliver them with 
the trunk and large bag ; but as he could not check 
them all her grandfather judged it safest not to 
part with them, and he and Lydia crowded into the 
horse-car with their arms and hands full. The con- 
ductor obliged him to give up the largest of these 
burdens, and hung the old-fashioned oil-cloth sack 
on the handle of the brake behind, where Mr. 
Latham with keen anxiety, and Lydia with shame, 
watched it as it swayed back and forth with the 
motion of the car and threatened to break loose 
from its hand-straps and dash its bloated bulk to 
the ground. The old man called out to the con- 
ductor to be sure and stop in ScoUay's Square, and 
the people, who had already stared uncomfortably 
at Lydia's bundles, all smiled. Her grandfather 
;v^as going to repeat his direction as the conductor 
made no sign of having heard it, when his neighbor 
said kindly, " The car always stops in ScoUay's 
Square." 



THE LADY OF THE ABOOSTOOK. 11 

" Then why could n't he say so ? " retorted the 
^ old man, in his high nasal key ; and now the people 
laughed outright. He had the nervous restlessness 
of age when out of its wonted place : he could not 
remain quiet in the car, for counting and securing 
his parcels ; when they reached Scollay's Square, 
and were to change cars, he ran to the car they were 
to take, though there was abundant time, and sat 
down breathless from his eflEort. He was eager then 
that they should not be carried too far, and was 
constantly turning to look out of the window to as- 
certain their whereabouts. His vigilance ended in 
their getting aboard the East Boston ferry-boat in 
the car, and hardly getting ashore before the boat 
started. They now gathered up their burdens once 
more, and walked toward the wharf they were seek- 
ing, past those squalid streets which open upon the 
docks. At the corners they entangled themselves 
in knots of truck- teams and hucksters' wagons and 
horse-cars ; once they brought the traffic of the 
neighborhood to a stand-still by the thoroughness 
of their inability and confusion. They wandered 
down the wrong wharf amidst the slime cast up by 
the fishing craft moored in the dock below, and 
made their way over heaps of chains and cord- 
age, and through, the hand-carts pushed hither and 
thither with their loads of fish, and so struggled 
back to the avenue which ran along the top of all 
the wharves. The water of the docks was of a 
livid turbidity, which teemed with the gelatinous 



12 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

globes of the sun-fish ; and people were rowing 
about there in pleasure-boats, and sailors on floats 
were painting the hulls of the black ships. The 
faces of the men they met were red and sunburned 
mostly, — not with the sunburn of the fields, but 
of the sea ; these men lurched in their gait with 
an uncouth heaviness, yet gave them way kindly 
enough ; but certain dull-eyed, frowzy-headed wom- 
en seemed to push purposely against her grandfa- 
ther, and one of them swore at Lydia for taking up 
all the sidewalk with her bundles. There were 
such dull eyes and slattern heads at the open win- 
dows of the shabby houses ; and there were gaunt, 
bold-faced young girls who strolled up and down 
the pavements, bonnetless and hatless, and chatted 
into the windows, and joked with other such girls 
whom they met. Suddenly a wild outcry rose from 
the swarming children up one of the intersecting 
streets, where a woman was beating a small boy 
over the head with a heavy stick : the boy fell howl- 
ing and writhing to the ground, and the cruel blows 
still rained upon him, till another woman darted 
from an open door and caught the child up with 
one hand, and with the other wrenched the stick 
away and flung it into the street. No words passed, 
and there was nothing to show whose child the vic- 
tim was ; the first woman walked off, and while the 
boy rubbed his head and arms, and screamed with 
the pain, the other children, whose sports had been 
scarcely interrupted, were shouting and laughing all 
about him again. 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 13 

" Grandfather," said Lydia faintly, " let us go 
down here, and rest a moment in the shade. I 'm 
almost worn out." She pointed to the open and 
quiet space at the side of the lofty granite ware- 
house which they had reached. 

" Well, I guess I'll set down a minute, too," said 
her grandfather. " Lyddy," he added, as they re- 
leased their aching arms from their bags and bun- 
dles, and sank upon the broad threshold of a door 
which seemed to have been shut ever since the 
decay of. the India trade, '* I don't believe but what 
it would have be'n about as cheap in the end to 
come down in a hack. But I acted for what I 
thought was the best. I supposed we 'd be'n there 
before now, and the idea of givin' a dollar for rid in' 
about ten minutes did seem sinful. I ain't noways 
afraid the ship will sail without you. Don't you 
fret any. I don't seem to know rightly just where 
I am, but after we' ve rested a spell I '11 leave you 
here, and inquire round. It 's a real quiet place, 
and I guess your things will be safe." 

He took off his straw hat and fanned his face 
with it, while Lydia leaned her head against the 
door frame and closed her eyes. Presently she 
heard the trampling of feet going by, but she did 
not open her eyes till the feet paused in a hesitat- 
ing way, and a voice asked her grandfather, in the 
firm, neat tone which she had heard summer board- 
ers from Boston use, " Is the young lady ill ? " She 
now looked up, and blushed like fire to see two hand. 



14 THE LADY OF THE ABOOSTOOK. 

some young men regarding her with frank compas- 
sion. 

"No," said her grandfather ; "a little beat out, 
that 's all. We 've been trying to find Lucas 
Wharf, and we don't seem somehow just to hit 
on it." 

" This is Lucas Wharf," said the young man. 
He made an instinctive gesture of salutation toward 
his hat, with the hand in which he held a cigar ; he 
put the cigar into his mouth as he turned from 
them, and the smoke drifted fragrantly back to 
Lydia as he tramped steadily and strongly on down 
the wharf, shoulder to shoulder with his companion. 

" Well, I declare for 't, so it is," said her grand- 
father, getting stiflBy to his feet and retiring a few 
paces to gain a view of the building at the base 
of which they had been sitting. " Why, I might 
known it by this buildin' I But where 's the Aroos- 
took, if this is Lucas Wharf ? " He looked wist- 
fully in the direction the young men had taken, but 
they were already too far to call after. 

" Grandfather," said the girl, " do I look pale ? " 

" Well, you don't now," answered the old man, 
simply. " You 've got a good color now." 

" What right had he," she demanded, " to speak 
to you about me ? " 

" I d' know but what you did look rather pal^ 
as you set there with your head leaned back. I 
d' know as I noticed much." 

" He took us for two beggars, — two tramps I ' 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 15 

she exclaimed, " sitting here with our bundles scat- 
tered round us I " 

The old man did not respond to this conjecture ; 
it probably involved matters beyond his emotional 
reach, though he might have understood them when 
he was younger. He stood a moment with his 
mouth puckered to a whistle, but made no sound, 
and retired a step or two farther from the building 
and looked up at it again. Then he went toward 
the dock and looked down into its turbid waters, 
and returned again with a face of hopeless perplex- 
ity. " This is Lucas Wharf, and no mistake," he 
said. " I know the place first-rate, now. But what 
I can't make out is. What 's got the Aroostook ? " 

A man turned the comer of the warehouse from 
the street above, and came briskly down towards 
them, with his hat off, and rubbing his head and 
face with a circular application of a red silk hand- 
kerchief. He was dressed in a suit of blue flannel, 
very neat and shapely, and across his ample waist- 
coat stretched a gold watch chain ; in his left hand 
he carried a white Panama hat. He was short and 
stout ; his round florid face was full of a sort of 
prompt kindness ; his small blue eyes twinkled un- 
der shaggy brows whose sandy color had not yet 
taken the grizzled tone of his close-clipped hair and 
beard. From his clean wristbands bis hands came 
out, plump and large ; stiff, wiry hairs stood up on 
their backs, and under these various designs in tat- 
tooing showed their purple. 



16 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

Lydia's grandfather stepped out to meet and 
halt this stranger, as he drew near, glancing quickly 
from the gir] to the old man, and then at their bun- 
dles. " Can you tell me where a ship named the 
Aroostook is, that was layin' at this wharf — Lucas 
Wharf — a fortnight ago, and better ? " 

" We]^, I guess I can, Mr. Latham," answered 
the stranger, with a quizzical smile, offering one of 
his stout hands to Lydia's grandfather. " You 
don't soem to remember your friends very well, do 

you ? " 

The old man gave a kind of crow expressive of an 
otherwise unutterable relief and comfort. " Well, 
if it ain't Captain Jenness I I be'n so turned 
about, I declare for 't, I don't believe I 'd ever 
known you if you had n't spoke up. Lyddy," he 
cried with a child-like joy, " this is Captain Jen- 
ness ! " 

Captain Jenness having put on his hat changed 
Mr. Latham's hand into his left, while he stretched 
his great right hand across it and took Lydia's long, 
slim fingers in its grasp, and looked keenly into her 
face. " Glad to see you, glad to see you, Miss 
Blood. (You see I 've got your name down on my 
papers.) Hope you 're well. Ever been a sea- 
vOyage before ? Little homesick, eh ? " he asked, 
as she put her handkerchief to her eyes. He kept 
pressing Lydia's hand in the friendliest way. " Well, 
that 's natural. And you 're excited ; that 's natu- 
ral, too. But we're not going to have any home- 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 17 

sickness on the Aroostook, because we 're going to 
make her home to you." At this speech all the 
girl's gathering f orlomness broke in a sob. " That 's 
right ! " said Captain Jenness. " Bless you, I 've 
got a girl just about your age up at Deer Isle, my- 
self I " He dropped her hand, and put his arm 
across her shoulders. " Good land, I know what 
girls are, I hope I These your things ? " He caught 
up the greater part of them into hia capacious hands, 
and started off down the wharf, talking back at 
Lydia and her grandfather, as they followed him 
with the light parcels he had left them. " I hauled 
away from the wharf as soon as I 'd stowed my 
cargo, and I 'm at anchor out there in the stream 
now, waiting till I can finish up a few matters of 
business with the agents and get my passengers on 
board. When you get used to the strangeness," he 
said to Lydia, " you won't be a bit lonesome. 
Bless your heart I My wife 's been with me many a 
voyage, and. the last time I was out to Messina I 
had both my daughters." 

At the end of the wharf, Captain Jenness 
stopped, and suddenly calling out, " Here ! " began, 
as she thought, to hurl Lydia's things into the water. 
But when she reached the same point, she found 
they had all been caught, and deposited in a neat 
pile in a boat which lay below, where two sailors 
stood waiting the captain's further orders. He 
keenly measured the distance to the boat with his 
jye, and then he bade the men work round outside 



e^ 



18 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

•a schooner which lay near ; and jumping on board 
this vessel, he helped Lydia and her grandfather 
down, and eiisily transferred them to the small boat. 
The men bent to their oars, and pulled swiftly out 
toward a ship that lay at anchor a little way ofiE. A 
light breeze crept along the water, which was here 
blue and clear, and the grateful coolness and pleas- 
ant motion brought light into the girl's cheeks and 
eyes. Without knowing it she smiled. " That 's 
right ! " cried Captain Jenness, who had applauded 
her sob in the same terms. " Tou 7Z like it, first- 
rate. Look at that ship I Tliat '« the Aroostook. 
Is she a beauty, or ain't she? " 

The stately vessel stood high from the water, for 
Captain Jenness's cargo was light, and he was go- 
ing out chiefly for a return freight. Sharp jibs and 
staysails cut their white outlines keenly against the 
afternoon blue of the summer heaven ; the topsails 
and courses dripped, half-furled, from the yards 
stretching across the yellow masts that sprang so 
far aloft ; the hull glistened black with new paint. 
When Lydia mounted to the deck she found it as 
clean scrubbed as her aunt's kitchen floor. Her 
glance of admiration was not lost upon Captain 
Jenness. " Yes, Miss Blood," said he, " one differ- 
ence between an American ship and any other sort 
is dirt. I wish I could take you aboard an English 
vessel, so you could appreciate the Aroostook. But 
I guess you don't need it," he added, with a proud 
satisfaction in his laugh. " The Aroostook ain't in 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 19 

order yet ; wait till we Ve been a few days at sea." 
The captain swept the deck with a loving eye. It 
was spacious and handsome, with a stretch of some 
forty or fifty feet between the house at the stern 
and the forecastle, which rose considerably higher ; 
a low bulwark was surmounted by a heavy rail sup- 
ported upon turned posts painted white. Every- 
thing, in spite of the captain's boastful detraction, 
was in perfect trim, at least to landfolk*s eyes. 
" Now come into the cabin," said the captain. He 
gave Lydia's traps, as he called them, in charge of 
a boy, while he led the way below, by a narrow 
stairway, warning Lydia and her grandfather to 
look out for their heads as they followed. " There ! " 
he said, when they had safely arrived, inviting their 
inspection of the place with a general glance of his 
own. 

" What did I tell you, Lyddy ? " asked her grand- 
father, with simple joy in the splendors about them. 
"Solid mahogany trimmin's everywhere." There 
was also a great deal of milk-white paint, with 
some modest touches of gilding here and there. 
The cabin was pleasantly lit by the long low win- 
dows which its roof rose just high enough to lift 
above the deck, and the fresh air entered with the 
slanting sun. Made fast to the floor was a heavy 
table, over which hung from the ceiling a swinging 
shelf. Around the little saloon ran lockers cush- 
ioned with red plush. At either end were four or 
five narrow doors, which gave into as many tiny 



20 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

state-rooms. The boy came with Lydia's things, 
and set them inside one of these doors ; and when 
he came out again the captain pushed it open, and 
called them in. " Here ! " said he. " Here 's where 
my girls made themselves at home the last voyage, 
and I expect you '11 find it pretty comfortable. 
They say you don't feel the motion so much, — / 
don't know anything about the motion, — and in 
smooth weather you can have that window open 
sometimes, and change the air. It 's light and it 's 
large. Well, I had it fitted up for my wife ; but 
she 's got kind of on now, you know, and she don't 
feel much like going any more ; and so I always give 
it to my nicest passenger." This was an unmistak- 
able compliment, and Lydia blushed to the captain's 
entire content. "That 's a rug she hooked," he con- 
tinued, touching with his toe the cai-pet, rich in its 
artless domestic dyes as some Persian fabric, that 
lay before the berth. " These gimcracks belong to 
my girls; they left 'em." He pointed to various 
slight structures of card-board worked with crewel, 
which were tacked to the walls. " Pretty snug, 
eh?" 

" Yes," said Lydia, "it 's nicer than I thought it 
could be, even after what grandfather said." 

" Well, that 's right I " exclaimed the captain. 
" I like your way of speaking up. I wish you could 
know my girls. How old are you now? " 

" I 'm nineteen," said Lydia. 

" Why, you 're just between my girls I " cried the 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 21 

captain. *' Sally is twenty-one, and Persia is eight- 
een. Well, now, Miss Blood," he said, as they re- 
turned to the cabin, " you can't begin to make your- 
self at home too soon for me. I used to sail to 
Cadiz and Malaga a good deal ; and when I went 
to see any of them Spaniards he 'd say, ' This house 
is yours.' Well, that's what I say: This ship is 
yours as long as you stay in her. And I mean it, 
and that 's more than they did ! ' Captain Jenness 
laughed mightily, took some of Lydia's fingers in 
his left hand and squeezed them, and clapped her 
grandfather on the shoulder with his right. Then 
he slipped his hand down the old man's bony arm 
to the elbow, and held it, while he dropped his head 
towards Lydia, and said, '' We shall be glad to 
have him stay to supper, and as much longer as he 
likes, heh ? " 

" Oh, no 1 " said Lydia ; " grandfather must go 
back on the six o'clock train. My aunt expects 
him." Her voice fell, and her face suddenly 
clouded. 

" Good I " cried the captain. Then he pulled out 
his watch, and held it as far away as the chain 
would stretch, frowning at it with his head aslant. 
" Well ! " he burst out. " He has n't got any too 
much time on his hands." The old man gave a 
nervous start, and the girl trembled. " Hold on ! 
Yes ; there 's time. It 's only fifteen minutes after 
hve. 

'^ Oh, but we were more than half an hour get- 



22 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

ting down here," said Lydia, anxiously. " And 
grandfather does n't know the way back. He '11 be 
sure to get lost. I wish we 'd come in a carriage.'* 

" Could n't 'a' kept the carriage waitin' on ex- 
pense, Lyddy," retorted her grandfather, " But I 
tell you," he added, with something like resolution, 
"if I could find a carriage anywheres near that 
wharf, I'd take it, just as sure! I wouldn't miss 
that train for more 'n half a dollar. It would cost 
more than that at a hotel to-night, let alone how 
your aunt Maria 'd feel." 

" Why, look here I " said Captain Jenness, natu- 
rally appealing to the girl. " Let me get your 
grandfather back. I Ve got to go up town again, 
any way, for some last things, with an express 
wagon, and we can ride right to the depot in that. 
Which depot is it ? " 

" Fitchburg," said the old man eagerly. 

" That 's right I " commented the captain. " Get 
you there in plenty of time, if we don't lose any 
now. And I '11 tell you what, my little girl," he 
added, turning to Lydia : " if it '11 be a comfort to 
you to ride up with us, and see your grandfather 
off, why come along I My girls went with me the 
last time on an express wagon." 

"No," answered Lydia. "I want to. But it 
would n't be any comfort. I thought that out be- 
fore I left home, and I 'm going to say good-by to 
grandfather here." 

" First-rate 1 " said Captain Jenness, bustling 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 23 

towards the gangway so as to leave them alone. A 
sharp cry from the old man arrested him. 

" Lyddy ! Where 's your trunks ? " 

" Why I " said the girl, catching her breath in 
dismay, " where can they be ? I foi^ot all about 
them." 

^^ I got the checks fast enough," said the old man, 
*' and I shan't give 'em up without I get the trunks. 
They 'd ought to had 'em down here long ago ; and 
now if I 've got to pester round after 'em I 'm sure 
to miss the train." 

" What shall we do? " asked Lydia. 

•" Let 's see your checks," said the captain, with 
an evident ease of mind that reassured her. When 
her grandfather had brought them with dijffioulty 
from the pocket visited last in the order of his 
search, and laid them in the captain's waiting palm,' 
the latter endeavored to get them in focus. " What 
does it say on 'em?" he asked, handing them to 
Lydia. " My eyes never did amount to anything 
on shore." She read aloud the name of the express 
stamped on them. The captain gathered them 
back into his hand, and slipped them into his 
pocket, with a nod and wink full of comfort. " I '11 
see to it," he said. " At any rate, this ship ain't 
a-going to sail without them, if she waits a week. 
Now, then, Mr. Latham I " 

The old man, who waited, when not directly ad- 
dressed or concerned, in a sort of blank patience, 
suddenly started out of his daze, and following the 



24 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

captain too alertly up the gangway stairs drove his 
hat against the hatch with a force that sent him 
back into Lydia's arms. 

" Oh, grandfather, are you hurt ? " she piteOusly 
asked, trying to pull up the hat that was jammed 
down over his forehead. 

" Not a bit ! But I guess my hat 's about done 
for, — without I can get it pressed over ; and I 
d' know as this kind of straw doos press." 

" First-rate ! " called the captain from above. 
"Never mind the hat." But the girl continued 
fondly trying to reshape it, while the old man 
fidgeted anxiously, and protested that he would be 
sure to be left. It was like a half- shut accordion 
when she took it from his head ; when she put it 
back it was like an accordion pulled out. 

" All ready ! " shouted Captain Jenness from the 
gap in the bulwark, where he stood waiting to de- 
scend into, the small boat. The old man ran to- 
wards him in his senile haste, and stooped to get 
over the side into the boat below. 

" Why, grandfather !" cried the girl in a break- 
ing voice, full of keen, yet tender reproach. 

" I declare for 't," he said, scrambling back to 
the deck. " I 'most forgot. I be'n so put about." 
He took Lydia's hand loosely into his own, and 
bent forward to kiss her. She threw her arms 
round him, and while he remained looking over 
her shoulder, with a face of grotesque perplexity, 
and saying, " Don't cry, Lyddy, don't cry ! " she 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. '2o 

pressed her face tighter into his withered neck, and 
tried to muffle her homesick sobs. The sympathies 
as well as the sensibilities often seem dulled by age. 
They have both perhaps been wrought upon too 
much in the course of the years, and can no longer 
respond to the appeal or distress which they can 
only dimly realize ; even the heart grows old. 
*' Don't you, don't you, Lyddy ! " repeated the old 
man. " You must n't. The captain 's waitin' ; 
and the cars — well, every minute I lose makes it 
riskier and riskier ; and your aunt Maria, she 's al- 
ways so uneasy, you know ! " 

The girl was not hurt by his anxiety about him- 
self ; she was more anxious about him than about 
anything else. She quickly lifted her head, and 
drying her eyes, kissed him, forcing her lips into 
the smile that is more heart-breaking to see than 
weeping. She looked over the side, as her grand- 
father was handed carefully down to a seat by the 
two sailors in the boat, and the captain noted 
her resolute counterfeit of cheerfulness. " That 's 
right ! " he shouted up to her. " Just like my girls 
when their mother left 'em. But bless you, thetf 
soon got over it, and so '11 you. Give way, men," 
he said, in a lower voice, and the boat shot from 
the ship's side toward the wharf. He turned and 
waved his handkerchief to Lydia, and, stimulated 
apparently by this, her grandfather felt in his pock- 
ets for his handkerchief ; he ended after a vain 
search by taking off his hat and waving that. 



26 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

When he put it on again, it relapsed into that like- 
ness of a half-shut accordion from which Lydia had 
rescued it ; but she only saw the face under it. 

As the boat reached the wharf an express wagon 
drove down, and Lydia saw the sarcastic parley 
which she could not hear between the captain and 
the driver about the belated baggage which the 
latter put off. Then she saw the captain help her 
grandfather to the seat between himself and the 
driver, and the wagon rattled swiftly out of sight. 
One of the sailors lifted Lydia's baggage over the 
side of the wharf to the other in the boat, and they 
pulled off to- the ship with it. 



m. 

Lydia Tvent back to the cabin, and presently the 
boy who had taken charge of her lighter luggage 
came dragging her trunk and bag down the gang- 
way stairs. Neither was very large, and even a 
boy of fourteen who was small for his age might 
easily manage them. 

" You can stow away what 's in 'em in the draw- 
ers," said the boy. "I suppose you did n't notice 
the drawers," he added, at her look of inquiry. He 
went into her room, and pushing aside the valance 
of the lower berth showed four deep drawers below 
the bed ; the charming snugness of the arrange- 
ment brought a light of housewifely joy to the girl's 
face. 

" Why, it 's as good as a bureau. They will hold 
everything." 

" Yes," exulted the boy ; " they 're for two per- 
sons' things. The captain's daughters, they both 
had this room. Pretty good sized too ; a good deal 
the captain's build. You won't find a better state- 
room than this on a steamer. I 've been on 'em." 
The boy climbed up on the edge of the upper 
drawer, and pulled open the window at the top of 
the wall. " Give you a little air, I guess. If you 
want I should, the captain said I was to bear a 



28 THE LADY OF THE ABOOSTOOK. 

hand helping you to stow away what was in your 
trunks." 

" No," said Lydia, quickly. " I *d just as soon 
do it alone." 

" All right," said the boy. " If I was you, I 'd 
do it now. I don't know just when • the captain 
means to sail ; but after we get outside, it might 
be rough, and it 's better to have everything pretty 
snug by that time. I '11 haul away the trunks 
when you 've got 'em empty. If I should n't hap- 
pen to be here, you can just call me at the top of 
the gangway, and I '11 come. My name 's Thomas," 
he said. He regarded Lydia inquiringly a moment 
before he added : " If you 'd just as lives, I rather 
you 'd call me Thomas, and not steward. They 
said you 'd call me steward," he explained, in a 
blushing, deprecating confidence '; ^' and as long as 
I 've not got my growth, it kind of makes them 
laugh, you know, — especially the second officer." 

" I will call you Thomas," said Lydia. 

*' Thank you." The boy glanced up at the 
round clock screwed to the cabin wall. " I guess 
you won't have to call me anything unless you 
hurry. J shall be down here, laying the table for 
supper, before you 're done. The captain said I 
was to lay it for you and him, and if he did n't get 
back in time you was to go to eating, any way. 
Guess you won't think Captain Jenness is going 
to starve anybody." 

"Have you been many voyages with Captaip 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 29 

Jenness before this ? " asked Lydia, as she set open 
her trunk, and began to lay her dresses out on the 
locker. Homesickness, like all grief, attacks in 
paroxysms. One gust of passionate regret had 
swept over the girl; before another came, she could 
occupy herself almost cheerfully with the details of 
unpacking. 

" Only one before," said the boy. " The last 
one, when his daughters went out. I guess it was 
their coaxing got mother to let me go. My father 
was killed in the war." 

" Was he ? " asked Lydia, sympathetically. 

" Yes. I did n't know much about it at the 
time ; so little. Both your parents living ? " 

" No," said Lydia. " They're both dead. They 
died a long while ago. I 've always lived with my 
aunt and grandfather." 

" I thought there must be something the matter, 
— your coming with your grandfather," said the 
boy. " I don't see why you don't let me carry in 
some of those dresses for you. I 'm used to help- 
ing about." 

" Well, you may," answered Lydia, " if you 
want." A native tranquil kindness showed itself 
ji her voice and manner, but something of the ha- 
bitual authority of a school-mistress mingled with 
it. " You must be careful not to rumple them if I 
let you." 

" I guess not. I 've got older sisters at home. 
They hated to have me leave. But I looked at it 



30 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

this way : If I was ever going to sea — and I was 
— I could n't get such another captain as Cap- 
tain Jenness, nor such another crew ; all the men 
from down our way ; and / don't mind the second 
mate's jokes much. He don't mean anything by 
them ; likes to plague, that 's all. He 's a first-rate 
sailor." 

Lydia was kneeling before one of the trunks, and 
the boy was stooping over it, with a hand on either 
knee. She had drawn out her only black silk dress, 
and was finding it rather crumpled. " I should n't 
have thought it would have got so much jammed, 
coming fifty miles," she soliloquized. " But they 
seemed to take a pleasure in seeing how much they 
could bang the trunks." She rose to her feet and 
shook out the dress, and drew the skirt several times 
over her left arm. 

The boy's eyes glistened. " Goodness I " he said. 
*' Just new, ain't it ? Going to wear it any on 
board?" 

" Sundays, perhaps," answered Lydia thought- 
fully, still smoothing and shaping the dress, which 
she regarded at arm's-length, from time to time, 
with her head aslant. 

"I suppose it's the latest style?" pursued the 
boy. 

" Yes, it is," said Lydia. " We sent to Boston 
for the pattern. I hate to pack it into one of those 
drawers," she mused, 

"You needn't," replied Thomas. "There's a 
whole row of hooks." 



THE LADY OF THE ABOOSTOOK. 81 

** I want to know I " cried Lydia. She followed 
Thomas into her state-room. " Well, well I They 
do seem to have thought of everything I " 

" I should say so," exulted the boy. " Look 
here I " He showed her a little niche near the head 
of the b^rth strongly framed with glass, in which a 
lamp was made fast. " Light up, you know, when 
you want to read, or feel kind of lonesome." Lydia 
clasped her hands in pleasure and amaze. '* Oh, I 
tell you Captain Jenness meant to have things about 
right. The other state-rooms don't begin to come 
up to this." He dashed out in his zeal, and opened 
their doors, that she might triumph in the superi- 
ority of her accommodations without delay. These 
rooms were cramped together on one side ; Lydia's 
was in a comparatively ample comer by itself. 

She went on unpacking her trunk, and the boy 
again took his place near her, in the same attitude 
as before. '' I tell you," he said, " I shall like to 
see you with that silk on. Have you got any other 
nice ones ? " 

"No; only this I'm wearing," answered Lydia, 
half amused and half hpnest in her sympathy with 
his ardor about her finery. " They said not to bring 
many clothes ; they would be cheaper over there." 
She had now reached the bottom of her trunk. She 
knew by the clock that her grandfather could hardly 
have left the city on his journey home, but the in- 
terval of time since she had parted with him seemed 
vast. It was as if she had started to Boston in a 



32 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

former life ; the histoiy of the choosing and cutting 
and making of these clothes was like a dream of 
preexistence. Sh6 had never had so many things 
new at once, and it had been a great outlay , but 
her aunt Maria had made the money go as far as 
possible, and had spent it with that native taste, that 
genius for dress, which sometimes strikes the summer 
boarder in the sempstresses of the New England hills. 
Miss Latham's gift was quaintly unrelated to her- 
self. In dress, as in person and manner, she was 
uncompromisingly plain and stiff. All the more 
lavishly, therefore, had it been devoted to the grace 
and beauty of her sister's child, who, ever since she 
came to find a home in her grandfather's house, had 
been more stylishly dressed than any other girl in 
the village. The summer boarders, whom the keen 
eye of Miss Latham studied with unerring sense of 
the best new effects in costume, wondered at Lydia's 
elegance, as she sat beside her aunt in the family 
pew, a triumph of that grim artist's skill. Lydia 
knew that she was well dressed, but she knew that 
after all she was only the expression of her aunt's in- 
spirations. Her own gift was of another sort. Her 
father was a music-teacher, whose failing health had 
obliged him to give up his profession, and who had 
taken the traveling agency of a parlor organ manu- 
factory for the sake of the out-door life. His busi- 
ness had brought him to South Bradfield, where he 
sold an organ to Deacon Latham's church, and fell 
in love with his younger daughter. He died a few 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 33 

years after his marriage, of an ancestral consumption, 
his sole heritage from the good New England stock of 
which he came. His skill as a pianist, which was con- 
siderable, had not descended to his daughter, but 
her mother had bequeathed her a peculiarly rich and 
flexible voice, with a joy in singing which was as 
yet a passion little affected by culture. It was this 
voice which, when Lydia rose to join in the terrible 
hymning of the congregation at South Bradfield, took 
the thoughts of people off her style and beauty ; and 
it was this which enchanted her father's sister when, 
the summer before the date of which we write, that 
lady had come to America on a brief visit, and heard 
Lydia sing at her parlor organ in the old homestead. 
Mrs. Erwin had lived many years abroad, chiefly in 
Italy, for the sake of the climate. She was of dedi- 
cate health, and constantly threatened by the he- 
reditary disease that had left her the last of her gen- 
eration, and she had the fastidiousness of an invalid. 
She was full of generous impulses which she mistook 
for virtues; but the presence of some object at once 
charming and worthy was necessary to rouse these 
impulses. She had been prosperously married when 
very young, and as a pretty American widow she 
had wedded in second marriage at Naples one of those 
Englishmen who have money enough to live at ease 
in Latin countries; he was very fond of her, and 
petted her. Having no children she might long be- 
fore have thought definitely of poor Henry's little 
girl, as she called Lydia but she had lived very 



84 THE LADY OF THE ABOOSTOOK. 

comfortably indefinite in regard to her ever since 
the father's death. Now and then she had sent the 
child a handsome present or a sum of money. She 
had it on her conscience not to let her be wholly a 
burden to her grandfather ; but often her conscience 
drowsed. When she came to South Bradfield, she 
won the hearts of the simple family, which had 
been rather hardened against her, and she professed 
an enthusiasm for Lydia. She called her pretty 
names in Italian, which she did not pronounce 
well ; she babbled a great deal about what ought 
to be done for her, and went away without doing 
anything; so that when a letter finally came, di- 
recting Lydia to be sent out to her in Venice, they 
were all surprised, in the disappointment to which 
they had resigned themselves. 

Mrs. Erwin wrote an epistolary style exasperat- 
ingly vacuous and diffuse, and, like many women of 
that sort, she used pencil instead of ink, always 
apologizing for it as due now to her weak eyes, and 
now to her weak wrist, and again to her not being 
able to find the ink. Her hand was full of foolish 
curves and dashes, and there were no spaces be- 
tween the words at times. Under these conditions 
it was no light labor to get at her meaning ; but 
the sum of her letter was that she wished Lydia to 
come out to her at once, and she suggested that, as 
khey could have few opportunities or none to send 
her with people going to Europe, they had better 
iet her come the whole way by sea. Mrs. Erwin 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 35 

remembered — in the space of a page and a half — 
that nothing had ever done her so much good as a 
loDg sea voyage, and it would be excellent for 
Lydia, who, though she looked so strong, probably 
needed all the bracing up she could get. She had 
made inquiries, — or, what was the same thing, Mr. 
Erwin had, for her, — and she found that vessels 
from American ports seldom came to Venice ; but 
they often came to Trieste, which was only a few 
hours away ; and if Mr. Latham would get Lydia 
a ship for Trieste at Boston, she could come very 
safely and comfortably in a few weeks. She gave 
the name of a Boston house engaged in the Medi- 
terranean trade to which Mr. Latham could apply 
for passage ; if they were not sending any ship 
themselves, they could probably recommend one to 
him. 

This was what happened when Deacon Latham 
called at their oflBce a few days after Mrs. Erwin's 
letter came. They directed him to the firm dis- 
patching the Aroostook, and Captain Jenness was 
at their place when the deacon appeared there. 
The captain took cordial possession of the old man 
at once, and carried him down to the wharf to look 
at the ship and her accommodations. Tlie matter 
was quickly settled between them. At that time 
Captain Jenness did not know but he might have 
other passengers out ; at any rate, he would look 
^fter the little girl (as Deacon Latham always said 
:n speaking of Lydia) the same as if she were his 
9wn child. 



36 THK LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

Lydia knelt before her trunk, thinking of the re 
mote events, the extinct associations of a few min- 
utes and hours and days ago ; she held some cuffs 
and collars in her hand, and something that her 
aunt Maria had said recurred to her. She looked 
up into the intensely interested face of the boy, 
and then laughed, bowing her forehead on the back 
of the hand that held these bits of linen. 

The boy blushed. " What are you laughing 
at?" he asked, half piteously, half indignantly, 
like a boy used to being badgered.* 

" Oh, nothing," said Lydia. " My aunt told me 
if any of these things should happen to want doing 
up, I had better get the stewardess to help me." 
She looked at the boy in a dreadfully teasing way, 
softly biting her lip. 

" Oh, if you 're going to begin that way ! " he 
cried in aflBiction. 

" I 'm not," she answered, promptly. " I like 
boys. I Ve taught school two winters, and I like 
boys first-rate." 

Thomas was impersonally interested again. 
" Time ! You taught school ? " 

" Why not ? " 

" You look pretty young for a school-teacher 1 " 

" Now you 're making fun of w^," said Lydia, 
astutely. 

The boy thought he must have been, and was 
consoled. " Well, you began it," he said. 

'' I ought n't to have done so," she replied with 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 87 

humility ; " and I won't any more. There I " she 
said, " I 'na not going to open my bag now. Yoa 
can take away the trunk when you want, Thomas." 
"Yes, ma'am," said the boy. The idea of a 
school-raistress was perhaps beginning to awe him 
a little. " Put your bag in your state-room first." 
He did this, and when he came back from carrying 
away her trunk he began to set the table. It was 
a pretty table, when set, and made the little cabin 
much cosier. When the boy brought the dishes 
from the cook's galley, it was a barbarously abun- 
dant table. There was cold boiled ham, ham and 
eggs, fried fish, baked potatoes, buttered toast, tea, 
cake, pickles, and watermelon ; nothing was want- 
ing. " I tell you," said Thomas, noticing Lydia's 
admiration, " the captain lives well lay-days." 
Lay-days ? " echoed Lydia. 
The days we 're in port," the boy explained. 
" Well, I should think as much I " §he ate with 
the hunger that tranquillity bestows upon youth 
after the swift succession of strange events, and the 
conflict of many emotions. The'^captain had not 
returned in time, and she ate alone. 

After a while she ventured to the top of the 
gangway stairs, and stood there, looking at the 
novel sights of the harbor, in the red sunset light, 
which rose slowly from the hulls and lower spars of 
the shipping, and kindled the tips of the high- 
shooting masts with a quickly fading splendor. A 
delicate flush responded in the east, and rose to 



6« 



88 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

ff 

meet the denser crimson of the west ; a few clouds, 
incomparably light and diaphanous, bathed them- 
selves in the glow. It was a summer sunset, por- 
tending for the land a morrow of great heat. But 
cool airs crept along the water, and the ferry-boats, 
thrust shuttle wise back and forth between either 
shore, made a refreshing sound as they crushed a 
broad course to foam with their paddles. People 
were pulling about in small boats ; from some the 
gay cries and laughter of young girls struck sharply 
along the tide. The noise of the quiescent city 
came off in a sort of dull moan. The lamps be- 
gan to twinkle in the windows and the streets on 
shore ; the lanterns of the ships at anchor in the 
stream showed redder and redder as the twilight 
fell. The homesickness began to mount from 
Lydia's heart in a choking lump to her throat; 
for one must be very happy to endure the sights 
and sounds of the summer evening anywhere. She 
had to shield her eyes from the brilliancy of the 
kerosene when she went below into the cabin. 






IV. 

Lydia did not know when the captain came on 
board. Once, talking in the cabin made itself felt 
through her dreams, but the dense sleep of weary 
youth closed over her again, and she did not fairly 
wake till morning. Then she thought she heard 
tbe crowing of a cock and the cackle of hens, and 
fancied herself in her room at home ; the illusion 
passed with a pang. The ship was moving, with a 
tug at her side, the violent respirations of which 
were mingled with the sound of the swift rush of 
the vessels through the water, the noise of feet on 
the deck, and of orders hoarsely shouted. 

The girl came out into the cabin, where Thomas 
was already busy with the breakfast table, and 
climbed to the deck. It was four o'clock of the 
summer's morning ; the sun had not yet reddened 
the east, but the stars were extinct, or glimmered 
faint points immeasurably withdrawn in the vast 
gray of the sky. At that hour there is a hovering 
dimness over all, but the light on things near at 
hand is wonderfully keen and clear, and the air has 
an intense yet delicate freshness that seems to 
breathe from the remotest spaces of the universe, 
— a waft from distances beyond the sun. On the 
land the leaves and grass are soaked with dew; 



40 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

the densely interwoven songs of the birds are like a 
fabric that you might see and touch. But here, 
save for the immediate noises on the ship, which 
had already left her anchorage far behind, the 
shouting of the tug's escape-pipes, and the huge, 
swirling gushes from her powerful wheel, a sort of 
spectacular silence prevailed, and the sounds were 
like a part of this silence. Here and there a small 
fishing schooner came lagging slowly in, as if be- 
lated, with scarce wind enough to fill her sails; 
now and then they met a steamboat, towering 
white and high, a many-latticed bulk, with no one 
to be seen on board but the pilot at his wheel, 
and a few sleepy passengers on the forward prom- 
enade. The city, so beautiful and stately from 
the bay, was dropping, and sinking away behind. 
They passed green islands, some of which were 
fortified : the black guns looked out over the neatly 
shaven glacis ; the sentinel paced the rampart. 

" Well, well I " shouted Captain Jenness, catch- 
ing sight of Lydia where she lingered at the cabin 
door. "You are an early bird. Glad to see you 
up ! Hope you rested well I Saw your grand- 
father off all right, and kept him from taking the 
wrong train with my own hand. He 's terribly ex- 
citable. Well, I suppose I shall be just so, at his 
age. Here I " The captain caught up a stool and 
set it near the bulwark for her. " There I You 
make yourself comfortable wherever you like. 
You 're at home, you know." He was off again in 



THE LADY OF THE ABOOSTOOK. 41 

a moment. Lydia cast her eye over at the tug. 
On the deck, near the pilot-house, stood the young 
man who had stopped the afternoon before, while 
she sat at the warehouse door, and asked her grand- 
father if she were not ill. At his feet was a sub- 
stantial yalise, and oyer his arm hung a shawl. He 
was smoking, and seated near hun, on another 
Yalise, was his companion of the day before, also 
smoking. In the instant that Lydia caught sight 
of them, she perceived that they both recognized 
her and exchanged, as it were, a start of surprise. 
But they remained as before, except that he who 
was seated drew out a fresh cigarette, and without 
looking up reached to the other for a light. They 
were both men of good height, and they looked 
fresh and strong, with something very alert in their 
slight movements, — sudden turns of the head and 
brisk nods, which were not nervously quick. Lydia 
wondered at their presence there in an ignorance 
which could not even conjecture. She knew too 
little to know that they could not have any desti- 
nation on the tug, and that they would not be mak- 
ing a pleasure-excursion at that hour in the morn- 
ing. Their having their valises with them deepened 
the mystery, which was not solved till the tug's 
endues fell silent, and at an unnoticed order a 
space in the bulwark not far from Lydia was 
opened and steps were let down the side of the 
I ship. Then the young men, who had remained, to 

^ all appearance, perfectly unconcerned, caught up 



42 THE LADT OF THE ABOOSTOOK. 

their valises and climbed to the deck of the Aroos- 
took. They did not give her more than a glance 
out of the corners of their eyes, but the surprise of 
their coming on board was so great a shock that 
she did not observe that the tug, casting loose from 
the ship, was describing a curt and foamy semi- 
circle for her return to the city, and that the 
Aroostook, with a cloud of snowy canvas filling 
overhead, was moving over the level sea with the 
light ease of a bird that half swims, half flies, along 
the water. A sudden dismay, which was somehow 
not fear so much as an overpowering sense of isola- 
tion, fell upon the girl. She caught at Thomas, 
going forward with some dishes in his hand, with a 
pathetic appeal. 

" Where are you going, Thomas ? " 

" I 'm going to the cook's galley to help dish up 
the breakfast." 

"What 's the cook's galley ? " 

" Don't you know ? The kitchen." 

" Let me go with you. I should like to see the 
kitchen." She trembled with eagerness. Arrived 
at the door of the narrow passage that ran across 
the deck aft of the forecastle, she looked in and 
saw, amid a haze of frying and broiling, the short, 
stocky figure of a negro, bow-legged, and unnatu- 
rally erect from the waist up. At sight of Lydia, 
he made a respectful duck forward with his un- 
couth body. "Why, are you the cook?" she al- 
most screamed in response to this obeisance. 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOR. 43 

" Yes, miss, " said the man, humbly, with a turn 
of the pleading black eyes of the negro. 

Lydia grew more peremptory : " Why — why — 
I thought the cook was a woman ! " 

" Very sorry, miss," began the negro, with a 
deprecatory smile, in a slow, mild voice. 

Thomas burst into a boy's yelling laugh : " Well, 
if that ain't the best joke on Gabriel! He '11, never 
hear the last of it when I tell it to the second 
ofl&cer I " 

" Thomas I " cried Lydia, terribly, " you shall 
not ! " She stamped her foot. " Do you hear 
me?" 

The boy checked his laugh abruptly. "Yes, 
ma' ana," he said submissively. 

"Well, thenl" returned Lydia. She stalked 
proudly back to the cabin gangway, and descending 
shut herself into her state-room. 



V. 

A FEW hours later Deacon Latham came into the 
house with a milk-pan full of pease. He set this 
down on one end of the kitchen table, with his straw 
hat beside it, and then took a chair at the other end 
and fell into the attitude of the day before, when he 
sat in the parlor with Lydia and Miss Maria waiting 
for the stage ; his mouth was puckered to a whistle, 
and his fingers were held above the board in act to 
drub it. Miss Maria turned the pease out on the 
table, and took the pan into her lap. She shelled at 
the pease in silence, till the sound of their pelting, 
as they were dropped on the tin, was lost in their 
multitude ; then she said, with a sharp, querulous, 
pathetic impatience, " Well, father, I suppose 
you 're thinkin' about Lyddy." 

" Yes, Maria, I be," returned her father, with 
uncommon plumpness, as if here now were some- 
thing he had made up his mind to stand to. " I 
been thinkin' that Lyddy's a woman grown, as 
you may say." 

" Yes," admitted Miss Maria, " she 's a woman, 
as far forth as that goes. What put it into your 
head?" 

" Well, I d' know as I know. But it 's just like 
this : I got to thinkin' whether she might n't get 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 45 

to feelin' rather lonely on the voyage, without any 
other woman to talk to." 

" I guess," said Miss Maria, tranquilly, " she 's 
goin' to feel lonely enough at times, any way, poor 
thing ! But I told her if she wanted advice or help 
about anything just to go to the stewardess. Tliat 
Mrs. Bland that spent the summer at the Parkers' 
last year was always tellin' how they went to the 
stewardess for most everything, and she give her 
five dollars in gold when they got into Boston. I 
should n't want Lyddy should give so much as that, 
but I should want she should give something, as 
long 's it 's the custom." 

" They don't have 'em on sailin' vessels, Captain 
Jenness said; they only have 'em on steamers," 
said Deacon Latham. 

" Have what ? " asked Miss Maria, sharply. 

" Stewardesses. They 've got a cabin-boy." 

Miss Maria desisted a moment from her work ; 
then she answered, with a gruff shortness peculiar 
to her, " Well, then, she can go to the cook, I sup- 
pose. It would n't matter which she went to, I 
presume." 

Deacon Latham looked lip with the air of confess- 
ing to sin before the whole congregation. " The 
cook 's a man, — a black man," he said. 

Miss Maria dropped a handful of pods into the 
pan, and sent a handful of peas rattling across the 
table on to the floor. ''Well, who in Time" — 
the expression was strong, but she used it without 



46 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTODK. 

hesitation, and was never known to repent it 
*' will she go to, then ? " 

" I declare for 't," said her father, " I don't 
know. I d' know as I ever thought it out fairly 
before ; but just now when I was pickin' the pease 
for you, my mind got to dwellin' on Lyddy, and 
then it come to me all at once : there she was, the 
only one among a whole shipf ul, and I — I did n't 
know but what she might think it rather of a 
strange position for her." 

" Oh ! " exclaimed Miss Maria, petulantly. " I 
guess Lyddy 'd know how to conduct herself wher- 
ever she was ; she 's a born lady, if ever there was 
one. But what I think is " — Miss Maria paused, 
and did not say what she thought ; but it was evi- 
dently not the social aspect of the matter which 
was uppermost in her mind. In fact, she had 
never been at all afraid of men, whom she regarded 
as a more inefficient and feebler-minded kind of 
women. 

" The only thing 't makes me feel easier is what 
the captain said about the young men," said Dea- 
con Latham. 

" What young men ? " asked Miss Maria. 

" Why, I told you about 'em I " retorted the old 
man, with some exasperation. 

" You told me about two young men that stopped 
on the wharf and pitied Lyddy's worn-out looks." 

" Did n't I tell you the rest ? I declare for 't, I 
don't believe I did ; I be'n so put about. Well, as 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 47 

we was drivin' up to the depot, we met the same 
two young men, and the captain asked 'em, *Are 
you goin' or not a-goin' ?' — just that way; and 
tliey^said, 'We're goin'.' And he said, 'When 
you comin' aboard ? ' and he told 'em he was goin' 
to haul out this mornin' at three o'clock. And 
they asked what tug, and he told 'em, and they 
fixed it up between 'em all then that they was to 
come aboard from the tug, when she 'd got the ship 
outside ; and that 's what I suppose they did. The 
captain he said to me he had n't mentioned it be- 
fore, because he wa' n't sure 't they 'd go till that 
minute. He give 'em a first-rate of a character." 

Miss Maria said nothing for a long while. The 
subject seemed one with which she did not feel 
herself able to grapple. She looked all about the 
kitchen for inspiration, and even cast a searching 
glance into the wood-shed. Suddenly she jumped 
from her chair, and ran to the open window : " Mr. 
Goodlow ! Mr. Goodlow ! I wish you 'd come in 
here a minute." 

She hurried to meet the minister at the front 
door, her father lagging after her with the infantile 
walk of an old man. 

Mr. Goodlow took off his straw hat as he mounted 
the stone step to the threshold, and said good- 
morning ; they did not shake hands. He wore a 
black alpaca coat, and waistcoat of farmer's satin ; 
his hat was dark straw, like Deacon Latham's, but 
it was low-crowned, and a line of ornamental open- 
work ran round it near the top. 



48 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

" Come into the settin'-room," said Miss Maria. 
" It 's cooler, in there." She lost no time in laying 
the case before the minister. She ended by say- 
ing, " Father, he don't feel just right about itf and 
I d' know as I 'm quite clear in my own mind." 

The minister considered a while in silence before 
he said, " I think Lydia's influence upon those 
around her will be beneficial, whatever her situa- 
tion in life may be." 

" There, father ! " cried Miss Maria, in reproach- 
ful relief. 

" You 're right, Maria, you 're right I " assented 
the old man, and they both waited for the minister 
to continue. 

" I rejoiced with you," he said, " when this op- 
portunity for Lydia's improvement offered, and I 
am not disposed to feel anxious as to the ways and 
means. Lydia is no fool. I have observed in her a 
dignity, a sort of authority, very remarkable in one 
of her years." 

