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    A Lost Lady

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    to her room just before dinner. It improved some women, but not

      her,--at least, not tonight, when her eyes were hollow with

      fatigue, and she looked pinched and worn as he had never seen her.

      He sighed as he thought how much work it meant to cook a dinner

      like this for eight people,--and a beefsteak with potatoes would

      have pleased them better! They didn't really like this kind of

      food at all. Why did she do it? How would she feel about it

      tonight, when she sank dead weary into bed, after these stupid boys

      had said good-night, and their yellow shoes had carried them down

      the hill?

      She was not eating anything, she was using up all her vitality to

      electrify these heavy lads into speech. Niel felt that he must

      help her, or at least try to. He addressed them one after another

      with energy and determination; he tried baseball, politics,

      scandal, the corn crop. They answered him with monosyllables or

      exclamations. He soon realized that they didn't want his polite

      remarks; they wanted more duck, and to be let alone with it.

      Dinner was soon over, at any rate. The hostess' attempts to

      prolong it were unavailing. The salad and frozen pudding were

      dispatched as promptly as the roast had been. The guests went into

      the parlour and lit cigars.

      Mrs. Forrester had the old-fashioned notion that men should be

      alone after dinner. She did not join them for half an hour.

      Perhaps she had lain down upstairs, for she looked a little rested.

      The boys were talking now, discussing a camping trip Ed Elliott was

      going to take in the mountains. They were giving him advice about

      camp outfits, trout flies, mixtures to keep off mosquitoes.

      "I'll tell you, boys," said Mrs. Forrester, when she had listened

      to them for a moment, "when I go back to California, I intend to

      have a summer cabin up in the Sierras, and I invite you, one and

      all, to visit me. You'll have to work for your keep, you

      understand; cut the firewood and bring the water and wash the pots

      and pans, and go out and catch fish for breakfast. Ivy can bring

      his gun and shoot game for us, and I'll bake bread in an iron pot,

      the old trappers' way, if I haven't forgotten how. Will you come?"

      "You bet we will! You know those mountains by heart, I expect?"

      said Ed Elliott.

      She smiled and shook her head. "It would take a life-time to do

      that, Ed, more than a life-time. The Sierras,--there's no end to

      them, and they're magnificent."

      Niel turned to her. "Have you ever told the boys how it was you

      first met Captain Forrester in the mountains out there? If they

      haven't heard the story, I think they would like it."

      "Really, would you? Well, once upon a time, when I was a very

      young girl, I was spending the summer at a camp in the mountains,

      with friends of my father's."

      She began there, but that was not the beginning of the story; long

      ago Niel had heard from his uncle that the beginning was a scandal

      and a murder. When Marian Ormsby was nineteen, she was engaged to

      Ned Montgomery, a gaudy young millionaire of the Gold Coast. A few

      weeks before the date set for their marriage, Montgomery was shot

      and killed in the lobby of a San Francisco hotel by the husband of

      another woman. The subsequent trial involved a great deal of

      publicity, and Marian was hurried away from curious eyes and sent

      up into the mountains until the affair should blow over.

      Tonight Mrs. Forrester began with "Once upon a time." Sitting at

      one end of the big sofa, her slippers on a foot-stool and her head

      in shadow, she stirred the air before her face with the sandalwood

      fan as she talked, the rings glittering on her white fingers. She

      told them how Captain Forrester, then a widower, had come up to the

      camp to visit her father's partner. She had noticed him very

      little,--she was off every day with the young men. One afternoon

      she had persuaded young Fred Harney, an intrepid mountain climber,

      to take her down the face of Eagle Cliff. They were almost down,

      and were creeping over a projecting ledge, when the rope broke, and

      they dropped to the bottom. Harney fell on the rocks and was

      killed instantly. The girl was caught in a pine tree, which

      arrested her fall. Both her legs were broken, and she lay in the

      canyon all night in the bitter cold, swept by the icy canyon

      draught. Nobody at the camp knew where to look for the two missing

      members of the party,--they had stolen off alone for their

      foolhardy adventure. Nobody worried, because Harney knew all the

      trails and could not get lost. In the morning, however, when they

      were still missing, search parties went out. It was Captain

      Forrester's party that found Marian, and got her out by the lower

      trail. The trail was so steep and narrow, the turns round the

      jutting ledges so sharp, that it was impossible to take her out on

      a litter. The men took turns carrying her, hugging the canyon

      walls with their shoulders as they crept along. With her broken

      legs hanging, she suffered terribly,--fainted again and again. But

      she noticed that she suffered less when Captain Forrester carried

      her, and that he took all the most dangerous places on the trail

      himself. "I could feel his heart pump and his muscles strain," she

      said, "when he balanced himself and me on the rocks. I knew that

      if we fell, we'd go together; he would never drop me."