" I guess the boys at the school down to the 
Mill Village found out she had authority enough," 
said Miss Maria, promptly materializing the idea. 

"Precisely," said Mr. Goodlow. 

" That 's what I told father, in the first place," 
said Miss Maria. " I guess Lyddy 'd know how to 
conduct herself wherever she was, — just the words 
I used." 

'' I don't deny it, Maria, I don't deny it," 
shrilly piped the old man. " I ain't afraid of any 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 49 

harm comin' to Lyddy any more 'n what you be. 
But what I said was, Wouldn't she feel kind of 
strange, sort of lost, as you may say, among so 
many, and she the only one ? " 

*' She will know how to adapt herself to circum- 
stances," said Mr. Goodlow. "I was conversing 
last summer with that Mrs. Bland who boarded at 
Mr. Parker's, and she told me that girls in Europe 
are brought up with no habits of self-reliance what- 
ever, and that young ladies are never seen on the 
streets alone in France and Italy." 

" Don't you think," asked Miss Maria, hesitat- 
ing to accept this ridiculous statement, " that Mrs. 
Bland exaggerated some ? " 

" She talked a great deal," admitted Mr. Good- 
low. " I should be sorry if Lydia ever lost any- 
thing of that native confidence of hers in her own 
judgment, and her ability to take care of herself 
under any circumstances, and I do not think she 
will. She never seemed conceited to me, but she 
was the most self-reliant girl I ever saw." 

" You 've hit it there, Mr. Goodlow. Such a 
spirit as she always had 1 " sighed Miss Maria. 
" It was just so from the first. It used to go to my 
heart to see that little thing lookin' after herself, 
every way, and not askin' anybody's help, but just 
as quiet and proud about it I She 's her mother, 
all over. And yest'day, when she set here waitin' 
for the stage, and it did seem as if I should have 
to give up, hearin' her sob, sob, sob, — why, Mr. 



50 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

Goodlow, she had n't any more idea of backin' out 
than — than " — Miss Maria relinquished the search 
for a comparison, and went into another room for a 
handkerchief. " I don 't believe she cared over and 
above about goin', from the start," said Miss Ma- 
ria, returning, " but when once she 'd made up her 
mind to it, there she was. I d' know as she took 
much of a fancy to her aunt, but you could n't told 
from anything that Lyddy said. Now, if I have 
anything on my mind, I have to blat it right out, 
as you may say ; I can't seem to bear it a minute ; 
but Lyddy 's different. Well," concluded Miss Ma- 
ria, " I guess there ain't goin' to any harm come 
to her. But it did give me a kind of start, first off, 
when father up and got to feelin' sort of bad about 
it. I d' know as I should thought much about it, if 
he had n't seemed to. I d' know as I should ever 
thought about anything except her not havin' any 
one to advise with about her clothes. It's the 
only thing she ain't handy with : she won't know 
what to wear. I 'm afraid she '11 spoil her silk. 
I d' know but what father 's been hasty in not look- 
in' into things carefuUer first. He most always does 
repent afterwards." 

" Could n't repent beforehand!" retorted Deacon 
Latham. " And I tell you, Maria, I never saw a 
much finer man than Captain Jenness; and the 
cabin 's everything I said it was, and more. Lyddy 
reg'larly went off over it ; 'n' I guess, as Mr. Good- 
low says, she '11 influence 'em for good. Don't you 



THE LADY OF THE ABOOSTOOK. 61 

fret about her clothes any. You fitted her out in 
apple-pie order, and she '11 soon be there. 'T ain't 
but a little ways to Try-East, any way, to what it 
is some of them India voyages, Captain Jenness 
said. He had his own daughters out the last voy- 
age ; 'n' I guess he can tell Lyddy when it 's 
weather to wear her silk. I d' koow as I 'd better 
said anything about what I was thinkin'. I don't 
want to be noways rash, and yet I thought I 
could n't be too partic'lar." 

For a silent moment Miss Maria looked sourly 
uncertain as to the usefulness of scruples that came 
so long after the fact. Then she said abruptly 
to Mr. Goodlow, "Was it you or Mr. Baldwin 
preached Mirandy Holcomb's fune'l sermon ? " 



VI. 

One of the advantages of the negative part as- 
signed to women in life is that they are seldom 
forced to commit themselves. They can, if they 
choose, remain perfectly passive while a great many 
things take place in regard to them ; tbey need not 
account for what they do not do. From time, to 
time a man must show his hand, but save for one 
supreme exigency a woman need never show hers. 
She moves in mystery as long as she likes ; and 
mere reticence in her, if she is young and fair, in- 
terprets itself as good sense and good taste. 

Lydia was, by convention as well as by instinct, 
mistress of the situation when she came out to 
breakfast, and confronted the young men again 
with collected nerves, and a reserve which was per- 
haps a little too proud. The captain was there to 
introduce them, and presented first Mr. Dunham, 
the gentleman who had spoken to her grandfather 
on the wharf, and then Mr. Stamford, his friend 
and senior by some four or five years. They were 
both of ihe fair New England complexion ; but 
Dunham's eyes were blue, and Staniford's dark 
gray. Their mustaches were blonde, but Dun- 
ham's curled jauntily outward at the comers, and 
his light hair waved over either temple from the 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 68 

parting in the middle. Staniford's mustache waa 
cut short ; his hair was clipped tight to his shapely 
head, and not parted at all ; he had a slightly aqui- 
line nose, with sensitive nostrils, showing the carti- 
lage ; his face was darkly freckled. They were both 
handsome fellows, and fittingly dressed in rough 
blue, which they wore like men with the habit of 
good clothes; they made Lydia'such bows as she 
had never seen before. Then the Captain intro- 
duced Mr. Watterson, the first officer, to all, and 
sat down, saying to Thomas, with a sort of guilty 
and embarrassed growl, " Ain't he but yet ? Well, 
we won't wait," and with but little change of tone 
asked a blessing ; for Captain Jenness in his way 
was a religious man. 

There was a sixth plate laid, but the captain 
made no further mention of the person who was not 
out yet till shortly after the coffee was poured, when 
the absentee appeared, hastily closing his state-room - 
door behind him, and then waiting on foot, with a 
half-impudent, half-intimidated air, while Captain 
Jenness, with a sort of elaborate repressiveness, 
presented him as Mr. Hicks. He was a short and 
slight young man, with a small sandy mustache 
curling tightly in over his lip, floating reddish-blue 
eyes, and a deep dimple in his weak, slightly re- 
treating chin. He had an air at once amiable and 
baddish,* with an expression, curiously blended, of 
monkey-like humor and spaniel-like apprehensive- 
uess. He did not look well, and till he had swal 



54 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

lowed two cups of coffee his hand shook. The cap- 
tain watched him furtively from under his bushy 
eyebrows, and was evidently troubled and preoccu- 
pied, addressing a word now and then to Mr. Wat- 
terson, who, by virtue of what was apparently the 
ship's discipline, spoke only when he was spoken 
to, and then answered with prompt acquiescence. 
Dunham and Staniford exchanged not so much a 
glance as a consciousness in regard to him, which 
seemed to recognize and class him. They talked 
to each other, and sometimes to the captain. Once 
they spoke to Lydia. Mr. Dunham, for example, 
said, " Miss — ah — Blood, don't you think we are 
uncommonly fortunate in having such lovely weather 
for a start-off ? " 

" I don't know," said Lydia. 

Mr. Dunham arrested himself in the use of his 
fork. " I beg your pardon ? " he smiled. 

It seemed to be a question, and after a moment's 
doubt Lydia answered, "I didn't know it was 
strange to have fine weather at the start." 

" Oh, but I can assure you it is," said Dunham, 
with a certain lady-like sweetness of manner which 
he had. " According to precedent, we ought to be 
all deathly seasick." 

"Not at this time of year," said Captain Jen- 
tiess. 

" Not at this time of year^^ repeated Mr. Wat- 
terson, as if the remark were an order to the crew. 

Dunham referred the matter with a look to his 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 66 

friend, who refused to take part in it, and then he 
let it drop. But presently Staniford himself at- 
tempted the civility of some conversation with 
Lydia. He asked her gravely, and somewhat se- 
verely, if she had suffered much from the heat of 
the day before. 

" Yes," said Lydia, " it was very hot." 

" I 'm told it was the hottest day of the summer, 
so far," continued Staniford, with the same sever- 
ity. 

" I want to know ! " cried Lydia. 

The young man did not say anything more. 

As Dunham lit his cigar at Staniford's on deck, 
the former said significantly, " What a very Amer- 
ican thing ! " 

" What a bore ! " answered the other. 

Dunham had never been abroad, as one might 
imagine from his calling Lydia's presence a very 
American thing, but he had always consorted with 
people who had lived in Europe ; he read the Re- 
vue des Deux Mondes habitually, and the London 
weekly newspapers, and this gave him the foreign 
stand-point from which he was fond of viewing his 
native world. " It 's incredible," he added. " Who 
in the world can she be ? " 

"Oh, /don't know," returned Staniford, with a 
cold disgust. " I should object to the society of 
such a young person for a month or six weeks un- 
der the most favorable circumstances, and with fre- 
quent respites ; but to be imprisoned on the same 



56 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

ship with her, and to have her on one's mind and 
in one's way the whole time, is more than I bar- 
gained for. Captain Jenness should have told us ; 
though I suppose he thought that if she could stand 
it, we might. There 's that point of view. But it 
takes all ease and comfort out of the prospect. 
Here comes that blackguard." Staniford turned, 
his back towards Mr. Hicks, who was approaching, 
but Dunham could not quite do this, though he 
waited for the other to speak first. 

" Will you — would you oblige me with a light ? " 
Mr. Hicks asked, taking a cigar from his case. 

" Certainly," said Dunham, with the comradery 
of the smoker. 

Mr. Hicks seemed to gather courage from his 
cigar. " You did n't expect to find a lady passen- 
ger on board, did you ? " His poor disagreeable 
little face was lit up with unpleasant enjoyment of 
the anomaly. Dunham hesitated for an answer. 

" One never can know what one's fellow passen- 
gers are going to be," said Staniford, turning about, 
and looking not at Mr. Hicks's face, but his feet, 
with an effect of being, upon the whole, disap- 
pointed not to find them cloven. He added, to put 
the man down rather than from an exact belief in 
his own suggestion, " She 's probably some relation 
of the captain's." 

"Why, that's the joke of it," said Hicks, flut- 
tered with his superior knowledge. " I 've been 
pumping the cabin-boy, and he says the captain 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 67 

never saw her till yesterday. She 's an up-country 
Bchool-marm, and she came do^vn here with her 
grandfather yesterday. She 's going out to meet 
friends of hers in Venice." The little man pulled 
at his cigar, and coughed and chuckled, and waited 
confidently for the impression. 

" Dunham," said Staniford, " did I hand you that 
sketch-block of mine to put in your bag, when we 
were packing last night ? " 

" Yes, I 've got it." 

" I 'm glad of that. Did you see Murray yester- 
day?" 

" No ; he was at Cambridge." 
» "I thought he was to have met you at Parker's." 
The conversation no longer included Mr. Hicks or 
the subject he had introduced ; after a moment's 
hesitation, he walked away to another part of the 
ship. As soon as he was beyond ear-shot, Staniford 
again spoke : " Dunham, this girl is plainly one of 
those cases of supernatural innocence, on the part 
of herself and her friends, which, as you suggested, 
wouldn't occur ambng any other people in the 
world but ours." 

" You 're a good fellow, Staniford I " cried Dun- 
ham. 

"Not at all. I call myself simply a human 
being, with the elemental instincts of a gentleman, 
as far as concerns this matter. The girl has been 
placed in a position which could be made very pain- 
ful to her. It seems to me it's our part to prevent 



68 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

it from beiDg so. I doubt if she finds it at all 
anomalous, and if we choose she need never do so 
till after we 've parted with her. I fancy we can 
preserve her unconsciousness intact." 

" Staniford, this is like you," said his friend, with 
glist(*ning eyes. "I had some wild notion of the 
kind myself, but I 'm so glad you spoke of it first." 

" Well, never mind," responded Staniford. " We 
must make her feel that there is nothing irregular 
or uncommon in her being here as she is. I don't 
know how the matter 's to be managed, exactly ; it 
must be a negative benevolence for the most part ; 
but it can be done. The first thing is to cow that 
nuisance yonder. Pumping the cabin-boy ! The^ 
little sot ! Look here, Dunham ; it 's such a satis- 
faction to me to think of putting that fellow under 
foot that I '11 leave you all the credit of saving the 
young lady's feelings. I should like to begin stamp- 
ing on him at once." 

^' I think you have made a beginning already. I 
confess I wish you had n't such heavy nails in your 
boots ! " 

" Oh, they '11 do him good, confound him I " said 
Staniford. 

" I should have liked it better if her name had n't 
been Blood," remarked Dunham, presently. 

" It does n't matter what a girl's surname is. Be- 
sides, Blood is very frequent in some parts of the 
State." 

"She's very pretty, isn't she?" Dunham sug- 
gested. 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 59 

"Oh, pretty enough, yes," replied Staniford. 
"Nothing is so common as the pretty girl of our 
nation. Her beauty is part of the general tiresome- 
ness of the whole situation," 

" Don't you think," ventured his friend, further, 
" that she has rather a lady-like air ? " 

"She wanted to know," said Staniford, with a 
laugh. 

Dunham was silent a while before he asked, 
" What do you suppose her first name is ? " 

" Jerusha, probably." 

" Oh, impossible ! " 

" Well, then, — Lurella. You have no idea of 
the grotesqueness of these people's minds. I used 
to see a gi*eat deal of their intimate life when I went 
on my tramps, and chanced it among them, for bed 
and board, wherever I happened to be. We culti- 
vated Yankees and the raw material seem hardly of 
the same race. Where the Puritanism has gone out 
of the people in spots, there 's the rankest growth 
of all sorts of crazy heresies, and the old scriptural 
nomenclature has given place to something com- 
pounded of the fancifulness of story-pnper romance 
and the gibberish of spiritualism. They make up 
their names, sometimes, and call a child by what 
sounds pretty to them. I wonder how the captain 
picked up that scoundrel." 

The turn of Staniford's thought to Hicks was 
suggested by the appearance of Captain Jenness, 
who now issued from the cabin gangway, and came 



60 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

toward them with the shadow of unwonted trouble 
in his face. The captain, too, was smoking. 

" Well, gentlemen," he began, with the obvious 
indirectness of a man not used to diplomacy, " how 
do you like your accommodations ? " 

Staniford silently acquiesced in Dunham's reply 
that they found them excellent. "But you don't 
mean to say," Dunham added, " that you 're going 
to give us beefsteak and all the vegetables of the 
season the whole way over?" 

" No," said the captain ; " we shall put you on 
sea-fare soon enough. But you '11 like it. You 
don't want the same things at sea that you do on 
shore ; your appetite chops round into a different 
quarter altogether, and you want salt beef; but 
you '11 get it good. Your room 's pretty snug," he 
suggested. 

" Oh, it 's big enough," said Staniford, to whom 
he had turned as perhaps more in authority than 
Dunham. " While we 're well we only sleep in it, 
and if we 're seasick it does n't matter where we 



are. 



The captain knocked the ash from his cigar with 
the tip of his fat little finger, and looked down, 
" I was in hopes I could have let you had a room 
apiece, but I had another passenger jumped on me 
at the last minute. I suppose you see what 's the 
matter with Mr. Hicks ? " He looked up from one 
to another, and they replied with a glance of per- 
fect intelligence. "I don't generally talk my 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 61 

passengers over with one another, but I thought 
I 'd better speak to you about him. I found him 
yesterday evening at my agents', with his father. 
He 's just been on a spree, a regular two weeks' 
tear, and the old gentleman did n't know what to do 
"With him, on shore, any longer. He thought he 'd 
send him to sea a voyage, and see what would come 
of it, and he plead hard with me to take him. I 
did n't want to take him, but he worked away at 
me till I could n't say no. I argued in my own 
mind that he couldn't get anything to drink on 
my ship, and that be 'd behave himself well enough 
as long as he was sober." The captain added rue- 
fully, " He looks worse this morning than he did 
last night. He looks bad. I told the old gentle- 
man that if he got into any trouble at Try-East, or 
any of the ports where we touched, he should n't 
set foot on my ship again. But I guess he '11 keep 
pretty straight. He has n't got any money, for one 
thing." 

Staniford laughed. " He stops drinking for 
obvious reasons, if for no others, like Artemus 
Ward's destitute inebriate. Did you think only 
of us in deciding whether you should take him ? " 

The captain looked up quickly at the young men, 
as if touched in a sore place. " Well, there again 
I didn't seem to get my bearings just right. I 
suppose you mean the young lady ? " Staniford 
motionlessly and silently assented. "Well, she's 
more of a young lady than I thought she was, when 



62 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

her grandfather first come down here and talked of 
sending her over with me. He was always speak- 
ing about his little girl, you know, and I got the 
idea that she was about thirteen, or eleven, may be. 
I thought the child might be some bother on the 
voyage, but thinks I, I 'm used to children, and I 
guess I can manage. Bless your soul I when I first 
see her on the wharf yesterday, it most knocked me 
down ! I never believed she was half so tall, nor 
half so good-looking." Staniford smiled at this 
expression of the captain's despair, but the captain 
did not smile. " Why, she was as pretty as a bird 
Well, there I was. It was no time then to back 
out. The old man would n't 'understood. Besides, 
there was the young lady herself, and she seemed 
so forlorn and helpless that I kind of pitied her. I 
thought, What if it was one of my own girls ? And 
I made up my mind that she should n't know from 
anything I said or did that she was n't just as much 
at home and just as much in place on my ship as 
she would be in my house. I suppose what made 
me feel easier about it, and took the queerness off 
some, was my having my own girls along last voy- 
age. To be sure, it ain't quite the same thing," 
said tlie captain, interrogatively. 

" Not quite," assented Staniford. 

"If there was two of them," said the captain, " I 
don't suppose I should feel so bad about it. But 
chinks I, A lady 's a lady the world over, and a 
gentleman's a gentleman." The captain looked 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 68 

significantly at the young men. " As for that other 
fellow," added Captain Jenness, "if I can't take 
care of him, I think I'd better stop going to sea 
altogether, and go into the coasting trade." 

He resumed his cigar with defiance, and was 
about turning away when Stamford spoke. " Cap- 
tain Jenness, my friend and I had been talking this 
little matter over just before you came up. Will 
you let me say that I'm rather proud of having 
reasoned in much the same direction as yourself ? " 

This was spoken wiih that air which gave Stan« 
iford a peculiar distinction, and made him the de- 
spair and adoration of his friend: it endowed the 
subject with seriousness, and conveyed a sentiment 
of grave and noble sincerity. The captain held 
out a hand to each of the young men, crossing his 
wrists in what seemed a favorite fashion with him. 
"Good!" he cried, heartily. "I thought I knew 
you." 



vn. 

Stantford and Dunham drew stools to the rail, 
and sat down with their cigars after the captain 
left them. The second mate passed by, and cast 
a friendly glance at them ; he had whimsical brown 
eyes that twinkled under his cap-peak, while a 
lurking smile played under his heavy mustache ; 
but he did not speak. Staniford said, there was a 
pleasant fellow, and he should like to sketch him. 
He was only an amateur artist, and he had been 
only an amateur in life otherwise, so far ; but he 
did not pretend to have been anything else. 

" Then you 're not sorry you came, Staniford ? " 
asked Dunham, putting his hand on his friend's 
knee. He characteristically assumed the responsi- 
bility, although the voyage by sailing-vessel rather 
than steamer was their common whim, and it had 
been Staniford's preference that decided them for 
Trieste rather than any nearer port. 

" No, I 'm not sorry, — if you caU it come, al- 
ready. I think a bit of Europe will be a very 
good thing for the present, or as long as I 'm in this 
irresolute mood. If I understand it, Europe is the 
place for American irresolution. When I 've made 
up my mind, I '11 come home again. I still think 
Colorado is the thing, though I have n't abandoned 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 66 

California altogether ; it 's a question of cattle- 
range and sheep-ranch." 

" You '11 decide against both," said Dunham. 

"How would you like West Virginia? They 
cattle-range in West Virginia, too. They may 
sheep-ranch, too, for all I know, — no, that 's in Old 
Virginia. The trouble is that the Virginias, other- 
wise irreproachable, are not paying fields for such 
enterprises. They say that one is a sure thing in 
California, and the other is a sure thing in Col- 
orado. They give you the figures." Staniford lit 
another cigar. 

" But why should n't you stay Where you are, 
Staniford ? You 've money enough left, after all." 

" Yes, money enough for one. But there 's some- 
thing ignoble in living on a small stated income, 
unless you liave some object in view besides living, 
and I have n't, you know. It 's a duty I owe to the 
general frame of things to make more money." 

" If you turned your mind to any one thing, I 'm 
sure you 'd succeed where you are," Dunham urged. 

"That's just the trouble," retorted his friend. 
" I can't turn my mind to any one thing, — I 'm 
too universally gifted. I paint a little, I model a 
little, I play a very little indeed ; I can write a 
book notice. The ladies praise my art, and the 
editors keep my literature a long time before they 
print it. This does n't seem the highest aim of be- 
ing. I have the noble earth-hunger; I must get 
apon the land. That 's why I 've got upon the 

5 



66 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

water." Staniford laughed again, and pulled com- 
fortably at his cigar. "Now, you," he added, after 
a pause, in which Dunham did not reply, " you have 
not had losses ; you. still have everything comfort- 
able about you. l)u hast Alles was Menschen be- 
geJir^ even to the schonsten Aug en of the divine 
Miss Hibbard." 

" Yes, Staniford, that 's it. I hate your going 
out there all alone. Now, if you were taking some 
nice girl with you ! " Dunham said, with a lover's 
fond desire that his friend should be in love, too. 

" To those wilds ? To a redwood shanty in Cali- 
fornia, or a turf hovel in Colorado? What nice 
girl would go ? * I will take some savage woman, 
she shall rear my dusky race.' " 

" I don't like to have you take any risks of de- 
generating," began Dunham. 

" With what you know to be my natural tend- 
encies ? Your prophetic eye prefigures my panta- 
loons in the tops of my boots. Well, there is time 
yet to turn back from the brutality of a patriarchal 
life. You must allow that I 've taken the longest 
way round in going West. In Italy there are many 
chances; and besides, you know, I like to talk." 

It seemed to be an old subject between them, 
and they discussed it languidly, like some abstract 
topic rather than a reality. 

" If you only had some tie to bind you to the 
East, I should feel pretty safe about you," said 
Dunham, presently. 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 67 

" I have you," answered his friend, demurely. 

" Oh, I 'm nothing," said Dunham, with sincer- 
ity. 

" Well, I may form some tie in Italy. Art may 
fall in love with me, there. How would you like 
to have me settle in Florence, and set up a studio 
instead of a ranch, — choose between sculpture and 
painting, instead of cattle and sheep? After all, 
it does grind me to have lost that money I If I 
had only been swindled out of it, I should n't have 
cared ; but when you go and make a bad thing of 
it yourself, with your eyes open, there 's a reluc- 
tance to place the responsibility where it belongs 
that does n't occur in the other case. Dunham, do 
you think it altogether ridiculous that I should feel 
there was something sacred in the money ? When 
I remember how hard my poor old father worked 
to get it together, it seems wicked that I should 
have stupidly wasted it on the venture I did. I 
want to get it back ; I want to make money. And 
so I 'm going out to Italy with you, to waste more. 
I don't respect myself as I should if I were on a 
Pullman palace car, speeding westward. I '11 own 
I like this better." 

" Oh, it 's all right, Staniford," said his friend. 
" The voyage will do you good, and you '11 have 
time to think everything over, and start fairer when 
you get back." 

** That girl," observed Staniford, with characteris- 
tic abruptness, " is a type that is commoner than we 



68 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

imagine in New England. We fair people fancy 
we are the only genuine Yankees. I guess that 's 
a mistake. There must have been a good many 
dark Puritans. In fact, we always think of Puri- 
tans as dark, don't we ?" 

" I believe we do," assented Dunham. " Per- 
haps on account of their black clothes." 

*' Perhaps," said Staniford. " At any rate, I 'm 
so tired of the blonde type in fiction that I rather 
like the other thing in life. Every novelist runs a 
blonde heroine ; I wonder why. This girl has the 
clear Southern pallor ; she 's of the olive hue ; and 
her eyes are black as sloes, — not that I know what 
sloes are. Did she remind you of anything in par- 
ticular? " 

" Yes ; a little of Faed's Evangeline, as she sat 
in the door-way of the warehouse yesterday." 

"Exactly. I wish the picture were more of a 
picture ; but I don't know that it matters. She '« 
more of a picture." 

" ' Pretty as a bird,' the captain said." 

" Bird is n't bad. But the bird is in her manner. 
There 's something tranquilly alert in her manner 
that 's like a bird ; like a bird that lingers on its 
perch, looking at you over its shoulder, if you 
come up behind. That trick of the heavily lifted, 
half lifted eyelids, — I wonder if it 's a trick. The 
long lashes can't be ; she can't make them curl up 
at the edges. Blood, — Lurella Blood. And she 
wants to know." Staniford's voice fell thoughtful. 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. " 69 

___ • ___ __ 

* She 's more slender than Faed's Evangeline. Faed 
painted rather too fat a sufiferer on that tombstone. 
Lurella Blood has a very pretty figure. Lurella. 
Why Lurella ? " 

" Oh, come, Staniford ! " cried Dunham. " It is 
n't fair to call the girl by that jingle without some 
ground for it." 

" I 'm sure her name 's Lurella, for she wanted 
to know. Besides, there 's as much sense in it as 
there is in any name. It sounds very well. Lurella. 
It is mere prejudice that condemns the novel col- 
location of syllables.'* 

" I wonder what she 's thinking of now, — what 's 
passing in her mind," mused Dunham aloud. 

" You want to know, too, do you ? " mocked his 
friend. " I '11 tell you what : processions of young 
men so long that they are an hour getting by a 
given point. That 's what 's passing in every girl's 
mind — when she 's thinking. It 's perfectly right. 
Processsions of young girls are similarly passing in 
our stately and spacious intellects. It 's the chief 
business of the youth of one sex to think of the 
youth of the other sex." 

" Oh, yes, I know," assented Dunham ; " and I 
believe in it, too " — 

" Of course you do, you wicked wretch, you aban- 
doned Lovelace, you bruiser of ladies' hearts ! You 
hope the procession is composed entirely of your- 
self. What would the divine Hibbard say to your 
goings-on ? " 



70 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

" Oh, don't, Staiiiford ! It is n't fair," pleaded 
Dunham, with the flattered laugh which the best of 
men give when falsely attainted of gallantry. " I 
Mas wondering whether she was feeling homesick, 
or strange, or " — 

" I will go below and ask her," said Staniford. 
" I know she will tell me the exact truth. They 
always do. Or if you will take a guess of mine in- 
stead of her word for it, I will hazard the surmise 
that she is not at all homesick. What has a pretty 
young girl to regret in such a life as she has left ? 
It 's the most arid and joyless existence under the 
sun. She has never known anything like society. 
In the country with us, the social side must always 
have been somewhat paralyzed, but there are mon- 
umental evidences of pleasures in other days that 
are quite extinct now. You see big dusty ball- 
rooms in the old taverns : ball-rooms that have had 
no dancing in them for half a century, and where 
they give you a bed sometimes. There used to be 
academies, too, in the hill towns, where they fur- 
nished a rude but serviceable article of real learn- 
ing, and where the local octogenarian remembers 
seeing something famous in the way of theatricals 
on examination-day ; but neither his children nor 
his grandchildren have seen the like. There 's a 
decay of the religious sentiment, and the church is 
no longer a social centre, with merry meetings 
among the tombstones between the morning and 
the afternoon service. Superficial humanitarianisra 



THE LADY OF THE ABOOSTOOK. 71 

of one kind or another has killed the good old or- 
thodoxy, as the railroads have killed the turnpikes 
and the country taverns ; and the common schools 
have killed the academies. Why, I don't suppose 
this girl ever saw anything livelier than a town- 
ship cattle show, or a Sunday-school picnic, in her 
life. They don't pay visits in the country except at 
rare intervals, and their evening parties, when they 
have any, are something to strike you dead with 
pity. They used to clear away the corn-husks and 
pumpkins on the barn floor, and dance by the light 
of tin lanterns. At least, that 's the traditional 
thing. The actual thing is sitting around four sides 
of the room, giggling, whispering, looking at pho- 
tograph albums, and coaxing somebody to play on 
the piano. The banquet is passed in the form of 
apples and water. I have assisted at some rural 
festivals where the apples were omitted. Upon the 
whole, I wonder our country people don't all go 
mad. They do go mad, a great many of them, 
and manage to get a little glimpse of society in the 
insane asylums." Staniford ended his tirade with 
a laugh, in which he vented his humorous sense and 
his fundamental pity of the conditions he had cari- 
catured. 

" But how," demanded Dunham, breaking rebell- 
iously from the silence in which he had listened, 
" do you account for her good manner ? " 

"She probably was born with a genius for it. 
Some people are born with a genius for one thing, 



72 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

and some with a genius for another. I, for exam- 
ple, am an artistic genius, forced to be an amateur 
by the delusive possession of early wealth, and now 
burning with a creative instinct in the direction of 
the sheep or cattle business ; you have the gift of 
universal optimism ; Lurella Blood has the genius 
of good society. Give that girl a winter among 
nice people in Boston, and you would never know 
that she was not born on Beacon Hill." 

" Oh, I doubt that,'* said Dunham. 

'' You doubt it ? Pessimist ! " 

" But you implied just now that she had no sen- 
sibility," pursued Dunham. 

" So I did ! " cried Staniford, cheerfully. " Social 
genius and sensibility are two very different things ; 
the cynic might contend they were incompatible, 
but I won't insist so far. I dare say she may regret 
the natal spot ; most of us have a dumb, brutish 
attachment to the cari luoghi ; but if she knows 
anything, she hates its surroundings, and must be 
glad to get out into the world. I should like 
mightily to know how the world strikes her, as far 
as she 's gone. But I doubt if she 's one to betray 
her own counsel in any way. She looks deep, Lu- 
rella does." Staniford laughed again at the pain 
which his insistence upon the name brought into 
Dunham's face. 



vin. 

After dinner, nature avenged herself ih the 
young men for their vigils of the night before, when 
they had stayed up so late, parting with friends, 
that they had found themselves early risers without 
having been abed. They both slept so long that 
Dunham, leaving Staniford to a still unfinished 
nap, came on deck between five and six o'clock. 

Lydia was there, wrapped against the freshening 
breeze in a red knit shawl, and seated on a stool in 
the waist of the ship, in the Evangeline attitude, 
and with the wistful, Evangeline look in her face, 
as she gazed out over the far-weltering sea-line, 
from which all trace of the shore had vanished. 
She seemed to the young man very interesting, and 
he approached her with that kindness for all other 
women in his heart which the lover feels in absence 
from his beloved, and with a formless sense that 
some retribution was due her from him for the 
roughness with which Staniford had surmised her 
natural history. Women had always been dear and 
sacred to him ; he liked, beyond most young men, 
to be with them ; he was forever calling upon them, 
getting introduced to them, waiting upon them, in- 
venting little services for them, corresponding with 
them, and wearing himself out in their interest. It 



74 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

is said that women do not value men of this sort so 
much as men of some other sorts. It was long, at 
any rate, before Dunham — whom people always 
called Charley Dunham — found the woman who 
thought him more lovely than every other woman 
pronounced him ; and naturally Miss Hibbard was 
the most exacting of her sex. She required all 
those offices which Dunham delighted to render, 
and many besides : being an invalid, she needed de- 
votion. She had refused Dunham before going out 
to Europe with her mother, and she had written to 
take him back after she got there. He was now on 
his way to join her in Dresden, where he hoped 
that he might marry her, and be perfectly sacrificed 
to her ailments. She only lacked poverty in order 
to be thoroughly displeasing to most men ; but 
Dunham had no misgiving save in regard to her 
money ; he wished she had no money. 

" A good deal more motion, is n't there ? " he 
said to Lydia, smiling sunnily as he spoke, and 
holding his hat with one hand. " Do you find it 
unpleasant ? " 

" No," she answered, " not at all. I like it." 
" Oh, there isn't enough swell to make it uncom- 
fortable, yet," asserted Dunham, looking about to 
see if there were not something he could do for her. 
*' And you may turn out a good sailor. Were you 
ever at sea before ? " 

" No ; this is the first time I was ever on a ship." 
" Is it possible I " cried Dunham ; he was now 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 76 

fairly at sea for the first time himself, though by 
virtue of his European associations he seemed to 
have made many voyages. It appeared to him that 
if there was nothing else he could do for Lydia, it 
was his duty to talk to her. He found another 
stool, and drew it up within easier conversational 
distance. " Then you 've never been out* of sight 
of land before ? " 
" No," said Lydia. 

" That 's very curious — I beg your pardon ; I 
mean you must find it a great novelty." 

" Yes, it 's very strange," said the girl, seriously. 
" It looks like the Flood. It seems as if all the 
rest of the world was drowned." 

Dunham glanced round the vast horizon. " It i8 
like the Flood. And it has that quality, which 
I've often noticed in sublime things, of seeming to 
be for this occasion only." 
" Yes ? " said Lydia. 

'' Why, don't you know ? It seems as if it must 
be like a fine sunset, and would pass in a few min- 
utes. Perhaps we feel that we can't endure sub- 
limity long, and want it to pass." 

" I could look at it forever," replied Lydia. 
Dunham turned to see if this were young-lady- 
ish rapture, but perceived that she was affecting 
nothing. He liked seriousness, for he was, with a 
great deal of affectation for social purposes, a very 
sincere person. His heart warmed more and more 
to the lonely girl; to be talking to her seemed, 



76 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

after all, to be doing very little for her, and he 
longed to be of service. " Have you explored our 
little wooden world, yet ? " he asked, after a pause. 

Lydia paused too. " The ship ? " she asked 
presently. " No ; I 've only been in the cabin, and 
here ; and this morning," she added, conscien- 
tiously, " Thomas showed me the cook's galley, — 
the kitchen." 

" You 've seen more than I have," said Dunham. 
" Would n't you like to go forward, to the bow, 
and see how it looks there ? " 

" Yes, thank you," answered Lydia, " I would." 

She tottered a little in gaining her feet, and the 
wind drifted her slightness a step or two aside. 
" Won't you take my arm, perhaps ? " suggested 
Dunham. 

" Thank you," said Lydia, " I think I can get 
along." But after a few paces, a lurch of the ship 
flung her against Dunham's side ; he caught her 
hand, and passed it through his arm without protest 
from her. 

" Is n't it grand ? " he asked triumphantly, as 
they stood at the prow, and rose and sank with the 
vessel's careering plunges. It was no gale, but only 
a fair wind ; the water foamed along the ship's 
sides, and, as her bows descended, shot forward in 
hissing jets of spray ; away on every hand flocked 
the white caps. "You had better keep my arm, 
here." Lydia did so, resting her disengaged hand 
on the bulwarks, as she bent over a little on that 



THE LADY OF THE AEOOSTOOK. 77 

side to watch the rush of the sea. " It really seems 
as if there were more of a view here." 

" It does, somehow," admitted Lydia." 

" Look back at the ship's sails," said Dunham. 
The swell and press of the white canvas seemed 
like ,the clouds of heaven swooping down upon 
them from all the airy heights. The sweet wind 
beat in their faces, and they laughed in sympathy, 
as they fronted it. " Perhaps the motion is a little 
too strong for you here ? " he asked. 

" Oh, not at all I " cried the girl. 

He had done something for her by bringing her 
here, and he hoped to do something more by taking 
her away. He was discomfited, for he was at a loss 
what other attention to offer. Just at that moment 
a sound made itself heard above the whistling of 
the cordage and the wash of the sea, which caused 
Lydia to start and look round. 

" Did n't you think," she asked, " that you heard 
hens ? " 

" Why, yes," said Dunham. " What could it 
have been ? Let us investigate." 

He led the way back past the forecastle and the 
cook's galley, and there, in dangerous proximity to 
the pots and frying pans, they found a coop with 
some dozen querulous and meditative fowl in it. 

"I heard them this morning," said Lydia. 
" They seemed to wake me with their crowing, and 
I thought — I was at home I " 

"I 'm very sorry," said Dunham, sympathetically. 



78 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

He wished Staniford were there to take shame to 
himself for denying sensibility to this girl. 

The cook, smoking a pipe at the door of his gal- 
ley, said, " Dey won't trouble you much, miss. Dey 
don't gen'ly last us long, and I '11 kill de roosters 
first." 

" Oh, come, now ! " protested Dunham. " I 
ivould n't say that ! " The cook and Lydia stared 
at him in equal surprise. 

"Well," answered the cook, "I. '11 kill the hens 
first, den. It don't make any difference to me 
which I kill. I dunno but de hens is tenderer." 
He smoked in a bland indifference. 

" Oh, hold on ! " exclaimed Dunham, in repeti- 
tion of his helpless protest. 

Lydia stooped down to make closer acquaintance 
with the devoted birds. They huddled themselves 
away from her in one corner of their prison, and 
talked together in low tones of grave mistrust. 
"Poor things! " she said. As a country girl, used 
to the practical ends of poultry, she knew as well 
as the cook that it was the fit and simple destiny of 
chickens to be eaten, sooner or later ; and it must 
have been less in commiseration of their fate than 
in self-pity and regret for the scenes they recalled 
that she sighed. The hens that burrowed yester- 
day under the lilacs in the door-yard ; the cock that 
her aunt so often drove, insulted and exclamatory, 
at the head of his harem, out of forbidden garden 
bounds ; the social groups that scratched and des* 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 79 

canted lazily about the wide, sunny barn doors ; the 
anxious companies seeking their favorite perches, 
with alarming outcries, in the dusk of summer 
evenings ; the sentinels answering each other from 
farm to farm before winter dawns, when all the 
hills were drowned in snow, were of kindred with 
these hapless prisoners. 

Dunham was touched at Lydia's compassion. 
*' Would you like — would you like to feed them ? " 
he asked by a happy inspiration. He turned to the 
cook, with his gentle politeness : " There 's no ob- 
jection to our feeding them, I suppose ? '* 

'' Laws, no ! " said the cook. " Fats 'em up." 
He went inside, and reappeared with a pan full of 
scraps of ndeat and crusts of bread. 

" Oh, I say 1 " cried Dunham. " Have n't you 
got some grain, you know, of some sort; some seeds, 
don't you know ? " 

" They will like this," said Lydia, while the cook 
stared in perplexity. She took the pan, and open- 
ing the little door of the coop flung the provision 
inside. But the fowls were either too depressed in 
spirit to eat anything, or they were not hungry; 
they remained in their corner, and merely fell silent, 
as if a new suspicion had been roused in their un- 
happy breasts. 

" Dey '11 come to it," observed the cook. 

Dunham felt far from content, and regarded the 
poultry with silent disappointment. " Are you fond 
of pets ? " he asked, after a while. 



80 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

" Yes, I used to have pet chickens when I was a 
little thing." 

"You ought to adopt one of these," suggested 
Dunham. " That white one is a pretty creature." 

" Yes," said Lydia. " He looks as if he were 
Leghorn. Leghorn breed," she added, in reply to 
Dunham's look of inquiry. " He 's a beauty." 

" Let me get him out for you a moment ! " cried 
the young man, in his amiable zeal. Before Lydia 
could protest, or the cook interfere, he had opened 
the coop-door and plunged his arm into the tumult 
which his manoeuvre created within. He secured 
the cockerel, and drawing it forth was about to 
offer it to Lydia, when in its struggles to escape it 
drove one of its spurs into his hand. Dunham sud- 
denly released it; and then ensued a wild chase 
for its recapture, up and down the ship, in which it 
had every advantage of the young man. At last it 
sprang upon -the rail ; he put out his hand to seize 
it, when it rose with a desperate screech, and flew 
far out over the sea. They watched the suicide till 
it sank exhausted into a distant white-cap. 

" Dat 's gone," said the cook, philosophically. 
Dunham looked round. Half the ship's company, 
alarmed by his steeple-chase over the deck, were 
there, silently agrin. 

Lydia did not laugh. When he asked, still with 
his habitual sweetness, but entirely at random, 
*' Shall we — ah — go below ? " she did not answer 
definitely, and did not go. At the same time she 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 81 

ceased to be so timidly intaDgible and aloof in man- 
ner. She began to talk to Dunham, instead of let- 
ting him talk to her ; she asked him questions, and 
listened with deference to what he said on such mat- 
ters as the probable length of the voyage and the 
sort of weather they were likely to have. She did 
not take note of his keeping his handkerchief wound 
round his hand, nor of his attempts to recur to the 
subject of his mortifying adventure. When they 
were again quite alone, the cook's respect having 
been won back through his ethnic susceptibility 
to silver, she remembered that she must go to her 
room. 

" In other words," said Staniford, after Dunham 
had reported the whole case to him, " she treated 
your hurt vanity as if you had been her pet school- 
boy. She lured you away from yourself, and got 
you to talking and thinking of other things. Lu- 
rella is deep, I tell you. What consummate tacti- 
cians the least of women are ! It 's a pity that they 
have to work so often in such dull material as men ; 
they ought always to have women to operate on. 
The youngest of them has more wisdom in human 
nature than the sages of our sex. I must say, Lu- 
rella is magnanimous, too. She might have taken 
her revenge on you for pitying her yesterday when 
she sat in that warehouse door on the wharf. It 
I was rather fine in Lurella not to do it. What did 

I «he say, Dunham ? What did she talk about? Did 

she want to know ? " 

6 



i 



u 



82 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

" No ! " shouted Dunham. " She talked very 
well, like any young lady." 

" Oh, all young ladies talk well, of course. But 
what did this one say ? What did she do, except 
suffer a visible pang of homesickness at the sight of 
unattainable poultry ? Come, you have represented 
the interview with Miss Blood as one of great brill- 
iancy.*' 

" I have n't," said Dunham. " I have done noth- 
ing of the kind. Her talk was like any pleasant 
talk ; it was rejBned and simple, and — unobtru- 
sive." 

" Tiiat is, it was in no way remarkable," observed 
Staniford, with a laugh. " I expected something 
better of Lurella ; I expected something salient. 
Well, never mind. She's behaved well by you, 
seeing what a goose you had made of yourself. 
She behaved like a lady, and I 've noticed that she 
eats with her fork. It often happens in the country 
that you find the women practicing some of the arts 
of civilization, while their men folk are still sunk in 
barbaric uses. Lurella, I see, is a social creature ; 
she was born for society, as you were, and I suppose 
you will be thrown a good deal together. We 're 
all likely to be associated rather familiarly, under 
the circumstances. But I wish you would note 
down in your mind some points of her conversation. 
I 'm really curious to know what a girl of her tradi- 
tions thinks about the world when she first sees it. 
Her mind must be in most respects an unbroken 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 83 

wilderness. She 's had schooling, of course, and she 
knows her grammar and algebra; but she can't 
have had any cultivation. If she were of an earner 
generation, one would expect to find something bib- 
lical in her ; but you can't count upon a Puritanic 
culture now among our country folks." 

" If you are so curious," said Dunham, " why 
don't you study her mind, yourself ? " 

" No, no, that would n't do," Staniford answered. 
" The light of your innocence upon hers is inval- 
uable. I can understand her better through you. 
You must go on. I will undertake to make your 
peace with Miss Hibbard." 

The young men talked as they walked the deck 
and smoked in the starlight. They were wakeful 
after their long nap in the afternoon, and they 
walked and talked late, with the silences that old 
friends can permit themselves. Staniford recurred 
to his loss of money and his Western projects, 
which took more definite form now that he had 
placed so much distance between himself and their 
fulfillment. With half a year in Italy before him, 
he decided upon a cattle-range in Colorado. Then, 
" I should like to know," he said, after one of the 
pauses, " how two young men of our form strike 
that girl's fancy. I have n't any personal curiosity 
about her impressions, but I should like to know, 
9.S an observer of the human race. If my conject- 
ares are right, she 's never met people of our sort 
before." 



84 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

" What sort of men has she been associated 
with ? " asked Dunham. 

" Well, I 'm not quite prepared to say. I take it 
that it is n't exactly the hobbledehoy sort. She has 
probably looked high, — as far up as the clerk in 
the store. He has taken her to drive in a buggy 
Saturday afternoons, when he put on his ready- 
made suit, — and looked very well in it, too ; and 
they 've been at picnics together. Or may be, as 
she 's in the school-teaching line, she 's taken some 
high-browed, hollow-cheeked high-school principal 
for her ideal. Or it is possible that she has never 
had attention from any one. That is apt to happen 
to self-respectful girls in rural communities, and their 
beauty doesn't save them. Fellows, as they call 
themselves, like girls that have what they call go, 
that make up to them. Lurella does n't seem of 
that kind ; and I should not be surprised if you were 
the first gentleman who had ever offered her his 
arm. I wonder what she thought of you. She 's 
acquainted by sight with the ordinary summer 
boarder of North America; they penetrate every- 
where, now ; but I doubt if she 's talked with them 
much, if at all. She must be ignorant of our world 
beyond anything we can imagine." 

" But how do you account for her being so well 
dressed ? " 

" Oh, that 's instinct. You find it everywhere. 
In every little village there is some girl who knows 
how to out-preen all the others. I wonder," added 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 86 

Staniford, in a more deeply musing tone, "if she 
kept from laughing at yoii out of good feeling, or 
if she was merely overawed by your splendor." 

" She did n't laugh," Dunham answered, " be- 
cause she saw that it would have added to my an- 
noyance. My splendor had nothing to do with it." 

" Oh, don't underrate your splendor, my dear 
fellow 1 " cried Staniford, with a caressing ridicule 
that he often used with Dunham. " Of course, I 
know what a simple and humble fellow you are , 
but you 've no idea how that exterior of yours 
might impose upon the agricultural imagination ; 
it has its efiEect upon me, in my pastoral moods." 
Dunham made a gesture of protest, and Staniford 
went on : " Country people have queer ideas of us, 
sometimes. Possibly Lurella was afraid of you. 
Think of that, Dunham, — having a woman afraid 
of you, for once in your life ! Well, hurry up your 
acquaintance with her, Dunham, or I shall wear 
myself out in mere speculative analysis. I have n't 
the aplomb for studying the sensibilities of a young 
lady, and catching chickens for her, so as to pro- 
duce a novel play of emotions. I thought this voy- 
age was going to be a season of mental quiet, but 
having a young lady on board seems to forbid that 
kind of repose. I shouldn't mind a half dozen, 
but one is altogether too many. Poor little thing ! 
I say, Dunham ! There 's something rather pretty 
about having her with us, after all, is n't there ? It 
gives a certain distinction to our voyage. We shall 



86 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

not degenerate. We shall sliave every day, wind 
and weather permitting, and wear our best things." 
They talked of other matters, and again Staniford 
recurred to Lydia : " If she has any regrets for her 
mountain home, — though I don't see why she 
should have, — I hope they have n't kept her awake. 
My far-away cot on the plains is not going to inter- 
fere with my slumbers." 

Staniford stepped to the ship's side, and flung the 
end of his cigarette overboard ; it struck, a red spark 
amidst the lurid phosphorescence of the bubbles that 
swept backward from the vessel's prow. 



IX. 

The weather held fine. The sun shone, and the 
friendly winds blew out of a cloudless heaven ; by- 
night the moon ruled a firmament powdered with 
stars of multitudinous splendor. The conditions 
inspired Dunham with a restless fertility of inven- 
tion in Lydia's behalf. He had heard of the game 
of shuffle-board, that blind and dumb croquet, with 
which the jaded passengers on the steamers appease 
their terrible leisure, and with the help of the ship's 
carpenter he organized this pastime, and played it 
with her hour after hour, while Staniford looked on 
and smoked in grave observance, and Hicks lurked 
at a distance, till Dunham felt it on his kind heart 
and tender conscience to invite him to a share in 
the diversion. As his nerves recovered their tone, 
Hicks showed himself a man of some qualities that 
Staniford would have liked in another man : he was 
amiable, and he was droll, though apt to turn sulky 
if Staniford addressed him, which did not often 
happen. He knew more than Dunham of shuffle- 
board, as well as of tossing rings of rope over a peg 
set up a certain space off in the deck, — a game 
which they eagerly took up in the afternoon, after 
pushing about the flat wooden disks all the morn- 
uig. Most of the talk at the table was of the vary- 



88 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

ing fortunes of the players; and the yarn of the 
story-teller in the forecastle remained half-spun, 
while the sailors off watch gathered to look on, and 
to bet upon Lydia's skill. It puzzled Stamford to 
make out whether she felt any strangeness in the 
situation, which she accepted with so much appar- 
ent serenity. Sometimes, in his frequently recur- 
ring talks with Dunham, he questioned whether 
their delicate precautions for saving her feelings 
were not perhaps thrown away upon a young per- 
son who played shuffle-board and ring-toss on the 
deck of the Aroostook with as much self-possession 
as she would have played croquet on her native 
turf at South Bradfield. 

" Their ideal of propriety up country is veiy 
different from ours," he said, beginning one of his 
long comments. " I don't say that it concerns the 
conscience more than ours does; but they think 
evil of different things. We 're getting European- 
ized, — I don't mean you, Dunham; in spite of 
your endeavors you will always remain one of the 
most hopelessly American of our species, — and we 
have our little borrowed anxieties about the free 
association of young people. They have none 
whatever ; though they are apt to look suspiciously 
upon married people's friendships with other peo- 
ple's wives and husbands. It's quite likely that 
Lurella, with the traditions of her queer world, has 
not imagined anything anomalous in her position. 
She may realize certain inconveniences. But she 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 89 

must see great advantages in it. Poor girl I How 
she must be rioting on the united devotion of cabin 
and forecastle, after the scanty gallantries of a hill 
town peopled by elderly unmarried women I I 'm 
glad of it, for her sake. I wonder which she 
really prizes most : your ornate attentions, or the 
uncouth homage of those sailors, who are always 
running to fetch her rings and blocks when she 
makt;s a wild shot. I believe I don't care and 
shoulax't disapprove of her preference, whichever 
it was.' Stamford frowned before he added : "But 
I object 10 Hicks and his drolleries. It 's impossi- 
ble for that little wretch to think reverently of a 
young girl ; it 's shocking to see her treating him 
as if he wore a gentleman." Hicks's behavior 
really gave no grounds for reproach; and it was 
only his moral mechanism, as Staniford called the 
character he constructed for him, which he could 
blame ; nevertheless, the thought of him gave an 
oblique cast to Staniford 's reflections, which he cut 
short by saying, " This sort of worship is every 
woman's due in girlhood ; but I suppose a fortnight 
of it will make her a pert and silly coquette. What 
does she say to your literature, Dunham ? " 

Dunham had already begun to lend Lydia books, 
— his own and Staniford's, — in which he read 
aloud to her, and chose passages for her admiration; 
but he was obliged to report that she had rather a 
passive taste in literature. She seemed to like what 
he said was good, but not to like it very much. 



90 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

or to care greatly for reading ; or else she had never 
had the habit of talking books. He suggested thia 
to Staniford, who at once philosophized it. 

" Why, I rather like that, you know. We all 
read in such a literary way, now; we don't read 
simply for the joy or profit of it ; we expect to talk 
about it, and say how it is this and that ; and I 've 
no doubt that we 're sub-consciously harassed, all 
the time, with an automatic process of criticism. 
Now Lurella, I fancy, reads with the sense of the 
days when people read in private, and not in pub- 
lic, as we do. She believes that your serious books 
are all true ; and she knows that my novels are all 
lies — that 's what some excellent Christians would 
call the fiction even of George Eliot or of Haw- 
thorne ; she would be ashamed to discuss the lives 
and loves of heroes and heroines who never existed. 
I think that 's first-rate. She must wonder at your 
distempered interest in them. If one could get at 
it, I suppose the fresh wholesomeness of Lurella's 
mind would be something delicious, — a quality 
like spring water." 

He was one of those men who cannot rest in re- 
gard to people they meet till they have made some 
efiEort to formulate them. He liked to ticket them 
off ; but when he could not classify them, he re- 
mained content with his mere study of them. His 
habit was one that does not promote sympathy with 
one's fellow creatures. He confessed even that it 
disposed him to wish for their less acquaintance 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 91 

when once he had got them generalized ; they be- 
came then collected specimens. Yet, for the time 
being, his curiosity in them gave him a specious 
air of sociability. He lamented the insincerity 
which this involved, but he could not help it. The 
next novelty in character was as irresistible as the 
last ; he sat down before it till it yielded its mean- 
ing, or suggested to him some analogy by which he 
could interpret it. 

With this passion for the arrangement and dis- 
tribution of his neighbors, it was not long before he 
had placed most of the people on board in what he 
called the psychology of the ship. He did not care 
that they should fit exactly in their order. He 
rather preferred that they should have idiosyncra- 
sies which differentiated them from their species, 
and he enjoyed Lydia's being a little indifferent 
about books for this and for other reasons. " If 
she were literary, she would be like those vulgar 
little persons of genius in the magazine stories. 
She would have read all sorts of impossible things 
up in her village. She would have been discovered 
by some aesthetic summer boarder, who had hap- 
pened to identify her with the gifted Daisy Dawn, 
and she would be going out on the aesthetic's money 
for the further expansion of her spirit in Europe. 
Somebody would be obliged to fall in love with her, 
and she would sacrifice her career for a man who 
was her inferior, as we should be subtly given to 
understand at the close. I think it 's going to bo 



92 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

as distinguished by and by not to like books as it 
is not to write them. Lurella is a prophetic soul ; 
and if there 's anything comforting about her, it 's 
her being so merely and stupidly pretty." 

" She is not merely and stupidlj'^ pretty I " re- 
torted Dunham. " She never does herself justice 
when you are by. She can talk very well, and on 
some subjects she thinks strongly." 

" Oh, I 'm sorry for that I " said Staniford. 
" But call me some time when she 's doing herself 
justice." 

"I don't mean that she's like the women we 
know. She does n't say witty things, and she 
has n't their responsive quickness ; but her ideas 
are her own, no matter how old they are ; and 
what she says she seems to be saying for the first 
time, and as if it had never been thought out be- 
fore." 

" That is what I have been contending for," said 
Staniford ; " that is what I meant by spring water. 
It is that thrilling freshness which charms me in 
Lurella." He laughed. " Have you converted her 
to your spectacular faith, yet ? " Dunham blushed. 
" You have tried," continued Staniford. " Tell 
me about it I " 

" I will not talk with you on such matters," said 
Dunham, " till you kijow how to treat serious 
things seriously." 

'' I shall know how when I realize that they 
are serious with you. Well, I don't object to a 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 93 

woman's thinking strongly on religious subjects : 
it 's the only safe ground for her strong thinking, 
and even there she had better feel strongly. Did 
you succeed in convincing her that Archbishop 
Laud was a saint incompris^ and the good King 
Charles a blessed martyr." 

Dunham did not answer till he had choked down 
some natural resentment. He had, several years 
earlier, forsaken the pale Unitarian worship of his 
family, because, Staniford always said, he had such 
a feeling for color, and had adopted an extreme tint 
of ritualism. It was rumored at one time, before 
his engagement to Miss Hibbard, that he was go- 
ing to unite with a celibate brotherhood ; he went 
regularly into retreat at certain seasons, to the 
vast entertainment of his friend ; and, within the 
bounds of good taste, he was a zealous propagan- 
dist of his faith, of which he had the practical vir- 
tues in high degree. " I hope," he said presently, 
" that I know how to respect convictions, even 
of those adhering to the Church in Error." 

Staniford laughed again. " I see you have not 
converted Lurella. Well, I like that in her, too. 
I wish I could have the arguments, pro and eon. 
It would have been amusing. I suppose," lie pon- 
dered aloud, " that she is a Calvinist of the leepest 
dye, and would regard me as a lost spirit for being 
outside of her church. She would look down upon 
me from one height, as I look down upon her from 
another. And really, as far as personal satisfac- 



94 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

tion in superiority goes, she might have the ad- 
vantage of me. That 's . very curious, very inter- 
efiting." 

As the first week wore away, the wonted inci- 
dents of a sea voyage lent their variety to the life 
on board. One day the ship ran into a school of 
whales, which remained heavily thumping and loll- 
ing about in her course, and blowing jets of water 
into the air, like so many breaks in garden hose, 
Staniford suggested. At another time some flying- 
fish came on board. The sailors caught a dolphin, 
and they promised a shark, by and by. All these 
things were turned to account for the young girl's 
amusement, as if they had happened for her. The 
dolphin died that she might wonder and pity his 
beautiful death ; the cook fried her some of the 
flying-fish ; some one was on the lookout to detect 
even porpoises for her. A sail in the oflfing won 
the discoverer envy when he pointed it out to her ; 
a steamer, celebrity. The captain ran a point out 
of his course to speak to a vessel, that she might 
be able to tell what speaking a ship at sea was 
like. 

At table the stores which the young men had 
laid in for private use became common luxuries, 
and she fared sumptuously every day upon dainties 
which she supposed were supplied by the ship, — 
delicate jellies and canned meats and syruped fruits ; 
and, if she wondered at anything, she must have 
wondered at the scrupulous abstinence with which 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 95 

Captain Jenness, seconded by Mr. Watterson, re- 
fused the luxuries which his bounty provided them, 
and at the constancy with which Staniford declined 
some of these dishes, and Hicks declined others. 
Shortly after the latter began more distinctly to be 
tolerated, he appeared one day on deck with a 
steamer-chair in his hand, and offered it to Lyd- 
ia's use, where she sat on a stool by the bulwark. 
After that, as she reclined in this chair, wrapped 
in her red shawl, and provided with a book or 
some sort of becoming handiwork, she was even 
more picturesquely than before the centre about 
which the ship's pride and chivalrous sentiment re- 
volved. They were Americans, and they knew how 
to worship a woman. 

Staniford did not seek occasions to please and 
amuse her, as the others did. When they met, as 
they must, three times a day, at table, he took his 
part in the talk, and now and then addressed her 
a perfunctory civility. He imagined that she dis- 
liked him, and he interested himself in imagining 
the ignorant grounds of her dislike. " A woman," 
he said, " must always dislike some one in com- 
pany ; it 's usually another woman ; as there 's none 
on board, I accept her enmity with meekness." 
Dunham wished to persuade him that he was mis- 
taken. " Don't try to comfort me, Dunham," he 
replied. " I find a pleasure in being detested which 
is inconceivable to your amiable bosom." 

Dunham turned to go below, from where they 



96 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

stood at the head of the cabin stairs. Staniford 
looked round, and saw Lydia, whom they had kept 
from coming up; she must have heard him. He 
took his cigar from his mouth, and caught up a 
stool, which he placed near the ship's side, where 
Lydia usually sat, and without waiting for her con- 
currence got a stool for himself, and sat down with 
her. 

"Well, Miss Blood," he said, "it's Saturday 
afternoon at last, and we 're at the end of our first 
week. Has it seemed very long to you ?" 

Lydia's color was bright with consciousness, but 
the glance she gave Staniford showed him looking 
tranquilly and honestly at her. " Yes," she said, 
" it has seemed long." 

" That 's merely the strangeness of everything. 
There 's nothing like local familiarity to make the 
time pass, — except monotony; and one gets both 
at sea. Next week will go faster than this, and 
we shall all be at Trieste before we know it. Of 
course we shall . have a storm or two, and that will 
retard us in fact as well as fancy. But you would 
n't feel that you 'd been at sea if you had n't had a 
Btorm." 

He knew that his tone was patronizing, but he 
had theorized the girl so much with a certain slight 
in his mind that he was not able at once to get the 
tone which he usually took towards women. This 
might not, indeed, have pleased some women any 
better than patronage : it mocked while it caressed 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 97 

all their little pretenses and artificialities ; he ad- 
dressed them as if they must be in the joke of 
themselves, and did not expect to be taken seri- 
ously. At the same time he liked them greatly, 
and would not on any account have had the silliest 
of them different from what she was. He did not 
seek them as Dunham did ; their society was not a 
matter of life or death with him ; but he had an 
elder-brotherly kindness for the whole sex. 

Lydia waited awhile for him to say something 
more, but he added nothing, and she observed, with 
a furtive look : " I presume you 've seen some very 
severe storms at sea." 

" No," Stamford answered, " I have n't. I 've 
been over several times, but I 've never seen any- 
thing alarming. I 've experienced the ordinary 
seasickening tempestuousness." 

" Have you — have you ever been in Italy ? " 
asked Lydia, after another pause. 

"Yes," he said, " twice ; I 'm very fond of Italy." 
He spoke of it in a familiar tone that might well 
have been discouraging to one of her total unac- 
quaintance with it. Presently he added of his own 
motion, looking at her with his interest in her as a 
curious study, " You 're going to Venice, I think 
Mr. Dunham told me." 

" Yes," said Lydia. 

" Well, I think it 's rather a pity that you should 
n't arrive there directly, without the interposition 
of Trieste." He scanned her yet more closely, but 

7 



38 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

with a sort of absence in his look, as if he addressed 
some ideal of her. 

" Why ? " asked Lydia, apparently pushed to 
some self-assertion by this way of being looked and 
talked at. 

"It's the strangest place in the world," said 
Staniford ; and then he mused again. " But I sup- 
pose " — He did not go on, and the word fell again 
to Lydia. 

"I'm going to visit my aunt, who is staying 
there. She was where I live, last summer, and she 
told us about it. But I could n't seem to under- 
stand it." 

" No one can understand it, without seeing it." 

" I 've read some descriptions of it," Lydia vent- 
ured. 

" They 're of no use, — the books." 

" Is Trieste a strange place, too ? " 

" It 's strange, as a hundred other places are, — 
and it 's picturesque ; but there 's only one Ven- 
ice. 

" I 'm afraid sometimes," she faltered, as if his 
manner in regard to this peculiar place had been 
hopelessly exclusive, " that it will be almost too 
strange." 

" Oh, that 's another matter," said Staniford. 
'I confess I should be rather curious to know 
whether you liked Venice. I like it, but I can im- 
agine myself sympathizing with people who de- 
tested it, — if they said so. Let me see what will 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 99 

give you some idea of it. Do you know Boston 
well ? " 

" No ; I 've only been there twice," Lydia ac- 
knowledged. 

" Then you Ve never seen the Back Bay by 
night, from the Long Bridge. Well, let me see" — 

" I 'm afraid," interposed Lydia, " that I 've not 
been about enough for you to give me an idea from 
other places. We always go to Greenfield to do 
our trading ; and I 've been to Keene and Spring- 
field a good many times." 

" I 'm sorry to say I have n't," said Staniford. 
" But I '11 tell you : Venice looks like an inun- 
dated town. If you could imagine those sunset 
clouds yonder turned marble, you would have Ven- 
ice as she is at sunset. You must first think of the 
sea when you try to realize the place. If you don't 
find the sea too strange, you won't find Venice so." 

" I wish it would ever seen half as home-like I " 
cried the girl. 

" Then you find the ship — I 'm glad you find 
the ship — home-like," said Staniford, tentatively. 

" Oh, yes ; everything is so convenient and pleas- 
ant. It seems sometimes as if I had always lived 
here." 

" Well, that 's very nice," assented Staniford, 
rather blankly. " Some people feel a little queer 
at sea — in the beginning. And you have n't — 
at all ? " He could not help this leading question, 
yet he knew its meanness, and felt remorse for it. 



100 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

" Oh, / did, at first," responded the girl, but 
went no farther ; and Staniford was glad of it. 
After all, why should he care to know what was in 
her mind ? 

" Captain Jenness," he merely said, " understands 
making people at home." 

" Oh, yes, ifideed," assented Lydia. " And Mr. 
Watterson is very agreeable, and Mr. Mason. I 
didn't suppose sailors were so. What soft, mild 
voices they have ! " 

" That 's the speech of most of the Down East 
coast people." 

*' Is it? I like it better than our voices. Our 
voices are so sharp and high, at home." 

" It 's hard to believe that," said Staniford, with 
a smile. 

Lydia looked at him. " Oh, I was n't born in 
South Bradfield. I was ten years old when I went 
there to live." 

" Where were you born, Miss Blood ? " lie asked. 

" In California. My father had gone out for his 
health, but he died there." 

"Oh!" said Staniford. He had a book in his 
hand, and he began to scribble a little sketch of 
Lydia's pose, on a fly-leaf. She looked round and 
gaw it. " You 've detected me," he said ; " I have n't 
any right to keep your likeness, now. I must make 
you a present of this work of art. Miss Blood." 
He finished the sketch with some ironical flourishes, 
and made as if to tear out the leaf. 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 101 

" Oh 1 " cried Lydia, simply, " you will spoil the 
book I " 

" Then the book shall go with the picture, if 
you '11 let it," said Staniford. 

" Do you mean to give it to me ? " she asked, 
with surprise. 

" That was my munificent intention. I want to 
write your name in it. What 's the initial of your 
first name, Miss Blood ? " 

" L, thank you," said Lydia. 

Staniford gave a start. /' No ! " he exclaimed. 
It seemed a fatality. 

" My name is Lydia," persisted the girl. " What 
letter should it begin with ? " 

"Oh — oh, I knew Lydia began with an L," 
stammered Staniford, " but I — I — I thought your 
first name was " — 

" What ? " asked Lydia sharply. 

"I don't know. Lily," he answered guiltily. 

"Lily Blood !^^ cried the girl. "Lydia is bad 
enough ; but Lily Blood ! They could n't have been 
such fools ! " 

" I beg your pardon. Of course not. I don't 
know how I could have got the idea. It was one 
of those impressions — hallucinations " — Staniford 
found himself in an attitude of lying excuse towards 
the simple girl, over whom he had been lording it 
in satirical fancy ever since he had seen her, and 
meekly anxious that she should not be vexed with 
tim. He began to laugh at his predicament, and 



102 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

she smiled at his mistake. " What is the date? " 
he asked. 

" The 15th," she said ; and he wrote under the 
sketch, Lydia Blood. Ship Aroostooky August 15, 
1874, and handed it to her, with a bow surcharged 
with gravity. 

She took it, and regarded the picture without 
comment. 

" Ah ! " said Staniford, " I see that you know 
how bad my sketch is. You sketch." 

" No, I don't know how to draw," replied Lydia. 

" You criticise." 

" No." 

" So glad," said Staniford. He began to like this. 
A young man must find pleasure in sitting alone 
near a pretty young girl, and talking with her about 
herself and himself, no matter how plain and dull 
her speech is ; and Staniford, though he found Lydia 
as blankly unresponsive as might be to the flatter- 
ing irony of his habit, amused himself in realizing 
that here suddenly he was almost upon the terms of 
"v^indow-seat flirtation with a girl whom lately he 
had treated with perfect indifference, and just now 
with fatherly patronage. The situation had some- 
thing more even than the usual window-seat advan- 
tages ; it had qualities as of a common shipwreck, of 
their being cast away on a desolate island together. 
He felt more than ever that he must protect this 
helpless loveliness, since it had begun to please his 
imagination. " You don't criticise," he said. " Is 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 108 

that because you are so amiable? I'm sure you 
could, if you would." 

" No," returned Lydia ; " I don't really know. 
But I 've often wished I did know." 

" Then you did n't teach drawing, in your 
school ? " 

"How did you know I had a school?" asked 
Lydia quickly. 

He disliked to confess his authority, because he 
disliked the authority, but he said, " Mr. Hicks 
told us." 

" Mr. Hicks ! " Lydia gave a little frown as of 
instinctive displeasure, which gratified Staniford. 

" Yes ; the cabin-boy told him. You see, we are 
dreadful gossips on the Aroostook, — though there 
are so few ladies " — It had slipped from him, but 
it seemed to have no personal slant for Lydia. 

" Oh, yes ; I told Thomas," she said. " No ; 
it's only a country school. Once I thought I 
should go down to the State Normal School, and 
study drawing there ; but I never did. Are you 
— are you a painter, Mr. Staniford? " 

He could not recollect that she had pronounced 
his name before ; he thought it came very winningly 
from her lips. " No, I 'm not a painter. I 'm not 
anything." He hesitated ; then he added recklessly, 
" I 'm a farmer." 

"A farmer?" Lydia looked incredulous, but 
grave. 

" Yes ; I 'm a homy-handed son of the soil. 



104 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

I 'm a cattle-farmer ; I 'm a sheep-farmer ; I don't 
know which. One day I 'm the one, and the next 
day I 'm the other." Lydia looked mystified, and 
Staniford continued : " I mean that I have no pro- 
fession, and that sometimes I think of going into 
farming, out West." 

" Yes ? " said Lydia. 

" How should I like it ? Give me an opinion, 
Miss Blood." 

" Oh, I don't know," answered the girl. 

" You would never have dreamt that I was a 
farmer, would you ? " 

" No, I should n't," said Lydia, honestly. " It 's 
very hard work." 

" And I don't look fond of hard work ? " 

"I did n't say that." 

" And I 've no right to press you for your mean- 
mg. 

" What I meant was — I mean — Perhaps if you 
had never tried it you did n't know what very hard 
work it was. Some of the summer boarders used 
to think our farmers had easy times." 

" I never was a summer boarder of that descrip- 
tion. I know that farming is hard work, and I 'm 
going into it because I dislike it. What do you 
think of that as a form of self-sacrifice ? " 

" I don't see why any one should sacrifice him- 
self uselessly." 

" You don't ? You have very little conception of 
martyrdom. Do you like teaching school ? " 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 105 

" No," said Lydia promptly. 

" Why do you teach, then ? " Staniford had 
blundered. He knew \Yhy she taught, and he felt 
instantly that he had hurt her pride, more sensitive 
than that of a more sophisticated person, who 
would have had no scruple in saying that she did 
it because she waa poor. He tried to retrieve him- 
self. " Of course, I understand that school-teaching 
is useful self-sacrifice." He trembled lest she 
should invent some pretext for leaving him; he 
could not afford to be left at a disadvantage. " But 
do you know, I would no more have taken you for a 
teacher than you me for a farmer." 

"Yes?" said Lydia. 

He could not tell whether she was appeased or 
not, and he rather feared not. " You don't ask 
why. And I asked you why at once." 

Lydia laughed. "Well, why?" 

" Oh, that 's a secret. I '11 tell you one of these 
days." He had really no reason ; he said this to 
gain time. He was always honest in his talk with 
men, but not always with women. 

" I suppose I look very young," said Lydia. " I 
used to be afraid of the big boys." 

" If the boys were big enough," interposed Stan- 
iford, " they must have been afraid of you." 

Lydia said, as if she had not understood, " I had 
hard work to get my certificate. But I was older 
than I looked." 

" That is much better," remarked Staniford, 



106 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

" than being younger than you look. I am twenty- 
eight, and people take me for thirty-four. I 'm a 
prematurely middle-aged man. I wish you would 
tell me, Miss Blood, a little about South Bradfield. 
I 've been trying to make out whether I was ever 
there. I tramped nearly everywhere when I was a 
student. What sort of people are they there ? " 

" Oh, they are very nice people,'* said Lydia. 

" Do you like them ? '* 

"I never thought whether I did. They are 
nearly all old. Their children have gone away ; 
they don't seem to live ; they are just staying. 
When I first came there I was .a little girl. One 
day I went into the grave-yard and counted the 
stones ; there were three times as many as there 
were living persons in the village." 

" I think I know the kind of place," said Stam- 
ford. " I suppose you 're not very homesick ? " 

" Not for the place," answered Lydia, evasively. 

" Of course," Staniford hastened to add, " you 
miss your own family circle." To this she made no 
reply. It is the habit of people bred like her to 
remain silent for want of some sort of formulated 
comment upon remarks to which they assent. 

Staniford fell into a musing mood, which was 
without visible embarrassment to the young girl, 
who must have been inured to much severer si- 
lences in the society of South Bradfield. He re- 
mained staring at her throughout his reverie, which 
in fact related to her. He was thinking what sort 



<^ 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 107 

of an old maid she would have become if she had 
remained in that village. He fancied elements of 
hardness and sharpness in her which would have 
asserted themselves as the joyless years went on, 
like the bony structure of her face as the softness 
of youth left it. She was saved from that, what- 
ever was to be her destiny in Italy. From South 
Bradfield to Venice, — what a prodigious transi- 
tion ! It seemed as if it must transfigure her. 
" Miss Blood," he exclaimed, " I wish I could be 
with you when you first see Venice 1 " 

"Yes?" saidLydia. 

Even the interrogative comment, with the rising 
inflection, could not chill his enthusiasm. " It is 
really the greatest sight in the world." 

Lydia had apparently no comment to make on 
this fact. She waited tranquilly a while before she 
said, "My father used to talk about Italy to me 
when I was little. He wanted to go. My mother 
said afterwards — after she had come home with 
me to South Bradfield — that she always believed 
he would have lived if he had gone there. He had 
consumption." 

" Oh ! " said Staniford softly. Then he added, 
with the tact of his sex, " Miss Blood, you must n't 
take cold, sitting here with me. This wind is 
chilly. Shall I go below and get you some more 
wraps ? " 

"No, thank you," said Lydia; " I believe I will 
go down, now." 



108 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

She went below to her room, and then came out 
into the cabin with some sewing at which she sat 
and stitched by the lamp. The captain was writ- 
ing in his log-book ; Dunham and Hicks were play- 
ing checkers together. Staniford, from a corner of 
a locker, looked musingly upon this curious family 
circle. It was not the first time that its occupa- 
tions had struck him oddly. Sometimes when they 
were all there together, Dunham read aloud. Hicks 
knew tricks of legerdemain which he played clev- 
erly. The captain told some very good stories, 
and led off in the laugh. Lydia always sewed and 
listened. She did not seem to find herself strangely 
placed, and her presence characterized all that was 
said and done with a charming innocence. As a 
bit of life, it was as pretty as it was quaint. 

" Really," Staniford said to Dunham, as they 
turned in, that night, " she has domesticated us.'* 

" Yes," assented Dunham with enthusiasm ; 
"is n't she a nice girl?" 

" She 's intolerably passive. Or not passive, 
either. She says what she thinks, but she does n't 
seem to have thought of many things. Did she 
ever tell you about her father ? " 

" No," said Dunham. 

" I mean about his dying of consumption ? " 

" No, she never spoke of him to me. Was he '' — 

" Um. It appears that we have been upon terras 
of confidence, then." Staniford paused, with one 
boot in his hand. " I should never have thought 
it." 



THE LADY OP THE AROOSTOOK. 109 

" What was her father ? " asked Dunham. 

" Upon my word, I don't know. I did n't seem 
to get beyond elemental statements of intimate fact 
with her. He died in California, where she was 
born ; and he always had a longing to go to Italy. 
That was rather pretty." 

" It 's very touching, I think." 

"Yes, of course. We might fancy this about 
Lurella : that she has a sort of piety in visiting the 
scenes that her father wished to visit, and that — 
Well, anything is predicable of a girl who says so 
little and looks so much. She's certainly very 
handsome ; and I 'm bound to say that her room 
could not have been better than her company, so 
far." 



X. 

The dress that Lydia habitually wore was one 
which her aunt Maria studied from the costume of 
a summer boarder, who had spent a preceding sum- 
mer at the sea-shore, and who found her yachting- 
dress perfectly adapted to tramping over the South 
Bradfield hills. Thus reverting to its original use 
on shipboard, the costume looked far prettier on 
Lydia than it had on the summer boarder from 
whose unconscious person it had been plagiarized. 
It was of the darkest blue flannel, and was fitly set 
off with those bright ribbons at the throat which 
women know how to dispose there according to 
their complexions. One day the bow was scarlet, 
and another crimson ; Staniford did not know which 
was better, and disputed the point in vain with 
Dunham. They all grew to have a taste in such 
matters. Captain Jenness praised her dress out- 
right, and said that he should tell his girls about it. 
Lydia, who had always supposed it was a walking 
costume, remained discreetly silent when the young 
men recognized its nautical character. She enjoyed 
its success ; she made some little changes in the hat 
she wore with it, which met the approval of the 
cabin family ; and she tranquilly kept her black 
silk in reserve for Sunday. She came out to break- 
fast in it, and it swept the narrow spaces, as she 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. Ill 

emerged from her state-room, with so rich and deep 
a murmur that every one looked up. She sustained 
their united glance with something tenderly depre- 
catory and appealingly conscious in her manner, 
much as a very sensitive girl in some new finery 
meets the eyes of her brothers when she does not 
know whether to cry or laugh at what they will say. 
Thomas almost dropped a plate. " Goodness ! " he 
said, helplessly expressing the public sentiment in 
regard to a garment of which he alone had been in 
the secret. No doubt it passed his fondest dreams 
of its splendor ; it fitted her as the sheath of the 
flower fits the flower. 

Captain Jenness looked hard at her, but waited 
a decent season after saying grace before offering 
his compliment, which he did in drawing the carv- 
ing-knife slowly across the steel. "Well, Miss 
Blood, that 's right ! " Lydia blushed richly, and 
the young men made their obeisances across the 
table. 

The flushes and pallors chased each other over 
her face, and the sight of her pleasure in being 
beautiful charmed Staniford. " If she were used to 
worship she would have taken our adoration more 
arrogantly,'* he said to his friend when they went 
on deck after breakfast. " I can place her ; but 
one's circumstance does n't always account for one 
in America, and I can't make out yet whether she 's 
ever been praised for being pretty. Some of our 
hill-country people would have felt like hushing up 



112 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

her beauty, as almost sinful, and some would have 
gone down before it like Greeks. I can't tell 
whether she knows it all or not ; but if 'you sup- 
pose her unconscious till now, it 's pathetic. And 
black silks must be too rare in her life not to be 
celebrated by a high tumult of inner satisfaction. 
I 'm glad we bowed down to the new dress." 

" Yes," assented Dunham, with an uneasy ab- 
sence; "but — Staniford, I should like to propose 
to Captain Jenness our having service this morning. 
It is the eleventh Sunday after " — 

" Ah, yes ! '* said Staniford. " It is Sunday, 
is n't it ? I thought we had breakfast rather later 
than usual. All over the Christian world, on land 
and sea, there is this abstruse relation between a 
late breakfast and religious observances." 

Dunham looked troubled. "I wish you wouldn't 
talk that way, Staniford, and I hope you won't say 
anything "— 

" To interfere with your proposition ? My dear 
fellow, I am at least a gentleman." 

" I beg your pardon," said Dunham, gratefully. 

Staniford even went himself to the captain with 
Dunham's wish ; it is true the latter assumed the 
more disagreeable part of proposing the matter to 
Hicks, who gave a humorous assent, as one might 
to a joke of doubtful feasibility. 

Dunham gratified both his love for social man- 
agement and his zeal for his church in this organi- 
zation of worship ; and when all hands were called 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 118 

aft, and stood round in decorous silence, he read the 
lesson for the day, and conducted the service with a 
gravity astonishing to the sailors, who had taken 
him for a mere dandy. Staniford bore his part in 
the responses from the same prayer-book with Cap- 
tain Jenness, who kept up a devout, inarticulate 
under-growl, and came out strong on particular 
words when he got his bearings through his spec- 
tacles. Hicks and the first officer silently shared 
another prayer-book, and Lydia offered half hers to 
Mr. Mason. 

When the hymn was given out, she waited while 
an experimental search for the tune took place 
among the rest. They were about to abandon the 
attempt, when she lifted her voice and began to 
sing. She sang as she did in the meeting-house at 
South Bradfield, and her voice seemed to fill all the 
hollow height and distance ; it rang far off like a 
mermaid's singing, on high like an angel's; it 
called with the same deep appeal to sense and soul 
alike. The sailors stood rapt ; Dunham kept up a 
show of singing for the church's sake. The others 
made no pretense of looking at the words ; they 
looked at her, and she began to falter, hearing her- 
self alone. Then Staniford struck in again wildly, 
and the sea- voices lent their powerful discord, while 
the girl's contralto thrilled through all. 

" Well, Miss Blood," said the captain, when the 
service had ended in that subordination of the spirit- 
ual to the artistic interest which marks the process 

8 



114 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

and the close of so much public worship in our 
day, "you 've given us a surprise. I guess we shall 
keep you pretty busy with our calls for music, after 
this." 

" She is a genius ! " observed Stamford at his 
first opportunity with Dunham. "I knew there 
must be something the matter. Of course she's 
going out to school her voice ; and she has n't 
strained it in idle babble about her own affairs I I 
must say that Lu — Miss Blood's power of holding 
her tongue commands my homage. Was it her lit- 
tle coup to wait till we got into that hopeless hobble 
before she struck in ? " 

" Coup ? For shame, Staniford I Coup at such 
a time I " 

" Well, well ! I don't say so. But for the thea- 
tre one can't begin practicing these effects too soon. 
Really, that voice puts a new complexion on Miss 
Blood. I have a theory to reconstruct. I have 
been philosophizing her as a simple country girl. 
I must begin on an operatic novice. I liked the 
other better. It gave value to the black silk ; as a 
singer she '11 wear silk as habitually as a cocoon. 
She will have to take some stage name ; translate 
Blood into Italian. We shall know her hereafter 
as La Sanguinelli ; and when she comes to Boston 
we shall make our modest brags about going out to 
Europe with her. I don't know; I think I pre- 
ferred the idyllic flavor I was beginning to find in 
the presence of the oj'dinp.ry, futureless young girl, 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 115 

voyaging under the chaperonage of her own inno- 
cence, — the Little Sister of the Whole Ship. But 
this crepusculant prima donna — no, I don't like it. 
Though it explains some things. These splendid 
creatures are never sent half equipped into the 
world. I fancy that where there 's an operatic 
voice, there 's an operatic soul to go with it. Well, 
La Sanguinelli will wear me out, yet ! Suggest 
some new topic, Dunham; talk of something else, 
for heaven's sake ! " 

"Do you suppose," asked Dunham, "that she 
would like to help get up some musicales, to pass 
away the time ? " 

" Oh, do you call that talking of something else ? 
What an insatiate organizer you are I You organize 
shuffleboard ; you organize public worship ; you 
want to organize musicales. She would have to do 
all your music for you." 

"I. think she would like to go in for it," said 
Dunham. " It must be a pleasure to exercise such 
a gift as that, and now that it 's come out in the 
way it has, it would be rather awkward for us not 
to recognize it." 

Staniford refused point-blank to be a party to the 
new enterprise, and left Dunham to his own devices 
at dinner, where he proposed the matter. 

" If you had my Persis here, now," observed Cap- 
tain Jenness, " with her parlor organ, you could get 
along." 

"I wish Miss Jenness was here," said Dunham, 



116 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

politely. "But we must try to get on as it is. 
With Miss Blood's voice to start with, nothing 
ought to discourage us." Dunham had a thin and 
gentle pipe of his own, and a fairish style in sing- 
ing, but with his natural modesty he would not of- 
fer himself as a performer except in default of all 
others. " Don't you sing, Mr. Hicks ? " 

" Anything to oblige a friend," returned Hicks. 
" But I don't sing — before Miss Blood." 

" Miss Blood," said Staniford, listening in ironic 
safety, " you overawe us all. I never did sing, but 
I think I should want to make an effort if you were 
not by." 

" But don't you — don't you play something, any- 
thing ? " persisted Dunham, in desperate appeal to 
Hicks. 

" Well, yes," the latter admitted, " I play the 
flute a little." 

" Flutes on water ! " said Staniford. Hicks looked 
at him in sulky dislike, but as if resolved not to be 
put down by him. 

" And have you got your flute with you ? " de- 
manded Dunham, joyously. 

" Yes, I have," replied Hicks. 

" Then we are all right. I think I can carry a 
part, and if you will play to Miss Blood's sing- 

mg — 

" Try it this evening, if you like," said the other. 

" Well, ah — I don't know. Perhaps — we 
bad n't better begin this evening." 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 117 

Staniford laughed at Dunham's embarrassment. 
" You might have a sacred concert, and Mr. Hicks 
could represent the shawms and cymbals with his 
flute." 

Dunham looked sorry for Staniford's saying this. 
Captain Jenness stared at him, as if his taking the 
names of these scriptural instruments in vain were 
a kind of blasphemy, and Lydia seemed puzzled and 
a little troubled. 

" I did n't think of its being Sunday," said Hicks, 
with what Staniford felt to be a cunning assump- 
tion of manly frankness, " or any more Sunday 
than usual ; seems as if we had had a month of 
Sundays already since we sailed. I 'm not much on 
religion myself, but I should n't like to interfere 
with other people's principles." 

Staniford was vexed with himself for his scornful 
pleasantry, and vexed with the others for taking it 
so seriously and heavily, and putting him so un- 
necessarily in the wrong. He was angry with Dun- 
ham, and he said to Hicks, "Very just senti- 
ments." 

" I am glad you like them," replied Hicks, with 
sullen apprehension of the offensive tone. 

Staniford turned to Lydia. " I suppose that in 
South Bradfield your Sabbath is over at sundown 
on Sunday evening." 

"That used to be the custom," answered the 
girl. " I 've heard my grandfather tell of it." 

" Oh, yes," interposed Captain Jenness. " They 



118 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

used to keep Saturday night down our way, too. I 
can remember when I was a boy. It came pretty 
hard to begin so soon, but it seemed to kind of 
break it, after all, having a night in." 

The captain did not know what Staniford began 
to laugh at. "Our Puritan ancestors knew just 
how much human nature could stand, after all. 
We did not have an uninterrupted Sabbath till the 
Sabbath had become much milder. Is that it ? " 

The captain had probably no very clear notion of 
what this meant, but simply felt it to be a critical 
edge of some sort. " I don't know as you can have 
too much religion," he remarked. "I've seen 
some pretty rough customers in the church, but I 
always thought. What would they be out of it ! " 

" Very true ! " said Staniford, smiling. He 
wanted to laugh again, but he liked the captain 
too well to do that ; and then he began to rage in 
his heart at the general stupidity which had placed 
him in the attitude of mocking at religion, a thing 
he would have loathed to do. It seemed to him 
that Dunham was answerable for his false position. 
" But we shall not see the right sort of Sabbath till 
Mr. Dunham gets his Catholic church fully going," 
he added. 

They all started, and looked at Dunham as good 
Protestants must when some one whom they would 
never have suspected of Catholicism turns out to 
be a Catholic. Dunham cast a reproachful glance 
at his friend, but said simply, " I am a Catholic, — 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 119 

that is true ; but I do not admit the pretensions of 
the Bishop of Rotoe." 

The rest of the company apparently could not 
follow him in making this distinction ; perhaps 
some of them did not quite know who the Bishop 
of Rome was. Lydia continued to look at him in 
fascination ; Hicks seemed disposed to whistle, if 
such a thing were allowable; Mr. Watterson de- 
voutly waited for the captain. " Well," observed 
the captain at last, with the air of giving the devil 
his due, " I 've seen some very good people among 
the Catholics." 

" That 's so. Captain Jenness," said the first offi- 
cer. 

" I don't see," said Lydia, without relaxing her 
gaze, "why, if you are a Catholic, you read the 
service of a Protestant church." 

" It is not a Protestant church," answered Dun- 
ham, gently, " as I have tried to explain to you." 

" The Episcopalian ? " demanded Captain Jen- 
ness. 

" The Episcopalian," sweetly reiterated Dun- 
ham. 

" I should like to know what kind of a church it 
is, then," said Captain Jenness, triumphantly. 

" An Apostolic church." 

Captain Jenness rubbed his nose, as if this were 
a new kind of church to him. 

" Founded by Saint Henry VIII. himself," inter- 
jected Staniford. 



120 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

" No, Staniford," said Dunham, with a soft re- 
pressiveness. And now a threatening light of zeal 
began to burn in his kindly eyes. These souls had 
plainly been given into his hands for ecclesiastical 
enlightenment. " If our friends will allow me, I 
will explain " — 

Staniford's shaft had recoiled upon his own head. 
" O Lord I " he cried, getting up from the table, 
" I can't stand that!^^ The others regarded him, 
as he felt, even to that weasel of a Hicks, as a 
sheep of uncommon blackness. He went on deck, 
and smoked a cigar without relief. He still heard 
the girl's voice in singing ; and he still felt in his 
nerves the quality of latent passion in it which had 
thrilled him when she sang. His thought ran 
formlessly upon her future, and upon what sort of 
being was already fated to waken her to those pos- 
sibilities of intense sujffering and joy which he im- 
agined in her. A wound at his heart, received 
long before, hurt vaguely ; and he felt old. 



XI. 

No one said anything more of the musicales, and 
the afternoon and evening wore away without gen- 
eral talk. Each seemed willing to keep apart from 
the rest. Dunham suffered Lydia to come on deck 
alone after tea, and Staniford found her there, in 
her usual place, when he went up some time later. 
He approached her at once, and said, smiling down 
into her face, to which the moonlight gave a pale 
mystery, " Miss Blood, did you think I was very 
wicked to-day at dinner ? " 

Lydia looked away, and waited a moment before 
she spoke. " I don't know," she said. Then, im- 
pulsively, " Did you ? " she asked. 

"No, honestly, I don't think I was," answered 
Staniford. " But I seemed to leave that impression 
on the company. I felt a little nasty, that was all ; 
and I tried to hurt Mr. Dunham's feelings. But I 
shall make it right with him before I sleep ; he 
knows that. He 's used to having me repent at 
leisure. Do you ever walk Sunday night? " 

" Yes, sometimes," said Lydia interrogatively. 

'' I 'm glad of that. Then I shall not offend against 
your scruples if I ask you to join me in a little ram- 
ble, and you will refuse from purely personal consid- 
erations. Will you walk with me? " 



122 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

"Yes." Lydia rose. 

" And will you take my arm ? " asked Staniford, 
a little surprised at her readiness. 

" Thank you." 

She put her hand upon his arm, confidently 
enough, and they began to walk up and down the 
stretch of open deck together. 

" Well, " said Staniford, " did Mr. Dunham con- 
vince you all ? " 

" I think he talks beautifully about it," replied 
Lydia, with quaint stiffness. 

" I am glad you see what a very good fellow he 
is. I have a real affection for Dunham." 

" Oh, yes, he 's good. At first it surprised me. 
I mean " — 

" No, no," Staniford quickly interrupted, " why 
did it surprise you to find Dunham good ? " 

" I don't know. You don't expect a person to be 
serious who is so — so " — 

" Handsome ? " 

" No, — so — I don't know just how to say it : 
fashionable." 

Staniford laughed. "Why, Miss Blood, you're 
fashionably dressed yourself, not to go any farther, 
and you 're serious." 

" It 's different with a man," the girl explained. 

" Well, then, how about me ? " asked Staniford. 
*' Am I too well dressed to be expected to be se- 
rious ? " 

" Mr. Dunham always seems in earnest," Lydia 
answered, evasively. 



~4 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 123 

" And you think one can't be in earnest without 
being serious ? " Lydia sufiEered one of those silences 
to ensue in which Staniford had already found him- 
self helpless. He knew that he should be forced to 
break it : and he said, with a little spiteful mock- 
ing, " I suppose the young men of South Bradfield 
are both serious and earnest." 

" How ? " asked Lydia. 

" The young men of South Bradfield." 

" I told you that there were none. They all go 
away." 

"Well, then, the young men of Springfield, of 
Keene, of Greenfield." 

" I can't tell. I am not acquainted there." 

Staniford had begun to have a disagreeable sus- 
picion that her ready consent to walk up and down 
with a young man in the moonlight might have come 
from a habit of the kind. But it appeared that her 
fearlessness was like that of wild birds in those des- 
ert islands where man has never come. The dis- 
covery gave him pleasure out of proportion to its 
importance, and he paced back and forth in a silence 
that no longer chafed. Lydia walked very well, 
and kept his step with rhythmic unison, as if they 
were walking to music together. " That 's the time 
in her pulses," he thought, and then he said, " Then 
you don't have a great deal of social excitement, I 
suppose, — dancing, and that kind of thing? 
Though perhaps you don't approve of dancing ? " 

" Oh, yes, I like it. Sometimes the summer 
Voarders get up little dances at the hotel." 



124 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. * 

" Oh, the summer boarders ! " Stamford had 
overlooked them. " The young men get them up, 
and invite the ladies ? " he pursued. 

*' There are no young men, generally, among the 
summer boarders. The ladies dance together. Most 
of the gentlemen are old, or else invalids." 

" Oh I " said Staniford. 

"At the Mill Village, where I've taught two 
winters, they have dances sometimes, — the mill 
hands do." 

"And do you go? " 

" No. They are nearly all French Canadians 
and Irish people." 

" Then you like dancing because there are no 
gentlemen to dance with ? " 

" There are gentlemen at the picnics." 

" The picnics ? " 

" The teachers' picnics. They have them every 
summer, in a grove by the pond." 

There was, then, a high-browed, dyspeptic high- 
school principal, and the desert-island theory was 
probably all wrong. It vexed Staniford, when he 
had so nearly got the compass of her social life, to 
find this unexplored corner in it. 

" And I suppose you are leaving very agi'eeable 
friends among the teachers ? " 

" Some of them are pleasant. But I don't know 
them very well. I 've only been to one of the pic- 
mcs. 

Staniford drew a long, silent breath. After all, 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 125 

he knew everything. He mechanically dropped a 
little the arm on which her hand rested, that it 
might slip farther within. Her timid remoteness 
had its charm, and he fell to thinking, with amuse- 
ment, how she who was so subordinate to him was, 
in the dimly known sphere in which he had been 
groping to find her, probably a person of authority 
and consequence. It satisfied a certain domineering 
quality in him to have reduced her to this humble 
attitude, while it increased the protecting tender- 
ness he was beginning to have for her. His mind 
went ofiE further upon this matter of one's different 
attitudes toward different persons ; he thought of 
men, and women too, before whom he should in- 
stantly feel like a boy, if he could be confronted 
with them, even in his present lordliness of mood. 
In a fashion of his when he convicted himself of 
anything, he laughed aloud. Lydia shrank a little 
from him, in question. " I beg your pardon," he 
said. " I was laughing at something I happened 
to think of. Do you ever find yourself struggling 
very hard to be what you think people think you 
are?" 

" Oh, yes," replied Lydia. '' But I thought no 
one else did." 

" Everybody does the thing that we think no one 
else does," said Staniford, sententiously. 

"I don't know whether I quite like it," said 
Lydia. " It seems like hypocrisy. It used to worry 
me. Sometimes I wondered if I had any real self. 



126 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

I seemed to be just what people made me, and a 
different person to each." 

" I 'm glad to hear it, Miss Blood. We are com- 
panions in hypocrisy. As we are such nonentities 
we shall not affect each other at all." Lydia 
laughed. " Don't you think so ? What are you 
laughing at ? I told you what I was laughing at I " 

" But I did n't ask you." 

" You wished to know." 

" Yes, I did." 

'* Then you ought to tell me what I wish to 
know." 

" It 's nothing," said Lydia. " I thought you 
were mistaken in what you said." 

" Oh ! Then you believe that there 's enough of 
you to affect me ? " 

"No." 

" The other way, then ? " 

She did not answer. 

" I 'ra delighted ! " exclaimed Staniford. " I hope 
I don't exert an uncomfortable influence. I should 
be very unhappy to think so." Lydia stooped side- 
wise, away from him, to get a fresh hold of her 
skirt, which she was carrying in her right hand, 
and she hung a little more heavily upon his arm, 
"I hope I make you think better of yourself, — 
very self-satisfied, very conceited even ." 

" No," said Lydia. 

" You pique my curiosity beyond endurance. 
Tell me how I make you feel." 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 127 

She looked quickly round at him, as if to see 
whether he was in earnest. " Why, it 's nothing," 
she said. " You made me feel as if you were laugh- 
ing at everybody." 

It flatters a man to be accused of sarcasm by the 
other sex, and Staniford was not superior to the 
soft pleasure of the reproach. "Do you think I 
make other people feel so, too ? " 

" Mr. Dunham said " — 

" Oh I Mr. Dunham has been talking me over 
with you, has he ? What did he tell you of me ? 
There is nobody like a true friend for dealing an 
underhand blow at one's reputation. Wait till you 
hear my account of Dunham I What did he say? " 

" He said that was only your way of laughing at 
yourself." 

" The traitor I What did you say ? " 

" I don't know that I said anything." 

" You were reserving your opinion for my own 
bearing ? " 

" No." 

" Why don't you tell me what you thought? It 
might be of great use to me. I 'm in earnest, now ; 
I 'm serious. Will you tell me ? " 

"Yes, some time," said Lydia, who was both 
amused and mystified at this persistence. 

" When ? To-morrow ? " 

" Oh, that 's too soon. When I get to Venice I " 

"Ah! That's a subterfuge. You know we 
shall part in Trieste." 



128 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

" I thought," said Lydia, " you were coming to 
Venice, too." 

" Oh, yes, but I should n't be able to see you 
there." 