      They got back to camp, and everything possible was done for her,

      but by the time a surgeon could be got up from San Francisco, her

      fractures had begun to knit and had to be broken over again.

      "It was Captain Forrester I wanted to hold my hand when the surgeon

      had to do things to me. You remember, Niel, he always boasted that

      I never screamed when they were carrying me up the trail. He

      stayed at the camp until I could begin to walk, holding to his arm.

      When he asked me to marry him, he didn't have to ask twice. Do you

      wonder?" She looked with a smile about the circle, and drew her

      finger-tips absently across her forehead as if to brush away

      something,--the past, or the present, who could tell?

      The boys were genuinely moved. While she was answering their

      questions, Niel thought about the first time he ever heard her tell

      that story: Mr. Dalzell had stopped off with a party of friends

      from Chicago; Marshall Field and the president of the Union Pacific

      were among them, he remembered, and they were going through in Mr.

      Dalzell's private car to hunt in the Black Hills. She had, after

      all, not changed so much since then. Niel felt tonight that the

      right man could save her, even now. She was still her indomitable

      self, going through her old part,--but only the stage-hands were

      left to listen to her. All those who had shared in fine

      undertakings and bright occasions were gone.

      NINE

      With the summer months Judge Pommeroy's health improved, and as

      soon as he was able to be back in his office, Niel began to plan to

      return to Boston. He would get there the first of August and would

    &n
    bsp; go to work with a tutor to make up for the months he had lost. It

      was a melancholy time for him. He was in a fever of impatience to

      be gone, and yet he felt that he was going away forever, and was

      making the final break with everything that had been dear to him in

      his boyhood. The people, the very country itself, were changing so

      fast that there would be nothing to come back to.

      He had seen the end of an era, the sunset of the pioneer. He had

      come upon it when already its glory was nearly spent. So in the

      buffalo times a traveller used to come upon the embers of a

      hunter's fire on the prairie, after the hunter was up and gone; the

      coals would be trampled out, but the ground was warm, and the

      flattened grass where he had slept and where his pony had grazed,

      told the story.

      This was the very end of the road-making West; the men who had put

      plains and mountains under the iron harness were old; some were

      poor, and even the successful ones were hunting for rest and a

      brief reprieve from death. It was already gone, that age; nothing

      could ever bring it back. The taste and smell and song of it, the

      visions those men had seen in the air and followed,--these he had

      caught in a kind of afterglow in their own faces,--and this would

      always be his.

      It was what he most held against Mrs. Forrester; that she was not

      willing to immolate herself, like the widow of all these great men,

      and die with the pioneer period to which she belonged; that she

      preferred life on any terms. In the end, Niel went away without

      bidding her good-bye. He went away with weary contempt for her in

      his heart.

      It happened like this,--had scarcely the dignity of an episode. It

      was nothing, and yet it was everything. Going over to see her one

      summer evening, he stopped a moment by the dining-room window to

      look at the honeysuckle. The dining-room door was open into the

      kitchen, and there Mrs. Forrester stood at a table, making pastry.

      Ivy Peters came in at the kitchen door, walked up behind her, and

      unconcernedly put both arms around her, his hands meeting over her

      breast. She did not move, did not look up, but went on rolling out

      pastry.

      Niel went down the hill. "For the last time," he said, as he

      crossed the bridge in the evening light, "for the last time." And

      it was even so; he never went up the poplar-bordered road again.

      He had given her a year of his life, and she had thrown it away.

      He had helped the Captain to die peacefully, he believed; and now

      it was the Captain who seemed the reality. All those years he had

      thought it was Mrs. Forrester who made that house so different from

      any other. But ever since the Captain's death it was a house where

      old friends, like his uncle, were betrayed and cast off, where

      common fellows behaved after their kind and knew a common woman

      when they saw her.

      If he had not had the nature of a spaniel, he told himself, he

      would never have gone back after the first time. It took two doses

      to cure him. Well, he had had them! Nothing she could ever do

      would in the least matter to him again.

      He had news of her now and then, as long as his uncle lived. "Mrs.

      Forrester's name is everywhere coupled with Ivy Peters'," the Judge

      wrote. "She does not look happy, and I fear her health is failing,

      but she has put herself in such a position that her husband's

      friends cannot help her."