" Why not ? " 

" Why not? Why, because " — He was near 
telling the young girl who hung upon his arm, and 
walked up and down with him in the m'oonlight, 
that in the wicked Old World towards which they 
were sailing young people could not meet save in 
the sight and hearing of their elders, and that a 
confidential analysis of character would be impossi- 
ble between them there. The wonder of her being 
where she was, as she was, returned upon him with 
a freshness that it had been losing in the custom of 
the week past. "Because you will be so much 
taken up with your friends," he said, lamely. He 
added quickly, " There 's one thing I should like to 
know. Miss Blood: did you hear what Mr. Dun- 
ham and I were saying, last night, when we stood 
in the gangway and kept you from coming up ? " 

Lydia waited a moment. Then she said, " Yes. 
I could n't help hearing it." 

" That 's all right. I don't care for your hearing 
what I said. But - — I hope it was n't true ? " 

"I could n't understand what you meant by it," 
phe answered, evasively, but rather faintly. 

" Thanks," said Staniford. " I did n't mean any- 
thing. It was merely the guilty consciousness of a 
generally disagreeable person." They walked up 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 129 

and down many turns without saying anything. 
She could not have made any direct protest, and it 
pleased him that she could not frame any flourish- 
ing generalities. " Yes," Staniford resumed, " I 
will try to see you as I pass through Venice. And 
I will come to hear you sing when you come out at 
Milan." 

"Come out? At Milan?" 

" Why, yes ! You are going to study at the con- 
servatory in Milan ? " 

" How did you know that ? " demanded Lydia. 

" From hearing you to-day. May I tell you how 
much I liked your singing ? " 

" My aunt thought I ought to cultivate my voice. 
But I would never go upon the stage. I would 
rather sing in a church. I should like that better 
than teaching." 

"I think you're quite right," said Staniford, 
gravely. " It 's certainly much better to sing in a 
church than to sing in a theatre. Though I believe 
the theatre pays best." 

" Oh, I don't care for that. All I should want 
would be to make a living." 

The reference to her poverty touched him. It 
was a confidence, coming from one so reticent, that 
was of value. He waited a moment and said, 
"It's surprising how well we keep our footing 
here, is n't it ? There 's hardly any swell, but the 
ship pitches. I think we walk better together than 
alone." 





130 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

" Yes," answered Lydia, " I think we do." 

" You must n't let me tire you. I 'm indefatiga- 
ble." 

" Oh, I 'm not tired. I like it, — walking." 

" Do you walk much at home ? " 

" Not much. It 's a pretty good walk to the 
school-house." 

" Oh ! Then you like walking at sea better than 
you do on shore?" 

" It is n't the custom, much. If there were any 
one else, I should have liked it thr^'^e. But it 's 
rather dull, going by yourself." 

" Yes, I understand how that is," said Staniford, 
dropping his teasing tone. " It 's stupid. And I 
suppose it 's pretty lonesome at South Bradfield 
every way." 

" It is, — winters," admitted Lydia. " In the 
summer you see people, at any rate, but in winter 
there are days and days when hardly any one passes. 
The snow is banked up everywhere." 

He felt her give an involuntary shiver ; and he 
began to talk to her about the climate to which she 
was going. It was all stranger to her than he could 
have realized, and less intelligible. She remembered 
California very dimly, and she had no experience by 
which she could compare and adjust his facts. He 
made her walk up and down more and more swiftly, 
ds he lost himself in the comfort of his own talking 
and of her listening, and he failed to note the little 
Ealterings with which she expressed her weariness. 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 131 

All at once he halted, and said, " Why, you 're out 
of breath ! I beg your pardon. You should have 
stopped me. Let us sit down." He wished to walk 
across the deck to where the seats were, but she 
just perceptibly withstood his motion, and he for- 
bore. 

" I think I won't sit down," she said. " I will 
go down-stairs." She began withdrawing her hand 
from his arm. He put his right hand upon hers, 
and when it came out of his arm it remained in his 
hand. 

" I 'm afraid you won't walk with me again," 
said Staniford. " I 've tired you shamefully." 

" Oh, not at all ! " 

" And you will ? " 

" Yes." 

" Thanks. You 're very amiable." He still held 
her hand. He pressed it. The pressure was not 
returned, but her hand seemed to quiver and throb 
in his like a bird held there. For the time neither 
of them spoke, and it seemed a long time. Stani- 
ford found himself carrying her hand towards his 
lips; and she was helplessly, trustingly, letting 
him. 

He dropped her hand, and said, abruptly, " Good- 
night." 

" Good-night," she answered, and ceased from his 
side like a ghost. 



XII. 

Stanipord sat in the moonlight, and tried to 
think what the steps were that had brought him 
to this point ; but there were no steps of which he 
was sensible. He remembered thinking the night 
before that the conditions were those of flirtation ; 
to-night this had not occurred to him. The talk 
had been of the dullest commonplaces ; yet he had 
pressed her hand and kept it in his, and had been 
about to kiss it. He bitterly considered the dis- 
parity between his present attitude and the stand 
he had taken when he declared to Dunham that it 
rested with them to guard her peculiar isolation 
from anything that she could remember with pain 
or humiliation when she grew wiser in the world. 
He recalled his rage with Hicks, and the insulting 
condemnation of his bearing towards him ever 
since ; and could Hicks have done worse ? He had 
done better : he had kept away from her ; he had 
let her alone. 

That night Staniford slept badly, and woke vrith 
a restless longing to see the girl, and to read in her 
face whatever her thought of him had been. But 
Lydia did not come out to breakfast. Thomas re- 
ported that she had a headache, and that he had 
already carried her the tea and toast she wanted. 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 133 

" Well, it seems kind of lonesome without her," 
said the captain. " It don't seem as if we could 
get along." 

It seemed desolate to Staniford, who let the talk 
flag and fail round him without an effort to rescue 
it. All the morning he lurked about, keeping out 
of Dunham's way, and fighting hard through a 
dozen pages of a book, to which he struggled to 
nail his wandering mind. A headache was a little 
matter, but it might be even less than a headache. 
He belated himself purposely at dinner, and en- 
tered the cabin just as Lydia issued from her state- 
room door. 

She was pale and looked heavy-eyed. As she 
lifted her glance to him, she blushed ; and he felt 
the answering red stain his face. When she sat 
down, the captain patted her on the shoulder with 
his burly right hand, and said he could not navigate 
the ship if she got sick. He pressed her to eat of 
this and that ; and when she would not, he said, 
well, there was no use trying to force an appetite, 
and that she would be better all the sooner for 
dieting. Hicks went to his state-room, and came 
out with a box of guava jelly, from his private 
stores, and won a triumph enviable in all eyes when 
Lydia consented to like it with the chicken. Dun- 
ham plundered his own and Staniford's common 
stock of dainties for her dessert; the first officer 
g^greed and applauded right and left; Staniford 
alone sat taciturn and inoperative, watching her 



134 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

face fui-tively. Once her eyes wandered to the side 
of the table where he and Dunham sat ; then she 
colored and dropped her glance. 

He took his book again after dinner, and with his 
finger between the leaves, at the last-read, unintel- 
ligible page, he went out to the bow, and crouched 
down there to renew the conflict of the morning. 
It was not long before Dunham followed. He 
stooped over to lay a hand on either of Staniford's 
shoulders. 

" What makes you avoid me, old man ? " he de- 
manded, looking into Staniford's face with his frank, 
kind eyes. 

"And I avoid you ? " asked Staniford. 

"Yes; why?" 

" Because I feel rather shabby, I suppose. I 
knew I felt shabby, but I did n't know I was avoid- 
ing you." 

"Well, no matter. If you feel shabby, it's all 
right ; but I hate to have you feel shabby." He got 
his left hand down into Staniford's right, and a 
tacit reconciliation was transacted between them. 
Dunham looked about for a seat, and found a stool, 
which he planted in front of Staniford. " Was n't 
it pleasant to have our little lady back at table, 
again?" 

"Very," said Staniford. 

" I could n't help thinking how droll it was that 
a person whom we all considered a sort of incum- 
brance and superfluity at first should really turn 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 136 

out an object of prime importance to us all. Is n't 
it amusing ? " 

"Very droll." 

" Why, we were quite lost without her, at break- 
fast. I could n't have imagined her taking such a 
hold upon us all, in so short a time. But she 's a 
pretty creature, and as good as she 's pretty." 

" I remember agreeing with you on those points 
before." Staniford feigned to suppress fatigue. 

Dunham observed him. " I know you don't take 
so much interest in her as — as the rest of us do, 
and I wish you did. You don't know what a lovely 
nature she is." 

"No?" 

" No ; and I 'm sure you 'd like her." 

" Is it important that I should like her ? Don't 
let your enthusiasm for the sex carry you beyond 
bounds, Dunham." 

"No, no. Not important, but very pleasant. 
And I think acquaintance with such a girl would 
give you some new ideas of women." 

" Oh, my old ones are good enough. Look here, 
Dunham," said Staniford, sharply, " what are you 
after ? " 

" What makes you think I 'm after anything ? " 

" Because you 're not a humbug, and because I 
am. My depraved spirit instantly recognized the 
dawning duplicity of yours. But you 'd better be 
honest. You can't make the other thing work. 
What do you want ? " 




THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

5,nt your advice. I want your help, Stan- 
iford." 

" I thought so I Coming and forgiving me in 
that — apostoKc manner." 

" Don't I " 

" Well. What do you want my help for ? What 
have you been doing ? " Staniford paused, and 
suddenly added : " Have you been making love to 
Lurella ? " He said this in his ironical manner, 
but his smile was rather ghastly. 

" For shame, Staniford I " cried Dunham. But 
he reddened violently. 

" Then it is n't with Miss Hibbard that you want 
my help. I 'm glad Of that. It would have been 
awkward. I 'm a little afraid of Miss Hibbard. It 
is n't every one has your courage, my dear fellow." 

" I have n't been making love to her," said Dun- 
ham, " but — I " — 

" But you what ? " demanded Staniford sharply 
again. There had been less tension of voice in his 
joking about Miss Hibbard. 

" Staniford," said his friend, " I don't know 
whether you noticed her, at dinner, when she 
looked across to our own side ? " 

" What did she do ? " 

" Did you notice that she — well, that she blushed 
a Uttle ? " 

Staniford waited a while before he answered, 
nf ter a gulp, " Yes, I noticed that." 

" Well, I don't know how to put it exactly, but 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 137 

I'm afraid that I have unwittingly wronged this 
young girl." 

" Wronged her ? What the devil do you mean, 
Dunham ? " cried Staniford, with bitter impatience. 

" I 'm afraid — I 'm afraid — Why, it 's simply 
this : that in trying to amuse her, and make the 
time pass agreeably, and relieve her mind, and all 
that, don't you know, I Ve given her the impression 
that I 'm — well — interested in her, and that she 
may have allowed herself — insensibly, you know — 
to look upon me in that light, and that she may have 
begun to think — that she may have become " — 

" Interested in you ? " interrupted Staniford 
rudely. 

" Well — ah — ^well, that is — ah — well — yes ! " 
cried Dunham, bracing himself to sustain a shout 
of ridicule. But Staniford did not laugh, and 
Dunham had courage to go on. " Of course, it 
sounds rather conceited to say so, but the circum- 
stances are so peculiar that I think we ought to 
recognize even any possibilities of that sort." 

" Oh, yes," said Staniford, gravely. " Most 
women, I believe, are so innocent as to think a 
man in love when he behaves like a lover. And 
this one," he added ruefully, "seems more than 
commonly ignorant of our ways, — of our infernal 
shilly-shallying, purposeless no-mindedness. She 
could n't imagine a man — a gentleman — devoting 
himself to her by the hour, and trying by every art 
to show his interest and pleasure in her society, 



138 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

without imagining that he wished her to like him, 
— love him ; there 's no half-way about it. She 
could n't suppose him the shallow, dawdling, soul- 
less, senseless ape he really was." Stamford was 
quite in a heat by this time, and Dunham listened 
in open astonishment. 

" You are hard upon me," he said. " Of course, 
I have been to blame ; T know that, I acknowledge 
it. But my motive, as you know well enough, was 
never to amuse myself with her, but to contribute 
in any way I could to her enjoyment and happi- 
ness. I " — 

" You ! " cried Stanif ord. " What are you talk- 
ing about? " 

" What are you talking about ? " demanded Dun- 
ham, in his turn. 

Staniford recollected himself. " I was speaking 
of abstract flirtation. I was firing into the air." 

" In my case, I don't choose to call it flirtation," 
returned Dunham. " My purpose, I am bound to 
say, was thoroughly unselfish and kindly." 

"My dear fellow," said Staniford, with a bitter 
smile, " there can be no unselfishness and no kindli- 
ness between us and young girls, unless we mean 
business, — love-making. You may be sure that 
they feel it so, if they don't understand it so." 

"I don't agree with you. I don't believe it. 
My own experience is that the sweetest and most 
generous friendships may exist between us, without 
a thought of anything else. And as to making 



I 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 139 

love, I must beg you to remember that my love has 
been made once for all. I never dreamt of show- 
ing Miss Blood anything but polite attention." 

" Then what are you troubled about ? " 

" I am troubled " — Dunham stopped helplessly, 
and Staniford laughed in a challenging, disagree- 
able way, so that the former perforce resumed: 
" I 'm troubled about — about her possible misin- 
terpretation." 

" Oh ! Then in this case of sweet and generous 
friendship the party of the second part may have 
construed the sentiment quite differently ! Well, 
what do you want me to do ? Do you want me to 
take the contract off your hands ? " 

" You put it grossly," said Dunham. 

"AndyoM put it offensively!" cried the other. 
" My regard for the young lady is as reverent as 
yours. You have no right to miscolor my words." 

" Staniford, you are too bad," said Dunham, hurt 
even more than angered. "If I 've come to you 
in the wrong moment — if you are vexed at any- 
thing, I '11 go away, and beg your pardon for bormg 
you." 

Staniford was touched ; he looked cordially into 
his friend's face. " I was vexed at something, but 
you never can come to me at the wrong moment, 
old fellow. I beg your pardon. / see your diffi- 
culty plainly enough, and I think you 're quite 
right in proposing to hold up, — for that 's what 
you mean, I take it ? " 



140 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

" Yes,' said Dunham, " it is. And I don't know 
how she will like it. She will be puzzled and 
grieved by it. I had n't thought seriously about 
the matter till this morning, when she did n't come 
to breakfast. You know I 've been in the habit of 
asking her to walk with me every night after tea ; 
but Saturday evening you were with her, and last 
night I felt sore about the aflFairs of the day, and 
rather dull, and I did n't ask her. I think she 
noticed it. I think she was hurt." 

" You think so? " said Staniford, peculiarly. 

" I might not have thought so," continued Dun- 
ham, " merely because she did not come to break- 
fast ; but her blushing when she looked across at 
dinner really made me uneasy." 

" Very possibly you 're right." Staniford mused 
a while before he spoke again. " Well, what do 
you wish me to do ? " 

" I must hold up, as you say, and of course she 
will feel the difference. I wish — I wish at least 
you would n't avoid her, Staniford. That 's all. 
Any little attention from you — I know it bores 
you — would not only break the loneliness, but it 
would explain that — that my — attentions did n't 
— ah — had n't meant anything." 

"Ohl" 

" Yes ; that it 's common to offer them. And 
she 's a girl of so much force of character that when 
she sees the affair in its true light — I suppose 
I 'm to blame I Yes, I ought to have told her at 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 141 

the beginning that I was engaged. But you can't 
force a fact of that sort upon a new acquaintance : 
it looks silly." Dunham hung his head in self- 
reproach. 

" Well ? " asked Stamford. 

"Well, that's all! No, it ibtCI all, either. 
There 's something else troubles me. Our poor 
little friend i» a blackguard, I suppose ? " 

" Hicks ? " 

"Yes." 

" You have invited him to be the leader of your 
orchestra, have n't you ? " 

" Oh, don't, Staniford I " cried Dunham in his 
helplessness. " I should hate to see her dependent 
in any degree upon that little cad for society." Cad 
was the last English word which Dunham had got 
himself used to. " That was why I hoped that you 
would n't altogether neglect her. She 's here, and 
she's no choice but to remain. We can't leave 
her to herself without the danger of leaving her to 
Hicks. You see?" 

" Well," said Staniford gloomily, " I 'm not sure 
that you could n't leave her to a worse cad than 
Hicks." Dunham looked up in question. "To 
me, for example." 

" Oh, hallo I " cried Dunham. 

" I don't see how I 'm to be of any use," contin- 
ued the other. " I 'm not a squire of dames ; I 
should merely make a mess of it." 

" You 're mistaken, Staniford, — I 'm sure you 



142 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

are, — in supposing that she dislikes you," urged 
his friend. 

" Oh, very likely." 

" I know that she 's simply afraid of you." 

" Don't flatter, Dunham. Why should I care 
whether she fears me or affects me ? No, my dear 
fellow. This is irretrievably your own affair. I 
should be glad to help you out if I knew how. But 
I don't. In the mean time your duty is plain, what- 
ever happens. You can't overdo the sweet and the 
generous in this wicked world without paying the 
penalty." 

Staniford smiled at the distress in which Dunham 
went his way. He understood very well that it 
was not vanity, but the liveliness of a sensitive con- 
science, that had made Dunham search his conduct 
for the offense against the young girl's peace of 
heart which he believed he had committed, and it 
was the more amusing because he was so guiltless 
of harm. Staniford knew who was to blame for the 
headache and the blush. He knew that Dunham 
had never gone so far ; that his chivalrous pleasure 
in her society might continue for years free from 
flirtation. But in spite of this conviction a little 
poignant doubt made itself felt, and suddenly be- 
came his whole consciousness. "Confound him!" 
he mused. " I wonder if she really could care any- 
thing for him I ^' He shut his book, and rose to 
his feet with such a burning in his heart that he 
could not have believed himself capable of the 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. l43 

greater rage he felt at what he just then saw. It 
was Lydia and Hicks seated together in the place 
where he had sat with her. She leaned with one 
arm upon the rail, in an attitude that brought all 
her slim young grace into evidence. She seemed 
on very good terms with him, and he was talking 
and making her laugh as Stamford had never heard' 
her laugh before — so freely, so heartily. 



xin. 

The atoms that had been tending in Staniford'a 
being toward a certain form suddenly arrested and 
shaped themselves anew at the vibration imparted 
by this laughter. He no longer felt himself Hicks's 
possible inferior, but vastly better in every way, 
and out of the turmoil , of his feelings in regard to 
Lydia was evolved the distinct sense of having been 
trifled with. Somehow, an advantage had been 
taken of his sympathies and purposes, and his for- 
bearance had been treated with contempt. 

The conviction was neither increased nor dimin- 
ished by the events of the evening, when Lydia 
brought out some music from her state-room, and 
Hicks appeared, flute in hand, from his, and they 
began practicing one of the pieces together. It was 
a pretty enough sight. Hicks had been gradually 
growing a better-looking fellow ; he had an unde- 
niable picturesqueness, as he bowed his head over 
the music towards hers; and she, as she held the 
sheet with one hand for him to see, while she noise- 
lessly accompanied herself on the table with the 
fingers of the other, and tentatively sang now this 
passage and now that, was divine. The picture 
seemed pleasing to neither Staniford nor Dunham ; 
they went on deck together, and sat down to their 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 145 

cigarettes in their wonted place. They did not talk 
of Lydia, or of any of the things that had formed 
the basis of their conversation hitherto, but Stani- 
ford returned to his Colorado scheme, and explained 
at length the nature of his purposes and expectar 
tions. He had discussed these matters before, but 
he had never gone into them so fully, nor with 
such cheerful earnestness. He said he should never 
marry, — he had made up his mind to that ; but he 
hoped to make money enough to take care of his 
sister's boy Jim handsomely, as the little chap had 
been named for him. He had been thinking the 
matter over, and he believed that he should get 
back by rail and steamer as soon as he could after 
they reached Trieste. He was not sorry he had 
come ; but he could not afford to throw away too 
much time on Italy, just then. 

Dunham, on his part, talked a great deal of Miss 
Hibbard, and of some curious psychological char- 
acteristics of her dyspepsia. He asked Staniford 
whether he had ever shown him the photograph of 
Miss Hibbard taken by Sarony when she was on to 
New York the last time: it was a three-quarters 
view, and Dunham thought it the best she had had 
done. He spoke of her generous qualities, and of 
the interest she had always had in the Diet Kitchen, 
to which, as an invalid, her attention had been partic- 
ularly directed : and he said that in her last letter she 
had mentioned a project for estabUshing diet kitchens 
in Europe, on the Boston plan. When their talk 

10 



146 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

grew more impersonal and took a wider range, they 
gathered suggestion from the situation, and remarked 
upon the immense solitude of the sea. They agreed 
that there was something weird in the long contin- 
uance of fine weather, and that the moon had a strange 
look. They spoke of the uncertainty of life. Dun- 
ham regretted, as he had often regretted before, that 
his friend had no fixed religious belief ; and Stani- 
ford gently accepted his solicitude, and said that he 
had at least a conviction if not a creed. He then 
begged Dunham's pardon in set terms for trying to 
wound his feelings the day before ; and in the silent 
hand-clasp that followed they renewed all the cor- 
diality of their friendship. From time to time, as 
they talked, the music from below came up fitfully, 
and once they had to pause as Lydia sang through 
the song that she and Hicks were practicing. 

As the days passed their common interest in the 
art brought Hicks and the young girl almost con- 
stantly together, and the sound of their concerting 
often filled the ship. The musicales, less formal 
rhan Dunham had intended, and perhaps for that 
reason a source of rapidly diminishing interest with 
him, superseded both ring-toss and shufile-board, and 
seemed even more acceptable to the ship's company 
as an entertainment. One evening, when the per- 
formers had been giving a piece of rather more than 
usual excellence and diflSculty, one of the sailors, 
deputed by his mates, came aft, with many clumsy 
shows of deference, and asked them to give March* 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 147 

ing through Georgia. Hicks found this out of his 
repertory, but Lydia sang it. Then the group at 
the forecastle shouted with one voice for Tramp, 
Tramp, Tramp, the Boys are Marching, and so be- 
guiled her through the whole list of war-songs. She 
ended with one unknown to her listeners, but better 
than all the rest in its pathetic words and music, 
and when she had sung The Flag 's come back to 
Tennessee, the spokesman of the sailors came aft 
again, to thank her for his mates, and to say they 
would not spoil that last song by asking for any- 
thing else. It was a charming little triumph for 
her, as she sat surrounded by her usual court : the 
captain was there to countenance the freedom the 
sailors had taken, and Dunham and Staniford stood 
near, but Hicks, at her right hand, held the place 
of honor. 

The next night Staniford found her alone in the 
waist of the ship, and drew up a stool beside the 
rail where she sat. 

"We all enjoyed your singing so much, last 
night. Miss Blood. I think Mr. Hicks plays 
charmingly, but I believe I prefer to hear your 
voice alone." 

" Thank you," said Lydia, looking down, de- 
murely. 

" It must be a great satisfaction to feel that you 
can give so much pleasure." 

" I don't know," .she said, passing the palm of 
one hand over the back of the other. 



148 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

" When you are a prima donna you must n't for- 
get your old friends of the Aroostook. We shall 
all take vast pride in you." 

It was not a question, and Lydia answered noth- 
ing. Staniford, who had rather obliged himself to 
this advance, with some dim purpose of showing 
that nothing had occurred to alienate them since 
the evening of their promenade, without having 
proved to himself that it was necessary to do this, 
felt that he was growing angry. It irritated him 
to have her sit as unmoved after his words as if he 
had not spoken. 

" Miss Blood," he said, " I envy you your gift of 
snubbing people." 

Lydia looked at him. " Snubbing people? " she 
echoed. 

" Yes ; your power of remaining silent when you 
wish to put down some one who has been wittingly 
or unwittingly impertinent." 

" I don't know what you mean," she said, in a 
sort of breathless way. 

" And you did n't intend to mark your dis- 
pleasure at my planning your future ? " 

« No 1 We had talked of that. I " — 

" And you were not vexed with me for any- 
thing ? I have been afraid that I — that you " — 
Staniford found that he was himself getting short 
of breath. He had begun with the intention of 
mystifying her, but matters had suddenly taken 
another course, and he was really anxious to know 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 149 

whether any disagreeable associations with that 
night lingered in her mind. With this longing 
camo a natural inability to find the right word. 
" I was afraid " — he repeated, and then he 
stopped again. Clearly, he could not tell her that 
he was afraid he had gone too far; but this was 
what he meant. " You don't walk with me, any 
more. Miss Blood," he concluded, with an air of 
burlesque reproach. 

" You have n't asked me — since," she said. 

He felt a singular value and significance in this 
word, since. It showed that her thoughts had 
been running parallel with his own ; it permitted, 
if it did not signify, that he should resume the 
mood. of that time, where their parting had inter- 
rupted it. He enjoyed the fact to the utmost, but 
he was not sure that he wished to do what he was 
permitted. " Then I did n't tire you ? " he merely 
asked. He was not sure, now he came to think of 
it, that he liked her willingness to recur to that 
time. He liked it, but not quite in the way he 
would have liked to like it. 
No," she said. 

The fact is," he went on aimlessly, " that I 
thought I had rather abused your kindness. Be- 
sides," he added, veering off, " I was afraid I should 
be an interruption to the musical exercises." 

" Oh, no," said Lydia. " Mr. Dunham has n't 
arranged anything yet." Staniford thought this 
vincandid. It was fighting- shy of Hicks, who was 






150 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

the person in his own mind ; and it reawakened a 
suspicion which was lurking there. " Mr. Dun- 
ham seems to have lost his interest." 

This struck Staniford as an expression of pique ; 
it reawakened quite another suspicion. It was evi- 
dent that she was hurt at the cessation of Dun- 
ham's attentions. He was greatly minded to say 
that Dunham was a fool, but he ended by saying, 
with sarcasm, " I suppose he saw that he was su- 
perseded." 

" Mr. Hicks plays well," said Lydia, judicially, 
" but he does n't really know so much of music as 
Mr. Dunham." 

'' No ? " responded Staniford, with irony. " I wiU 
tell Dunham. No doubt he 's been suffering the 
pangs of professional jealousy. That must be the 
reason why he keeps away." 

" Keeps away ? " asked Lydia. 

" Now I 've made an ass of myself I " thought 
Staniford. '^ You said that he seemed to have lost 
his interest," he answered her. 

"Oh I Yes I" assented Lydia. And then she 
remained rather distraught, pulling at the ruffling 
of her dress. 

"Dunham is a very accomplished man," said 
Staniford, finding the usual satisfaction in pressing 
his breast against the thorn. " He 's a great favorite 
in society. He 's up to no end of things." Stani- 
ford uttered these praises in a curiously bitter tone. 
" He 's a capital tdker. Don't you think he talks 
well ? " 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK 161 

"I don't know; I suppose I have n't seen enough 
people to be a good judge." 

" Well, you 've seen enough people to know that 
he 's very good looking ? " 

"Yes?" 

"You. don't mean to say you donH think him 
good looking ? " 

" No, — oh, no, I mean — that is — I don't know 
anything about his looks. But he resembles a lady 
who used to come from Boston, summers. I thought 
he must be her brother." 

" Oh, then you think he looks effeminate ! " cried 
Staniford, with inner joy. " I assure you," he added 
with solemnity, " Dunham is one of the manliest 
fellows in the world ! " 

" Yes ? " said Lydia. 

Staniford rose. He was smiling gayly as he looked 
over the broad stretch of empty deck, and down 
into Lydia's eyes. " Would n't you like to take a 
turn, now?" 

" Yes," she said promptly, rising and arranging 
her wrap across her shoulders, so as to leave her 
hands free. She laid one hand in his arm and 
gathered her skirt with the other, and they swept 
round together for the start and confronted Hicks. 

" Oh I " cried Lydia, with what seemed dismay, 

' I promised Mr. Hicks to practice a song with 

him." She did not try to release her hand from 

Stamford's arm, but was letting it linger there 

irresolutely. 



162 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

Staniford dropped his arm, and let her hand fall. 
He bowed with icy stiffness, and said, with a 
courtesy so fierce that Mr. Hicks, on whom he 
glared as he spoke, quailed before it, '^I yield to 
your prior engagement." 



XIV. 

It was nothing to Staniford that she should have 
promised Hicks to practice a song with him, and no 
process of reasoning could have made it otherwise. 
The imaginary opponent with whom he scornfully 
argued the matter had not a word for himself. 
Neither could the young girl answer anything to 
the cutting speeches which he mentally made her 
as he sat alone chewing the end of his cigar ; and 
he was not moved by the imploring looks which his 
fancy painted in her face, when he made believe 
that she had meekly returned to offer him some 
sort of reparation. Why should she excuse her- 
self ? he, asked. It was he who ought to excuse 
himself for having been in the way. The dialogue 
went on at length, with every advantage to the 
inventor. 

He was finally aware of some one standing near 
and looking down at him. It was the second mate, 
who supported himself in a conversational posture 
by the hand which he stretched to the shrouds 
above their heads. "Are you a good sailor, Mr. 
Staniford?'* he inquired. He and Staniford were 
friends in their way, and had talked together be- 
fore this. 



154 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

** Do you mean seasickness ? Why ? " Staniford 
looked up at the mate's face. 

" Well, we 're going to get it, I guess, before long. 
We shuU soon be off the Spanish coast. We Ve had 
a great run so far." 

" If it comes we must stand it. But I make it a 
rule never to be seasick beforehand." 

" Well, I ain't one to borrow trouble, either. 
It don't run in the family. Most of us like to 
chance things. I chanced it for the whole war, and 
I come out all right. Sometimes it don't work so 
well." 

" Ah ? " said Staniford, who knew that this waa 
a leading remark, btit forbore, as he knew Mason 
wished, to follow it up directly. 

" One of us chanced it once too often, and of 
course it was a woman." 

"The risk?" 

" Not the risk. My oldest sister tried tamin' a 
tiger. Ninety-nine times out of a hundred, a tiger 
won't tame worth a cent. But her pet was such a 
lamb most the while that she guessed she 'd chance 
it. It did n't work. She 's at home with mother 
now, — three children, of course, — and he 's in 
hell, I s'pose. He was killed 'long-side o' me at 
Gettysburg. Ike was a good fellow when he was 
sober. But my souls, the life he led that poor 
girl 1 Yes, when a man 's got that tiger in him, 
there ought to be some quiet little war round for 
puttin' him out of his misery." Staniford listened 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 155 

silently, waiting for the mate to make the applica- 
tion of his grim allegory. " I s'pose I 'm preju- 
diced ; but I do hate a drunkard ; and when I 
see one of 'em makin' up to a girl, I want to go 
to her, and tell her she 'd better take a real tiger 
out the show, at once." 

The idea which these words suggested sent a 
thrill to Staniford's heart, but he continued silent, 
and the mate went on, with the queer smile, which 
could be inferred rather than seen, working under 
his mustache and the humorous twinkle of his 
eyes evanescently evident under his cap peak. 

" I don't go round criticisin' my superior officers, 
and I don't say anything about the responsibility 
the old man took. The old man 's all right, accord- 
in' to his lights ; he ain't had a tiger in the family. 
But if that chap was to fall overboard, — well, I 
don't know how long it would take to lower a boat, 
if I was to listen to my conscience. There ain't 
really any help for him. He 's begun too young 
ever to get over it. He won't be ashore at Try- 
East an hour before he 's drunk. If our men had 
any spirits amongst 'em that could be begged, 
bought, or borrowed, he'd be drunk now, right 
along. Well, I 'm off watch," said the mate, at the 
tap of bells. " Guess we '11 get our little gale 
pretty soon." 

" Good-night," said Staniford, who remained pon- 
dering. He presently rose, and walked up and down 
the deck. He could hear Lydia and Hicks trying 



156 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

that song : now the voice, and now the flute ; then 
both together ; and presently a burst of laughter. 
He began to be angry with her ignorance and inex- 
perience. It became intolerable to him that a 
woman should be going about with no more knowl- 
edge of the world than a child, and entangling her- 
self in relations with all sorts of people. It was 
shocking to think of that little sot, who had now 
made his infirmity known to all the ship's company, 
admitted to association with her which looked to 
common eyes like courtship. From the mate's in- 
sinuation that she ought to be warned, it was evi- 
dent that they thought her interested in Hicks; 
and the mate had come, like Dunham, to leave the 
responsibility with Staniford. It only wanted now 
that Captain Jenness should appear with his ap- 
peal, direct or indirect. 

While Staniford walked up and down, and scorned 
and raged at the idea that he had anything to do 
with the matter, the singing and fluting came to a 
pause in the cabin ; and at the end of the next 
tune, which brought him to the head of the gang- 
way stairs, he met Lydia emerging. He stopped 
and spoke to her, having instantly resolved, at sight 
of her, not to do so. 

" Have you come up for breath, like a mer- 
maid ? " he asked. " Not that I 'm sure mermaids 
do." 

" Oh, no," said Lydia. " I think I dropped my 
handkerchief where we were sitting." 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 157 

Staniford suspected, with a sudden return to a 
theory of her which he had already entertained, 
that she had not done so. But she went lightly by 
him, where he stood stolid, and picked it up ; and 
now he suspected that she had dropped it there on 
purpose. 

" You have come back to walk with me ? " 

" No ! " said the girl indignantly. " I have not 
come back to walk with you ! " She waited a mo- 
ment ; then she burst out with, " How dare you 
say such a thing to me ? What right have you to 
speak to me so ? What have I done to make you 
think that I would come back to " — 

The fierce vibration in her voice made him know 
that her eyes were burning upon him and her lips 
trembling. He shrank before her passion as a man 
must before the justly provoked wrath of a woman, 
or even of a small girl. 

" I stated a hope, not a fact," he said in meek 
uncandor. " Don't you think you ought to have 
done so ? " 

" I don't — I don't understand you," panted 
Lydia, confusedly arresting her bolts in mid-course. 

Staniford pursued his guilty advantage ; it was 
his only chance. " I gave way to Mr. Hicks when 
you had an engagement with me. I thought — you 
would come back to keep your engagement." He 
was still very meek. 

" Excuse me," she said with self-reproach that 
would have melted the heart of any one but a man 



168 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

who was in the wrong, and was trying to get out of 
it at all hazards. " I did n't know what you meant 
— I" — 

" If I had meant what you thought,'* interrupted 
Staniford nobly, for he could now aiford to be gen- 
erous, "I should have deserved much more than 
you said. But I hope you won't punish my awk- 
wardness by refusing to walk with me." 

He knew that she regarded him earnestly before 
she said, " I must get my shawl and hat." 

" Let me go ! " he entreated. 

" You could n't find them," she answered, as she 
vanished past him. She returned, and promptly 
laid her hand in his proffered arm ; it was as if she 
were eager to make him amends for her harshness. 

Staniford took her hand out, and held it while he 
bowed low toward her. " I declare myself satis- 
fied." 

" I don't understand," said Lydia, in alarm and 
mortification. 

" When a subject has been personally aggrieved 
by his sovereign, his honor is restored if • they 
merely cross swords." 

The girl laughed her delight in the extravagance. 
She must have been more or less than woman not 
to have found his flattery delicious. " But we are 
republicans ! " she said in evasion. 

" To be sure, we are republicans. Well, then, 
Miss Blood, answer your free and equal one thing : 
s it a case of conscience ? " 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 159 

" How ? " she asked, and Staniford did not recoil 
at the rusticity. This how for what, and the inter- 
rogative yes, still remained. Since their first walk, 
she had not wanted to know, in however great sur- 
pi ise she found herself. 

*' Are you going to walk with me because you 
had promised ? " 

" Why, of course," faltered Lydia. 

" That is n't enough." 

" Not enough ? " 

" Not enough. You must walk with me because 
you like to do so." 

Lydia was silent. 

" Do you like to do so ? " 

" I can't answer you," she said, releasing her 
hand from him. 

" It was not fair to ask you. What I wish to do 
is to restore the original status. You have kept 
your engagement to walk with me, and your con- 
science is clear. Now, Miss Blood, may I have 
your company for a little stroll over the deck of the 
Aroostook ? " He made her another very low bow. 

" What must I say ¥ " asked Lydia, joyously. 

"That depends upon whether you consent. If 
you consent, you must say, ' I shall be very glad.' " 

" And if I don't ? " 

" Oh, I can't put any such decision into words." 

Lydia mused a moment. "I shall be very glad," 
she said, and put her hand again into the arm he 
•)£Eered. 



160 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

As happens after such a passage they were at 
first silent, while they walked up and down. 

"If this fine weather holds," said Staniford, "and 
you continue as obliging as you are to-night, you 
can say, when people ask you how you went to Eu- 
rope, that you walked the greater part of the way. 
Shall you continue so obliging? Will you -walk 
with me every fine night ? " pursued Staniford. 

"Do you think I'd better say so ?" she asked, 
with the joy still in her voice. 

" Oh, I can't decide for you. I merely formulate 
your decisions after you reach them, — if they 're 
favorable." 

" Well, then, what is this one ? " 

" Is it favorable ? " 

" You said you would formulate it." She laughed 
again, and Staniford started as one does when a 
nebulous association crystallizes into a distinctly re- 
membered fact. 

" What a curious laugh you have I " he said. 
" It 's like a nun's laugh. Once in France I lodged 
near the garden of a convent where the nuns kept 
a girls' school, and I used to hear them laugh. You 
never happened to be a nun, Miss Blood ? " 

" No, indeed 1 " cried Lydia, as if scandalized. 

" Oh, I merely meant in some previous existence. 
Of course, I did n't suppose there was a convent in 
South Bradfield." He felt that the girl did not 
^uite like the little slight his irony cast upon South 
Bradfield, or rather upon her for never having been 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 161 

anywhere else. He hastened to say, "I'm sure 
that in the life before this you were of the South 
somewhere." 

" Yes ? " said Lydia, interested and pleased again 
as one must be in romantic talk about one's self. 
" Why do you think so ? " 

He bent a little over toward her, so as to look 
into the face she instinctively averted, while she 
could not help glancing at him from the corner of 
her eye. " You have the color and the light of the 
South," he said. " When you get to Italy, you 
will live in a perpetual mystification. You will go 
about in a dream of some self of yours tliat was 
native there in other days. You will find yourself 
retrospectively related to the olive faces and the 
dark eyes you meet; you will recognize sisters and 
cousins in the patrician ladies when you see their 
portraits in the palaces where you used to live in 
such state." 

Staniford spiced his flatteries with open bur- 
lesque; the girl entered into his fantastic humor. 
" But if I was a nun ? " she asked, gayly. 

" Oh, I forgot. You were a nun. There was a 
nun in Venice once, about two hundred years ago, 
when you lived there, and a young English lord 
who was passing through the town was taken to 
the convent to hear her sing ; for she was not only 
of 'an admirable beauty,' as he says, but sang ' ex- 
tremely well.' She sang to him through the grat- 
ing of the convent, and when she stopped he said, 

u 



162 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

* Die whensoever you will, you need to change 
neither voice nor face to be an angel ! ' Do you 
think — do you dimly recollect anything that makes 
you think — it might — Consider carefully: the 
singing extremely well, and " — He leant over 
again, and looked up into her face, which again she 
could not wholly withdraw. 

" No, no ! " she said, still in his mood. 

" Well, you must allow it was a pretty speech." 

*' Perhaps," said Lydia, with sudden gravity, in 
which there seemed to Staniford a tender insinua- 
tion of reproach, " he was laughing at her." 

" If he' was, he was properly punished. He went 
on to Rome, and when he came back to Venice the 
beautiful nun was dead. He thought that his words 
' seemed fatal.' Do you suppose it would kill you 
now to be jested with ? " 

" I don't think people like it generally." 

" Why, Miss Blood, you are intense I " 

" I donjt know what you mean by that," said 
Lydia. 

" You like to take things seriously. You can't 
bear to think that people are not the least in ear- 
nest, even when they least seem so." 

" Yes," said the girl, thoughtfully, " perhaps 
that 's true. Should you like to be made fun of, 
yourself ? " 

" I should n't mind it, I fancy, though it would 
depend a great deal upon who made fun of me. 1 • 
suppose that women always langh at men, — at 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 163 

their clumsiness, their want of tact, the fit of their 
clothes." 

" I don't know. I should not do that with any- 
one I " — 

" You liked ? Oh, none of them do I " cried 
Staniford. 

*' I was not going to say that," faltered the girl. 

" What were you going to say ? " 

She waited a moment. " Yes, I was going to 
say that," she assented with a sigh of helpless ve- 
racity. " What makes you laugh ? " she asked, in 
distress. 

" Something I like. 1 'm difiEerent from you : I 
laugh at what I like ; I like your truthfulness, — 
it 's charming." 

" I did n't know that truth need be charming." 

" It had better be, in women, if it 's to keep even 
with the other thing." Lydia seemed shocked; 
she made a faint, involuntary motion to withdraw 
her hand, but he closed his arm upon it. *' Don't 
condemn me for thinking that fibbing is charming. 
I should n't like it at all in you. Should you in 
me?" 

" I should n't in any one," said Lydia. 

" Then what is it you dislike in me ? " he sud- 
denly demanded. 

" I did n't say that I disliked anything in you." 

" But you have made fun of something in me ^ ** 

"No, no!" 

" Then it was n't the stirring of a guilty con- 



164 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

science when you asked me whether I should like 
to be made fun of ? I took it for granted you 'd 
been doing it." 

"You are very suspicious." 

" Yes ; and what else ? " 

" Oh, you like to know just what every one 
thinks and feels." 

" Go on I " cried Staniford. " Analyze me, form- 
ulate me I " 

" That 's all." 

" All I come to ? " 

"All I have to say." 

" That 's very little. Now, I '11 begin on you. 
You don't care what people think or feel." 

" Oh, yes, I do. I care too much." 

" Do you care what I think ? " 

*' Yes." 

" Then I think you 're too unsuspicious." 

" Ought I to suspect somebody ? " she asked, 
lightly. 

" Oh, that 's the way with all your sex. One 
asks you to be suspicious, and you ask whom you 
shall suspect. You can do nothing in the abstract. 
I should like to be suspicious for you. Will you 
let me ? " 

" Oh, yes, if you like to be." 

" Thanks. I shall be terribly vigilant, — a per- 
fect dragon. And you really invest me with 
authority ? " 

« Yes." 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 166 

" That 's charming." Stauiford drew a long 
breath. After a space of musing, he said, " I 
thought I should be able to begin by attacking 
some one else, but I must commence at home, and 
denounce myself as quite unworthy of walking to 
and fro, and talking nonsense to you. You must 
beware of me, Miss Blood." 

" Why ? " asked the girl. 

*' I am very narrow-minded and prejudiced, and 
I have violent antipathies. I should n't be able to 
do justice to any one I disliked." 

" I think that 's the trouble with all of us," said 
Lydia. 

" Oh, but only in degree. I should not allow, if 
I could help it, a man whom I thought shabby, and 
coarse at heart, the privilege of speaking to any 
one I valued, — to my sister, for instance. It 
would shock me to find her have any taste in com- 
mon with such a man, or amused by him. Don't 
you understand ? " 

" Yes," said Lydia. It seemed to him as if by 
some infinitely subtle and unconscious affinition 
she relaxed toward him as they walked. This was 
incomparably sweet and charming to Stamford, — 
too sweet as recognition of his protecting friend- 
ship to be questioned as anything else. He felt 
sure that she had taken his meaning, and he rested 
content from further trouble in regard to what it 
would have been impossible to express. Her tacit 
confidence touched a kindred spring in him, and he 



166 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

began to talk to her of himself: not of his charac- 
ter or opinions, — they had already gone over them, 
— but of his past life, and his future. Their 
strangeness to her gave certain well-worn topics 
novelty, and the familiar project of a pastoral ca- 
reer in the far West invested itself with a color of 
romance which it had not worn before. She tried 
to remember, at his urgence, something about her 
childhood in California; and she told him a great 
deal more about South Bradfield. She described 
its characters and customs, and, from no vantage- 
ground or stand-point but her native feeling of their 
oddity, and what seemed her sympathy with him, 
made him see them as one might whose life had 
not been passed among them. Then they began to 
compare their own traits, and amused themselves 
to find how many they had in common. Stanifbrd 
related a singular experience of his on a former 
voyage to Europe, when he dreamed of a collision, 
and woke to hear a great trampling and uproar on 
deck, which afterwards turned out to have been 
caused by their bare escape from running into an 
iceberg. She sa,id that she had had strange 
dreams, too, but mostly when she was a little girl ; 
once she had had a presentiment that troubled her, 
but it did not come true. They both said they did 
not believe in such things, and agreed that it was 
only people's love of mystery that kept them no- 
ticed. He permitted himself to help her, with his 
disengaged hand, to draw her shawl closer about 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 167 

the shoulder that was away from him. He gave 
the action a philosophical and impersonal character 
by saying immediately afterwards : " The sea is 
really the only mystery left us, and that will never 
be explored. They circumnavigate the whole 
globe," — here he put the gathered shawl into the 
fingers which she stretched through his arm to take 
it, and she said, "Oh, thank you!" — "but they 
don't describe the sea. War and plague and fam- 
ine submit to the ameliorations of science," — the 
closely drawn shawl pressed her against his shoul- 
der ; his mind wandered ; he hardly knew what he 
was saying, — " but the one utterly inexorable ca- 
lamity — the same now as when the first sail was 
spread — is a shipwreck." 

" Yes," she said, with a deep inspiration. And 
now they walked back and forth in silence broken 
only by a casual word or desultory phrase. Once 
Staniford had thought the conditions of these prom- 
enades perilously suggestive of love-making ; an- 
other time he had blamed himself for not think- 
ing of this; now he neither thought nor blamed 
himself for not thinking. The fact justified itself, 
as if it had been the one perfectly right and wise 
thing in a world where all else might be questioned. 

" Is n't it pretty late ? " she asked, at last. 

" If you 're tired, we '11 sit down," he said. 

" What time is it ? " she persisted. 

"Must I look?" he pleaded. They went to a 
lantern, and he took out his watch and sprang the 



168 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

case open. " Look I " he said. " I sacrifice myself 
on the altar of truth." They bent their heads low 
together over the watch ; it was not easy to make 
out the time. " It 's nine o'clock," said Staniford. 

" Ifc can't be ; it was half past when I came up," 
answered Lydia. 

" One hand 's at twelve and the other at nine," 
he said, conclusively. 

" Oh, then it 's a quarter to twelve." She caught 
away her hand from his arm, and fled to the gang- 
way. " I did n't dream it was so late." 

The pleasure which her confession brought to his 
face faded at sight of Hicks, who was turning the 
last pages of a novel by the cabin lamp, as he fol- 
lowed Lydia in. It was the book that Staniford 
had given her. - 

" Hullo I " said Hicks, with companionable ease, 
looking up at her. " Been having quite a tramp." 

She did not seem troubled by the familiarity of 
an address that incensed Staniford almost to the 
point of taking Hicks from his seat, and tossing 
him to the other end of the cabin. " Oh, you 've 
finished my book," she said. " You must tell me 
how you like it, to-morrow." 

" I doubt it," said Hicks. " I 'm going to be 
bcasick to-morrow. The captain 's been shaking his 
head over the barometer and powwowing with the 
first oflScer. Something 's up, and I guess it 's a 
gale. Good-by ; I shan't see you again for a week 



or so." 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 169 

He nodded jocosely to Lydia, and dropped his 
eyes again to his book, ignoring Staniford's pres- 
ence. The latter stood a moment breathing quick ; 
then he controlled himself and went into his room. 
His coming roused Dunham, who looked up from 
his pillow. "What time is it?" he asked, stupidly. 

" Twelve," said Staniford. 

" Had a pleasant walk ? " 

"If you still think," said Staniford, savagely, 
" that she 's painfully interested in you, you can 
make your mind easy. She does n't care for either 
of us." 

^^ Either of us?" echoed Dunham. He roused 
himself. 

" Oh, go to sleep; go to sleep I " cried Staniford. 



XV. 

The foreboded storm did not come so soon as had 
been feared, but the beautiful weather which had 
lasted so long was lost in a thickened sky and a sul- 
len sea. The weather had changed with Staniford, 
too. The morning after the events last celebrated, 
he did not respond to the glance which Lydia 
gave him when they met, and he hardened his 
heart to her surprise, and shunned being alone with 
her. He would not admit to himself any reason 
for his attitude, and he could not have explained to 
her the mystery that at first visibly grieved her, 
and then seemed merely to benumb her. But the 
moment came when he ceased to take a certain 
cruel pleasure in it, and he approached her one 
morning on deck, where she stood holding fast to 
the railing where she usually sat, and said, as if 
there had been no interval of estrangement between 
them, but still coldly, " We have had our last walk 
for the present. Miss Blood. I hope you will 
grieve a little for my loss." 