      And again: "Of Mrs. Forrester, no news is good news. She is sadly

      broken."

      After his uncle's death, Niel heard that Ivy Peters had at last

      bought the Forrester place, and had brought a wife from Wyoming to

      live there. Mrs. Forrester had gone West,--people supposed to

      California.

      It was years before Niel could think of her without chagrin. But

      eventually, after she had drifted out of his ken, when he did not

      know if Daniel Forrester's widow were living or dead, Daniel

      Forrester's wife returned to him, a bright, impersonal memory.

      He came to be very glad that he had known her, and that she had had

      a hand in breaking him in to life. He has known pretty women and

      clever ones since then,--but never one like her, as she was in her

      best days. Her eyes, when they laughed for a moment into one's

      own, seemed to promise a wild delight that he has not found in

      life. "I know where it is," they seemed to say, "I could show

      you!" He would like to call up the shade of the young Mrs.

      Forrester, as the witch of Endor called up Samuel's, and challenge

      it, demand the secret of that ardour; ask her whether she had

      really found some ever-blooming, ever-burning, ever-piercing joy,

      or whether it was all fine play-acting. Probably she had found no

      more than another; but she had always the power of suggesting

      things much lovelier than herself, as the perfume of a single

      flower may call up the whole sweetness of spring.

      Niel was destined to hear once again of his long-lost lady. One

      evening as he was going into the dining-room of a Chicago hotel, a

      broad-shouldered man with an open, sunbrowned face, approached him

      and introduced himself as one of the boys who had grown up in Sweet

      Water.

      "I'm Ed Elliott, and I thought it must be you. Could we take a

      table together? I promised an old friend of yours to give you a

      message, if I ever ran across you. You remember Mrs. Forrester?

      Well, I saw her again, twelve years after she left Sweet Water,--

      down in Buenos Ayres." They sat down and ordered dinner.

      "Yes, I was in South America on business. I'm a mining engineer,

      I spent some time in Buenos Ayres. One evening there was a banquet

      of some sort at one of the big hotels, and I happened to step out

      of the bar, just as a car drove up to the entrance where the guests

      were going in. I paid no attention until one of the ladies

      laughed. I recognized her by her laugh,--that hadn't changed a

      particle. She was all done up in furs, with a scarf over her head,

      but I saw her eyes, and then I was sure. I stepped up and spoke to

      her. She seemed glad to see me, made me go into the hotel, and

      talked to me until her husband came to drag her away to the dinner.

      Oh, yes, she was married again,--to a rich, cranky old Englishman;

      Henry Collins was his name. He was born down there, she told me,

      but she met him in California. She told me they lived on a big

      stock ranch and had come down in their car for this banquet. I

      made inquiries afterward and found the old fellow was quite a

      character; had been married twice before, once to a Brazilian

      woman. People said he was rich, but quarrelsome and rather stingy.

      She seemed to have everything, though. They travelled in a fine

      French car, and she had brought her maid along, and he had his

      valet. No, she hadn't changed as much as you'd think. She was a

      good deal made up, of course, like most of the women down there;

      plenty of powder, and a little red, too, I guess. Her hair was

      black, blacker than I remembered it; looked as if she dyed it. She


      invited me to visit them on their estate, and so did the old man,

      when he came to get her. She asked about everybody, and said, 'If

      you ever meet Niel Herbert, give him my love, and tell him I often

      think of him.' She said again, 'Tell him things have turned out

      well for me. Mr. Collins is the kindest of husbands.' I called at

      your office in New York on my way back from South America, but you

      were somewhere in Europe. It was remarkable, how she'd come up

      again. She seemed pretty well gone to pieces before she left Sweet

      Water."

      "Do you suppose," said Niel, "that she could be living still? I'd

      almost make the trip to see her."

      "No, she died about three years ago. I know that for certain.

      After she left Sweet Water, wherever she was, she always sent a

      cheque to the Grand Army Post every year to have flowers put on

      Captain Forrester's grave for Decoration Day. Three years ago the

      Post got a letter from the old Englishman, with a draft for the

      future care of Captain Forrester's grave, 'in memory of my late

      wife, Marian Forrester Collins.'"

      "So we may feel sure that she was well cared for, to the very end,"

      said Niel. "Thank God for that!"

      "I knew you'd feel that way," said Ed Elliott, as a warm wave of

      feeling passed over his face. "I did!"

      End of this Project Gutenberg of Australia eBook

      A Lost Lady by Willa Cather

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