She turned on him a look that cut him to the 
heart, with what he fancied its reproach and its 
wonder. She did not reply at once, and then she 
did not reply to his hinted question. 

" Mr. Staniford," she began. It was the second 



THE LADY OF THE ABOOSTOOK. 171 

time he had heard her pronounce his name ; he 
distinctly remembered the first. 

" Well ? " he said. 

" I want to speak to you about lending that 
book to Mr. Hicks. I ought to have asked you 
first." 

" Oh, no," said Staniford. " It was yours." 

" You gave it to me," she returned. 

" Well, then, it was yours, — to keep, to lend, to 
throw away." 

" And you did n't mind my lending it to him ? " 
she pursued. " I " — 

She stopped, and Staniford hesitated, too. Then 
he said, " I did n't dislike your lending it ; I dis- 
liked his having it. I will acknowledge that." 

She looked up at him as if she were going to 
speak, but checked herself, and glanced away. The 
ship was plunging heavily, and the livid waves 
were racing before the wind. The horizon was lit 
wi^h a yellow brightness in the quarter to which 
she turned, and a pallid gleam defined her profile. 
Captain Jenness was walking fretfully to and fro ; 
he glanced now at the yellow glare, and now cast 
his eye aloft at the shortened sail. While Stani- 
ford stood questioning whether she meant to say 
anything more, or whether, having discharged her 
conscience of an irpagined ofiEense, she had now 
reached one of her final, precipitous silences. Cap- 
tain Jenness suddenly approached them, and said to 
him, " T guess you 'd better go below with Miss 
Blood." 



172 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

The storm that followed had its hazards, but 
Staniford's consciousness was confined to its discom- 
forts. The day came, and then the dark came, and 
both in due course went, and came again. Where 
he lay in his berth, and whirled and swung, and 
rose and sank, as lonely as a planetary fragment 
tossing in space, he heard the noises of the life with- 
out. Amidst the straining of the ship, which was 
like the sharp sweep of a thunder-shower on the 
deck overhead, there plunged at irregular intervals 
the wild trample of heavily-booted feet, and now 
and then the voices of the crew answering the 
shouted orders made themselves hollowly audible. 
In the cabin there was talking, and sometimes even 
laughing. Sometimes he heard the click of knives 
and forks, the sardonic rattle of crockery. After 
the first insane feeling that somehow he must get 
ashore and escape from his torment, he hardened 
himself to it through an immense contempt, equally 
insane, for the stupidity of the sea, its insensate 
uproar, its blind and ridiculous and cruel mischiev- 
ousness. Except for this delirious scorn he was a 
vsurface of perfect passivity. 

Dunham, after a day of prostration, had risen, 
and had perhaps shortened his anguish by his reso- 
lution. He had since taken up his quarters on a 
locker in the cabin ; he looked in now and then 
upon Staniford, with a cup of tea, or a suggestion 
of something light to eat ; once he even dared to 
boast of the sublimity of the ocean. Staniford 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 173 

stared at Lira with eyes of lack-lustre indifference, 
and waited for him to b^^i^e. But he lingered to 
say, " You would laugh to see what a sea-bird our 
lady is I She has n't been sick a minute. And 
Hicks, you '11 be glad to know, is behaving himself 
very well. Really, I don't think we 've done the 
fellow justice. I think you 've overshadowed him, 
and that he 's needed your absence to show himself 
to advantage." 

Staniford disdained any comment on this except 
a fierce " Humph I " and dismissed Dunham by 
turning his face to the wall. He refused to think 
of what he had said. He lay still and suffered in- 
definitely, and no longer waited for the end of the 
storm. There had been times when he thought 
with acquiescence of going to the bottom, as a prob- 
able conclusion ; now he did not expect anything. 
At last, one night, he felt by inexpressibly minute 
degrees something that seemed surcease of his mis- 
ery. It might have been the end of all things, for 
all he cared ; but as the lull deepened, he slept 
without knowing what it was, and when he woke 
in the morning he found the Aroostook at anchor 
in smooth water. 

She was lying in the roads at Gibraltar, and be- 
fore her towered the embattled rock. He crawled 
on deck after a while. The captain was going 
Ashore, and had asked such of his passengers as 
iiked, to go with him and see the place. When 
Staniford appeared, Dunham was loyally refusing 



174 TUE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

to leave his friend till he was fairly on foot. At 
sight of him they suspended their question long 
enough to welcome him back to animation, with the 
patronage with which well people hail a convales- 
cent. Lydia looked across the estrangement of the 
past days with a sort of inquiry, and Hicks chose 
to come forward and accept a cold touch of the 
hand from him. Staniford saw, with languid ob- 
servance, that Lydia was very fresh and bright ; 
she was already equipped for the expedition, and 
could never have had any doubt in her mind as 
to going. She had on a pretty walking dress 
which he had not seen before, and a hat with the 
rim struck sharply upward behind, and her masses 
of dense, dull black hair pulled up and fastened 
somewhere on the top of her head. Her eyes shyly 
sparkled under the abrupt descent of the hat-brim 
over her forehead. 

His contemptuous rejection of the character of 
invalid prevailed with Dunham; and Staniford 
walked to another part of the ship, to cut short the 
talk about himself, and saw them row away. 

" Well, you 've had a pretty tough time, they 
say," said the second mate, lounging near him. 
" I don't see any fun in seasickness myBelf,'*^ 

" It 's a ridiculous sort of misery," said Stani- 
ford. 

" I hope we shan't have anything worse on board 
when that chap gets back. The old man thinks he 
can keep an eye on him." The mate was looking 
after the boat. 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 175 

" The captain says he has n't any money," Stam- 
ford remarked carelessly. The mate went away 
without saying anything more, and Staniford re- 
turned to the cabin, where he beheld without abhor- 
rence the preparations for his breakfast. But he 
had not a great appetite, in spite of his long fast. 
He found himself rather light-headed, and came 
on deck again after a while, and stretched himself 
in Hicks's steamer chair, where Lydia usually sat 
in it. He fell into a dull, despairing reverie, in 
which he blamed himself for not having been more 
explicit with her. He had merely expressed his 
dislike of Hicks ; but expressed without reasons it 
was a groundless dislike, which she had evidently 
not understood, or had not cared to heed ; and since 
that night, now so far away, when he had spoken 
to her, he had done everything he could to harden 
her against himself. He had treated her with a 
stupid cruelty, which a girl like her would resent 
to the last ; he had forced her to take refuge in the 
politeness of a man from whom he was trying to 
keep her. 

His heart paused when he saw the boat return- 
i ig in the afternoon without Hicks. The others 
reported that they had separated before dinner, and 
that they had not seen him since, though Captain 
Jenness had spent an hour trying to look him up 
before starting back to the ship. The captain wore 
a look of guilty responsibility, mingled with intense 
exasperation, the two combining in as much hag- 



176 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

gardness as his cheerful visage could express. " If 
he 's here by six o'clock," he said, grimly, " all well 
and good. If not, the Aroostook sails, any way." 

Lydia crept timidly below. Staniford complexly 
raged to see that the anxiety about Hicks had 
blighted the joy of the day for her. 

" How the deuce could he get about without any 
money? " he demanded of Dunham, as soon as they 
were alone. 

Dunham vainly struggled to look him in the eye. 
"Staniford," he faltered, with much more culpa- 
bility than some criminals would confess a murder, 
" I lent him five dollars ! " 

" You lent him five dollars I " gasped Staniford. 

" Yes," replied Dunham, miserably ; " he got me 
aside, and asked me for it. What could I do? 
What would you have done yourself ? " 

Staniford made no answer. He walked some 
paces away, and then returned to where Dunham 
stood helpless. " He 's lying about there dead- 
drunk, somewhere, I suppose. By Heaven, I could 
almost wish he was. He could n't come back, then, 
at any rate." 

The time lagged along toward the moment ap- 
pointed by the captain, and the preparations for the 
ship's departure were well advanced, when a boat 
was seen putting out from shore with two rowers, 
and rapidly approaching the Aroostook. In the 
stern, as it drew nearer, the familiar figure of Hicks 
iiscovered itself in the act of waving a handkerchief 



* THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 177 

He scrambled up the side of the ship in excellent 
spirits, and gave Dunham a detailed account of his 
adventures since they had parted. As always hap- 
pens with such scapegraces, he seemed to have had 
a good time, however he had spoiled the pleasure 
of the others. At tea, when Lydia had gone away, 
he clapped down a sovereign near Dunham's plate. 
" Your five dollars," he said. 

" Why, how " — Dunham began. 

" How did I get on without it ? My dear boy, I 
sold my watch ! A ship's time is worth no more 
than a setting hen's, — eh, captain? — and why 
take note of it ? Besides, I always like to pay my 
debts promptly : there 's nothing mean about me. 
I 'm not going ashore again without my pocket- 
book, I can tell you." He winked shamelessly at 
Captain Jenness. "If you hadn't been along, 
Dunham, I could n't have made a raise, I sup- 
pose. You would n't have lent me five dollars. 
Captain Jenness." 

" No, I would n't," said the captain, bluntly. 

" And I believe you 'd have sailed without me, if 
I had n't got back on time." 

" I would," said the captain, as before. 

Hicks threw back his head, and laughed. Prob- 
ably no human being had ever before made so free 
with Captain Jenness at his own table ; but the cap- 
tain must have felt that this contumacy was part- of 
the general risk which he had taken in taking Hicks, 
Wid he contented himself with maintaining a silence 

12 



178 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

that would have appalled a less audacious spirit. 
Hicks's gayety, however, was not to be quelled in 
that way. 

" Gibraltar would n't be a bad place to put up at 
for a while," he said. " Lots of good fellows among 
the officers, they say, and fun going all the while. 
First-class gunning in the Cork Woods at St. Roque. 
If it had n't been for the res angusta domi^ — you 
know what I mean, captain, — I should have let you 
get along with your old dug-out, as the gentleman 
in the water said to Noah." His hilarity had some- 
thing alarmingly knowing in it ; there was a wild- 
ness in the pleasure with which he bearded the cap- 
tain, like that of a man in his first cups ; yet he had 
not been drinking. He played round the captain's 
knowledge of the sanative destitution in which hB 
was making the voyage with mocking recurrence; 
but he took himself off to bed early, and the captain 
came through his trials with unimpaired temper. 
Dunham disappeared not long afterwards; and Stani- 
ford's vague hope that Lydia might be going on 
deck to watch the lights of the town die out behind 
the ship as they sailed away was disappointed. 
The second mate made a point of lounging near 
him where he sat alone in their wonted place. 

" Well," he said, " he did come back sober." 

" Yes," said Staniford. 

" Next to not comin' back at all," the mate con- 
tinued, " I suppose it was the best thing he could 
do." He lounged away. Neither his voice nor his 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 179 

manner had that quality of disappointment which 
characterizes those who have mistatenly prophesied 
evil. Staniford had a mind to call him back, and 
ask him what he meant ; but he refrained, and he 
went to bed at last resolved to unburden himself of 
the whole Hicks business once for all. He felt that 
he had had quite enough of it, both in the abstract 
and in its relation to Lydia. 



XVL 

Hicks did not join the others at breakfast. 
They talked of what Lydia had seen at Gibral- 
tar, where Staniford had been on a former voyage. 
Dunham had made it a matter of conscience to 
know all about it beforehand from his guide-books, 
and had risen early that morning to correct his 
science by his experience in a long entry in the 
diary which he was keeping for Miss Hibbard. 
The captain had the true sea-farer's ignorance, and 
was amused at the things reported by his passen- 
gers of a place where he had been ashore so often ; 
Hicks's absence doubtless relieved him, but he did 
not comment on the cabin-boy's announcement that 
he was still asleep, except to order him let alone. 

They were seated at their one o'clock dinner be- 
fore the recluse made any sign. Then he gave note 
of his continued existence by bumping and thump- 
ing sounds within his state-room, as if some one 
were dressing there in a heavy sea. 

" Mr. Hicks seems to be taking his rough weather 
retrospectively," said Staniford, with rather tremu- 
lous humor. 

The door was flung open, and Hicks reeled out, 
staying himself by the door-knob. Even before^^he 
appeared, a reek of strong waters had preceded 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 181 

him. He must have been drinking all night. His 
face was flushed, and his eyes were bloodshot. He 
had no collar on ; but he wore a cravat and other- 
wise he was accurately and even fastidiously dressed. 
He balanced himself by the door-knob, and meas- 
ured the distance he had to make before reaching 
his place at the table, smiling, and waving a del- 
icate handkerchief which he held in his hand: 
" Spilt c'logne, tryin' to scent my hie — handker- 
chief. Makes deuced bad smell — too much c'logne ; 
smells*- — alcoholic. Thom's, bear a hand, 's good 
flow. No? All right, go on with your waitin'. 
B-ic — business b'fore pleasure, 's feller says. 
Play it alone, I guess." 

The boy had shrunk back in dismay, and Hicks 
contrived to reach his place by one of those precip- 
itate dashes with which drunken men attain a 
point, when the luck is with them. He looked 
smilingly round the circle of faces. Staniford and 
the captain exchanged threatening looks of intel- 
ligence, while Mr. Watterson and Dunham subor- 
dinately waited their motion. But the advantage, 
as in such cases, was on the side of Hicks. He 
knew it, with a drunkard's subtlety, and was at his 
ea3e. 

" No app'tite, friends ; but thought I 'd come 
out, keep you from feeling lonesome." He laughed 
and hiccuped, and smiled upon them all. " Well, 
cay'n," he continued, " 'covered from 'tigues day, 
sterday ? You look blooming 's usual. Thom's, 



182 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

pass the — pass the — victuals lively, my son, and 
fetch along coffee soon. Some the friends up late, 
and want their coffee. Nothing like coffee, carry 
off 'fee's." He winked to the men, all round ; and 
then added, to Lydia : " Sorry see you in thi9 state 
— I mean, sorry see me — Can 't make it that 
way either ; up stump on both routes. What I 
mean is, sorry had n't coffee first. But you V« all 
right — all right ! Like see anyJDody offer you dis- 
respec', 'n I 'm around. Tha 's all." 

Till he addressed her, Lydia had remained mo- 
tionless, first with bewilderment, and then with 
open abhorrence. She could hardly have seen in 
South Bradfield a man who had been drinking. 
Even in haying, or other sharpest stress of farm- 
work, our farmer and his men stay themselves with 
nothing stronger than molasses-water, or, in extreme 
cases, cider with a little corn soaked in it ; and the 
Mill Village, where she had taught school, was 
under the iron rule of a local vote for prohibition. 
She stared in stupefaction at Hicks's heated, fool- 
ish face ; she started at his wild movements, and 
listened with dawning intelligence to his hiccup- 
broken speech, with its thickened sibilants and its 
wandering emphasis. When he turned to her, and 
accompanied his words with a reassuring gesture, 
she recoiled, and as if breaking an ugly fascination 
she gave a low, shuddering cry, and looked at Stan- 
iford. 

" Thomas," he said, " Miss Blood was going to 
take her dessert on deck to-day. Dunham ? " 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 183 

Dunham sprang to his feet, and led her out of 
the cabin. 

The movement met Hicks's approval. " Tha 's 
right; 'sert on deck, 'joy landscape and pudding to- 
gether, — Rhine steamer style. All right. Be up 
there m'self soon *s I get my coffee." He winked 
again with drunken sharpness. " T know wha 's 
what. Be up there m'self, 'n a minute." 

" If you offer to go up," said Staniford, in a low 
voice, as soon as Lydia was out of the way, " I '11 
knock you down ! " 

" Captain," said Mr. Watterson, venturing, per- 
haps for the first time in his whole maritime his- 
tory, upon a suggestion to his superior officer, 
" shall I clap him in irons ? " 

" Clap him in irons ! " roared Captain Jenness. 
*' Clap him in bed ! Look here, you ! " He turned 
to Hicks, but the latter, who had been bristling 
at Staniford's threat, now relaxed in a crowing 
laugh : — 

" Tha 's right, captain. Irons no go, 'cept in case 
mutiny ; bed perfectly legal 't all times. Bed is 
good. But trouble is t' enforce it." 

" Where 's your bottle ? " demanded the captain, 
rising from the seat in which a paralysis of fury 
had kept him hitherto. " I want your bottle." 

" Oh, bottle 's all right ! Bottle 's under pillow. 
Empty, — empty 's Jonah's gourd ; 'nother sea-far- 
ing party, — Jonah. S'cure the shadow ere the 
substance fade. Drunk all the brandy, old boy. 



184 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

Bottle 's a canteen ; 'vantage of military port to 
houseless stranger. Brought the brandy on board 
under my coat; nobody noticed, — so glad get me 
back. Prodigal son's return, — fatted calf under 
his coat." 

The reprobate ended his boastful confession with 
another burst of hiccuping, and Staniford helplessly 
laughed. 

" Do me proud," said Hicks. " Proud, I 'sure 
you. Gentleman, every time, Stanny. Know good 
thing when you see it — hear it, I mean." 

"Look here, Hicks," said Staniford, choosing to 
make friends with the mammon of unrighteousness, 
if any good end might be gained by it. " You know 
you 're drunk, and you 're not fit to be about. Go 
back to bed, that 's a good fellow ; and come out 
again, when you 're all right. You don't want to 
do anything yon '11 be sorry for." 

" No, no ! No, you don't, Stanny. Coffee '11 
make me all right. Coffee always does. Coffee — 
Heaven's lash besh gift to man. 'Scovered subse- 
subs'quently to grape. See ? Comes after claret 
in course of nature. Captain doesn't understand 
the 'lusion. All right, captain. Little learning 
dangerous thing." He turned sharply on Mr. Wat- 
terson, who had remained inertly in his place. 
" Put me in irons, heh ! You put me in irons, you 
old Triton. Put me in irons, will you ? " His ami- 
able mood was passing ; J^efore one could say so, it 
was past. He was meditating means of active of- 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 185 

fense. He gathered up the carving-knife and fork, 
and held them close under Mr. Watterson's nose. 
" Smell that ! '* he said, and frowned as darkly as 
a man of so little eyebrow could. 

At this senseless defiance Staniford, in spite of 
himself, broke into another laugh, and even Captain 
Jenness grinned. Mr. Watterson sat with his head 
drawn as far back as possible, and with his nose 
wrinkled at the affront offered it. " Captain," he 
screamed, appealing even in this extremity to his 
superior, " shall I fetch him one ? " 

" No, no ! '• cried Staniford, springing from his 
chair ; "don't hit him ! He is n't responsible. Let 's 
get him into his room." 

*' Fetch me one, heh ? " said Hicks, rising, with 
dignity, and beginning to turn up his cuffs. " One ! 
It '11 take more than one, fetch me, Stan' up, 'f 
you 're man enough." He was squaring at Mr. 
Watterson, when he detected signs of strategic ap- 
proach in Staniford and Captain Jenness. He gave 
a wild laugh, and shrank into a corner. " No I No, 
you don't, boys," he said. 

They continued their advance, one on either side, 
and reinforced by Mr. Watterson hemmed him in. 
The drunken man has the advantage of his sober 
brother in never seeming to be on the alert. Hicks 
apparently entered into the humor of the affair. 
" Sur-hic-surrender ! " he said, with a smile in his 
heavy eyes. He darted under the extended arms of 
Captain Jenness, who was leading the centre of the 



186 THE LADY OP THE ABOOSTOOK. 

advance, and before either wing could touch him he 
was up the gangway and on the deck. 

Captain Jenness indulged one of those expres- 
sions, very rare with him, which are supposed to be 
forgiven to good men in moments of extreme per- 
plexity, and Mr. Watterson profited by the prec- 
edent to unburden his heart in a paraphrase of 
the captain's language. Staniford's laugh had as 
much cursing in it as their profanity. 

He mechanically followed Hicks to the deck, 
prepared to renew the attempt for his capture there. 
But Hicks had not stopped near Dunham and Lydia. 
He had gone forward on the other side of the ship, 
and was leaning quietly on the rail, and looking 
into the sea. Staniford paused irresolute for a 
moment, and then sat down beside Lydia, and they 
all tried to feign that nothing unpleasant had hap- ^ 
pened, or was still impending. But their talk had 
the wandering inconclusiveness which was inevita- 
ble, and the eyes of each from time to time fur- 
tively turned toward Hicks. 

For half an hour he hardly changed his position. 
At the end of that time, they found him looking 
intently at them ; and presently he began to work 
slowly back to the waist of the ship, but kept to 
his own side. He was met on the way by the sec- 
ond mate, when nearly opposite where they sat. 

" Ain't you pretty comfortable where you are? " 
they heard the mate asking. *' Gucqs I would n't 
go aft any further just yet.' 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 187 

" You Ve all right, Mason," Hicks answered. 
" Going below — down cellar, 's feller says ; go to 
bed." 

" Well, that 's a pious idea," said the mate. 
" You could n't do better than that. I '11 lend you 
a hand." 

" Don't care 'f I do," responded Hicks, taking 
the mate's proffered arm. But he really seemed to 
need it very little ; he walked perfectly well, and 
he did not look across at the others again. 

At the head of the gangway he encountered Cap- 
•tain Jenness and Mr. Watterson, who had completed 
the perquisition they had remained to maka in his 
state-room. Mr. Watterson came up empty-handed ; 
but the captain bore the canteen in which the com- 
mon enemy had been so artfully conveyed on board. 
He walked, darkly scowling, to the rail, and flung 
the canteen into the sea. Hicks, who had saluted 
his appearance with a glare as savage as his own, 
yielded to his whimsical sense of the futility of this 
vengeance. He gave his fleering, drunken laugh : 
" Good old boy, Captain Jenness. Means well — 
means well. But lacks — lacks — forecast. Pounds 
of cure, but no prevention. Not much on bite, but 
death on bark. . Heh ? " He waggled his hand 
offensively at the captain, and disappeared, loosely 
floundering down the cabin stairs, holding hard by 
the hand-rail, and fumbling round with his foot for 
the steps before he put it down. 

" As soon as he 's in his room, Mr. Watterson, 



188 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

you lock him in." The captain handed his officer 
a key, and walked away forward, with a hang-dog 
look on his kindly face, which he kept averted from 
his passengers. 

The sound of Hicks's descent had hardly ceased 
when clapping and knocking noises were heard 
again, and the face of the troublesome little wretch 
reappeared. He waved Mr. Watterson aside with 
his left hand, and in default of specific orders the 
latter allowed him to mount to the deck again. 
Hicks stayed himself a moment, and lurched to 
where Staniford and Dunham sat with Lydia. 

" What I wish say Miss Blood is," he began, — 
" what I wish say is, peculiar circumstances make 
no difference with man if man 's gentleman. What 
I say is, everybody 'spec's — What I say is, cir- 
cumstances don't alter cases ; lady 's a lady — 
What I want do is beg you fellows' pardon — beg 
her pardon — if anything I said that firs' mom- 
mg — 

" Go away I " cried Staniford, beginning to whiten 
round the nostrils. " Hold your tongue ! " 

Hicks fell back a pace, and looked at him with 
the odd effect of now seeing him for the first time. 
" What you want? " he asked. " What you mean? 
Slingin' criticism ever since you came on this ship I 
What you mean by it ? Heh ? What you mean ? " 

Staniford rose, and Lydia gave a start. He cast 
an angry look at her. *' Do you think I 'd hurt 
him ? " he demanded. 



THE LADY OF THE AEOOSTOOK. 189 

Hicks went on : " Sorry, very sorry, 'larm a lady, 
— specially lady we all respec'. But this particular 
affair. Touch — touches my honor. You said," he 
continued, " 'f I came on deck, you 'd knock me down. 
Why don't you do it? Wha 's the matter with 
you ? Sling criticism ever since you been on ship, 
and 'fraid do it ! 'Fraid, you hear ? 'F-ic — 'fraid, 
I say." Staniford slowly walked away forward, and 
Hicks followed him, threatening him with word and 
gesture. Now and then Staniford thrust him aside, 
and addressed him some expostulation, and Hicks 
laughed and submitted. Then, after a silent ex- 
cursion to the other side of the ship, he would re- 
turn and renew his one-sided quarrel. Staniford 
seemed to forbid the interference of the crew, and 
alternately soothed and baffled his tedious adver- 
sary, who could still be heard accusing him of sling- 
ing criticism, and challenging him to combat. He 
leaned with his back to the rail, and now looked 
quietly into Hicks's crazy face, when the latter 
paused in front of him, and now looked down with 
a worried, wearied air. At last he crossed to the 
other side, and began to come aft again. 

" Mr. Dunham ! " cried Lydia, starting up. " I 
know what Mr. Staniford wants to do. He wants 
to keep him away from me. Let me go down to 
the cabin. I can't walk ; please help me I " Her 
eyes were full of tears, and the hand trembled that 
she laid on Dunham's arm, but she controlled her 
voice. 



190 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

He softly repressed her, while he intently watched 
Staniford. " No, no ! " 

" But he can't bear it much longer," she pleaded. 
" And if he should " — 

" Staniford would never strike him," said Dun- 
ham, calmly. " Don't be afraid. . Look I He 's 
coming back with him ; he 's trying to get him be- 
low ; they '11 shut him up there. That 's the only 
chance. Sit down, please." She dropped into her 
seat, hid her eyes for an instant, and then fixed 
them again on the two young men. 

Hicks had got between Staniford and the rail. 
He seized him by the arm, and, pulling him round, 
suddenly struck at him. It was too much for his 
wavering balance : his feet shot from under him, 
and he went backwards in a crooked whirl and tum- 
ble, over the vessel's side. 

Staniford uttered a cry of disgust and rage. 
" Oh, you little brute ! " he shouted, and with what 
seemed a single gesture he flung olBE his coat and the 
low shoes he wore, and leaped the railing after him. 

The cry of " Man overboard ! " rang round the 
ship, and Captain Jenness's order, " Down with 
your Ijelml Lower a boat, Mr. Mason 1" came, 
quick as it was, after the second mate had prepared 
to let go ; and he and two of the men were in the 
boat, and she was sliding from her davits, while the 
Aroostook was coming up to the light wind and 
losing headway. 

When the boat touched the water, two heads 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 191 

had appeared above the surface terribly far away. 
" Hold on, for God's sake I We '11 be there in a 
3econd." 

" All right ! " Staniford's voice called back. " Be 
quick." The heads rose and sank with the undula- 
tion of the water. The swift boat appeared to 
crawl. 

By the time it reached the place where they had 
been seen, the heads disappeared, and the men in 
the boat seemed to be rowing blindly about. The 
mate stood upright. Suddenly he dropped and 
clutched at something over the . boat's side. The 
people on the ship could see three hands on her gun- 
wale; a figure was pulled up into the boat, and 
proved to be Hicks ; then Staniford, seizing the 
gunwale with both hands, swung himself in. 

A shout went up from the ship, and Staniford 
waved his hand. Lydia waited where she hung 
upon the rail, clutching it hard with her hands, till 
the boat was along-side. Then from white she 
turned fire-red, and ran below and locked herself in 
her room. 



XVIL 

Dunham followed Staniford to their room, and 
helped him ofif with his wet clothes. He tried 
to say something ideally fit in recognition of his 
heroic act, and he articulated some bald common- 
places of praise, and shook Staniford's clammy 
hand. " Yes," said the latter, submitting ; " but 
the difficulty about a thing of this sort is that you 
don't know whether you have n't been an ass. It 
has been pawed over so much by the romancers that 
you don't feel like a hero in real life, but a hero of 
fiction. I 've a notion that Hicks and I looked 
rather ridiculous going over the ship's side ; I know 
we did, coming back. No man can reveal his great- 
ness of soul in wet clothes. Did Miss Blood 
laugh ? " 

" Staniford ! " said Dunham, in an accent of re- 
proach. " You do her great injustice. She felt 
what you had done in the way you would wish, — 
if you cared." 

" What did she say ? " asked Staniford, quickly. 

" Nothing. But " — 

" That 's an easy way of expressing one's admi- 
ration of heroic behavior. I hope she '11 stick to 
that line. I hope she won't feel it at all necessary 
to say anything in recognition of my prowess; it 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 193 

would be extremely embarrassing. I 've got Hicks 
back again, but I could n't stand any gratitude for 
it. Not that I'm ashamed bi the " performance. 
Perhaps if it had been anybody but Hicks, I should 
have waited for them to lower a boat. But Hicks 
had peculiar claims. You could n't let a man 
you disliked so much welter round a great while. 
Where is the poor old fellow ? Is he clothed and 
in his right mind again ? " 

" He seemed to be sober enough," said Dunham, 
" when he came on board ; but I don't think he 's 
out yet." 

" We must let Thomas in to gather up this bath- 
ing-suit," observed Staniford. " What a Newport- 
ish flavor it gives the place ! " He was excited, and 
in great gayety of spirits. 

He and Dunham went out into the cabin, where 
they found Captain Jenness pacing to and fro. 
" Well, sir," he said, taking Stamford's hand, and 
crossing his right with his left, so as to include Dun- 
ham in his congratulations, " you ought to have 
been a sailor ! " Then he added, as if the unquali- 
fied praise might seem fulsome, '* But if you 'd been 
a sailor, you would n't have tried a thing like that. 
You 'd have had more sense. The chances were ten 
to one against you." 

Staniford laughed. " Was it so bad as that ? I 
shall begin to respect myself." 

The captain did not answer, but his iron grip 
closed hard upon Stani ford's hand, and he frowned 

13 



194 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

in keen inspection of Hicks, who at that moment 
came out of his st^ite-room, looking pale and quite 
sobered. Captain Jenness surveyed him from head 
to foot, and then from foot to head, and pausing at 
the level of his eyes he said, still holding Staniford 
by the hand : " The trouble with a man aboard 
ship is that he can't turn a blackguard out-of-doors 
just when he likes. The Aroostook puts in at Mes- 
sina. You 11 be treated well till we get there, and 
then if I find you on my vessel five minutes after 
she comes to anchor, I '11 heave you overboard, and 
I '11 take care that nobody jumps after you. Do 
you hear ? And you won't find me doing any such 
fool kindness as I did when I took you on board, 
soon again." 

" Oh, I say. Captain Jenness," began Staniford. 

" He 's all right," interrupted Hicks. " I 'm a 
blackguard ; I know it ; and I don't think I was 
worth fishing up. But you 've done it, and I must 
n't go back on you, I suppose." He lifted his poor, 
weak, bad little face, and looked Staniford in the 
eyes with a pathos that belied the slang of his 
speech. The latter released his hand from Captain 
Jenness and gave it to Hicks, who wrung it, as he 
kept looking him in the eyes, while his lips twitched 
pitifully, like a child's. The captain gave a quick 
enort either of disgust or of sympathy, and turned 
abruptly about and bundled himself up out of the 
cabin. 

" I say ! " exclaimed Staniford, " a cup of coflfee 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. . 195 

would n't be bad, would it ? Let 's have some cof- 
fee, Thomas, about as quick as the cook can make 
it," he added, as the boy came out from his state- 
room with a lump of wet clothes in his hands. 
" You wanted some cofifee a little while ago," he 
said to Hicks, who hung his head at the joke. 

For the rest of the day Staniford was the hero of 
the ship. The men looked at him from a distance, 
and talked of him together. Mr. Watterson hung 
about whenever Captain Jenness drew near him, as 
if in the hope of overhearing some acceptable ex- 
pression in which he could second his superior offi- 
cer. Failing this, and being driven to despair, 
" Find the water pretty cold, sir ? " he asked at 
last ; and after that seemed to feel that he had dis- 
charged his duty as well as might be under the ex- 
traordinary circumstances. 

The second mate, during the course of the after- 
noon, contrived to pass near Staniford. " Why, 
there wa' n't no need of your doing it," he said, in 
a bated tone. " I could ha' had him out with the 
boat, soon enough.^'* 

Staniford treasured up these meagre expressions 
of the general approbation, and would not have had 
them different. From this time, within the nar- 
low bounds that brought them all necessarily to- 
gether in some sort, Hicks abolished himself as 
nearly as possible. He chose often to join the sec- 
ond mate at meals, which Mr. Mason, in accordance 
with the discipline of the ship, took apart both 



196 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

from the crew and his superior officers. Mason 
treated the voluntary outcast with a sort of sarcas- 
tic compassion, as a man whose fallen state was not 
without its points as a joke to the indififerent ob- 
server, and yet might appeal to the pity of one who 
knew such cases through the misery they inflicted. 
Staniford heard him telling Hicks about his brother- 
in-law, and dwelling upon the peculiar relief which 
the appearance of his name in the mortality list 
gave all concerned in him. Hicks listened in apa- 
thetic patience and acquiescence ; but Staniford 
thought that he enjoyed, as much as he could enjoy 
anything, the second officer's frankness. For his 
own part, he found that having made bold to keep 
this man in the world he had assumed a curious re- 
sponsibility towards him. It became his business to 
show him that he was not shunned by his fellow- 
creatures, to hearten and cheer him up. It was 
heavy work. Hicks with his joke was sometimes 
odious company, but he was also sometimes amus- 
ing ; without it, he was of a terribly dull conver- 
sation. He accepted Staniford's friendliness too ' 
meekly for good comradery ; he let it add, appar- 
ently, to his burden of gratitude, rather than lessen 
it. Staniford smoked with him, and told him sto- 
ries; he walked up and down with him, and made 
a point of parading their good understanding, but 
his spirits seemed to sink the lower. " Deuce take 
him I " mused his benefactor ; "he 's in love with 
her I " But he now had the satisfaction, such as it 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 197 

was, of seeing that if he was in love he was quite 
without hope. Lydia had never relented in her 
abhorrence of Hicks since the day of his disgrace. 
There seemed no scorn in her condemnation, but 
neither was there any mercy. In her simple life 
she had kept unsophisticated the severe morality 
of a child, and it was this that judged him, that 
found him unpardonable and oiftlawed him. He 
had never ventured to speak to her since that day, 
and Staniford never saw her look at him except 
when Hicks was not looking, and then with a re- 
pulsion which was very curious. Staniford could 
have pitied him, and might have interceded so far 
as to set him nearer right in her eyes ; but he 
felt that she avoided him, too ; there were no more 
walks on the deck, no more readings in the cabin ; 
the checker-board, which professed to be the His- 
tory of England, In 2 Vols., remained a closed 
book. The good companionship of a former time, 
in which they had so often seemed like brothers 
and sister, was gone. " Hicks has smashed our 
Happy Family," Staniford said to Dunham, with 
little pleasure in his joke. " Upon my word, I 
think I had better have left him in the water." 
Lydia kept a great deal in her own room ; some- 
times when Staniford came down into the cabin he 
found her there, talking with Thomas of little 
things that amuse children ; sometimes when he 
went on deck in the evening she would be there in 
her accustomed seat, and the second mate, with 



198 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

face and figure half averted, and staying himself 
by one hand on the shrouds, would be telling her 
something to which she listened with lifted chin 
and attentive eyes. The mate would go away when 
Staniford appeared, but that did not help matters, 
for then Lydia went too. At table she said very 
little ; she had the effect of placing herself more 
and more under the protection of the captain. The 
golden age, when they had all laughed and jested 
so freely and fearlessly together, under her pretty 
sovereignty, was past, and they seemed far dis- 
persed in a common exile. Staniford imagined she 
grew pale and thin ; he asked Dunham if he did 
not see it, but Dunham had not observed. " I think 
matters have taken a very desirable shape, socially," 
he said. " Miss Blood will reach her friends as 
fancy-free as she left home." 

" Yes," Staniford assented vaguely; "that's the 
great object." 

After a while Dunham asked, " She 's never said 
anything to you about your rescuing Hicks ? " 

" Resetting ? What rescuing ? They 'd have had 
him out in another minute, any way," said Stani- 
.'ord, fretfully. Then he brooded angrily upon the 
subject : " But I can tell you what : considering all 
the circumstances, she might very well have said 
something. It looks obtuse, or it looks hard. She 
must have known that it all came about through 
my trying to keep him away from her." 

" Oh, yes ; she knew that," said Dunham ; " she 
spoke of it at the time. But I thought " — 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. . 199 

" Oh, she did I Then I think that it would be 
very little if she recognized the mere fact that 
something had happened." 

" Why, you said you hoped she would n't. You 
said it would be embarrassing. You 're hard to 
please, Staniford." . 

"I shouldn't choose to have her speak for my 
pleasure," Staniford returned. " But it argues a 
dullness and coldness in her " — 

'^ I don't believe she 's dull ; I don't believe she's 
cold," said Dunham, warmly. 

" What do you believe she is ? ' 

" Afraid." 

" Pshaw I " said Staniford. 

The eve of their arrival at Messina, he discharged 
one more duty by telling Hicks that he had better 
come on to Trieste with them. " Captain Jenness 
asked me to speak to you about it," he said. " He 
feels a little awkward, and thought I could, open 
the matter better." 

" The captain 's all right," answered Hicks, with 
unruffled humility, " but I 'd rather stop at Mes- 
sina. I 'm going to get home as soon as I can, — 
strike a bee-line." 

" Look here ! " said Staniford, laying his hand 
on his shoulder. " How are you going to manage 
for money ? " 

" Monte di Piet&;," replied Hicks. " I 've been 
there before. Used to have most of my things in 
the care of the state when I was studying raedi- 



200 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

cine in Paris. I've got a lot of rings and trinkets 
that'll carry me through, with what's left of my 
watch." 

" Are you sure ? " 

" Sure." 

" Because you can draw on me, if you 're going to 
be short." 

" Thanks," said Hicks. " There 's something I 
should like to ask you," he added, after a moment. 
" I see as well as you do that Miss Blood is n't the 
same as she was before. I want to know — I can't 
always be sure afterwards — whether I did or said 
anything out of the way in her presence." 

" You were drunk," said Staniford, frankly, " but 
beyond that you were irreproachable, as regarded 
Miss Blood. You were even exemplary." 

'' Yes, I know," said Hicks, with a joyless laugh. 
" Sometimes it takes that turn. I don't think I 
could .stand it if I had shown her any disrespect. 
She 's a lady, — a perfect lady ; she 's the best girl 
I ever saw." 

" Hicks," said Staniford, presently, " I have n't 
bored you in regard to that little foible of yours. 
Are n't you going to try to do something about 
It?" 

" I 'm going home to get them to shut me up 
somewhere," answered Hicks. " But I doubt if any- 
thing can be don^. I 've studied the thing ; I am 
a doctor, — or I would be if I were not a drunk- 
ard, — and I 've diagnosed the case pretty thor- 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 201 

oughly. For three months or four months, now, I 
shall be all right. After that I shall go to the bad 
for a few weeks ; and I'll have to scramble back the 
best way I can. Nobody can help me. That was 
the ihistake this last time. I should n't have 
wanted anything at Gibraltar if I could have had 
my spree out at Boston. But I let them take me 
before it was over, and ship me ofif. I thought I *d 
try it. Well, it was like a burning fire every 
minute, all the way. I thought I should die. I 
tried to get something from the sailors; I tried to 
steal Gabriel's cooking- wine. When I got that 
brandy in Gibraltar I was wild. Talk about hero- 
ism ! I tell you it was superhuman, keeping that 
canteen corked till night ! I was in hopes I could 
get through it, — sleep it off, — and nobody be any 
the wiser. But it would n't work. O Lord, Lord, 
Lord ! " 

Hicks was as common a soul as could well be. 
His conception of life was vulgar, and his experi- 
ence of it was probably vulgar. He had a good 
mind enough, with abundance of that humorous 
brigbtness which may hereafter be found the most 
national quality of the Americans; but his ideals 
were pitiful, and the language of his heart was a 
drolling slang. Yet his doom lifted him above his 
low conditions, and made him tragic ; his despair 
gave him the dignity of a mysterious expiation, 
and set him apart with all those who suffer beyond 
human help. Without deceiving himself as to the 



202 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

quality of the man, Stanif ord felt awed by the dark- 
ness of his fate. 

" Can't you try somehow to stand up against it, 
and fight it ofif ? Your 're so young yet, it 
can t — 

The wretched creature burst into tears. " Oh, 
try, — try ! You don't know what you 're talking 
about. Don't you suppose I 've had reasons for try- 
ing ? If you could see how my mother looks when 
I come out of one of my drunks, — and my father, 
poor old man ! It 's no use ; I tell you it 's no use. 
I shall go just so long, and then I shall want it, 
and will have it, unless they shut me up for life. 
My God, I wish I was dead I Well I " He rose from 
the place where they had been sitting together, and 
held out his hand to Stanif ord. " I 'm going to be 
olBE in the morning before you 're out, and I '11 say 
good-by now. I want you to keep this chair, and 
give it to Miss Blood, for me, when you get to 
Trieste." 

" I will, Hicks," said Staniford, gently. 

" I want her to know that I was ashamed of my- 
self. I think she '11 like to know it." 

" I will say anything to her that you wish," re- 
plied Staniford. 

" There 's nothing else. If ever you see a man 
with my complaint fall overboard again, think 
twice before you jump after him." 

He wrung Staniford's hand, and went below, 
^eaving him with a dull remorse that he should ever 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 203 

have hated Hicks, and that he could not quite like 
him even now. 

But he did his duty by him to the last. He rose 
at dawn, and was on deck when Hicks went over 
the side into the boat which was to row him to the 
steamer for Naples, lying at anchor not far off. He 
presently returned, to Staniford's surprise, and 
scrambled up to the deck of the Aroostook. " The 
steamer sails to-night," he said, " and perhaps I 
could n't raise the money by that time. I wish 
you 'd lend me ten napoleons. I '11 send 'em to you 
from London. There 's my father's address : I 'm 
going to telegraph to him." He handed Staniford 
a card, and the latter went below for the coins. 
" Thanks," said Hicks, when he reappeared with 
them. " Send 'em to you where ? " 

" Care Blumenthals', Venice. I 'm going to be 
there some weeks." 

In the gray morning light the lurid color of trag- 
edy had faded out of Hicks. He was merely a 
baddish-looking young fellow whom Staniford had 
lent ten napoleons that he might not see again. 
Staniford watched the steamer uneasily, both from 
the Aroostook and from the shore, where he strolled 
languidly about with Dunham part of the day. 
When she sailed in the evening, he felt that Hicks's 
absence was worth twice the money. 



XVHL 

The young men did not come back to the ship at 
night, but went to a hotel, for the greater conven- 
ience of seeing the city. They had talked of offer- 
ing to show Lydia about, but their talk had not 
ended in anything. Vexed with himself to be 
vexed at such a thing, Staniford at the bottom of 
his heart still had a soreness which the constant 
sight of her irritated. It was^ in vain that he said 
there was no occasion, perhaps no opportunity, for 
her to speak, yet he was hurt that she seemed to 
have seen nothing uncommon in his risking his own 
life for that of a man like Hicks. He had set the 
action low enough in his own speech ; but he knew 
that it was not ignoble, and it puzzled him that it 
should be so passed over. • She had not even said a 
word of congratulation upon his own escape. It 
might be that she did not know how, or did not 
think it was her place to speak. She was curiously 
estranged. He felt as if he had been away, and she 
had grown from a young girl into womanhood dur- 
ing his absence. This fantastic conceit was strong- 
est when he met her with Captain Jenness one 
day. He had found friends at the hotel, as one 
always does in Italy, if one's world is at all wide, 
— some young ladies, and a lady, now married, 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 205 

with whom he had once violently flirted. She was 
willing that he should envy her husband ; that 
amused him in his embittered mood; he let her 
drive him about ; and they met Lydia and the cap- 
tain, walking together. Staniford started up from 
his lounging ease, as if her limpid gaze had searched 
his conscience, and bowed with an air which did 
not escape his companion. 

" Ah ! Who 's that ? " she asked, with the bold- 
ness which she made pass for eccentricity. 

" A lady of my acquaintance," said Staniford, at 
his, laziest again. 

" A lady ? " said the other, with an inflection 
that she saw hurt. " Why the marine animal, then ? 
She bowed very prettily ; she blushed prettily, too." 

" She 's a very pretty girl," replied Staniford. 

" Charming ! But why blush ? " 

" I 've heard that there are ladies who blush for 
nothing." 

" Is she Italian ? " 

" Yes, — in voice." 

" Oh, an American prima donna .^" Staniford did 
not answer. " Who is she ? Where is she from ? " 

"South Bradfield, Mass." Staniford's eyes twin- 
kled at her pursuit, which he did not trouble himself 
to turn aside, but baffled by mere impenetrability. 

The party at the hotel suggested that the young 
men should leave their ship and go on with them to 
Naples ; Dunham was tempted, for he could have 
reached Dresden sooner by land ; but Staniford over- 



206 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

ruled him, and at the end of four days they went 
back to the Aroostook. They said it was like get- 
ting home, but in fact they felt the change from the 
airy heights and breadths of the hotel to the siT'ill 
cabin and the closets in which they slept ; it was not 
so great alleviation as Captain Jenness seemed to 
think that one of them could now have Hicks's state- 
room. But Dunham took everything sweetly, as his 
habit was ; and, after all, they were meeting their 
hardships voluntarily. Some of the ladies came with 
them in the boat which rowed them to the Aroos- 
took ; the name made them laugh ; that lady whr> 
wished Staniford to regret her waved him her hand 
kerchief as the boat rowed away again. She had 
with diflBculty been kept from coming on board by 
the refusal of the others to come with her. She 
had contrived to associate herself with him again 
in the minds- of the others, and this, perhaps, was 
all that she desired. But the sense of her frivolity 
— her not so much vacant-mindedness as vacant- 
heartedness — was like a stain, and he painted in 
Lydia's face when they first met the reproach which 
was in his own breast. 

Her greeting, however, was frank and cordial ; it 
was a real welcome. Staniford wondered if it were 
not more frank and cordial than he quite liked, and 
whether she was merely relieved by Hicks's absence, 
or had freed herself from that certain subjection in 
i^hich she had hitherto been to himself. 

Yet it was charming to see her again as she had 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 207 

been in the happiest moments of the past, and to 
feel that, Hicks being out of her world, her trust of 
everybody in it was perfect once more. She treated 
that interval of coldness and diffidence as all women 
know how to treat a* thing which they wish not to 
have been ; and Stamford, a man on whom no pleas- 
ing art of her sex was ever lost, admired and grate- 
fully accepted the eflEect of this. He fell luxuriously 
into the old habits again. They had still almost 
the time of a steamer's voyage to Europe before 
them ; it was as if they were newly setting sail from 
America. The first night after they left Messina 
Staniford found her in her place in the waist of the 
ship, and sat down beside her there, and talked ; the 
next night she did not come ; the third she came, and 
he asked her to walk with him. The elastic touch 
of her hand on his arm, the rhythmic movement of 
her steps beside him, were things that seamed always 
to have been. ' She told him of what she had seen 
and done in Messina. This glimpse of Italy had 
vividly aninjated her ; she had apparently found a 
world within herself as well as without. 

With a suddenly depressing sense of loss, Staniford 
had a prevision of splendor in her, when she should 
have wholly blossomed out in that fervid air of art 
and beauty; he would fain have kept her still a 
wilding rosebud of the New England wayside. He 
hated the officers who should wonder at her when 
she first came into the Square of St. Mark with her 
aunt and uncle. 



208 THE LADY OF THE ABOOSTOOK. 

Her talk about Messina went on ; he was thinking 
of her, and not of her talk ; but he saw that she was 
not going to refer to their encounter. " You make 
me jealous of the objects of interest in Messina," he 
said. " You seem to remember seeing everything 
but me, there." 

She stopped abruptly. " Yes," she said, after a 
deep breath, " I saw you there ; " and she did not 
ojffer to go on again. 

" Where were you going, that morning?" 

" Oh, to the cathedral. Captain Jenness left me 
there, and I looked all through it till he came back 
from the consulate." 

" Left you there alone ! " cried Staniford. 

" Yes ; I told him I should not feel lonely, and I 
should not stir out of it till he came back. I took 
one of those little pine chairs and sat down, when I 
got tired, and looked at the people coming to wor- 
ship, and the strangers with their guide-books." 

" Did any of them look at you ? " 

" They stared a good deal. It seems to be the 
custom in Europe; but I told Captain Jenness I 
should probably have to go about by myself in Ven- 
ice, as my aunt's an invalid, and I had better get 
used to it." 

She paused, and seemed to be referring the point 
to Staniford. 

" Yes, — oh, yes," he said. 

" Captain Jenness said it was their way, over 
here," she resumed ; " but he guessed I had as much 
dght in a church as anybody." 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 209 

" The captain's common sense is infallible," an- 
swered Staniford. He was ashamed to know that 
the beautiful young girl was as improperly alone in 
church as she would have been in a caf^, and he be- 
gan to hate the European world for the fact. It 
seemed better to him that the Aroostook should put 
about and sail back to Boston with her, as she was, 
— better that she should be going to her aunt in 
South Bradfield than to her aunt in Venice. " We 
shall soon be at our journey's end, now," he said, 
after a while. 

" Yes ; the captain thinks in about eight days, if 
we have good weather." 

" Shall you be sorry ? " 

"Oh, I like the sea very well." 

" But the new life you are coming to, — does n't 
that alarm you sometimes ? " 

" Yes, it does," she admitted, with a kind of re- 
luctance. 

" So much that you would like to turn back from 
it?" 

" Oh, no I " she answered quickly. Of course 
not, Staniford thought ; nothing could be worse than 
going back to South Bradfield. " I keep thinking 
about it," she added. " You say Venice is such a 
very strange place. Is it any use my having seen 
Messina ? " 

"Oh, all Italian cities have something in com- 



mon." 



" I presume," she went on, " that after I get there 

14 



\ 



210 THE LAPY OF THE AROOSTOOK, 

eveiything will become natural. But I- don't like 
to look forward. It — scares me. I can't form any 
idea of it." 

" You needn't be afraid," said Staniford. " It's 
only more beautiful than anything you can imagine." 

" Yes — yes; I know," Lydia answered. 

" And do you really dread getting there ? " 

" Yes, I dread it," she said. 

"Why," returned Staniford lightly, "so do I; 
but it's for a dijfferent reason, I 'm afraid. I should 
like such a voyage as this to go on forever. Now 
and then I think it will ; it seems always to have 
gone on. Can you remember when it began ? " 

" A great while ago," she answered, humoring 
his fantasy, "but I can remember." She paused a 
long while. "I don't know," she said at last, 
" whether I can make you understand just how I 
feel. But it seems to me as if I had died, and this 
long voyage was a kind of dream that I was going 
to wake up from in another world. I often used to 
think, when I was a little girl, that when I got 
to heaven it would be lonesome — I don't know 
whether I can express it. You say that Italy — 
that Venice — is so beautiful ; but if I don't know 
any one there " — She stopped, as if she had gone 
- too far. 

" But you do know somebody there," said Stani- 
ford. " Your aunt " — 

" Yes," said the girl, and looked away. 

" But the people iq this long dream, — you 're 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 211 

going to let some of them appear to you there," he 
suggested. 

" Oh, yes," she said, reflecting his lighter humor, 
" I shall want to see them, or I shall not know I 
am the same person, and I must be sure of myself, 
at least." 

*' And you wouldn't like to go back to earth — 
to South Bradfield again ? " he asked presently. 

" No," she answered. " All that seems over 
forever. I could n't go back there and be what I 
was. I could have stayed there, but I could n't go 
back." 

Staniford laughed. " I see that it is n't the other 
world that 's got hold of you I It 's this world I I 
don*t believe you '11 be unhappy in Italy. But it 's 
pleasant to think you 'vabeen so contented on the 
Aroostook that you hate to leave it. I don't believe 
there 's a man on the ship that would n't feel per- 
sonally flattered to know that you liked being here. 
Even that poor fellow who parted from us at Mes- 
sina was anxious that you should think as kindly of 
him as you could. He knew that he had behaved 
in a way to shock you, and he was very sorry. He 
left a message with me for you. He thought you 
would like to know that he was ashamed of him- 
self." 

" I pitied him," said Lydia succinctly. It was 
the first time that she had referred to Hicks, and 
Staniford found it in character for her to limit her- 
self to this sparse comment. Evidently, her com- 




212 THE LADY OF THE ABOOSTOO 

passion was a religious duty. Staniford's generos- 
ity came easy to him. 

" I feel bound to say that Hicks was not a bad 
fellow. I disliked him immensely, and I ought to 
do him justice, now he's gone. He deserved all 
your pity. He 's a doomed man ; his vice is irrep- 
arable; he can't resist it." Lydia did not say 
anything: women do not generalize in these mat- 
ters ; perhaps they cannot pity the faults of those 
they do not love. Staniford only forgave Hicks 
the more. " I can't say that up to the last moment 
I thought him anything but a poor, common little 
creature ; and yet I certainly did feel a greater 
kindness for him after — what I — after what had 
happened. He left something more than a message 
for you, Miss Blood; he left his steamer chair 
yonder, for you." 

"For me?" demanded Lydia. Staniford felt 
her thrill and grow rigid upon his arm, with re- 
fusal. " I will not have it. He had no right to 
do so. He — he — : was dreadful I I will give it to 
you I " she said, suddenly. " He ought to have 
given it to you. You did everything for him ; you 
saved his life." 

It was clear that she did not sentimentalize 
Hicks 's case ; and Staniford had some doubt as to 
the value she set upon what he had done, even now 
she had recognized it. 

He said, " I think you overestimate my service to 
him, possibly. I dare say the boat could have 
picked him up in good time." 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 213 

" Yes, that 's what the captain and Mr. Watter- 
Bon and Mr. Mason all said," assented Lydia. 

Staniford was nettled. He would have preferred 
a devoted belief that but for him Hicks must have 
perished. Besides, what she said still gave no clew 
to her feeling in regard to himself. He was obliged 
to go on, but he went on as indifferently as he 
could. " However, it was hardly a question for 
mJB at the time whether he could have been got out 
without my help. If I had thought about it at 
all — which I did n't — I suppose I should have 
thought that it would n't do to take any chances." 

" Oh, no," said Lydia, simply, " you could n't 
have done anything less than you did." 

In his heart Staniford had often thought that he 
could have done very much less than jump over- 
board after Hicks, and could very properly have 
left him to the ordinary life-saving apparatus of 
the ship. But if he had been putting the matter 
to some lady in society who was aggressively prais- 
ing him for his action, he would have said just 
what Lydia had said for him, — that he could not 
have done anything less. He might have said it, 
however, in such a way that the lady would have 
pursued his retreat from her praises with still 
fonder applause ; whereas this girl seemed to think 
there was nothing else to be said. He began to 
stand in awe of her heroic simplicity. If she drew 
every-day breath in that lofty air, what could she 
really think of him, who preferred on principle the 



214 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

atmosphere of the valley? " Do you know, Miss 
Blood," he said gravely, "that you pay me a very 
high compliment?" 

" How ? " she asked. 

" You rate my maximum as my mean tempera- 
ture." He felt that she listened inquiringly. " I 
don't think I 'm habitually up to a thing of that 
kind," he explained. 

" Oh, no," she assented, quietly ; " but when he 
struck at you so, you had to do everything." 

" Ah, you have the pitiless Puritan conscience 
that takes the life out of us all ! " cried Staniford, 
with sudden bitterness. Lydia seemed startled, 
shocked, and her hand trembled on his arm, as if 
she had a mind to take it away. " I was a long 
time laboring up to that point. I suppose you are 
always there ! " 

" I don't understand," she said, turning her head 
round with the slow motion of her beauty, and look- 
ing him full in the face. 

" I can't explain now. I will, by and by, — when 
we get to Venice," he added, with quick lightness. 

" You put ojff everything till we get to Venice," 
she said, doubtfully. 

" I beg your pardon. It was you who did it the 
last time." 

" Was it ? " She laughed. " So it was I I was 
thinking it was you." 

It consoled him a little that she should have con- 
fused them in her thought, in this way. " What 
was it ^rivt were to tell me in Venice? " he asked. 



THE LADY OF' THE AROOSTOOK. 215 

" I can't think, now." 

"Very likely something of yourself — or myself. 
A third person might say our conversational range 
was limited." 

" Do you think it is very egotistical ? " she asked, 
in the gay tone which gave him relief from the 
sense of oppressive elevation of mind in her. 

" It is in me, — not in you." 

" But I don't see the difiference." 

" I will explain sometime." 

" When we get to Venice ? " 

They both laughed. It was very nonsensical; 
but nonsense is sometimes enough. 

When they were serious again, " Tell me," he 
said, " what you thought of that lady in Messina, 
the other day." 

She did not affect not to know whom he meant. 
She merely said, " I only saw her a moment." 

"But you thought something. If we only see 
people a second we form some opinion of them." 

" She is very fine-appearing," said Lydia. 

Staniford smiled at the countrified phrase; he 
had observed that when, she spoke her mind she 
used an instinctive good language ; when she would 
not speak it, .she fell into the phraseology of the 
people with whom she had lived. " I see you don't 
wish to say, because you think she is a friend of 
mine. But you can speak out freely. We were 
not friends ; we were enemies, if anything." 

Staniford's meaning was clear enough to himself; 



216 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

but Lydia paused, as if in doubt whether he was 
jesting or not, before she asked, " Why were you 
riding with her then ? " 

" I was driving with her," he replied, " I suppose, 
because she asked me." 

" Asked you ! " cried the girl ; and he perceived 
her moral recoil both from himself and from a 
woman who could be so unseemly. That lady 
would have found it delicious if she could have 
known that a girl placed like Lydia was shocked at 
her behavior. But he was not amused. He was 
touched by the simple self-respect that would not 
let her sujffer from what was not wrong in itself, 
but that made her shrink from a voluntary sem- 
blance of unwomanliness. It endeared her not only 
to his pity, but to that sense which in every man 
consecrates womanhood, and waits for some woman 
to be better than all her sex. Again he felt the 
pang he had remotely known before. What would 
she do with these ideals of hers in that depraved 
Old World, — so long past trouble for its sins as to 
have got a sort of sweetness and innocence in them, 
— where her facts would be utterly irreconcilable 
with her ideals, and equally incomprehensible ? 

They walked up and down a few turns without 
speaking again of that lady. He knew that she 
grew momently more constrained toward him ; that 
the pleasure of the time was spoiled for her ; that 
she had lost her trust in him ; and this half amused, 
half afflicted him. It did not surprise him when, 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 217 

at their third approach to the cabin gangway, she 
withdrew her hand from his arm and said, stiffly, 
" I think I will go down." But she did not go at 
once. She lingered, and after a certain hesitation 
she said, without looking at him, "I didn't ex- 
press what I wanted to, about Mr. Hicks, and — 
what you did. It is what I thought you would do." 
" Thanks," said Staniford, with sincere humility. 
He understood how she had had this in her mind, 
and how she would not withhold justice from him 
because he had fallen in her esteem ; how rather 
she would be the more resolute to do him justice 
for that reason. 



XIX. 

He could see that she avoided being alone with 
him the next day, but he took it for a sign of re- 
lenting, perhaps helpless relenting, that she was in 
her usual place on deck in the evening. He went 
to her, and, " I see that you have n't forgiven me," 
he said. 

" Forgiven you ? " she echoed. 

" Yes," he said, " for letting that lady ask me 
to drive with her." 

" I never said " — she began. 

" Oh, no ! But I knew it, all the same. It was 
not such a very wicked thing, as those things go. 
But I liked your not liking it. Will you let me 
say something to you ? " 

" Yes," she answered, rather breathlessly. 

" You must think it 's rather an odd thing to say, 
as I ask leave. It is ; and I hardly know how to 
say it. I want to tell you that I 've made bold to 
depend a great deal upon your good opinion for 
my peace of mind, of late, and that I can't well do 
without it now." 

She stole the quickest of her bird-like glances at 
him, but did not speak ; and though she seemed, 
to his anxious fancy, poising for flight, she re- 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 219 

mained, and merely looked away, like the bird that 
will not or cannot fly. 

" You don't resent my making you my outer con- 
science, do you, and my knowing that you 're not 
quite pleased with me ?" 

She looked down and away with one of those 
turns of the head, so precious when one who be- 
holds them is young, and caught at the fringe of 
her shawl. " I have no right," she began. 

" Oh, I give you the right I " he cried, with 
passionate urgence. " You have the right. Judge 
me ! " She only looked more grave, and he hurried 
on. " It was no great harm of her to ask me ; 
that 's common enough ; but.it was harm of me to 
go if I did n't quite respect her, — if I thought 
her silly, and was willing to be amused with her. 
One has n't any right to do that. I saw this when 
I saw you." She still hung her head, and looked 
away. "I want you to tell me something," he 
pursued. " Do you remember once — the second 
time we talked together — that you said Dunham 
was in earnest, and you would n't answer when I 
asked you about myself ? Do you remember ? " 

" Yes," said the girl. 

" I did n't care, then. I care very much now. 
You don't think me — you think I can be in ear- 
nest when I will, don't you ? And that I can re- 
gret — that I really wish " — He took the hand 
that played with the shawl-fringe, but she softly 
drew it away. 



220 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

" Ah, I see I " he said. *' You can't believe in 
me. You don't believe that I can be a good man 

— like Dunham ! " 

She answered in the same breathless murmur, 
" I think you are good." Her averted face drooped 
lower. 

" I will tell you all about it, some day ! " he cried, 
with joyful vehemence. " Will you let me ? " 

"Yes," she answered, with the swift expulsion 
of breath that sometimes comes with tears. She 
rose quickly and turned away. He did not try to 
keep her from leaving him. His heart beat tumult- 
uously ; his brain seemed in a whirl. It all meant 
nothing, or it meant everything. 

" What is the matter with Miss Blood ? " asked 
Dunham, who joined him at this moment. " I just 
spoke to her at the foot of the gangway stairs, and 
she would n't answer me." 

" Oh, I don't know about Miss Blood — I don't 
know what 's the matter," said Staniford. " Look 
here, Dunham ; I want to talk with you — I want 
to tell you something — I want you to advise me 

— I — There 's only one thing that can explain 
it, that can excuse it. There 's only one thing that 
can justify all that I 've done and said, and that 
can not only justify it, but can make it sacredly 
and eternally right, — right for her and right *f or 
me. Yes, it 's reason for all, and for a thousand 
times more. It makes it fair for me to have let 
her see that I thought her beautiful and charming, 



THE LADY OF THE AROQSTOOK. 221 

that I delighted to be with her, that I — Dunham," 
cried Staniford, " I 'm in love I " 

Dunham started at the burst "in which these rav- 
ings ended. " Staniford," he faltered, with grave 
regret, " I hope not ! " 

" You hope not ? You — you — What do you 
mean ? How else can I free myself from the self- 
reproach of having trifled with her, of " — 

Dunham shook his head compassionately. " You 
can't do it that way. Your only safety is to fight 
it to the death, — to* run from it." 

" But if I don't choose to fight it ? " shouted 
Staniford, — "if I don't choose to run from it ? If 
I" — 

" For Heaven's sake, hush ! The whole ship 
will hear you, and you ought n't to breathe it in 
the desert. I saw how it was going ! I dreaded 
it ; I knew it ; and I longed to speak. I 'm to 
blame for not speaking ! " 

"I should like to know what would have author- 
ized you to speak ? " demanded Staniford, haugh- 

tily. 

" Only my regard for you ; only what urges me 
to speak now ! You must fight it, Staniford, whether 
you choose or not. Think of yourself, — think of 
her ! Think — you have always been my ideal of 
honor and truth and loyalty — think of her hus- 
band " — 

"Her husband ! "gasped Staniford. "Whose 
husband ? What the deuce — who the deuce — 
are you talking about, Dunham ? " 



222 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

" Mrs. Rivers." 

" Mrs. Rivers ? That flimsy, feather-headed, 
empty-hearted — eyes-maker ! That frivolous, ri- 
diculous — Pah! And did you think that I was 
talking of her f Did you think I was in love with 
her ? " 

" Why," stammered Dunham, "I supposed — I 
thought — At Messina, you know " — 

" Oh I " Staniford walked the deck's length 
away. "Well, Dunham," he said, as he came 
back, *' you've spoilt a pretty scene with your rot 
about Mrs. Rivers. I was going to be romantic 1 
But perhaps I 'd better say in ordinary newspaper 
English that I 've just found out that I'm in love 
with Miss Blood." 

" With her ! " cried Dunham, springing at his 
hand. 

" Oh, come now I Don't you be romantic, after 
knocking my chance." 

" Why, but Staniford ! " said Dunham, wringing 
his hand with a lover's joy in another's love and his 
relief that it was not Mrs. Rivers. "I never should 
have dreamt of such a thing I " 

" Why ? " asked Staniford, shortly. 

" Oh, the way you talked at first, you know, 
and" — 

" I suppose even people who get married have 
something to take back about each other," said 
Staniford, rather sheepishly. " However," he added, 
with an impulse of frankness, " I don't know that I 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK 223 

should have dreamt of it myself, and I don't blame 
you. But it 's a fact, nevertheless." 

" Why, of course. It 's splendid ! Certainly. 
It 's magnificent ! " There was undoubtedly a 
qualification, a reservation, in Dunham's tone. He 
might have thought it right to bring the inequali- 
ties of the affair to Staniford's mind. With all his 
effusive kindliness of heart and manner, he had a 
keen sense of social fitness, a nice feeling for con- 
vention. But a man does not easily suggest to 
another that the girl with whom he has just de- 
clared himself in love is his inferior. What Dun- 
ham finally did say was : " It jumps with all your 
ideas — all your old talk about not caring to marry 
a society girl " — 

" Society might be very glad of such a girl 1 " 
said Staniford, stiffly. 

" Yes, yes, certainly ; but I mean " — 

" Oh, I know what yoii mean. It 's all right," 
said Staniford. " But it is n't a question of marry- 
ing yet. I can't be sure she understood me, — I 've 
been so long understanding myself. And yet, she 
must, she must I She must believe it by this time, 
or else that I 'm the most infamous scoundrel alive. 
When I think how I have sought her out, and fol- 
lowed her up, and asked her judgment, and hung 
upon her words, I feel that I oughtn't to lose a 
moment in being explicit. I don't care for myself; 
she can take me or leave me, as she likes ; but if 
she does n't understand, she mustn't be left in sus- 



224 THE LADY OF TE^ AROOSTOOK. 

pense as to my meaning." He seemed to be speak- 
ing to Dunham, but he was really thinking aloud, 
and Dunham waited for some sort of question be- 
fore he spoke. " But it 's a great satisfaction to 
have had it out with myself. I have n't got to 
pretend any more that I hang about her, and look 
at her, and go mooning round after her, for this 
no-reason and that; I 've got the best reason in the 
world for playing the fool, — I 'm in love ! " He 
drew a long, deep breath. " It simplifies matters 
immensely to have reached the point of acknowl- 
edging that. Why, Dunham, those four days at 
Messina almost killed me ! They settled it. When 
that woman was in full fascination it nlade me 
gasp. I choked for a breath of fresh air; for a 
taste of spring-water; for — Lurella!" It was a 
long time since Stamford had used this name, and 
the sound of it made him laugh. "It's droll — 
but I always think of her as Lurella; I wish it 
was her name 1 Why, it was like heaven tp see her 
face when I got back to the ship. After we met 
her that day at Messina, Mrs. Rivers tried her best 
to get out of me who it was, and where I met her. 
But I flatter myself that I was equal to that emer- 
gency." 

Dunham said nothing, at once. Then, " Stani- 
ford," he faltered, " she got it out of me." 

"Did you tell her who Lu — who Miss Blood 
was?" 

« Yes." 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 225 

" And how I happened to be acquainted with 
her ? " 

" Yes." 

"And that we were going on to Trieste with 
her ? " 

" She had it out of me before I knew," said 
Dunham. " I did n't realize what she was after ; 
and I did n't realize how peculiar the situation 
might seem " — 

" I see nothing peculiar in the situation," inter- 
rupted Staniford, haughtily. Then he laughed con- 
sciously. " Or, yes, I do ; of course I do I You 
must know her to appreciate it, though." He 
mused a while before he added : " No wonder Mrs. 
Rivers was determined to come aboard! I wish 
we had let her, — confound her ! She '11 think 
I was ashamed of it. There 's nothing to be 
ashamed of I By Heaven, I should like to hear any 
one " — Staniford broke off, and laughed, and then 
bit his lip, smiling. Suddenly he burst out again, 
frowning : " I won't view it in that light. I refuse 
to consider it from that point of view. As far as 
I 'm concerned, it 's as regular as anything else in 
life. It 's the same to me as if she were in her 
own house, and I had come there to tell her that 
she has my future in her hand. She 's such a lady 
by instinct that she 's made it all a triumph, and 
I thank God that I have n't done or said anything 
to mar it. Even that beast of a Hicks did n't ; it 's 
no merit. I 've made love to her, — I own it ; of 

15 



226 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

course I have, because I was in love with her ; and 
my fault has been that I have n't made love to her 
openly, but have gone on fancying that I was 
studying her character, or some rubbish of that 
sort. But the fault is easily repaired." He turned 
about, as if he were going to look for Lydia at 
once, and ask her to be his wife. But he halted 
abruptly, and sat down. " No ; that won't do," he 
said. " That won't do at all." He remained 
thinking, and Dunham, unwilling to interrupt his 
reverie, moved a few paces oflP. " Dunham, don't 
go. I want your advice. Perhaps I don't see it 
in the right light." 

" How is. it you see it, my dear fellow ? " asked 
Dunham. 

" I don't know whether I 've a right to be ex- 
plicit with her, here. It seems like taking an ad- 
vantage. In a few days she will be with her 
friends " — 

"You must wait," said Dunham, decisively. 
** You can't speak to her before she is in their care ; 
it would n't be the thing. You 're quite right 
about that." 

" No, it would n't be the thing," groaned Stani- 
ford. " But how is it all to go on till then ?" he 
demanded desperately. 

" Why, just as it has before," answered Dunham, 
with easy confidence. 

" But is that fair to her ? " 

" Why not ? You mean to say to her at the 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 227 

right time all that a man can. Till that time 
comes I have n't the least doubt she understands 

you." 

" Do you think so ? " asked Staniford, simply. 
He had suddenly grown very subject and meek to 
Dunham. 

" Yes," said the other, with the superiority of a 
betrothed lover; "women are very quick about 
^those things." 

" I suppose you 're right," sighed Staniford, with 
nothing of his wonted arrogant pretension in re- 
gard to women's moods and minds, " I suppose 
you 're right. And you would go on just as be- 
fore?" 

" I would, indeed. How could you change with- 
out making her unhappy — if she's interested in 

you?" 

" That 's true. I could imagine worse things 
than going on just as before. I suppose," he added, 
" that something more explicit has its charms ; but 
a mutual understanding is very pleasant, — if it is 
a mutual understanding." He looked inquiringly 
at Dunham. 

" Why, as to that, of course I don't know. You 
ought to be the best judge of that. But I don't 
believe your impressions would deceive you." 

" Yours did, once," suggested Staniford, in sus- 
pense. 

" Yes ; but I was not in love with her," explained 
Dunham. 



228 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

" Of course," said Staniford, with a breath of 
relief. " And you think — Well, I must wait I " 
he concluded, grimly. "But don't — don't men- 
tion this matter, Dunham, unless I do. Don't 
keep an eye on me, old fellow. Or, yes, you must ! 
You can't help it. I want to tell you, Dunham, 
what makes me think she may be a not wholly un- 
interested spectator of my — sentiments." He 
made full statement of words and looks and tones. 
Dunham listened with the patience which one lover 
has with another. 



XX. 

The few days that yet remained of their voyage 
were falling in the latter half of September, and 
Staniford tried to make the young girl see the sur- 
passing loveliness of that season under Italian skies ; 
the fierceness of the summer is then past, and at 
night, when chiefly they inspected the firmament, 
the heaven has begun to assume something of the 
intense blue it wears in winter. She said yes, it 
was very beautiful, but she could not see that the 
days were finer, or the skies bluer, than those of 
September at home ; and he laughed at her loyalty 
to the American weather. " Don't you think so, 
too ? " she asked, as if it pained her that he should 
like Italian weather better. 

" Oh, yes, — yes," he said. Then he turned the 
talk on her, as he did whenever he could. " I like 
your meteorological patriotism. If I were a woman, 
I should stand by America in everything." 

" Don't you as a man ? " she pursued, still anx- 
iously. 

" Oh, certainly," he answered. " But women owe 
our continent a double debt of fidelity. It's the 
Paradise of women, it 's their Promised Land, 
where they've been led up out of the Egyptian 
oondage of Europe. It's the home of their free- 



230 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

dom. It is recognized in America that women have 
consciences and souls." 

Lydia looked very grave. " Is it — is it so differ- 
ent with women in Europe ? " she faltered. 

" Very," he replied, and glanced at her half- 
laughingly, half-tenderly. 

After a while, " I wish you would tell me," she 
said, "just what you mean. I wish you would tell 
me what is the difference." 

" Oh, it 's a long story. I will tell you — when 
we get to Venice." The well-worn jest served its 
purpose again ; she laughed, and he continued : 
" By the way, just when will that be ? The cap- 
tain says that if this wind holds we shall be in 
Trieste by Friday afternoon. I suppose your 
friends will meet you there on Saturday, and that 
you '11 go back with them to Venice at once." 

" Yes," assented Lydia. 

" Well, if I should come on Monday, would that 
be too soon ? " 

" Oh, no I " she answered. He wondered if she 
had been vaguely hoping that he might go directly 
on with her to Venice. They were together all 
day, now, and the long talks went on from early 
morning, when they met before breakfast on deck, 
until late at night, when they parted there, with 
blushed and laughed good-nights. Sometimes the 
trust she put upon his unspoken promises was ter- 
rible ; it seemed to condemn his reticence as fantas- 
tic and hazardous. With her, at least, it was clear 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 231 

that this love was the first ; her living and loving 
were one. He longed to testify the devotion which 
he felt, to leave it unmistakable and safe past acci- 
dent ; he thought of making his will, in which he 
should give her everything, and declare her su- 
premely dear ; he could only rid himself of this by 
drawing up the paper in writing, and then he easily 
tore it in pieces. 

They drew nearer together, not only in their talk 
about each other, but in what they said of different 
people in their relation to themselves. But Stam- 
ford's pleasure in the metaphysics of reciprocal ap- 
preciation, his wonder at the quickness with which 
she divined characters he painfully analyzed, was 
not greater than his joy in the pretty hitch of the 
shoulder with which she tucked her handkerchief 
into the back pocket of her sack, or the picturesque- 
ness with which she sat facing him, and leant upon 
the rail, with her elbow wrapped in her shawl, and 
the fringe gathered in the hand which propped her 
cheek. He scribbled his sketch-book full of her 
contours and poses, which sometimes he caught un- 
awares, and which sometimes she sat for him to 
draw. One day, as they sat occupied in this, " I 
wonder," he said, "if you have anything of my 
feeling, nowadays. It seems to me as if the world 
had gone on a pleasure excursion, without taking 
me along, and I was enjoying myself very much at 
home." 

"Why, yes," she said, joyously ; "do you have 
that feeling, too ? " 



232 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

" I wonder what it is makes us feel so," he vent- 
ured. 

" Perhaps," she returned, " the long voyage." 

" I shall hate to have the world come back, I be- 
lieve," he said, reverting to the original figure. 
" Shall you ? " 

"You know I don't know much about it," she 
answered, in lithe evasion, for which she more than 
atoned with a conscious look and one of her dark 
blushes. Yet he chose, with a curious cruelty, to 
try how far she was his. 

" How odd it would be," he said, " if we never 
should have a chance to talk up this voyage of ours 
when it is over ! " 

She started, in a way that made his heart smite 
him. " Why, you said you " — And then she 
caught herself, and struggled pitifully for the self- 
possession she had lost. She turned her head 
away ; his pulse bounded. 

" Did you think I would n't ? I am living for 
that." He took the hand that lay in her lap ; she 
seemed to try to free it, but she had not the strength 
or will ; she could only keep her face turned from 
him. 



XXI. 

They arrived Friday afternoon in Trieste, and 
Captain Jenness telegraphed his arrival to Lydia's 
uncle as he went up to the consulate with his ship's 
papers. The next morning the young men sent 
their baggage to a hotel, but they came back for a 
last dinner on the Aroostook. They all pretended 
to be very gay, but everybody was perturbed and 
distraught. Staniford and Dunham had paid their 
way handsomely with the sailors, and they had re- 
turned with remembrances in florid scarfs and jew- 
elry for Thomas and the captain and the oflScers. 
Dunham had thought they ought to get something 
to give Lydia as a souvenir of their voyage ; it was 
part of his devotion to young ladies to offer them 
little presents; but Staniford overruled him, and 
said there should be nothing of the kind. They 
agreed to be out of the way when her uncle came, 
and they said good-by after dinner. She came on 
deck to watch them ashore. Staniford would be the 
last to take leave. As he looked into her eyes, he 
saw brave trust of him, but he thought a sort of 
troubled wonder, too, as if she could not under- 
stand his reticence, and suffered from it. There 
was the same latent appeal and reproach in the 
pose in which she watched their boat row away 



234 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

She stood with one hand resting on the rail, and 
her slim grace outlined against the sky. He waved 
his hand ; she answered with a little languid wave 
of hers ; then she turned away. He felt as if he 
had forsaken her. 

The afternoon was very long. Toward night-fall 
he eluded Dunham, and wandered back to the ship 
in the hope that she might still be there. But she 
was gone. Already everything was changed. There 
was bustle and discomfort ; it seemed years since 
he had been there. Captain Jenness was ashore 
somewhere ; it was the second mate who told Stan- 
iford of her uncle's coming. 

" What sort of person was he ? " he asked vaguely. 

" Oh, well I Dum an Englishman, any way," 
said Mason, in a tone of easy, sociable explanation. 

The scruple to which Staniford had been holding 
himself for the past four or five days seemed the 
most incredible of follies, — the most fantastic, the 
most cruel. He hurried back to the hotel ; when 
he found Dunham coming out from the table d'hdte 
he was wild. 

" I have been the greatest fool in the world, 
Dunham," he said. " I have let a quixotic quibble 
keep me from speaking when I ought to have 
spoken." 

Dunham looked at him in stupefaction. " Where 
have you been ? " he inquired. 

"Down to the ship. I was in hopes that she 
might be still there. But she 's gone." 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 235 

" The Aroostook gone f " 

" Look here, Dunham,", cried Staniford, angrily, 
" this is the second time you 've done^ that I If you 
are merely thick-witted, much can be forgiven to 
your infirmity ; but if you 've a mind to joke, let 
me tell you you choose your time badly." 

" I 'm not joking. I don't know what you 're 
talking about. I may be thick-witted, as you say ; 
or you may be scatter- witted," said Dunham, indig- 
nantly. " What are you after, any way ? " 

*' What was my reason for not being explicit 
with her; for going away from her without one 
honest, manly, downright word; for sneaking off 
without telling her that she was more than life to 
me, and that if she cared for me as I cared for her 
I would go on with her to Venice, ancj meet her 
people with her ? " 

" Why, I don't know," replied Dunham, vaguely. 
" We agreed that there would be a sort of — that 
she ought to be in their care before " — 

" Then I can tell you," interrupted Staniford, 
" that we agreed upon the greatest piece of nonsense 
that ever was. A man can do no more than offer 
himself, and if he does less, after he 's tried every- 
thing to show that he 's in love with a woman, and 
to make her in love with him, he 's a scamp to refrain 
from a bad motive, and an ass to refrain from a good 
one. Why in the name of Heaven should n't I have 
spoken, instead of leaving her to eat her heart out 
in wonder at my delay, and to doubt and suspect 



236 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

and dread — Oh ! " he shouted, in supreme self- 
contempt. 

Dunham* had nothing to urge in reply. He had 
fallen in with what he thought Staniford's own mind 
in regard to the course he ought to take ; since he 
had now changed his mind, there seemed never to 
have been any reason for that course. 

" My dear fellow," he said, " it is n't too late yet 
to see her, I dare say. 7 jet us go and find what 
time the trains leave for Venice." 

" Do you suppose I can offer myself in the salle 
cTattente ? " sneered Staniford. But he went with 
Dunham to the coffee-room, where they found the 
Osservatore Triestino and the time-table of the rail- 
road. The last train left for Venice at ten, and it 
was now seven ; the Austrian Lloyd steamer for 
Venice sailed at nine. 

" Pshaw I " said Staniford, and pushed the pa- 
per away. He sat brooding over the matter before 
the table on which the journals were scattered, while 
Dunham waited for him to speak. At last he said, 
" I can't stand it ; I must see her. I don't know 
whether I told her I should come on to-morrow 
night or not. If she should be expecting me on 
Monday morning, and I should be delayed — Dun- 
ham, will you drive round with me to the Austrian 
Lloyd's wharf ? They may be going by the boat, 
and if they are they '11 have left their hotel. We '11 
try the train later. I should like to find out if they 
are on board. I don't know that I '11 try to speak 
with them ; very likely not." 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 237 

" I '11 go, certainly," answered Dunham, cordially. 

" I '11 have some dinner first," said Staniford. 
" I 'm hungry." 

It was quite dark when they drove on to the wharf 
at which the boat for Venice lay. When they ar- 
rived, a plan had occurred to Staniford, through the 
timidity which had already succeeded the boldness 
of his desperation. " Dunham," he said, " I want 
you to go on board, and see if she 's there. I don't 
think I could stand not finding her. Besides, if 
she's cheerful and happy, perhaps I'd better not 
see her. You can come back and report. Confound 
it, you know, I should be so conscious before that 
iofernal uncle of hers. You understand ! " 

"Yes, yes," returned Dunham, eager to serve 
Staniford in a case like this. " I '11 manage it." 

" Well," said Staniford, beginning to doubt the 
wisdom of either going aboard, " do it if you think 
best. I don't know " — 

"Don't know what?" asked Dunham, pausing 
in the door of the fiacre, 

" Oh, nothing, nothing I I hope we 're not mak- 
ing fools of ourselves." 

" You 're morbid, old fellow I " said Dunham, 
gayly. He disappeared in the darkness, and Stani- 
ford waited, with set teeth, till he came back. He 
seemed a long time gone. When he returned, he 
stood holding fast to the open fiacre-door, without 
speaking. 

*' Well I " cried Staniford, with bitter impatience. 



238 THE LADY OF THE ABOOSTOOK. 

Well what? " Dunham asked, in a stupid voice. 

'' Were they there ? " 

^' I don't know. I can't tell." 

'' Can't tell, man ? Did you go to see ? " 

" I think so. I 'm not sure." 

A heavy sense of calamity descended upon Stani- 
ford's heart, but patience came with it. " What 's 
the matter, Dunham ? " he asked, getting out trem- 
ulously. 

" I don't know. I think I 've had a fall, some- 
where. Help me in." 

Staniford got out and helped him gently to the 
seat, and then mounted beside him, giving the order 
for their return. " Where is your hat ? " he asked, 
finding that Dunham was bareheaded. 

" I don't know. It does n't matter. Am I bleed- 
ing?" 

" It 's so dark, I can't see." 

" Put your hand here." He carried Staniford's 
hand to the back of his head. 

" There 's no blood ; but you 've had an ugly 
knock there." 

" Yes, that 's it," said Dunham. " I remember 
now ; I slipped and struck my head. He lapsed 
away in a torpor; Staniford could learn nothing 
more from him. 

The hurt was not what Staniford in his first 
anxiety had feared, but the doctor whom they called 
at the hotel was vague and guarded as to every- 
thing but the time and care which must be given 



• THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 239 

in any event. Stamford despaired ; but there was 
only one thing to do. He sat down beside his friend 
to take care of him. 

His mind was a turmoil of regrets, of anxieties, 
of apprehensions ; but he had a superficial calmness 
that enabled him to meet the emergencies of the 
case. He wrote a letter to Lydia which he somehow 
knew to be rightly worded, telling her of the acci« 
dent. In terms which conveyed to her all that he 
felt, he said that he should not see her at the time 
he had hoped, but promised to come to Venice as 
soon as he could quit his friend. Then, with a deep 
breath, he put that affair away for the time, and 
seemed to turn a key upon it. 

He called a waiter, and charged him to have his 
letter posted at once. The man said he would give 
it to the portier^ who was sending out some other 
letters. He returned, ten minutes later, with a 
number of letters which he said the portier had 
found for him at the post-oflSce. Staniford glanced 
at them. It was no time to read them then, and he 
put them into the breast pocket of his coat. 



XXTL 

At the hotel in Trieste, to which Lydia went 
with her uncle before taking the train for Venice, 
she found an elderly woman, who made her a 
courtesy, and, saying something in Italian, startled 
her by kissing her hand. 

" It 's our Veronica," her uncle explained ; " she 
wants to know how she can serve you." He gave 
Veronica the wraps and parcels he had been carry- 
ing. " Your aunt thought you might need a maid." 

" Oh, no ! " said Lydia. " I always help my- 
self." 

"Ah, I dare say," returned her uncle. "You 
American ladies are so — up to snuff, as you say. 
But your aunt thought we 'd better have her with 
us, in any case." 

" And she sent her all the' way from Venice ? " 

" Yes." 

"Well, I never did!^\ said Lydia, not lightly, 
but with something of contemptuous severity. 

Her uncle smiled, as if she had said something 
peculiarly acceptable to him, and asked, hesitatingly, 
" When you say you never did, you know, what is 
the full phrase ? " 

Lydia looked at him. " Oh ! I suppose I meant 
I never heard of such a thing." 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 241 

'' Ah, thanks, thanks ! " said her uncle. He was 
a tall, slender man of fifty-five or sixty, with a 
straight gray mustache, and not at all the typical 
Englishman, but much more English-looking than 
if he had been. His bearing toward Lydia blended 
a fatherly kindness and a colonial British gallantry, 
such as one sees in elderly Canadian gentlemen 
attentive to quite young Canadian ladies at the pro- 
vincial watering-places. He had an air of advent- 
ure, and of uncommon pleasure and no small as- 
tonishment in Lydia's beauty. They were already 
good friends ; she was at her ease with him ; she 
treated him as if he were an old gentleman. At 
the station, where Veronica got into the same car- 
riage with them, Lydia found the whole train very 
queer-looking, and he made her describe its differ- 
ence from an American train. He said, " Oh, yes 
— yes, engine," when she mentioned the locomotive, 
and he apparently prized beyond its worth the word 
cow-catcher, a fixture which Lydia said was wanting 
to the European locomotive, and left it very stubby. 
He asked her if she would allow him to set it down ; 
ftnd he entered the word in his note-book, with 
several other idioms she had used. He said that he 
amused himself in picking up these things from his 
American friends. He wished to know what she 
called this and that and the other thing, and was 
equally pleased whether her nomenclature agreed 
or disagreed with his own. Where it differed, he 
recorded the fact, with her leave, in his book. He 

16 



242 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

plied her with a thousand questions about America, 
with all parts of which he seemed to think her fa- 
miliar ; and she explained with difficulty how very- 
little of it she had seen. He begged her not to let 
him bore her, and to excuse the curiosity of a Brit- 
isher, " As I suppose you 'd call me," he added. 

Lydia lifted her long-lashed lids half-way, and 
answered, " No, I should n't call you so." 
- " Ah, yes," he returned, " the Americans always 
disown it. But I don't mind it at all, you know. 
I like those native expressions." Where they 
stopped for refreshments he observed that one of 
the dishes, which was flavored to the national taste, 
had a pretty tall smell, and seemed disappointed by 
Lydia's unresponsive blankness at a word which a 
countryman of hers — from Kentucky — had applied 
to the odor of the Venetian canals. He sufiEered in 
like measure from a like effect in her when he la- 
mented the complications that had kept him the 
year before from going to America with Mrs. Erwin, 
when she revisited her old stamping-ground. 

As they rolled along, the warm night which had 
fallen after the beautiful daj^ breathed through the 
half-dropped window in a rich, soft air, as strange 
almost as the flying landscape itself. Mr. Erwin 
began to drowse, and at last he fell asleep; but 
Veronica kept her eyes vigilantly fixed upon Lydia, 
always smiling when she caught her glance, and of- 
fering service. At the stations, so orderly and yet 
so noisy, where the passengers were held in the 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 243 

same meek subjection as at Trieste, people got in 
and out of the carriage ; and there were officers, at 
first in white coats, and after they passed the Italian 
frontier in blue, who stared at Lydia. One of the 
Italians, a handsome young hussar, spoke to her. 
She could not know what he said ; but when he 
crossed over to her side of the carriage, she rose and 
took her place beside Veronica, where she remained 
even after he left the carriage. She was sensible of 
growing drowsy. Then she was aware of nothing 
till she woke up with her head on Veronica's shoul- 
der, against which she had fallen, and on which she 
had been patiently supported for hours. " Ecco 
Venezia!" cried the old woman, pointing to a swarm 
of lights that seemed to float upon an expanse of 
sea. Lydia did not understand ; she thought she 
was again on board the Aroostook, and that the 
lights she saw were the lights of the shipping in 
Boston harbor. The illusion passed, and left her 
heart sore. She issued from the glare of the station 
upon the quay before it, bewildered by the ghostly 
beauty of the scene, but shivering in the chill of the 
dawn, and stunned by the clamor of the gondoliers. 
A tortuous course in the shadow of lofty walls, more 
deeply darkened from time to time by the arch of a 
bridge, and again suddenly pierced by the brilliance 
of a lamp that shot its red across the gloom, or 
plunged it into the black water, brought them to a 
palace gate at which they stopped, and where, after 
a dramatic ceremony of sliding bolts and the reluo- 



244 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

fcant yielding of broad doors on a level with the 
water, she passed through a marble-paved court and 
up a stately marble staircase to her uncle's apart- 
ment. " You 're at home, now, you know," he said, 
in a kindly way, and took her hand, very cold and 
lax, in his for welcome. She could not answer, but 
made haste to follow Veronica to her room, whither 
the old woman led the way with a candle. It was 
a gloomily spacious chamber, with sombre walls and 
a lofty ceiling with a faded splendor of gilded panel- 
ing. Some tall, old-fashioned mirrors and bureaus 
stood about, with rugs before them on the stone 
floor ; in the middle of the room was a bed curtained 
with mosquito-netting. Carved chairs were pushed 
here and there against the wall. Lydia dropped 
into one of these, too strange and heavy-hearted to 
go to bed in that vastness and darkness, in which 
her candle seemed only to burn a small round hole. 
She longed forlornly to be back again in her pretty 
state-room on the Aroostook; vanishing glimpses 
and echoes of the faces and voices grown so familiar 
in the past weeks haunted her; the helpless tears 
ran down her cheeks. 

There came a tap at her door, and her aunt's 
voice called, " Shall I come in ? " and before she 
could faintly consent, her aunt pushed in, and caught 
her in her arms, and kissed her, and broke into a 
twitter of welcome and compassion. " You poor 
child 1 Did you think I was going to let you go to 
sleep without seeing you, after you 'd come half 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 245 

round the world to see me ? " Her aunt was dark 
and slight like Lydia, but not so tall ; she was still 
a very pretty woman, and she was a very effective 
presence now in the long white morning-gown of 
camel's hair, somewhat fantastically embroidered in 
crimson silk, in which she drifted about before Lyd- 
ia's bewildered eyes. " Let me see how you look ! 
Are you as handsome as ever? " She held the can- 
dle she carried so as to throw its light full upon Lyd- 
ia's face. " Yes I " she sighed. " How pretty you 
are ! And at your age you '11 look even better by 
daylight I I had begun to despair of you ; I thought 
you could n't be all I remembered ; but you are, — 
you 're more ! I wish I had you in Rome, instead 
of Venice ; there would be some use in it. There 's 
a great deal of society there, — English society ; but 
never mind : I 'm going to take you to church with 
me to-morrow, — the English service ; there are lots 
of English in Venice now, on their way south for 
the winter. I 'm crazy to see what dresses you 've 
brought ; your aunt Maria has told me how she 
fitted you out. I 've got two letters from her since 
you started, and they're all perfectly well, dear. 
Your black silk will do nicely, with bright ribbons, 
especially ; I hope you have n't got it spotted or 
anything on the way over." She did not allow 
Lydia to answer, nor seem to expect it. " You 've 
got your mother's eyes, Lydia, but your father had 
those straight eyebrows: you're very much like 
him. Poor Henry ! And now I 'm having you got 



), 



V 



246 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

something to eat. I 'm not going to risk cofifee on 
you, for fear it will keep you awake ; though you 
can drink it in this climate with comparative impu- 
nity. Veronica is warming you a bowl of bouillon, 
and that 's all you 're to have till breakfast ! " 

" Why, aunt Josephine," said the girl, not know- 
ing what bouillon was, and abashed by the sound 
of it, " I 'm not the least hungry. You ought n't 
to take the trouble " — 

" You '11 be hungry when you begin to eat. I 'm 
so impatient to hear about your voyage I I am 
going to introduce you to some very nice people, 
here, — English people. There are no Americans 
living in Venice ; and the Americans in Europe are 
so queer ! You 've no idea how droll our customs 
seem here ; and I much prefer the English. Your 
poor uncle can never get me to ask Americans. I 
tell him I 'm American enough, and he '11 have to 
get on .without others. Of course, he 's perfectly 
delighted to get at you. You 've quite taken him 
by storm, Lydia; he 's in raptures about your looks. 
It 's what I told him before you came ; but I could . 
n't believe it till I took a look at you. I could n't 
have gone to sleep without it. Did Mr. Erwin talk 
much with you ? " 

" He was very pleasant. He talked — as long as 
he was awake," said Lydia. 

"J suppose he was trying to pick up Americanisms 
from you ; he 's always doing it. I keep him away 
from Americans as much as I can; but he will 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 247 

get at them on the cars and at the hotels. He 's 
always asking them such ridiculous questions, and I 
know some of them just talk nonsense to him." 

Veronica came in with a tray, and a bowl of 
bouillon on it ; and Mrs. Erwin pulled up a light 
table, and slid about, serving her, in her cabalistic 
dress, like an Oriental sorceress performing her in- 
cantations. She volubly watched Lydia while she 
ate her supper, and at the end she kissed her again. 
" Now you feel better," she said. " I knew it would 
cheer you up more than any one thing. There 's 
nothing like something to eat when you 're home- 
sick. I found that out when I was off at school." 

Lydia was hardly kissed so much at home during 
a year as she had been since meeting Mrs. Erwin. 
Her aunt Maria sparely embraced her when slie 
went and came each week from the Mill Village ; 
anything more than this would have come of insin- 
cerity between them ; but it had been agreed that 
Mrs. Erwin's demonstrations of affection, of which 
she had been lavish during her visit to South Brad- 
field, might not be so false. - Lydia accepted them 
submissively, and she said, when Veronica returned 
for the tray, " I hate to give you so much trouble. 
And sending her all the way to Trieste on my ac- 
count, — I felt ashamed. There was n't a thing for 
her to do." 

" Why, of course not I " exclaimed her aunt. 
" But what did you think I was made of? Did you 
suppose I was going to have you come on a night- 



248 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

journey alone with your uncle ? It would have 
been all over Venice ; it would have been ridiculous. 
I sent Veronica along for a dragon." 

"A dragon? I don't understand," faltered 
Lydia. 

"Well, you will," said her aunt, putting the 
palms of her hands against Lydia's, and so pressing 
forward to kiss her. " We shall have breakfast at 
ten. Go to bed 1 " 



xxm. 

When Lydia came to breakfast she found her 
uncle alone in the room, reading Galignani's Mes* 
senger. He put down his paper, and came forward 
to take her hand. " You are all right this morning, 
I see. Miss Lydia," he said. " You were quite up 
a stump, last night, as your countrymen say." 

At the same time hands were laid upon her 
shoulders from behind, and she was pulled half 
round, and pushed back, and held at arm's-length. 
It was Mrs. Erwin, who, entering after her, first 
scanned her face, and then, with one devouring 
glance, seized every detail of her dress — the black 
silk which had already made its effect — before she 
kissed her. "You are lovely, my dear! I shall 
spoil you, I know ; but you 're worth it ! What 
lashes you have, child I And your aunt Maria made 
and fitted that dress ? She 's a genius I " 

" Miss Lydia," said Mr. Erwin, as they sat down, 
" is of the fortunate age when one rises young every 
morning." He looked very fresh himself in his 
clean-shaven chin, and his striking evidence of 
snowy wristbands and shirt-bosom. " Later in life, 
you can't do that. She looks as blooming," he 
udded, gallantly, " as a basket of chips, — as you 
say in America." 



250 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

"Smiling," said Lydia, mechanically correcting 
him. 

" Ah ! It is ? Smiling, — yes ; thanks. It 's very 
good either way ; very characteristic. It would be 
curious to know the origin of a saying like that. I 
imagine it goes back to the days of the first settlers. 
It suggests a wood-chopping period. Is it — ah — 
in general use ? " he inquired. 

*' Of course it is n't, Henshaw I " said his wife. 

" You 've been a great while out of the country, 
my dear," suggested Mr. Erwin. 

" Not so long as not to know that your Ameri- 
canisms are enough to make one wish we had held 
our tongues ever since we were discovered, or had 
never been discovered at all. I want to ask Lydia 
about her voyage. I have n't heard a word yet. 
Did your aunt Maria come down to Boston with 
you?" 

" No, grandfather brought me." 

" And you had good weather coming over? Mr. 
Erwin told me you were not seasick." 

"We had one bad storm, before we reached 
Gibraltar ; but I was n't seasick." 

" Were the other passengers ? " 

" One was." Lydia reddened a little, and then 
turned somewhat paler than at first. 

" What is it, Lydia?" her aunt subtly demanded. 
" Who was the one that was sick ? " 

" Oh, a gentleman," answered Lydia. 

Her aunt looked at her keenly, and for whatever 



THE LADY OP THE AROOSTOOK. 251 

reason abruptly left the subject. "Your silk," 
she said, " will do very well for church, Lydia." 

"Oh, I say, now!" cried her husband, "you're 
not going to make her go to church to-day I " 

" Yes, I am I There will be more people there 
to-day than any other time this fall. She must 

" But she 's tired to death, — quite tuckered, you 
know." 

" Oh, I 'm rested, now," said Lydia. " I should n't 
lijce to miss going to church." 

"Your silk," continued her aunt, "will be quite 
the thing for church." She looked hard at the 
dress, as if it were not quite the thing for break- 
fast. Mrs. Erwin herself wore a morning-dress of 
becoming delicacy, and an airy French cap ; she 
had a light fall of powder on her face. "What 
kind of overthing have you got ? " she asked. 

" There 's a sack goes with this," said the girl, 
suggestively. 

" That 's nice I What is your bonnet ? " 

" I have n't any bonnet. But my best hat is 
nice. I could " — 

" iVb one goes to church in a hat I You can't do 
it. It 's simply impossible." 

" Why, my dear," said her husband, " I saw some 
very pretty American girla in hats at church, last 
Sunday." 

" Yes, and everybody knew they were Americans 
by their hats 1 . ' retorted Mrs. Erwin. 



252 THE LADY OF THE ABOOSIOOK. 

"2 knew they were Americans by their good 
looks," said Mr. Erwin, " and what you call their 
stylishness." 

" Oh, it 's all well enough for you to talk. You We 
an Englishman, and you could wear a hat, if you 
liked. It would be set down to character. But in 
an American it would be set down to greenness. If 
you were an American, you would have to .wear a 
bonnet." 

" I 'm glad, then, I 'm not an American," said her 
husband ; " I don't think I should look well in a 
bonnet." 

" Oh, stuff, Henshaw I You know what I mean. 
And I 'm not going to have English people think- 
ing we 're ignorant of the common decencies of life. 
Lydia shall not go to church in a hat; she bad 
better never go. I will lend her one of my bonnets. 
Let me see, which one." She gazed at Lydia in 
critical abstraction. "I wear rather young bon- 
nets," she mused aloud, "and we're both rather 
dark. The only diflBculty is I 'm so much more 
delicate " — She brooded upon the question in a 
silence, from which she burst exulting. " The very 
thing I I can fuss it up in no time. It won't take 
two minutes to get it ready. And you '11 look just 
killing in it." She turned grave again. "Hen- 
shaw," she said, " I wuh you would go to church 
this morning I " 

" I would do almost anything for you, Josephine ; 
but really, you know, you ought n't to ask that. I 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 253 

was there last Sunday; I can't go every Sunday. 
It 's bad enough in England ; a man ought to have 
some relief on the Continent." 

" Well, well. I suppose I ought n't to ask you," 
sighed his wife, — " especially as you 're going with 
us to-night." 

" I '11 go to-night, with pleasure," said Mr. Er- 
win. He rose when his wife and Lydia left the 
table, and opened the door for them with a certain 
courtesy he had ; it struck even Lydia's uneducated 
sense as something peculiarly sweet and fine, and it 
did not overawe her own simplicity, but seemed of 
kind with it. 

The bonnet, when put to proof, did not turn out 
to be all that it was vaunted. It looked a little 
odd, from the first ; and Mrs. Erwin, when she was 
herself dressed, ended by taking it off, and putting 
on Lydia the hat previously condemned. " You 're 
divine in that," she said. " And after all, you are 
a traveler, and I can say that some of your things 
were spoiled coming over, — people always get 
things ruined in a sea voyage, — and they '11 think 
it was your bonnet." 

" I kept my things very nicely, aunt Josephine," 
said Lydia conscientiously. " I don't believe any- 
thing was hurt." 

" Oh, well, you can't tell till you 've unpacked ; 
and we 're not responsible for what people happen 
to think, you know. Wait I " her aunt suddenly 
cried. She pulled open a drawer, and snatched 



264 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

two ribbons from it, which she pinned to the sides 
of Lydia's hat, and tied in a bow under her chin ; 
she caught out a lace veil, and drew that over the 
front of the hat, and let it hang in a loose knot be- 
hind. " Now," she said, pushing her up to a mir- 
ror, that she might see, " it 's a bonnet ; and I 
need n't say anything I " 

They went in Mrs. Erwin's gondola to the pal- 
ace in which the English service was held, and 
Lydia was silent, as she looked shyly, almost fear- 
fully, round on the visionary splendors of Venice. 

Mrs. Erwin did not like to be still. " What are 
you thinking of, Lydia ? " she asked. 

" Oh I I suppose I was thinking that the leaves 
were beginning to turn in the sugar orchard," an- 
swered Lydia faithfully. "I was thinking how 
still the sun would be in the pastures, there, this 
morning. I suppose the stillness here put me in 
mind of it. One of these bells has the same tone 
as our bell at home." 

" Yes," said Mrs. Erwin. *' Everybody finds a 
familiar bell in Venice. There are enough of them, 
goodness knows. I don't see why you call it still, 
with all this clashing and banging. I suppose this 
seems very odd to you, Lydia," she continued, indi- 
cating the general Venetian effect. " It 's an old 
story to me, though. The great beauty of Ven- 
ice is that you get more for your money here than 
you can anywhere else in the world. There is n't 
much society, however, and you must n't expect to 
be very gay." 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 265 

" I have never been gay," said Lydia. 

" Well, that 's no reason you should n't be," re- 
turned her aunt. " If you were in Florence, or 
Rome, or even Naples, you could have a good time. 
There I I 'm glad your uncle did n't hear me say 
that ! " 

« What ? " asked Lydia. 

"Good time ; that's an Americanism." 

"Is it?" 

" Yes. He 's perfectly delighted when he catches 
me in one. I try to break myself of them, but I 
don't always know them myself. Sometimes I feel 
almost like never talking at all. But you can't do 
that, you know." 

" No," assented Lydia. 

" And you have to talk Americanisms if you 're 
an American. You must n't think your uncle 
is n't obliging, Lydia. He is. I ought n't to have 
asked him to go to church, — it bores him so much. 
I used to feel terribly about it once, when we were 
first married. But things have changed very much 
of late years, especially with all this scientific talk. 
In England it 's quite different from what it used 
to be. Some of the best people in society are 
skeptics now, and that makes it quite another 
thing." Lydia looked grave, but she said nothing, 
and her aunt added, "I would n't have asked him, 

« 

but I had a little headache, myself." 

" Aunt Josephine," said Lydia, " I 'm afraid 
you 're doing too much for me. Why did n't you 
let me come alone ? " 



256 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

" Come alone ? To church ! " Mrs. Erwin ad- 
dressed her in a sort of whispered shriek. " It 
would have been perfectly scandalous." 

" To go to church alone ? " demanded Lydia, as- 
tounded. 

" Yes. A young girl must n't go anywhere 
alone." 

" Why ? " 

"I'll explain to you, sometime, Lydia; or rather, 
you '11 learn for yourself. In Italy it 's very differ- 
ent from what it is in America." Mrs. Erwin sud- 
denly started up and bowed with great impress- 
iveness, as a gondola swept towards them. The 
gondoliers wore shirts of blue silk, and long crim- 
son sashes. On the cushions of the boat, beside a 
hideous little man who was sucking the top of an 
ivory-handled stick, reclined a beautiful woman, 
pale, with purplish rings round the large black eyea 
with which, faintly smiling, she acknowledged Mrs. 
Erwin 's salutation, and then stared at Lydia. 

" Oh, you may look, and you may look, and you 
may look I " cried Mrs. Erwin, under her breath; 
" You 've met more than your match at last I The 
Countess Tatocka," she explained to Lydia. " That 
was her palace we passed just now, — the one with 
the iron balconies. Did you notice the gentleman 
with her? She always takes to those monsters. 
He 's a Neapolitan painter, and ever so talented, — 
clever, that is. He 's dead in love with her, they 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 257 

" Are they engaged ? " asked Lydia. 

" Engaged I " exclaimed Mrs. Erwin, with her 
shriek in dumb show. " Why, child, she 's mar- 
ried I " 

" To him ? " demanded the girl, with a recoil. 

" No I To her husband." 

" To her husband ? " gasped Lydia. " And 
she" — 

" Why, she is n't quite well seen, even in Ven- 
ice," Mrs. Erwin explained. " But she 's rich, and 
her conversazioni are perfectly brilliant. She's 
very artistic, and she writes poetry, — Polish po- 
etry. I wish she could hear you sing, Lydia I I 
know she 'U be frantic to see you again. But I 
don't see how it 's to be managed ; her house is n't 
one you can take a young girl to. And I can't ask 
her : your uncle detests her." 

" Do you go to her house ? " Lydia inquired 
stiffly. 

't Why, as a foreigner, I can go. Of course, 
Lydia, you can't be as particular about everything 
on the Continent as you are at home." 

The former oratory of the Palazzo Grinzelli, 
which served as the English chapel, was filled with 
travelers of both the English-speaking nationali- 
ties, as distinguishable by their dress as by their 
faces. Lydia's aunt afEected the English style, but 
some instinctive elegance betrayed her, and every 
Englishwoman there knew and hated her for an 
American, though she was a precisian in her lit- 

17 



258 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

urgy, instant in all the responses and genuflexions. 
She found opportunity in the course of the lesson to 
make Lydia notice every one, and she gave a tele- 
grammic biography of each person she knew, with 
a criticism of the costume of all the strangers, man- 
aging so skillfully that by the time the sermon be- 
gan she was able to yield the text a statuesquely 
close attention, and might have been carved in 
marble where she sat as a realistic conception of 
Worship. 

The sermon came to an end; the ritual pro- 
ceeded ; the hymn, with the hemming and hawing 
of respectable inability, began, and Lydia lifted her 
voice with the rest. Few of the people were in 
their own church ; some turned and stared at her ; 
the bonnets and the back hair of those who did not 
look were intent upon her; the long red neck of 
one elderly Englishman, restrained by decorum 
from turning his head toward her, perspired with 
curiosity. Mrs. Erwin fidgeted, and dropped ]ier 
eyes from the glances which fell to her for ex- 
planation of Lydia, and hurried away with her as 
soon as the services ended. In the hall on the 
water-floor of the palace, where they were kept 
waiting for their gondola a while, she seemed to 
shrink even from the small, surly greetings with 
which people whose thoughts are on higher things 
permit themselves to recognize fellow-beings of their 
acquaintance in coming out of church. But an old 
lady, who supported herself with a cane, pushed 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 259 

through the crowd to where they stood aloof, and, 
without speaking to Mrs. Erwin, put out her hand 
to Lydia ; she had a strong, undaunted, plain face, 
in which was expressed the habit of doing what she 
liked. " My dear," she said, " how wonderfully you 
sing! Where did you get that heavenly voice? 
You are an American ; I see that by your beauty. 
You are Mrs. Erwin's niece, I suppose, whom she 
expected. Will you come and sing to me ? You 
must bring her, Mrs. Erwin." 

She hobbled away without waiting for an an- 
swer, and Lydiai and her aunt got into their gon- 
dola. " Oh ! How glad I am ! " cried Mrs. Erwin, 
in a joyful flutter. " She 's the very tip-top of the 
English here; she has a whole palace, and you 
meet the very best people at her house. I was 
afraid when you were singing, Lydia, that they 
would think your voice was too good to be good 
form, — that 's an expression you must get ; it 
means every thing, — it sounded almost professional. 
I wanted to nudge you to sing a little lower, 
or different, or something ; but I could n't, every- 
body was looking so. No matter. It's all right 
now. If she liked it, nobody else will dare to 
breathe. You can see that she has taken a fancy 
to you ; she '11 make a great pet of you." 

" Who is she ? " asked Lydia, bluntly. 

" Lady Fenleigh. Such a character, — so ec- 
centric ! But really, I suppose, very hard to live 
with. It must have been quite a release for poor 
Sir Fenleigh Fenleigh." 



260 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

" She did n't seem in mourning," said Lydia, 
" Has he been dead long ? " 

" Why, he is n't dead at all I He is what you 
call a grass-widower. The best soul in the world, 
everybody says, and very, very fond of her; but 
she could n't stand it ; he was too good, don't you 
understand ? They 've lived apart a grea;t many 
years. She 's lived a great deal in Asia Minor, — 
somewhere. She likes Venice ; but of course there 's 
no telling how long she may stay. She has another 
house in Florence, all ready to go and be lived in at 
a day's notice. I wish I had presented you I It 
did go through my head ; but it did n't seem as if 
I could get the Blood out. It is a fearful name, 
Lydia ; I always felt it so when I was a girl, and I 
was 80 glad to marry out of it ; and it sounds so 
terribly American. I think you must take your 
mother's name, my dear. Latham is rather flattish, 
but it 's worlds better than Blood." 

'' I am not ashamed of my father's name," said 
Lydia. 

" But you '11 have to change it some day, at any 
rate, — when you get married." 

Lydia turned away. " I will be called Blood till 
then. If Lady Fenleigh " — 

" Yes, my dear," promptly interrupted her aunt, 
" I know that sort of independence. I used to 
have whole Declarations of it. Bat you'll get over 
that, in Europe. There was a time — just after 
the war — when the English quite liked our stick- 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 261 

ing up for ourselves ; but that 's past now. They 
like us to be outlandish, but they don't like us to 
be independent. How did you like the sermon ? 
Did n't you think we had a nicely-dressed congre- 
gation ? " 

" I thought the sermon was very short," answered 
Lydia. 

" Well, that 's the English way, and I like it. 
If you get in all the service, you must make the 
sermon short." 

Lydia did not say anything for a little while. 
Then she asked, " Is the service the same at the 
evening meeting ? " 

" Evening meeting ? " repeated Mrs. Erwin. 

*' Yes, — the church to-night." 

"Why, child, there isn't any church to-night I 
What are you talking about ? " 

" Did n't uncle — did n't Mr. Erwin say he would 
go with us to-night ? " 

Mrs. Erwin seemed about to laugh, and then she 
looked embarrassed. " Why, Lydia," she cried at 
last, " he did n't mean church ; he meant — opera ! " 

" Opera ! Sunday night I Aunt Josephine, do 
you go to the theatre on Sabbath evening ? " 

There was something appalling in the girl's stern 
voice. Mrs. Erwin gathered herself tremulously 
together for defense. " Why, of course, Lydia, I 
don't approve of it, though I never was Orthodox. 
Your uncle likes to go; and if everybody's there 
that you want to see, and they will give the best 
operas Sunday night, what are you to do ? " 



262 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

Lydia said nothing, but a bard look came into 
her face, and she shut her lips tight. 

" Now you see, Lydia," resumed her aunt, with 
an air of deductive reasoning from the premises, 
" the advantage of having a bonnet on, even if it 's 
only a make-believe. I don't believe a soul knew 
it. All those Americans had hats. You were the 
only American girl there with a bonnet. I 'm sure 
that it had more than half to do with Lady Fen- 
leigh's speaking to you. It showed that y^u had 
been well brought up." 

" But I never wore a bonnet to church at home,'* 
said Lydia. 

" That has nothing to do with it, if they thought 
you did. And Lydia," she continued, "I was think- 
ing while you were singing there that I would n't 
say anything at once about your coming over to 
cultivate your voice. That 's got to be such an 
American thing, now. I '11 let it out little by little, 
— and after Lady Fenleigh 's quite taken you under 
her wing. Perhaps we may go to Milan with you, 
or to Naples, — there 's a conservatory there, too ; 
and we can pull up stakes as easily as not. Well I " 
said Mrs. Erwin, interrupting herself, "I'm glad 
Henshaw wasn't by to hear that speech. He'd 
have had it down among his Americanisms in- 
stantly. I don't know whether it is an American- 
ism ; but he puts down all the outlandish sayings 
he gets hold of to Americans ; he has no end of 
English slang in his book. Everything has opened 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 263 

beautifully^ Lydia, and I intend you shall have the 
best time ! " She looked fondly at her brothey's 
child. " You 've no idea how much you remind me 
of your poor father. You have his looks exactly. 
I always thought he would come out to Europe be- 
fore he died. We used to be so proud of his looks 
at home ! I can remember that, though I was the 
youngest, and he was ten years older than I. But 
I always did worship beauty. A perfect Greek, 
Mr. Rose-Black calls me : you 'U see him ; he 's an 
English painter staying here ; he comes a great 
deal." 

" Mrs. Erwin, Mrs. Erwin 1 " called a lady's voice 
from a gondola behind them. The accent was 
perfectly English, but the voice entirely Italian. 
" Where are you running to ? " 

" Why, Miss Landini I " retorted Mrs. Erwin, 
looking back over her shoulder. "Is that you? 
Where in the world are you going ? " 

" Oh, I 've been to pay a visit to my old English 
teacher. He's awfully ill with rheumatism; but 
awfully ! He can't turn in bed." 

" Why, poor man 1 This is my niece whom I 
told you I was expecting 1 Arrived last night ! 
We've been to church 1 " Mrs. Erwin exclaimed 
each of the facts. 

The Italian girl stretched her hand across the 
gunwales of the boats, which their respective gon- 
doliers had brought skillfully side by side, and took 
Lydia's hand. "I'm glad to see you, my dear. 



264 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

But my God, how beautiful you Americans are I 
But you don't look American, you know ; you look 
Spanish ! I shall come a great deal to see you, and 
practice my English." 

" Come home with us now. Miss Landini, and 
have lunch," said Mrs. Erwin. 

" No, my dear, I can't. My aunt will be raising 
the devil if I 'm not there to drink coffee with her ; 
and I 've been a great while away now. Till to- 
morrow I " Miss Landini's gondolier pushed his 
boat away, and rowed it up a narrow canal on the 
right. 

" I suppose," Mrs. Erwin explained, " that she 's 
really her mother, — everybody says so; but she 
always calls her aunt. Dear knows who her father 
was. But she 's a very bright girl, Lydia, and 
you '11 like her. Don't you think she speaks Eng- 
lish wonderfully for a person who 's never been out 
of Venice ? " 

" Why does she swear ? " asked Lydia, stonily. 

" Swear ? Oh, I know what you mean. That 's 
the funniest thing about Miss Landini. Your uncle 
says it 's a shame to correct her ; but I do, when- 
ever I think of it. Why, you know, such words as 
God and devil don't sound at all wicked in Italian, 
and ladies use them quite commonly. She under- 
stands that it isn't good form to do so in English, 
but when she gets excited she forgets. Well, you 
can't say but what she was impressed, Lydia I " 

After lunch, various people came to call upon 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 265 

Mrs. Erwin. Several of them were Italians who 
were learning English, and they seemed to think it 
inoffensive to say that they were glad of the oppor- 
tunity to practice the language with Lydia. They 
talked local gossip with her aunt, and they spoke 
of an approaching visit to Venice from the king ; 
it seemed to Lydia that the king's character was 
not good. 

Mr. Rose-Black, the English artist, came. He 
gave himself the effect of being in Mrs. Erwin's 
confidence, apparently without her authority, and 
he bestowed a share of this intimacy upon Lydia. 
He had the manner of a man who had been taken 
up by people above him, and the impudence of a 
talent which had not justified the expectations 
formed of it. He softly reproached Mrs. Erwin for 
running away after service before he could speak to 
her, and told her how much everybody had been 
enchanted by her niece's singing. "At least, they 
said it was your niece." 

" Oh, yes, Mr. Rose-Black, let me introduce you 
to Miss " — Lydia looked hard, even to threaten- 
ing, at her aunt, and Mrs. Erwin added, " Blood." 

" I beg your pardon," said Mr. Rose-Black, with 
his picked-up politeness, " I did n't get the name." 

" Blood," said Mrs. Erwin, more distinctly. 

" Aoh ! " said Mr. Rose-Black, in a cast-off ac- 
cent of jaded indifferentism, just touched with dis- 
pleasure. " Yes," he added, dreamily, to Lydia, 
'*it was divine, you know. You might say it 



266 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

needed training; but it had the naive sweetness 
we associate with your countrywomen. They're 
greatly admired in England now, you know, for 
their beauty. Oh, I assure you, it's quite the 
thing to admire American ladies. I want to ar- 
range a little lunch at my studio for Mrs. Erwin 
and yourself ; and I want you to abet me in it. 
Miss Blood." Lydia stared at him, but he was not 
troubled. " I 'm going to ask to sketch you. Re- 
ally, you know, there 's a poise — something bird- 
like — a sort of repose in movement " — He sat 
in a corner of the sofa, with his head fallen back, 
and abandoned to an absent enjoyment of Lydia's 
pictorial capabilities. He was very red ; his full 
beard, which started as straw color, changed to red 
when it got a little way from his face. He wore a 
suit of rough blue, the coat buttoned tightly about 
him, and he pulled a glove * through his hand as he 
talked. He was scarcely roused from his reverie 
by the entrance of an Italian officer, with his hus- 
sar jacket hanging upon one shoulder, and his 
sword caught up in his left hand. He ran swiftly 
to Mrs. Erwin, and took her hand. 

" Ah, my compliments I I come practice my 
English with you a little. Is it well said, a little, 
or do you say a small ? " 

" A little, ctivaliere," answered Mrs. Erwin, ami- 
ably. " But you must say a good deal, in this 
case." 

" Yes, yes, — good deal. For what ? " 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 267 

"Let me introduce you to my niece. Colonel 
Pazzelli," said Mrs. Erwin. 

" Ah ! Too much honor, too much honor I " 
murmured the cavaliere. He brought his heels to- 
gether with a click, and drooped towards Lydia till 
his head was on a level with his hips. Recovering 
himself, he caught up his eye-glasses, and bent them 
on Lydia. " Very please, very honored, much " — 
He stopped, and looked confused, and Lydia turned 
pale and red. 

" Now, won't you play that pretty barcarole you 
played the other night at Lady Fenleigh's?" en- 
treated Mrs. Erwin. 

Colonel Pazzelli wrenched himself from the fasci- 
nation of Lydia's presence, and lavished upon Mrs. 
Erwin the hoarded English of a week. " Yes, 
yes ; very nice, very good. With much pleasure. 
I thank you. Yes, I play." He was one of those 
natives who in all the great Italian cities haunt 
English-speaking societies; they try to drink tea 
without grimacing, and sing for the ladies of our 
race, who innocently pet them, finding them so 
very like other women in their lady-like sweet- 
ness and softness ; it is said they boast among their 
vwn countrymen of their triumphs. The cavaliere 
unbuckled his sword, and laying it across a chair 
sat down at the piano. He played not one but 
many barcaroles, and seemed loath to leave the in- 
strument. 

" Now, Lydia," said Mrs. Erwin, fondly, " won't 
you sing us something ? " 



268 THE LADY OF THE ABOOSTOOK. 

" Do I " called Mr. Rose-Black from the sofa, 
with the intonation of a spoiled firstrcousin, or half- 
brother. 

" I don't feel like singing to-day," answered 
Lydia, immovably. Mrs. Erwin was about to urge 
her further, but other people came in, — some Jew- 
ish ladies, and then a Russian, whom Lydia took at 
first for an American. They all came and went, 
but Mr. Rose-Black remained in his corner of the 
sofa, and never took his eyes from Lydia's face. 
At last he went, and then Mr. Erwin looked in. 

" Is that beast gone ? " he asked. " I shall be 
obliged to show him the door, yet, Josephine. 
You ought to snub him. He 's worse than his pict- 
ures. Well, you 've had a whole raft of folks to- 
day, — as your countrymen say." 

" Yes, thank Heaven," cried Mrs. Erwin, " and 
they 're all gone. I don't want Lydia to think 
that I let everybody come to see me on Sunday. 
Thursday is my day, Lydia, but a few privileged 
friends understand that they can drop in Sunday 
afternoon." She gave Lydia a sketch of the life 
and character of each of these friends. « And 
now I must tell you that your manner is very good, 
Lydia. That reserved way of yours is quite the 
thing for a young girl in Europe : I suppose it 's a 
gift ; I never could get it, even when I was 2i girl. 
But you must n't show any hauteur, even when you 
dislike people, and you refused to sing with rather 
too much aplomb. I don't suppose it was noticed. 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 269 

* 

though, — those ladies coming in at the same time. 
Really, I thought Mr. Rose-Black and Colonel 
Pazzelli were trying to outstare each other ! It 
was certainly amusing. I never saw such an evi- 
dent case, Lydia ! The poor cavaliere looked as if 
he had seen you somewhere before in a dream, and 
was struggling to make it all out." 

Lydia remained impassive. Presently she said 
she would go to her room, and write home before 
dinner. When she went out Mrs. Erwin fetched a 
deep sigh, and threw herself upon her husband's 
sympathy. 

" She 's terribly unresponsive," she began. " I 
supposed she 'd be in raptures with the place, at 
least, but you would n't know there was anything 
at all remarkable in Venice from anything she 's 
said. We have met ever so many interesting 
people to-day, — the Countess Tatocka, and Lady 
Fenleigh, and Miss Landini, and everybody, but I 
don't really think she 's said a word about a soul. 
She 's too queer for anything." 

" I dare say she has n't the experience to be 
tistonished from," suggested Mr. Erwin easily. 
" She *s here as if she 'd been dropped down from 
her village." 

" Yes, that 's true," considered his wife. " But 
it 's hard, with Lydia's air and style and self-posses- 
sion, to realize -that she iz merely a village girl." 

"She may be much more impressed than she 
chooses to show," Mr. Erwin continued. " I re- 



270 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

member a very curious essay by a French writer 
about your countrymen : he contended that they 
were characterized by a savage stoicism through 
their contact with the Indians." 

*' Nonsense, Henshaw 1 There has n't been an 
Indian near South Bradfield for two hundred years. 
And besides that, am / stoical ? " 

" I 'm bound to say," replied her husband, " that 
so far as you go, you 're a complete refutation of the 
theory." 

" I hate to see a young girl so close," fretted 
Mrs. Erwin. " But perhaps," she added, more 
cheerfully, " she '11 be the easier managed, being so 
passive. She doesn't seem at all willful, — that's 
one comfort." 

She went to Lydia's room just before dinner, and 
found the girl with her head fallen on her arms 
upon the table, where she had been writing. She 
looked up, and faced her aunt with swollen eyes. 

" Why, poor thing ! " cried Mrs. Erwin. " What 
is it, dear ? What is it, Lydia ? " she asked, ten- 
derly, and she pulled Lydia's face down upon her 
neck. 

" Oh, nothing," said Lydia. " I suppose I was a 
little homesick ; writing home made me." 

She somewhat coldly suffered Mrs. Erwin to kiss 
her and smooth her hair, while she began to talk 
with her of her grandfather and her aunt at home. 
*' But this is going to be home to you now," said 
Mrs. Erwin, " and I 'm not going to let you be sick 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 271 

for any other. I want you to treat me just like a 
mother, or an older sister. Perhaps I shan't be the 
wisest mother to you in the world, but I mean to 
be one of the best. Come, now, bathe your eyes, 
my dear, and let 's go to dinner. I don't like to 
keep your uncle waiting." She did not go at once, 
but showed Lydia the appointments of the room, 
and lightly indicated what she had caused to be 
done, and what she had done with her own hands, 
to make the place pretty for her. " And now shall 
I take your letter, and have your uncle post it this 
evening ? " She picked up the letter from the table. 
*' Had n't you any wax to seal it ? You know 
they don't generally mucilage their envelopes in Eu- 
rope." 

Lydia blushed. " I left it open for you to read. 
I thought you ought to know what I wrote." 

Mrs. Erwin dropped her hands in front of her, 
with the open letter stretched between them, and 
looked at her niece in rapture. "Lydia," she 
cried, " one would suppose you had lived all your 
days in Europe ! Showing me your letter, this 
way, — why, it 's quite like a Continental girl." 

*' I thought it was no more than right you should 
see what I was writing home," said Lydia, unre^- 
sponsively. 

" Well, no matter, even if it was right," replied 
Mrs. Erwin. " It comes to the same thing. And 
aow, as you 've been quite a European daughter, 
I 'm going to be a real American mother." She 



272 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

took up the wax, and sealed Lydia's letter without 
looking into it. " There 1 " she said, triumphantly. 

She was very good to Lydia all through dinner, 
and made her talk of the simple life at home, and 
the village characters whom she remembered from 
her last summer's visit. That amused Mr. Erwin, 
who several times, when his wife was turning the 
talk upon Lydia's voyage over, intervened with 
some new question about the life of the queer little 
Yankee hill-town. He said she must tell Lady 
Fenleigh about it, — she was fond of picking up 
those curios ; it would make any one's social fortune 
who could explain such a place intelligibly in Lon- 
don ; when they got to having typical villages of the 
different civilizations at the international exposi- 
tions, — as no doubt they would, — somebody must 
really send South Bradfield over. He pleased him- 
self vastly with this fancy, till Mrs. Erwin, who 
had been eying Lydia critically from time to time, 
as if making note of her features and complexion, 
said she had a white cloak, and that in Venice, 
where one need not dress a great deal for the opera, 
Lydia could wear it that night. 

Lydia looked up in astonishment, but she sat 
passive during her aunt's discussion of her plans. 
When they rose from table, she said, at her stiffest 
and coldest, " Aunt Josephine, I want you to ex- 
?.use me from going with you to-night. I don't feel 
like going." 

" Not feel like going ! " exclaimed her aunt ia 
dismay. " Why, your uncle has taken a box 1 " 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 273 

Lydia opposed nothing to this argument. She 
only said, " I would rather not go.'* 

" Oh, but you will^ dear," coaxed her aunt. 
"You would enjoy it so much." 

" I thought you understood from what I said to- 
day," replied Lydia, " that I could not go." 

" Why, no, I did n't I I knew you objected; but 
if I thought it was proper for you to go " — 

" I should not go at home," said Lydia, in the 
same immovable fashion. 

" Of course not. Every place has its customs, and 
in Venice it has always been the custom to go to 
the opera on Sunday night." This fact had no visi- 
ble weight with Lydia, and after a pause her aunt 
added, " Did n't Paul himself say to do in Rome as 
the Romans do ? " 

" No, aunt Josephine," cried Lydia, indignantly, 
" he did not ! " 

Mrs. Erwin turned to her husband with a face of 
appeal, and he answered, " Really, my dear, I 
think you 're mistaken. I always had the impres- 
sion that the saying was — an Americanism of some 
sort." 

" But it does n't matter," interposed Lydia de- 
3isively. " I could n't go, if I didn't think it was 
right, whoever said it." 

*' Oh, well," began Mrs. Erwin, " if you would 
n't mind what Paul said " — She suddenly checked 
herself, and after a little silence she resumed, 
kindly, " I won't try to force you, Lydia. I did n't 

18 



274 THE LADY OF THE AKOOSTOOK. 

realize what a very short time it is since you left 
home, and how you still have all those ideas. I 
wouldn't distress you about them for the world, 
my dear. I want you to feel at home with me, and 
I 'U make it as like home for you as I can in every- 
thing. Henshaw, I think you must go alone, this 
evening. I will stay with Lydia." 

" Oh, no, no ! I could n't let you ; I can't let 
you ! I shall not know what to do if I keep you at 
home. Oh, don't leave it that way, please I I shall 
feel so badly about it " — 

" Why, we can both stay," suggested Mr. Erwin, 
kindly. 

Lydia's lips trembled and her eyes glistened, and 
Mrs. Erwin said, " I '11 go with you, Henshaw. I '11 
be ready in half an hour. I won't dress muchy 
She added this as if not to dress a great deal at the 
opera Sunday night might somehow be accepted as 
an observance of the Sabbath. 



XXIV. 

The next morning Veronica brought Lydia a 
little scrawl from her aunt, bidding the girl come 
and breakfast with her in her room at nine. 

" WqU, my dear," her aunt called to her from 
her pillow, when she appeared, "you find me flat 
enough, this morning. If there was anything wrong 
about going to the opera last night, I was properly 
punished for it. Such wretched stuff as I never 
heard ! And instead of the new ballet that they 
promised, they gave an old thing that I had seen till 
I was sick of it. You did n't miss much, I can tell 
you. How fresh and bright you do look, Lydia I " 
she sighed. " Did you sleep well ? Were you 
lonesome while we were gone ? Veronica says you 
were reading the whole evening. Are you fond of 
reading?" 

" I don't think I am, very," said Lydia. " It was 
a book that I began on the ship. It 's a novel." 
She hesitated. "I wasn't reading it; I was just 
looking at it." 

"What a queer child you are! I suppose you 
were dying to read it, and would n't because it was 
Sunday. Well I " Mrs. Erwin put her hand unde. 
her pillow, and pulled out a gossamer handkerchief, 
with which she delicately touched her complexion 



276 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

here aud there, and repaired with an instinctive 
rearrangement of powder the envious ravages of a 
sUght rash about her nose. "I respect your high 
principles beyond anything, Lydia, and if they can 
only be turned in the right direction they will never 
be any disadvantage to you." Veronica came in 
with the breakfast on a tray, and Mrs. Erwin added, 
"Now, pull up that little table, and bring your 
chair, my dear, and let us take it easy. I like to 
talk while I 'm breakfasting. Will you pour out my 
chocolate ? That 's it, in the ugly little pot with 
the wooden handle ; the copper one 's for you, with 
coffee in it. I never could get that repose which 
seems to come perfectly natural to you. I was 
always inclined to be a little rowdy, my dear, and 
I 've had to fight hard against it, without any help 
from either of my husbands; men like it; they 
think it 's funny. When I was first married, I was 
very young, and so was he; it was a real love 
match ; and my husband was very well off, and 
when I began to be delicate, nothing would do but 
he must come to Europe with me. How little I 
ever expected to outlive him I " 

" You don't look very sick now," began Lydia. 

" 111," said her aunt. " You must say ill. Sick 
is an Americanism." 

" It 's in the Bible," said Lydia, gravely. 

" Oh, there are a great many words in the Bible 
you can't use," returned her aunt. " No, I don't 
^ook ill now, and I 'm worlds better. But I 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 277 

could n't live a year in any other climate, I suppose. 
You seem to take after your mother's side. Well, 
as I was saying, the European ways didn't come 
natural to me, at all. I used to have a great deal 
of gayety when I was a girl, and I liked beaux and 
attentions ; and I had very free ways. I could n't 
get their stiffness here for years and years, and all 
through my widowhood it was one wretched failure 
with me. Do what I would, I was always violat- 
ing the most essential rules, and the worst of it was 
that it only seemed to make me the more popular. 
I do believe it was nothing but my rowdiness that 
attracted Mr. Erwin ; but I determined when I had 
got an Englishman I would make one bold strike 
for the proprieties, and have them, or die in the 
attempt. I determined that no Englishwoman I 
ever saw should outdo me in strict conformity to 
all the usages of European society. So I cut my- 
self off from all the Americans, and went with no- 
body but the English." 

"Do you like them better? " asked Lydia, with 
the blunt, child-like directness that had already 
more than once startled her aunt. 

^^ lAke them! I detest them! If Mr. Erwin 
were a real Englishman, I think I should go crazy ; 
but he 's been so little in his own country — all his 
life in India, nearly, and the rest on the Continent, 
— that he 's quite human ; and no American hus- 
band was ever more patient and indulgent; and 
that '« saying a good deal. He would be glad to 



278 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

have nothing but Americans around; he has an en- 
thusiasm for tliem, — or for what he supposes they 
are. Like the English ! You ought to have heard 
them during our war; it would have made your 
blood boil! And then how they came crawling 
round after it was all over, and trying to pet us 
up I Ugh I" 

" If you feel so about them," said Lydia, as be- 
fore, "why do you want to go with them so 
much?" 

" My dear," cried her aunt, " to beat them with 
their own weapons on their own ground^ — to show 
them that an American can be more European than 
any of them, if she chooses 1 And now you 've 
come here with looks and temperament and every- 
thing just to my hand. You 're more beautiful 
than any English girl ever dreamt of being ; you 're 
very distinguished-looking ; your voice is perfectly 
divine ; and you 're colder than an iceberg. OA, 
if I only had one winter with you in Rome, I think 
I should die in peace I " Mrs. Erwin paused, and 
drank her chocolate, which she had been letting 
cool in the eagerness df her discourse. " But, never 
mind," she continued, " we will do the best we can 
here. I 've seen English girls going out two or 
three together, without protection, in Rome and 
Florence; but I mean that you shall be quite 
Italian in that respect. The Italians never go out 
without a chaperone of some sort, and you must 
aever be seen without me, or your uncle, or 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 279 

Veronica. Now I '11 tell you -how you must do at 
parties, and so on. You must be very retiring; 
you 're that, any way ; but you must always keep 
close to me. It does n't do for young people to 
talk much together in society ; it makes scandal 
about a girl. If you dance, you must always hurry 
back to me. Dear me ! " exclaimed Mrs. Erwin, 
"I remember how, when I was a girl, I used to 
hang on to the young men's arms, and promenade 
with them after a dance, and go out to supper with 
them, and flirt on the stairs, — such times ! But 
that would n't do here, Lydia. It would ruin a 
girl's reputation ; she could hardly walk arm in 
arm with a young man if she was engaged to him." 
Lydia blushed darkly red, and then turned paler 
than usual, while her aunt went on. " You might 
do it, perhaps, and have it set down to American 
eccentricity or under-breeding, but I 'm not going 
to have that. I intend you to be just as dull and 
diffident in society as if you were an Italian, and 
more than if you were English. Your voice, of 
course, is a difficulty. If you sing, that will make 
you conspicuous, in spite of everything. But I 
don't see why that* can't be turned to advantage ; 
it 's no worse than your beauty. Yes, if you 're 
so splendid-looking and so gifted, and at the same 
time as stupid as the rest, it 's so much clear gain. 
It will come easy for you to be shy with men, for I 
suppose you 've hardly ever talked with any, living 
up there in that out-of-the-way village ; and your 



280 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

manner is very good. It 's reserved, an4 yet it 
isn't green. The way," continued Mrs. Erwin, 
" to treat men in Europe is to behave as if they 
were guilty till they prove themselves innocent. 
All you have to do is to reverse all your American 
ideas. But here I am, lecturing you as if you had 
been just such a girl as I was, with half a dozen 
love affairs on her hands at once, and no end of 
gentlemen friends. Europe won't be hard for you, 
my dear, for you have n't got anything to unlearn. 
But some girls that come over I — it's perfectly 
ridiculous, the trouble they get into, and the time 
they have getting things straight. They take it for 
granted that men in good society are gentlemen, — 
what we mean by gentlemen." 

Lydia had been letting her coffee stand, and had 
scarcely tasted the delicious French bread and the 
sweet Lombard butter of which her aunt ate so 
heartily. " Why, child," said Mrs. Erwin, at last, 
"where is your appetite? One would think you 
were the elderly invalid who had been up late. 
Did you find it too exciting to sit at home looking 
at a novel ? What was it ? If it 's a new story I 
should like to see it. But you did n't bring a novel 
from South Bradfleld with you? " 

" No," said Lydia, with a husky reluctance. " One 
of the — passengers gave it to me." 

" Had you many passengers ? But of course not. 
That was what made it so delightful when I came 
over that way. I was newly married then, and 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 281 

with spirits — oh dear me ! — for anything. It was 
one adventure, the whole way ; and we got so well 
acquainted, it was like one family. I suppose your 
grandfather put you in charge of some family. I 
know artists sometimes come out that way, and 
people for their health." 

" There was no family on our ship," said Lydia. 
" My state-room had been fixed up for the captain's 
wife " — 

" Our captain's wife was along, too," interposed 
Mrs. Erwin. " She was such a joke with us. She 
had been out to Venice on a voyage before, and 
used to be always talking about the Dn-cal Palace. 
And did they really turn out of their state-room 
for you ? " 

" She was not along," said Lydia. 

" Not along ? " repeated Mrs. Erwin, feebly. 
" Who — who were the other passengers ? " 

" There were three gentlemen," answered Lydia. 

" Three gentlemen ? Three men? Three — And 
you — and " — Mrs. Erwin fell back upon her pil- 
low, and remained gazing at Lydia, with a sort of 
remote bewildered pity, as at perdition, not indeed 
beyond compassion, but far beyond help. Lydia's 
color had been coming and going, but now it settled 
to a clear white. Mrs. Erwin commanded herself 
sufficiently to resume : " And there were — there 
were — no other ladies ? " 

" No. " 

" And you were " — 



282 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

"I was the only woman on board," replied Lydia. 
She rose abruptly, striking the edge of the table in 
her movement, and setting its china and silver jar- 
ring. " Oh, I know what you mean, aunt Jose- 
phine, but two days ago I could n't have dreamt it I 
From the time the ship sailed till I reached this 
wicked place, there was n't a word said nor a look 
looked to make me think I was n't just as right and 
safe there as if I had been in my own room at 
home. They were never anything but kind and 
good to me. They never let me think that they 
could be my enemies, or that I must suspect them 
and be on the watch against them. They were 
Americans I I had to wait for one of your Eu- 
ropeans to teach me that, — for that officer who was 
here yesterday " — 

" The cavaliere ? Why, where " — 

" He spoke to me in the cars, when Mr. Erwin 
was asleep ! Had he any right to do so ? " 

" He would think he had, if he thought you were 
alone," said Mrs. Erwin, plaintively. " I don't see 
how we could resent it. It was simply a mistake 
on his part. And now you see, Lydia " — 

" Oh, I see how my coming the way I have will 
seem to all these people 1 " cried Lydia, with pas- 
sionate despair. " I know how it will seem to that 
married woman who lets a man be in love with her, 
and that old woman who can't live with her hus- 
band because he 's too good and kind, and that girl 
who swears and doesn't know who her father is. 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 283 

and that impudent painter, and that officer who 
thinks he has the right to insult women if he finds 
them alone ! I wonder the sea does n't swallow up 
a place where even Americans go to the theatre on 
the Sabbath ! " 

" Lydia, Lydia ! It is n't so bad as it seems to 
you," pleaded her aunt, thrown upon the defensive 
by the girl's oiftburst. " There are ever so many 
good and nice people in Venice, and I know them, 
too, — Italians as well as foreigners. And even 
amongst those you saw. Miss Landini is one of the 
kindest girls in the world, and she had just been to 
see her old teacher when we met her, — she half 
takes care of him ; and Lady Fenleigh 's a perfect 
mother to the poor ; and I never was at the Count- 
ess Tatocka's except in the most distant way, at a 
ball where everybody went ; and is it better to let 
your uncle go to the opera alone, or to go with 
him ? You told me to go with him yourself ; and 
they consider Sunday over, on the Continent, after 
morning service, any way ! " 

*' Oh, it makes no difference ! " retorted Lydia, 
wildly. " I am going away. I am going home. I 
have money enough to get to Trieste, and the ship 
is there, and Captain Jenness will take me back 
with him. Oh!" she moaned. "jBehas been in 
Europe, too, and I suppose he 's like the rest of 
you ; and he thought because I was alone and help- 
less he had the right to — Oh, I see it, I see now 
that he never meant anything, and — Oh, oh, oh I " 

• 



284 THE LADY OF THE ABOOSTOOK. 

She fell on her knees beside the bed, as if crushed 
to them by the cruel doubt that suddenly over- 
whelmed her, and flung out her arms on Mrs. Er- 
win's coverlet — it was of Venetian lace sewed 
upon silk, a choice bit from the palace of one of 
the ducal families — and buried her face in it. 

Her aunt rose from her pillow, and looked in 
wonder and trouble at the beautiful fallen head, 
and the fair young figure shaken with sobs. " He 
— who — what are you talking about, Lydia ? 
Whom do you mean ? Did Captain Jenness " — 

" No, no 1 " wailed the girl, " the one that gave 
me the book." 

" The one that gave you the book ? The book 
you were looking at last night ? " 

" Yes," sobbed Lydia, with her voice muffled in 
the coverlet. 

Mrs. Erwin lay down again with significant de- 
liberation. Her face was still full of trouble, but 
of bewilderment no longer. In moments of great 
distress the female mind is apt to lay hold of some 
minor anxiety for its distraction, and to find a cer- 
tain relief in it. " Lydia," said her aunt in a 
broken voice, " I wish you would n't cry in the cov- 
erlet : it does n't hurt the lace, but it stains the 
silk." Lydia swept her handkerchief under her 
face but did not lift it. Her aunt accepted the 
compromise. " How came he to give you the 
Dook ? " 

" Oh, I don't know. I can't tell. I thought it 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 285 

was because — because — It was almost at the 
very beginning. And after that he walked up and 
down with me every night, nearly ; and he tried to 
be with me all he could ; and he was always saying 
things to make me think — Oh dear, oh dear^ oh 
dear I And he tried to make me care for him ! Oh, 
it was cruel, cruel! " 

" You mean that he made love to you ? " asked 
her aunt. 

" Yes — no — I don't know. He tried to make 
me care for him, and to make me think he cared for 
me." 

" Did he sat/ he cared for you ? Did he " — 

" No ! " 

Mrs. Erwin mused a while before she said, " Yes, 
it was cruel indeed, poor child, and it was cowardly, 
too." 

" Cowardly ? " Lydia lifted her face, and flashed 
a glance of tearful fire at her aunt. " He is the 
bravest man in the world ! And the most generous 
and high-minded ! He jumped into the sea after 
that wicked Mr. Hicks, and saved his life, when he 
disliked him worse than anything ! " 

" Who was Mr. Hicks ? " 

" He was the one that stopped at Messina. He 
was the one that got some brandy at Gibraltar, and 
behaved so dreadfully, and wanted to fight him." 

» Whom ? " 

" This one. The one who gave me the book. 
And don't you see that his being so good makes it 



286 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

all the worse ? Yes ; and he pretended to be glad 
when I told him I thought he was good, — he got 
me to say it ! " She had her face down again in 
her handkerchief. " And I suppose you think it 
was horrible, too, for me to take his arm, and talk 
and walk with him whenever he asked me ! " 

" No, not for you, Lydia," said her aunt, gently. 
" And don't you think now," she asked after a 
pause, " that he cared for you ? " 

" Oh; I did think so, — I did believe it ; but 
now, 710W " — 

" Now, what ? " 

" Now, I 'm afraid that may be he was only play- 
ing with me, and putting me off ; and pretending 
that he had something to tell me when he got to 
Venice, and he never meant anything by anything." 

" Is he coming to " — her aunt began, but Lydia 
broke vehemently out again. 

"If he had • cared for me, why couldn't he have 
told me so at once, and not had me wait till he got 
to Venice ? He knew I " — 

" There are two ways of explaining it," said Mrs. 
Erwin. " He may have been in earnest, Lydia, and 
felt that he had no right to be more explicit till 
you were in the care of your friends. That would 
be the European way which you consider so bad," 
said Mrs. Erwin. " Under the circumstances, it 
was impossible for him to keep any distance, and 
all he could do was to postpone his declaration till 
there could be something like good form about it. 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 287 

Yes, it might have been that." She was silent, but 
the troubled look did not leave her face. "I am 
sorry for you, Lydia," she resumed, " but I don't 
know that I wish he was in earnest." Lydia looked 
up at her in dismay. "It might be far less em- 
barrassing the other way, however painful. He 
may not be at all a suitable person." The tears 
stood in Lydia's eyes, and all her face expressed a 
puzzled suspense. " Where was he from ? " asked 
Mrs. Erwin, finally; till then she had been more 
interested in the lover than the man. 

" Boston," mechanically answered Lydia. 

" What was his name ? " 

" Mr. Stamford," owned Lydia, with a blush. 

Her aunt seemed dispirited at the sound. " Yes, 
I know who they are," she sighed. 

" And are n't they nice ? Is n't he — suitable ? " 
asked Lydia, tremulously. 

" Oh, poor child I He 's only too suitable. I 
can't explain to you, Lydia; but at home he 
wouldn't have looked at a girl like you. What 
sort of looking person is he ? " 

"He 's rather — red; and he has — light hair." 

" It must be the family I 'm thinking of," said 
Mrs. Erwin. She had lived nearly twenty years in 
Europe, and had seldom revisited her native city ; 
but at the sound of a Boston name she was all 
Bostonian again. She rapidly sketched the history 
of the family to which she imagined Staniford to 
belong. " I remember his sister ; I used to see her 



288 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

at school. She must have been five or six years 
younger than I ; and this boy " — 

" Why, he 's twenty-eight years old ! " inter- 
rupted Lydia. 

" How came he to tell you ? " 

" I don't know. He said that he looked thirty- 
four." 

"Yes; she was always a forward thing too, — 
with her freckles," said Mrs. Erwin, musingly, as 
if lost in reminiscences, not wholly pleasing, of Miss 
Staniford. 

" J7e has freckles," admitted Lydia. 

" Yes, it *s the one," said Mrs. Erwin. " He 
could n't have known what your family was from 
anything you said?" 

" We never talked about our families." 

" Oh, I dare say ! You talked about your- 
selves ? " 

" Yes." 

" All the time ? " 

" Pretty nearly." 

" And he did n't try to find out who or what you 
were?" 

" He asked a great deal about South Bradfield." 

" Of course, that was where he thought you had 
always belonged." Mrs. Erwin lay quiescent for a 
while, in apparent uncertainty as to how she should 
next attack the subject. " How did you first 
meet ? " 

Lydia began with the scene on Lucas Wharf, 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 289 

and little by little told the whole story up to the 
moment of their parting at Trieste. There were 
lapses and pauses in the story, which her aunt was 
never at a loss to fill aright. At the end she said, 
"If it were not for his promising to come here and 
see you, I should say Mr. Staniford had been flirt- 
ing, and as it is he may not regard it as anything 
more than flirtation. Of course, there was his be- 
ing jealous of Mr. Dunham and Mr. Hicks, as he 
certainly was; and his wanting to explain about 
that lady at Messina — yes, that looked peculiar; 
but he may not have meant anything by it. His 
parting so at Trieste with you, that might be either 
because he was embarrassed at its having got to be 
such a serious thing, or because he really felt badly. 
Lydia," she asked at last, " what made you think 
he cared for you ? " 

" I don't know," said the girl ; her voice had sunk 
to a husky whisper. " I did n't believe it till he 
said he wanted me to be his — conscience, and tried 
to make me say he was good, and " — 

" That 's a certain kind of man's way of flirting. 
It may mean nothing at all. I could tell in au 
instant, if I saw him." 

" He said he would be here this afternoon," mur- 
nmred Lydia, tremulously. 

" This afternoon I " cried Mrs. Erwin. " I must 
get up ! " 

At her toilette she had the exaltation and fury 
^f a champion arming for battle. 

19 




XXV. 

Mb. Ebwin entered about the completion of her 
preparations, and without turning round from her 
glass she said, " I want you to think of the worst 
thing you can, Henshaw. I don't see how I 'm ever 
to lift up my head again." As if this word had 
reminded her of her bead, she turned it from side 
to side, and got the eflFect in the glass, first of one 
ear-ring, and then of the other. Her husband 
patiently waited, and she now confronted him. 
" You may as well know first as last, Henshaw, 
and I want you to prepare yourself for it. Noth- 
ing can be done, and you will just have to live 
through it. Lydia — has come over — on that 
ship — alone, — with three young men, — and not 
the shadow — not the ghost — of another woman — 
on board I " Mrs. Erwin gesticulated with her 
hand-glass in delivering the words, in a manner at 
once intensely vivid and intensely solemn, yet some- 
how falling short of the due tragic effect. Her 
husband stood pulling his mustache straight down, 
while his wife turned again to the mirror, and put 
*^he final touches to her personal appearance with 
hands which she had the effect of having desper- 
ately washed of all responsibility. He stood so 
long in this meditative mood that she was obliged 



J 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 291 

fco be peremptory with his image in the glass. 
" Well ? " she cried. 

" Why, my dear," said Mr. Erwin, at last, " they 
were all Americans together, you know." 

" And what difference does that make ? " de- 
manded Mrs. Erwin, whirling from his image to 
the man again. 

" Why, of course, you know, it is n't as if they 
were — English." Mrs. Erwin flung down three 
hair-pins upon her dressing-case, and visibly de- 
spaired. " Of course you don't expect your coun- 
trymen" — His wife's appearance was here so 
terrible that he desisted, and resumed by saying, 
*' Don't be vexed, my dear. I — I rather like it, you 
know. It strikes me as a genuine bit of American 
civilization." 

" American civilization ! Oh, Henshaw ! " wailed 
Mrs. Erwin, " is it possible that after all I 've said, 
and done, and lived, you still think that any one but 
a girl from the greenest little country place could 
do such a thing as that ? Well, it is no use trying 
to enlighten English people. You like it, do you ? 
Well, I 'm not sure that the Englishman who mis- 
inderstands American things and likes them is n't 
a little worse than the Englishman who misunder- 
stands them and dislikes them. You all misundei:- 
stand them. And would you like it, if one of the 
young men had been making love to Lydia ? " 

The amateur of our civilization hesitated and was 
serious, but he said at last, " Why, you know, I 'm 



292 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

not surprised. She 's so uncommonly pretty. I — I 
suppose they 're engaged ? " he suggested. 

His wife held her peace for scorn. Then she said, 
" The gentleman is of a very good Boston family, 
and would no more think of engaging himself to a 
young girl without the knowledge of her friends 
than you would. Besides, he 's been in Europe a 
great deal." 

^' I wish I could meet some Americans who had 
n't been in Europe," said Mr. Erwin. " I should 
like to see what you call the simon-pure American. 
As for the young man's not engaging himself, it 
seems to me that he did n't avail himself of his na- 
tional privileges. I should certainly have done it in 
his place, if I 'd been an American." 

" Well, if you 'd been an American, you would 
n't," answered his wife. 

" Why ? " 

" Because an American would have had too much 
delicacy." 

" I don't understand that." 

"I know you don't, Henshaw. And there's 
where you show yourself an Englishman." 

"Really," said her husband, "you're beginning 
to crow, my dear. Come, I like that a great deal 
better than your cringing .to the effete despotisms 
of the Old World, as your Fourth of July orators 
have it. It 's almost impossible to get a bit of good 
honest bounce out of an American, nowadays, — to 
get him to spread himself, as you say." 



THE LADY OF THE AEOOSTOOK. 293 

" All that is neither here nor there, Henshaw," 
said his wife. " The question is how to receive Mr. 
Staniford — that 's his name — when he comes. How 
are we to regard him ? He 's coming here to see 
Lydia, and she thinks he 's coming to propose." 

" Excuse me, but how does she regard him ? " 

" Oh, there 's no question about that, poor child. 
She 's dead in love with him, and can't understand 
why he didn't propose on shipboard." 

" And she is n't an Englishman, either I " exulted 
Mr. Erwin. " It appears that there are Americans 
and Americans, and that the men of your nation 
have more delicacy than the women like." 

" Don't be silly," said his wife. " Of course, 
women always think what they would do in such 
cases, if they were men ; but if men did what women 
think they would do if they were men, the women 
would be disgusted." 

" Oh I " 

" Yes. Her feeling in the matter is no guide." 

" Do you know his family ? " asked Mr. Erwin. 

" I think I do. Yes, I 'm sure I do." 

" Are they nice people ? " 

*' Have 'nt I told you they were a good Boston 
family ? " 

" Then upon my word, I don't see that we 've to 
take any attitude at all. I don't see that we 've to 
regard him in one way or the other. It quite re- 
mains for him to make the first move." 

As if they had been talking of nothing but dress 



294 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

before, Mrs. Erwin asked : " Do you think I look 
better in this black mexicaine, or would you wear 
your 6cv\x ? " 

" I think you look very well in this. But why — 
He is n't going to propose to you, I hope ? " 

" I must have on something decent to receive him 
in. What time does the train from Trieste get 
m r 

" At three o'clock." 

" It 's one, now. There '-s plenty of time, but 
there is n't any too much. I '11 go and get Lydia 
ready. Or perhaps you '11 tap on her door, Henshaw, 
and send her here. Of course, this is the end of her 
voice, — if it is the end." 

" It 's the end of having an extraordinarily pretty 
girl in the house. I don't at all like it, you know, 
— having her whisked away in this manner." 

Mrs. Erwin refused to let her mind wander from 
the main point. " He '11 be round as soon as he can, 
after he arrives. I shall expect him by four, at the 
latest." 

" I fancy he '11 stop for his dinner before he comes," 
said Mr. Erwin. 

" Not at all," retorted his wife, haughtily. And 
with his going out of the room, she set her face in 
a resolute cheerfulness, for the task of heartening 
Lydia when she should appear ; but it only expressed 
misgiving when the girl came in with her yachting- 
dress on. " Why, Lydia, shall you wear that ? " 

Lydia swept her dress with a downward glance. 



THE LADY OF THE AKOOSTOOK. 295 

"I thought I would wear it. I thought he — I 
should seem — more natural in it. I wore it all the 
time on the ship, except Sundays. He said — he 
liked it the best." 

Mrs. Erwin shook her head. *' It would n't do. 
Everything must be on a new basis now. He might 
like it ; but it would be too romantic, would n't it, 
don't you think ? " She shook her head still, but 
less decisively. " Better wear your silk. Don't 
you think you 'd better wear your silk ? This 
is very pretty, and the dark blue does become 
you, awfully. Still, I don't know — J don't know, 
either ! A great many English wear those careless 
things in the house. Well, wear it, Lydia I You 
do look perfectly killing in it. I '11 tell you : your 
uncle was going to ask you to go out in his boat ; 
he 's got one he rows himself, and this is a boating 
costume ; and you know you could time yourselves 
so as to get back just right, and you could come in 
with this on " — 

Lydia turned pale. " Ought n't I — ought n't I 
— to be here ? " she faltered. 

Her aunt laughed gayly. " Why, he '11 ask for 
me^ Lydia." 

" For you ? " asked Lydia, doubtfully. 

" Yes. And I can easily keep him till you get 
Dack. If you 're here by four " — 

"The train," said Lydia, " arrives at three." 

" How did you know ? " asked her aunt, keenly. 

Lydia's eyelids fell even lower than their wont- 



296 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

^^ I looked it out in that railroad guide in the par- 
lor." 

Her aunt kissed her. " And you 've thought the 
whole thing out, dear, have n't you ? I 'm glad to 
see you so happy about it." 

" Yes," said the girl, with a fluttering breath, "I 
have thought it out, and 1 believe him, I " — She 
tried to say something more, but could not. 

Mrs. Erwin rang the bell, and sent for her hus- 
band. *' He knows about it, Lydia," she said. 
" He 's just as much interested as we are, dear, but 
you need n't be worried. He 's a perfect post for 
not showing a thing if you don't want him to. 
He 's really quite superhuman, in that, — equal to 
a woman. You can talk Americanisms with him. 
If we sat here staring at each other till four o'clock, 
— he must go to his hotel before he comes here ; 
and I say four at the earliest ; and it 's much more 
likely to be five or six, or perhaps evening, — I 
should die T " 

Mr. Erwin's rowing was the wonder of all Ven- 
ice. There was every reason why he should fall 
overboai:d at each stroke, as he stood to propel the 
boat in the gondolier fashion, except that he never 
yet had done so. It was sometimes his fortune to 
be caught on the shallows by the falling tide ; but 
on that day he safely explored the lagoons, and re- 
turned promptly at four o'clock to the palace. 

His wife was standing on the balcony, looking 
out for them, and she smiled radiantly down into 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 297 

Lydia's anxiously lifted face. But when she met 
the girl at the head of the staircase in the great 
hall, she embraced her, and said, with the same gay 
smile, " He has n't come yet, dear, and of course he 
won't come till after dinner. If I had n't been as 
silly as you are, Lydia, I never should have let you 
expect him sooner. He'll want to go to his hotel; 
and no matter how impatient he is, he '11 want to 
dress, and be a little ceremonious about his call. 
You know we 're strangers to him, whatever ^ou 
are." 

" Yes," said Lydia, mechanically. She was going 
to sit down, as she was ; of her own motion she 
would not have stirred from the place till he came, 
or it was certain he would not come ; but her aunt 
would not permit the despair into which she saw 
her sinking. 

She laughed resolutely, and said, " I think we 
must give up the little sentimentality of meeting 
him in that dress, now. Go and change it, Lydia. 
Put on your silk, — or wait : let me go with you. 
I want to try some little effects with your complex- 
ion. We 've experimented with the simple and fa- 
miliar, and now we '11 see what can be done in the 
way of the magnificent and unexpected. I 'm going 
to astonish the young man with a Venetian beauty ; 
you know you look Italian, Lydia." 

" Yes, he said so," answered Lydia. 

" Did he ? That shows he has an eye, and he '11 
appreciate what we are going to do." 



298 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

She took Lydia to her own room, for the greater 
convenience of her experiments, and from that mo- 
ment she did not allow her to be alone ; she scarcely 
allowed her to be silent ; she made her talk, she 
kept her in movement. At dinner she permitted no 
lapse. " Henshaw," she said, " Lydia has been tell- 
ing me about a storm they had just before they 
reached Gibraltar. I wish you would tell her of 
the typhoon you were in when you first went out 
to India.'* Her husband obeyed ; and then recur- 
ring to the days of his civil employment in India, 
he told stories of tiger-hunts, and of the Sepoy 
mutiny. Mrs. Erwin would not let them sit very 
long at table. After dinner she asked Lydia to 
sing, and she suffered her to sing all the American 
songs her uncle asked for. At eight o'clock she 
said with a knowing little look at Lydia, which in- 
cluded a sub-wink for her husband, " You may go 
to your cafd alone, this evening, Henshaw. Lydia 
and I are going to stay at home and talk South 
Bradfield gossip. I 've hardly had a moment with 
her yet." But when he was gone, she took Lydia 
to her own room again, and showed her all her jew- 
elry, and passed the time in making changes in the 
girl's toilette. 

It was like the heroic endeavor of the arctic voy- 
ager who feels the deadly chill in his own veins, and 
keeps himself alive by rousing his comrade from the 
torpor stealing over him. They saw in each other's 
eyes that if they yielded a moment to the doubt in 
their hearts they were lost. 



THE LADY OF THE ABOOSTOOK. 299 

At ten o'clock Mrs. Erwin said abruptly, " Go to 
bed, Lydia I " Then the girl broke down, and aban- 
doned herself in a storm of tears. " Don't cry, dear, 
don't cry," pleaded her aunt. " He will be here in 
the morning, I know he will. He has been de- 
layed." 

" No, he 's not coming," said Lydia, through her 
sobs. 

" Something has happened," urged Mrs. Erwin. 

" No," said Lydia, as before. Her tears ceased 
as suddenly as they had come. She lifted her head, 
and drying her eyes looked into her aunt's face. 
" Are you ashamed of me ? ' ' she asked hoarsely. 

" Ashamed of you ? Oh, poor child " — 

" I can't pretend anything. If I had never told 
you about it at all, I could have kept it back till I 
died. But now — But you will never hear me 
speak of it again. It 's over." She took up her 
candle, and stiflBly suffering the compassionate em- 
brace with which her aunt clung to her, she walked 
across the great hall in the vain splendor in which 
she had been adorned, and shut the door behind 
her. 



XXVI. 

Dunham lay in a stupor for twenty-fowr hours, 
and after that he was delirious, with dim intervals 
of reason in which they kept him from talking, till 
one morning he woke and looked up at Staniford 
with a perfectly clear eye, and said, as if resuming 
the conservation, " I struck my head on a pile of 
chains." 

" Yes," replied Staniford, with a wan smile, 
" and you Ve been out of it pretty near ever since. 
You must n't talk." 

" Oh, I 'm all right," said Dunham. *' I know 
about my being hurt. I shall be cautious. Have 
you written to Miss Hibbard ? I hope you have n't ! " 

" Yes, I have," replied Staniford. " But I 
have n't sent the letter," he added, in answer to 
Dunham's look of distress. " I thought you were 
going to pull through, in spite of the doctor, — he 's 
wanted to bleed you, and I could hardly keep his 
lancet out of you, — and so I wrote, mentioning 
the accident and announcing your complete restora- 
tion. The letter merely needs dating and sealing. 
I '11 look it up and have it posted." He began a 
search in the pockets of his coat, and then went to 
bis portfolio. 

What day is this? " asked Dunham. 



(( 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 301 

"Friday," said Staniford, rummaging his port 
folio. 

" Have you been in Venice ? " 

" Look here, Dunham I If you begin in that 
way, I can't talk to you. It shows that you 're still 
out of your head. How could I have been in Ven- 
ice?" 

" But Miss Blood ; the Aroostook " — 

" Miss Blood went to Venice with her uncle last 
Saturday. The Aroostook is here in Trieste. The 
captain has just gone away. He 's stood watch and 
watch with me, while you were off on business." 

"But did n't you go to Venice on Monday? " 

"Well, hardly," answered Staniford. 

"No, you stayed with me, — I see," said Dun- 
ham. 

" Of course, I wrote to her at once," said Stani- 
ford, huskily, " and explained the matter as well as 
I could without making an ado about it. But now 
you stop, Dunham. If you excite yourself, there '11 
be the deuce to pay again." 

" I 'm not excited," said Dunham, " but I can't 
help thinking how disappointed — But of course 
you 've heard from her ? " 

" Well, there 's hardly time, yet," said Staniford, 
evasively. 

" Why, yes, there is. Perhaps your letter mis- 
carried." 

" Don't ! " cried Staniford, in a hollow under- 
voice, which he broke through to add, " Go to sleep, 
now, Dunham, or keep quiet, somehow." 



302 THE LADY OF THE ABOOSTOOK. 

Dunham was silent for a while, and Staniford 
continued his search, which he ended by taking the 
. portfolio by one corner, and shaking its contents 
out on the table. "I don't seem to find it; but 
I 've put it away somewhere. I '11 get it." He 
went to another coat, that hung on the back of a 
chair, and fumbled in its pockets. " Hollo ! Here 
are those letters they brought me from the post- 
office Saturday night, — Murray's, and Stanton's, 
and that bore Farrington's. I forgot all about 
them." He ran the unopened letters over in his 
hand. "Ah, here's my familiar scrawl" — He 
stopped suddenly, and walked away to the window, 
where he stood with his back to Dunham. 

" Staniford 1 What is it ? " 

"It's — it's my letter to A^r," said Staniford, 
without looking round. 

" Your letter to Miss Blood — not gone ? " Stan- 
iford, with his face still from him, silently nodded. 
" Oh ! " moaned Dunham, in self-forgetful compas- 
sion. " How could it have happened? " 

" I see perfectly well," said the other, quietly, 
but he looked round at Dunham with a face that 
was haggard. " I sent it out to be posted by the 
portier^ and he got it mixed up with these letters 
for me, and brought it back." 

The young men were both silent, but the tears 
stood in Dunham's eyes. " If it had n't been for 
me, it would n't have happened," he said. 

" No," gently retorted Staniford, " if it had n't 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 303 

been for me^ it would n't have happened. I made 
you come from Messina with me, when you wanted 
to go on to Naples with those people ; if I 'd had 
any sense, I should have spoken fully to her before 
we parted ; and it was I who sent you to see if she 
were on the steamer, when you fell and hurt your- 
self. I know who 's to blame, Dunham. What day 
did I tell you this was ? " • 

" Friday." 

" A week I And I told her to expect me Mon- 
day afternoon. A week without a word or a sign 
of any kind I Well,* I might as well take passage 
in the Aroostook, and go back to Boston again." 

" Why, no ! " cried Dunham, " you must take 
the first train to Venice. Don't lose an instant. 
You can explain everything as soon as you see 
her." 

Staniford shook his head. " If all her life had 
been different, if she were a woman of the world, it 
would be different; she would know how to ac- 
count for some little misgivings on my part ; but as 
it is she would n't know how to account for even the 
appearance of them. What she must have suffered 
all this week — I can't think of it I " He sat down 
and turned his face away. Presently he sprang up 
again. " But I 'm going, Dunham. I guess you 
won't die now ; but you may die if you like. I 
would go over your dead body ! " 

"Now you are talking sense," said Dunham. 

Staniford did not listen ; he had got out his rail- 



304 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

road guide and was studying it. " No ; there are 
only those two trains a day. The seven o'clock has 
gone ; and the next starts at ten to-night. Great 
heavens! I could walk it sooner 1 Dunham," he 
asked, " do you think I 'd better telegraph ? " 

" What would you say ? " 

^^ Say that there 's been a mistake ; that a letter 
miscarried ; that I '11 be there in the morning ; 
that " — 

"Wouldn't that be taking her anxiety a little 
too much for granted ? " 

" Yes, that 's true. Well, ^ou 've got your wits 
about you now, Dunham," cried Staniford, with 
illogical bitterness. "Very probably," he added, 
gloomily, " she does n't care anything for me, after 
all." 

" That 's a good frame of mind to go in," said 
Dunham, 

" Why IB it ? " demanded Staniford. "Did I ever 
presume upon any supposed interest in her ? " 

" You did at first," replied Dunham. 

Staniford flushed angrily. But you cannot quar- 
rel with a man lying helpless on his back ; besides, 
what Dunham said was true. 

The arrangements for Staniford's journey were 
quickly made, — so quickly that when he had seen 
the doctor, and had been down to the Aroostook 
and engaged Captain Jenness to come and take his 
place with Dunham for the next two nights, he had 
twelve hours on his hands before the train for 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 805 

Venice would leave, and he started at last with but 
one clear perception, — that at the soonest it must 
be twelve hours more before he could see her. 

He had seemed intolerably slow in arriving on 
the train, but once arrived in Venice he wished 
that he had come by the steamboat, which would 
not be in for three hours yet. In despair he went 
to bed, considering that after he had tossed there 
till he could endure it no longer, he would still 
have the resource of getting up, which he would 
not have unless he went to bed. When he lay 
down, he found himself drowsy ; and while he won- 
dered at this, he fell asleep, and dreamed a -strange 
dream, so terrible that he woke himself by groan- 
ing in spirit, a thing which, as he reflected, he had 
never done before. The sun was piercing the crev- 
ice between his shutters, and a glance at his watch 
showed him that it was eleven o'clock. 

The shadow of his dream projected itself into 
his waking mood, and steeped it in a gloom which 
he could not escape. He rose and dressed, and 
meagrely breakfasted. Without knowing how he 
came there, he stood announced in Mrs. Erwin's 
parlor, and waited for her to receive him. 

His card was brought in to her where she lay 
in bed. After supporting Lydia through the first 
sharp shock of disappointment, she had yielded to 
the prolonged strain, and the girl was now tak- 
ing care of her. She gave a hysterical laugh aa 

ihe read the name on the card Veronica brought, 

ao 



3')6 THE LADY OF THE ABOOSTOOK. 

and crushing it in her hand, ^^ He ^s coioe I " she 
cried. 

^^ I will not see him ! *' said Lydia instantly. 

" No/' assented her aunt. ** It would n't be at 
all tlie thing. Besides, he 's asked for me. Your 
uncle might see him, but he 's out of the way ; of 
course he tcould be out of the way. Now, let me 
see ! *' The excitement inspired her ; she rose in 
bed, and called for the pretty sack in which she 
ordinarily breakfasted, and took a look at herself in 
a hand-glass that lay on the bed. Lydia did not 
move ; she scarcely seemed to breathe ; but a swift 
pulse in her neck beat visibly. " K it would be 
decent to keep him waiting so long, I could dress, 
and see him myself. I 'm well enough." Mrs. 
Erwin again reflected. " Well," she said at last, 
"you must see him, Lydia." 

" I " — began the girl. 

"Yes, you. Some one must. It will be all 
right. On second thought, I believe I should send 
you, even if I were quite ready to go myself. This 
affair has been carried on so far on the American 
plan, and I think I shall let you finish it without 
my interference. Yes, as your uncle said when I 
told him, you 're all Americans together ; and you 
arc. Mr. Staniford has come to see you, though he 
asks for me. That 's perfectly proper ; but I can't 
see him, and I want you to excuse me to him." 

"What would you — what must I" — Lydia 
began again. 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 307 

" No, Lydia," interrupted her aunt. " I won't 
tell you a thing. I might have advised you when 
you first came ; but now, I — Well, I think I Ve 
lived too long in Europe to be of use in such a case, 
and I won't have anything to do with it. I won't 
tell you how to meet him, or what to say ; but 
oh, child," — here the woman's love of loving 
triumphed in her breast, — "I wish I was in your 
place I Go ! " 

Lydia slowly rose, breathless. 

*' Lydia ! " cried her aunt. " Look at me ! " 
Lydia turned her head. " Are you going to be 
hard with him? " 

" I don't know what he 's coming for," said Lydia 
dishonestly. 

" But if he 's coming for what you hope ? " 

" I don't hope for anything." 

"But you did. Don't be severe. You 're terri- 
ble when you 're severe." 

"I will be just." 

" Oh, no, you must n't, my dear. It won't do at 
all to be just with men, poor fellows. Kiss me, 
Lydia ! " She pulled her down, and kissed her. 
When the girl had got as far as the door, " Lydia, 
Lydia I " she qalled after her. Lydia turned. 
" Do you realize what dress you 've got on ? " 
Lydia look down at her robe ; it was the blue 
flannel yachting-suit of the Aroostook, which she 
had put on for convenience in taking care of her 
aunt. " Is n't it too ridiculous ? " Mrs. Erwin. 



308 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

meant to praise the coincidence, not to blame the 
dress. Lydia smiled faintly for answer, and the 
next moment she stood at the parlor door. 

Staniford, at her entrance, turned from looking 
out of the window and saw her as in his dream, with 
her hand behind her, pushing the door to ; but the 
face with which she looked at him was not like the 
dead, sad face of his dream. It was thrillingly 
alive, and all passions were blent in it, — love, 
doubt, reproach, indignation ; the tears stood in 
her eyes, but a fire burnt through the tears. With 
his first headlong impulse to console, explain, de- 
plore, came a thought that struck him silent at 
sight of her. He remembered, as h*e had not till 
then remembered, in all his wild longing and fear- 
ing, that there had not yet been anything exphcit 
between them ; that there was no engagement ; and 
that he had upon the face of things, at least, no 
right to offer her more than some formal expres- 
sion of regret for not having been able to keep his 
promise to come sooner. While this stupefying 
thought gradually filled his whole sense to the ex- 
clusion of all else, he stood looking at her with 
a dumb and helpless appeal, utterly stunned and 
wretched. He felt the life die oyit of his face and 
leave it blank, and when at last she spoke, he knew 
that it was in pity of him, or contempt of him. 
'* Mrs. Erwin is not well," she said, " and she 
wished me '' — 

But he broke in upon her : " Oh, don't talk to 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 309 

me of Mrs. Erwin I It was you I wanted to see. 
Are you well ? Are you alive ? Do you " — He 
stopped as precipitately as he began ; and after an- 
other hopeless pause, he went on piteously : "I 
don't know where to begin. I ought to have been 
here five days ago. I don't know what you think 
of me, or whether you have thought of me at all ; 
and before I can ask I must tell you why I wanted 
to come then, and why I come now, and why I 
think I must have come back from the dead to see 
you. You are all the world to me, and have been 
ever since I saw you. It seems a ridiculously un- 
necessary thing to say, I have been looking and 
acting and liviiig it so long ; but I say it, because I 
choose to have you know it, whether you ever 
cared for me or not. I thought I was coming here 
to explain why I had not come sooner, but I need 
n't do that unless — unless " — He looked at her 
where she still stood aloof, and he added : " Oh, 
answer me something, for pity's sake ! Don't send 
me away without a word. There have been times 
when you would n't have done that ! " 

" Oh, I did care for you I " she broke out. " You 
know I did " — 

He was instantly across the room, beside her. 
*' Yes, yes, I know it I " But she shrank away. 

"You tried to make me believe you cared for 
me, by everything you could do. And I did be- 
lieve you then ; and yes, I believed you afterwards, 
when I did n't know what to believe. You were 



310 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

the one true thing in the world to me. But it 
Beems that you did n't believe it yourself." 

** That I did n't believe it myself ? That I— I 
don't know what you mean." 

*' You took a week to think it over I I have 
had a week, too, and I have thought it over, too. 
You have come too late." 

"Too late? You don't, you can't, mean — 
Listen to me, Lydia ; I want to tell you " — 

" No, there is nothing you can tell me that would 
change me. I know it, I understand it all." 

" But you don't understand what kept me." 

" I don't wish to know what made you break 
your word. I don't care to know. I could n't go 
back and feel as I did to you. Oh, that 's gone I 
It isn't that you did not come — that you made 
me wait and suffer ; but you knew how it would 
be with me after I got here, and all the things I 
should find out, and how I should feel ! And you 
stayed away 1 I don't know whether I can forgive 
you, even ; oh, I 'm afraid I don't ; but I can never 
care for you again. Nothing but a case of life and 
death " — 

"It was a case of life and death I " 

Lydia stopped in her reproaches, and looked at 
him with wistful doubt, changing to a tender fear. 

" Oh, have you been hurt ? Have you been 
sick ? " she pleaded, in a breaking voice, and made 
some unconscious movement toward him. He put 
out his hand, and would have caught one of hers, 
but she clasped them in each other. 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 311 

" No, not I, — Dunham " — 

" Oh ! " said Lydia, as if this were not at all 
enough. 

" He fell and struck his head, the night you left. 
I thought he would die." Staniford reported his 
own diagnosis, not the doctor's; but he was per- 
haps in the right to do this. " I had made him go 
down to the wharf with me ; I wanted to see you 
again, before you started, and I thought we might 
find you on the boat." He could see her face re- 
lenting ; her hands released each other. " He was 

delirious till yesterday. I could n't leave him." 

" Oh, why did n't you write to me ? " She ig- 
nored Dunham as completely as if he had never 
lived. " You knew that I " — Her voice died 
away, and her breast rose, 

" I did write " — 

" But how, — I never got it." 

" No, — it was not posted, through a cruel blun- 
der. And then I thought — I got to thinking that 
you did n't care " — 

« Oh," said the girl. " Could you doubt me? " 

"You doubted me," said Staniford, seizing his 
advantage. " I brought the letter with me to 
prove my truth." She did not look at him, but she 
took the letter, and ran it greedily into her pocket. 
" It 's well I did so, since you don't believe my 
word." 

" Oh, yes, — yes, I know it," she said ; " I never 
doubted it ! " Staniford stood bemazed, though he 



312 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

knew enough to take the hands she yielded him ; 
but she suddenly caught them away again, and set 
them against his breast. " I was very wrong to 
suspect you ever ; I 'm sorry I did ; but there 's 
something else. I don't know how to say what I 
want to say. But it must be said." 

" Is it something disagreeable ? " asked Staniford, 
lightly. 

*' It 's right," answered Lydia, unsmilingly. 

" Oh, well, don't say it I " he pleaded ; " or don't 
say it now, — not till you 've forgiven me for the 
anxiety I 've caused you ; not till you 've praised 
me for tiying to do what I thought the right thing. 
You can't imagine how hard it was for one who 
has n't the habit ! " ' 

" I do praise you for it. There 's nothing to for- 
give you ; but I can't let you care for me unless I 
know — unless" — She stopped, and then, "Mr. 
Staniford," she began firmly, "since I came here, 
I 've been learning things that I did n't know be- 
fore. They have changed the whole world to me, 
and it can never be the same again." 

" I 'm sorry for that ; but if they have n't 
changed you, the world may go." 

"No, not if we're to live in it," answered the 
girl, with the soberer wisdom women keep at such 
times. " It will have to be known how we met. 
What will people say ? They will laugh." 

" I don't tliink they will in my presence," said 
Staniford, with swelling nostrils. " They may use 
their pleasure elsewhere." 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 313 

" And I should n't care for tbeir laughing, either/' 
said Lydia. " But oh, why did you come ? " 

" Why did I come ? " 

" Was it because you felt bound by anything 
that 's happened, and you would n't let me bear the 
laugh alone? I'm not afraid for myself. I shall 
never blame you. You can go perfectly free." 

" But I don't want to go free ! " 

Lydia looked at him with piercing earnestness. 
" Do you think I 'm proud ? " she asked. 

" Yes, I think you are," said Staniford, vaguely. 

*' It is n't for myself that I should be proud with 
other people. But I would rather die than bring 
ridicule upon one I — upon you." 

"I can believe that," said Staniford, devoutly, 
and patiently reverencing the delay of her scru- 
ples. 

"And if — and" — Her lips trembled, but she 
steadied her trembling voice. " If they laughed at 
you, and thought of me in a slighting way because " 
— Staniford gave a sort of roar of grief and pain 
to know how her heart must have been wrung be- 
fore she could come to this. " You were all so good 
that you did n't let me think there was anything 
strange about it " — 

" Oh, good heavens I We only did what it was 
our precious and sacred privilege to do I We were 
all of one mind about it from the first. But don't 
torture yourself about it, my darling. It's over 
now ; it 'a past — no, it 's present, and it will al- 



314 THE LADY OF THE ABOOSTOOK. 

ways be, forever, the dearest and best thing in ilfe 
Lydia, do you believe that I love you ? " 

*' Oh, I must ! " 

" And don't you believe that I 'm telling you the 
truth when I say that I would n't, for all the world 
can give or take, change anything that 's been ? " 

" Yes, I do believe you. Oh, I have n't said at 
all what I wanted to say 1 There was a great deal 
that I ought to say. I can't seem to recollect it." 

He smiled to see her grieving at this recreance of 
her memory to her conscience. " Well, you shall 
have a whole lifetime to recall it in." 

" No, I must try to speak now. And you must 
tell me the truth now, — no matter what it costs 
either of us." She laid her hands upon his ex- 
tended arms, and grasped them intensely. *' There 's 
something else. I want to ask you what you 
thought when you found me alone on that ship with 
all of you." If she had stopped at this point, Stan- 
iford's cause might have been lost, but she went on : 
*' I want to know whether you were ever ashamed 
of me, or despised me for it ; whether you ever felt 
that because I was helpless and friendless there, 
you had the right to think less of me than if you 
had first met me here in this house." 

It was still a terrible question, but it offered a 
loop-hole of escape, which Staniford was swift to 
seize. Let those who will justify tbe answer with 
which he smiled into her solemn eyes : " I will leave 
you to say." A generous uncandor like this goes as 



_^^ 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 315 

far with a magnanimous and serious-hearted woman 
as perhaps anything else. 

" Oh, I knew it, I knew it ! '* cried Lydia. And 
then, as he caught her to him at last, " Oh — oh — 
are you sure it 's right? " 

"I have no doubt of it," answered Stamford. 
Nor had he any question of the strategy through 
which he had triumphed in this crucial test. He 
may have thought that there were always explana- 
tions that had to be made afterwards, or he may 
have believed that he had expiated in what he had 
done and suffered for her any slight which he had 
felt ; possibly, he considered that she had asked 
more than she had a right to do. It is certain that 
he said with every appearance of sincerity, *' It be- 
gan the moment I saw you on the wharf, there, and 
when I came to know my mind I kept it from you 
only till I could tell you here. But now I wish I 
had n't ! Life is too short for such a week as this." 

" No," said Lydia, " you acted for the best, and 
you are — good." 

" I '11 keep that praise till I 've earned it," an- 
swered Staniford. 



J\.J\. YXJL» 

In the Campo Santi Apostoli at Venice there 
stands, a little apart from the church of that name, 
a chapel which has been for many years the place 
of worship for the Lutheran congregation. It was 
in this church that Staniford and Lydia were mar- 
ried six weeks later, before the altar under Titian's 
beautiful picture of Christ breaking bread. 

The wedding was private, but it was not quite a 
family aflfair. Miss Hibbard had come down with 
her mother from Dresden, to complete Dunham's 
cure, and she was there with him perfectly recov- 
ered ; he was not quite content, of course, that the 
marriage should not take place in the English chap- 
el, but he was largely consoled by the candles burn- 
ing on the altar. The Aroostook had been delayed 
by repairs which were found necessary at Trieste, 
and Captain Jenness was able to come over and rep- 
resent the ship at the wedding ceremony, and at 
the lunch which followed. He reserved till the mo- 
ment of parting a supreme expression of good-will. 
When he had got a hand of Lydia's and one of 
Stanif ord's in each of his, with his wrists crossed, 
he said, " Now, I ain't one to tack round, and stand 
oflE and on a great deal, but what I want to say is 
just this : the Aroostook sails next week, and if you 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 317 

two are a mind to go back in her, the ship 's yours, 
as I said to Miss Blood, here, — I mean Mis' Stan- 
iford ; well, I hainH had much time to get used to 
it! — when she first come aboard there at Boston. 
I don't mean any pay ; I want you to go back as 
my guests. You can use the cabin for your parlor ; 
and I promise you I won't take any other passen- 
gers this time. I declare," said Captain Jenness, 
lowering his voice, and now referring to Hicks for 
the first time since the day of his escapade, " I did 
feel dreadful about that fellow I " 

" Oh, never mind," replied Staniford. " If it 
hadn't been for Hicks perhaps I mightn't have 
been here." He exchanged glances with his wife, 
that showed they had talked all that matter over. 

The captain grew confidential. " Mr. Mason told 
me he saw you lending that chap money. I hope 
he did n't give you the slip ? " 

" No ; it came to me here at Blumenthals' the 
other day." 

" Well, that 's right I It all worked together for 
good, as you say. Now you come 1 " 

" What do you say, my dear ? " asked Staniford, 
on whom the poetic fitness of the captain's proposal 
had wrought. 

Women are never blinded by romance, however 
much they like it in the abstract. " It 'a coming 
winter. Do you think you would n't be seasick? " 
returned the bride of an hour, with the practical 
wisdom of a matron. 



318 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

Staniford laughed. " She 's right, captaiu. I 'm 
no sailor. I '11 get home by the all-rail route as far 
as I can." 

Captain Jenuess threw back his head, and laughed 
too. " Good ! That 's about it." And he released 
their hands, so as to place one hairy paw on a shoul- 
der of each. " You '11 get along together, I guess." 

" But we 're just as much obliged to you as if we 
went, Captain Jenness. And tell all the crew that 
I 'ra homesick for the Aroostook, and thank all for 
being so kind to me ; and I thank you^ Captain 
Jenness ! " Lydia looked at her husbajid, and then 
startled the captain with a kiss. 

He blushed all over, but carried it off as boldly 
as he could. " Well, well," he said, " that 's right I 
If you change your minds before the Aroostook sails, 
you let me know." 

This affair made a great deal of talk in Venice, 
where the common stock of leisure is so great that 
each person may without self-reproach devote a much 
larger share of attention to the interests of the oth- 
ers than could be given elsewhere. The decorous 
fictions in which Mrs. Erwin draped the singular 
facts of the acquaintance and courtship of Lydia 
and Staniford were what unfailingly astonished and 
amused him, and he abetted them without scruple. 
He found her worldliness as innocent as the un- 
worldliness of Lydia, and he gave Mrs. Erwin his 
hearty sympathy when she ingenuously owned that 
the effort to throw dust in the eyes of her European 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 319 

acquaintance was simply killing her. He found 
endless refreshment in the contemplation of her atti- 
tude towards her burdensome little world, and in 
her reasons for enslaving herself to it. He was very- 
good friends with both of the Erwins. When he 
could spare the time from Lydia, he went about with 
her uncle in his boat, and respected his skill in row- 
ing it without falling overboard. He could not see 
why any one should be so much interested in the 
American character and dialect as Mr. Erwin was ; 
but he did not object, and he reflected that after all 
they were not what their admirer supposed them. 

The Erwins came with the Stanifords as far as 
Paris on their way home, and afterwards joined them 
in California, where Staniford bought a ranch, and 
found occupation if not profit in its management. 
Once cut loose from' her European ties, Mrs. Erwin 
experienced an incomparable repose and comfort in 
the life of San Francisco ; it was, she declared, the 
life for which she had really been adapted, after all ; 
and in the climate of Santa Barbara she found all 
that she had left in Italy. In that land of strange 
and surprising forms of every sort, her husband has 
been very happy in the realization of an America 
surpassing even his wildest dreams, and he has richly 
stored his note-book with philological curiosities. 
He hears around him the vigorous and imaginative 
locutions of the Pike language, in which, like the 
late Canon Kingsley, he finds a Scandinavian huge- 
ness ; and pending the publication of his Hand-Book 



320 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

of Americanisms, he is- in confident search of the 
miner who uses his pronouns cockney-wise. Like 
other English observers, frfendiy and unfriendly, he 
does not permit the facts to interfere with his pre- 
conceptions. 

Staniford's choice long remained a mystery to his 
acquaintances, and was but partially explained by 
Mrs. Dunham, when she came home. " Why, I 
suppose he fell in love with her," she said. "Of 
course, thrown together that way, as they were, for 
six weeks, it might have happened to anybody ; but 
James Staniford was always the most consummate 
flirt that breathed ; and he never could see a woman, 
without coming up, in that metaphysical way of his, 
and trying to interest her in him. He was always 
laughing at women, but there never was a man who 
cared more for them. From all that I could learn 
from Charles, he began by making fun of her, and 
all at once he became perfectly infatuated with her. 
I don't see why. I never could get Charles to tell 
me anything remarkable that she said or did. She 
was simply a country girl, with country ideas, and 
no sort of cultivation. Why, there was nothing to 
her. He 's done the wisest thing he could by taking 
her out to California. She never would have gone 
down, here. I suppose James Staniford knew that 
as well as any of us ; and if he finds it worth while 
to bury himself with her there, we 've no reason to 
complain. She did sing^ wonderfully ; that is, her 
voice was perfectly divine. But of course that 's 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 321 

all over, now. She did n't seem to care ranch for 
it ; and she really knew so little of life that I don't 
believe she could form the idea of an artistic career, 
or feel that it was any sacrifice to give it up. James 
Staniford was not worth any such sacrifice ; but she 
could n't know that either. She was good, I sup- 
pose. She was very stiff, and she had n't a word 
to say for herself. I think she was cold. To be 
sure, she was a beauty ; I really never saw any- 
thing like it, — that pale complexion some brunettes 
have, with her hair growing low, and such eyes and 
lashes ! " 

" Perhaps the beauty had something to do with 
his falling in love with her," suggested a listener. 
The ladies present tried to look as if this ought not 
to be sufficient. 

"Oh^ very likely," said Mrs. Dunham. She 
added, with an air of being the wreck of her former 
self, " But we all know what becomes of beauty 
after marriage." 

The mind of Lydia's friends had been expressed in 
regard to her marriage, when the Stanifords, upon 
their arrival home from Europe, paid a visit to 
South Bradfield. It was in the depths of the winter 
following their union, and the hill country, stern and 
wild even in midsummer, wore an aspect of savage 
desolation. It was sheeted in heavy snow, through 
which here and there in the pastures, a craggy 
bowlder lifted its face and frowned, and along the 
woods the stunted pines and hemlocks blackened 

21 



822 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

against a background of leafless oaks and birches. 
A northwest wind cut shrill across the white wastes, 
and from the crests of the billowed drifts drove a 
scud of stinging particles in their faces, while the 
sun, as high as that of Italy, coldly blazed from a 
cloudless blue sky. Ezra Perkins, perched on the 
seat before them, stiff and silent as if he were frozep 
there, drove them from Bradfield Junction to South 
Bradfield in the long wagon-body set on bob-sleds, 
with which he replaced his Concord coach in win- 
ter. At the station he had sparingly greeted Lydia, 
as if she were just back from Greenfield, and in the 
interest of personal independence had ignored a 
faint motion of hers to shake hands ; at her grand- 
father's gate, he set his passengers down without a 
word, and drove away, leaving Staniford to get in 
his trunk as he might. 

" Well, I declare," said Miss Maria, who had 
taken one end of the trunk in spite of him, and was 
leading the way up through the path cleanly blocked 
out of the snow, ^^that Ezra Perkins is enough to 
make you wish he 'd stayed in Dakoty I " 

Staniford laughed, as h« had laughed at every- 
thing on the way from the station, and had proba- 
bly thus wounded Ezra Perkins's susceptibilities. 
The village houses, separated so widely by the one 
long street, each with its path neatly tunneled from 
the roadway to the gate; the meeting-house, so 
much vaster than the present needs of worship, and 
looking blue-cold with its never-renewed single coat 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 323 

of white paint ; the graveyard set in the midst of 
the village, and showing, after Ezra Perkins's dis- 
appearance, as many signs of life as any other lo- 
cality, realized in the most satisfactory degree his 
theories of what winter must be in such a place as 
South Bradfield. The burning smell of the sheet- 
iron stove in the parlor, with its battlemented top 
of filigree iron work; the grimness of the horse- 
hair-covered best furniture ; the care with which 
the old-fashioned fire-places had been walled up, 
and all accessible character of the period to which 
the house belonged had been effaced, gave him an 
equal pleasure. He went about with his arm round 
Lydia's waist, examining these things, and yielding 
to the joy they caused him, when they were alone. 
*' Oh, my darling," he said, in one of these accesses 
of delight, " when I think that it 's my privilege 
to take you away from all this, I begin to feel not 
so very unworthy, after all." 

But he was very polite, as Miss Maria owned, 
when Mr. and Mrs. Goodlow came in during the 
evening, with two or three unmarried ladies of the 
village, and he kept them from falling into the 
frozen silence which habitually expresses social en- 
joyment in South Bradfield when strangers are 
present. He talked about the prospects of Italian 
advancement to an equal state of intellectual and 
moral perfection with rural New England, while 
Mr. Goodlow listened, rocking himself back and 
forth in the hair-cloth arm-chair. Deacon Latham, 



824 * THE LADY OF THE ABOOSTOOK. 

passing his hand continually along the stove bat- 
tlements, now and then let his fingers rest on the 
sheet-iron till he burnt them, and then jerked them 
suddenly away, to put them back the next moment, 
in his absorbing interest. Miss Maria, amidst a 
murmur of admiration from the ladies, passed 
sponge-cake and coffee: she confessed afterwards 
that the evening had been so brilliant to her as to 
seem almost wicked; and the other ladies, who 
owned to having lain awake all night on her coffee, 
said that if they had enjoyed themselves they were 
properly punished for it. 

When they were gone, and Lydia and Staniford 
hkd said good-night, and Miss Maria, coming in from 
the kitchen with a hand-lamp for her father, ap- 
proached the marble-topped centre-table to blow out 
the large lamp of pea-green glass with red woollen 
wick, which had shed the full radiance of a sun- 
burner upon the festival, she faltered at a manifest 
unreadiness in the old man to go to bed, though the 
fire was low, and they had both resumed the droop- 
ing carriage of people in going about cold houses. 
He looked excited, and, so far as his unpracticed 
visage could intimate the emotion, joyous. 

" Well, there, Maria ! " he said. " You can't 
say but what he 's a master-hand to converse, any 
way. I d' know as I ever see Mr. Goodlow more 
struck up with any one. He looked as if every word 
done him good ; I presume it put him in mind of 
meetings with brother ministers : I don't suppose but 



THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 325 

what he misses it some, here. You can't say but 
what he 's a fine appearin' young man. I d' know 
as I see anything wrong in his kind of dressin' up 
to the nines, as you may say. As long 's he 's 
got the money, I don't see what harm it is. It 's 
all worked for good, Lyddy's going out that way ; 
though it did seem a mysterious providence at the 
time." 

" Well ! " began Miss Maria. She paused, as if 
she had been hurried too far by her feelings, and 
ought to give them a check before proceeding. 
" Well, I don't presume you 'd notice it, but she 's 
got a spot on her silk, so 't a whole breadth 's got 
to come out, and be let in again bottom s\de up. I 
guess there 's a pair of 'em, for carelessness." She 
waited a moment before continuing: "I d' know 
as I like to see a husband puttin' his arm round his 
wife, even when he don't suppose any one 's lookin' ; 
but I d' know but what it 's natural, too. But it 's 
one comfort to see 't she ain't the least mite silly 
about him. He 's dreadful freckled.'' Miss Maria 
again paused thoughtfully, while her father burnt 
his fingers on the stove for the last time, and took 
them definitively away. " I don't say l^ut what he 
talked well enough, as far forth as talkin' goes; Mr. 
Goodlow said at the door 't he did n't know 's he 
ever passed many such evenin's since he 'd been in 
South Bradfield, and I d' know as I have. I pre- 
sume he has his faults ; we ain't any of us perfect ; 
but he doo8 seem terribly wrapped up in Lyddy. 



826 THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK. 

I don't say but what he '11 make her a good hus- 
band, if she must have one. I don't suppose but 
what people might think, as you may say, 't she 'd 
made out pretty well ; and if Lyddy 's suited, I 
d' know as anybody else has got any call to be over 
particular."