<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_SEVEN" id="CHAPTER_SEVEN"></SPAN>CHAPTER SEVEN</h2>
<h3>THE BEAUTY OF ELIZABETH</h3>
<p>His interview with Evelyn Langham left North with a sense of
moral nausea, yet he felt he had somehow failed in his
comprehension of her, that she had not meant him to understand her
as he had; that, after all, perhaps the significance he had given
to her words was of his own imagining.</p>
<p>He waited in his room until she should have time to be well on
her way home, then hurried down-stairs. He was to dine at the
Herberts' at seven o'clock, and as their place was but scant two
miles from town, he determined to walk. He crossed the Square, only
stopping to speak with the little lamplighter, and twenty minutes
later Mount Hope, in the cold breath of the storm, had dwindled to
a huddle of faint ghostly lights on the hillside and in the
valley.</p>
<p>The Herbert home, a showy country-place in a region of farms,
merited a name; but no one except Mrs. Herbert, who in the first
flush of possession determined so to dignify it, had ever made use
of the name she had chosen after much deliberation. General Herbert
himself called it simply the farm, while to the neighbors and the
dwellers in Mount Hope it was known as the general's place, which
perhaps sufficiently distinguished it; for its owner was still
always spoken of as the general, though since the war he had been
governor of his state.</p>
<p>Rather less than half a century before, Daniel Herbert, then a
country urchin tending cattle on the hillside where now stood his
turreted stone mansion, had decided that some day when he should be
rich he would return and buy that hillside and the great reach of
flat river-bottom that lay adjacent to it, and there build his
home. His worldly goods at the time of this decision consisted of a
pair of jeans trousers, a hickory shirt, and a battered straw hat.
For years he had forgotten his boyish ambition. He had made his way
in the world; he had won success in his profession, the law; he had
won even greater distinction as a soldier in the Civil War; he had
been a national figure in politics, and he had been governor of his
state. And then had come the country-bred man's hunger for the
soil. He had remembered that hillside where as a boy he had tended
his father's herds.</p>
<p>He was not a rich man, but he had married a rich woman, and it
was her money that bought the many acres and built the
many-turreted mansion. Wishing, perhaps, to mark the impermanency
of the life there and to give it a purely holiday aspect, Mrs.
Herbert had christened the place Idle Hour; but the governor,
beyond occasional participation in local politics, never again
resumed those activities by which he had so distinguished himself.
He wore top-boots and rode about the farm on an old gray horse,
while his intimates were the neighboring farmers, with whom he
talked crops and politics by the hour.</p>
<p>In pained surprise Mrs. Herbert, a woman of great ambition, had
endured five years of this kind of life; with unspeakable
bitterness of spirit she had seen the once potent name of Daniel
Herbert disappear from the newspapers, and then she had died.</p>
<p>On her death the general became a rich and, in a way, a free
man, for now he could, without the silent protest of his wife,
recover the neglected lore of wood and field, and practise
forgotten arts that had in his boyhood come under the elastic head
of chores. Elizabeth, his daughter, had never shared her mother's
ambitions. Perhaps because she had always had it she cared nothing
for society. She was well content to ride about the farm with her
father, whom she greatly admired, and at whose eccentricities she
only smiled.</p>
<p>In this agreeable comradeship with his daughter, General Herbert
had lived through the period of his bereavement with very tolerable
comfort. He had rendered the dead the dead's due of regretful
tenderness; but Elizabeth never asked him when he was going to make
his reëntry into politics; and she never reproached him with
having wasted the very best years of his life in trying to make
four hundred acres of scientifically farmed land show a profit, a
feat he had not yet accomplished.</p>
<p>Quitting the highway, North turned in at two stone pillars that
marked the entrance to Idle Hour and walked rapidly up the
maple-lined driveway to the great arched vestibule that gave to the
house the appearance of a Norman-French château.</p>
<p>Answering the summons of the bell, a maid ushered him into the
long drawing-room, and into the presence of the general and his
daughter. The former received North with a perceptible shade of
reserve. He knew more about the young man than he would have cared
to tell his daughter, since he believed it would be better for her
to make her own discoveries where North was concerned. He had not
opposed his frequent visits to Idle Hour, for he felt that if
Elizabeth was interested in the young fellow opposition would only
strengthen it. Glancing at North as he greeted Elizabeth, the
general admitted that whatever he might be, he was presentable,
indeed good-looking, handsome. Why hadn't he done something other
than make a mess of his life! He wondered, too, wishing to be quite
fair, if North had not been the subject of a good deal of unmerited
censure, if, after all, his idleness had not been the worst thing
about him. He hoped this might be true. Still he regretted that
Elizabeth should have allowed their boy and girl
friendship—they had known each other always—to grow
into a closer intimacy.</p>
<p>In the minds of these two men there was absolute accord on one
point. Either would have said that Elizabeth Herbert's beauty was a
supreme endowment, and more nearly perfect than the beauty of any
other woman. She was slender, not tall, but poised and graceful
with a distinction of bearing that added to her inches. Her hair
was burnished copper and her coloring the tint of warm ivory with
the sunlight showing through. North gazed at her as though he would
store in his memory the vision of her loveliness. Then they walked
out to the dining-room.</p>
<p>The dinner was rather a somber feast. North felt the restraint
of the general's presence; he sensed his disfavor; and with added
bitterness he realized that this was his last night in Mount Hope,
that the morrow would find him speeding on his way West. He had
given up everything for nothing, and now that a purpose, a hope, a
great love had come to him, he must go from this place, the town of
his birth, where he had become a bankrupt in both purse and
reputation.</p>
<p>It was a relief when they returned to the drawing-room. There
the general excused himself, and North and Elizabeth were left
alone. She seated herself before the open fire of blazing hickory
logs, whose light, and that of the shaded lamps, filled the long
room with a soft radiance. She had never seemed so desirable to
North as now when he was about to leave her. He stood silent,
leaning against the corner of the chimneypiece, looking down on all
her springlike radiance. Usually he was neither preoccupied nor
silent, but to-night he was both. The thought that he was seeing
her for the last time—Ah, this was the price of all his
folly! At length he spoke.</p>
<p>"I came to-night to say good-by, Elizabeth!"</p>
<p>She glanced up, startled.</p>
<p>"To say good-by?" she repeated.</p>
<p>He nodded gloomily.</p>
<p>"Do you mean that you are going to leave Mount Hope?" she asked
slowly.</p>
<p>"Yes, to-night maybe."</p>
<p>Her glance no longer met his, but he was conscious that she had
lost something of her serenity.</p>
<p>"Are you sorry, Elizabeth?" he ventured.</p>
<p>To pass mutely out of her life had suddenly seemed an
impossibility, and his tenderness and yearning trembled in his
voice. She answered obliquely, by asking:</p>
<p>"Must you go?"</p>
<p>"I want to get away from Mount Hope. I want to leave it
all,—all but you, dear!" he said. "You haven't answered me,
Elizabeth; will you care?"</p>
<p>"I am sorry," she said slowly, and the light in her gray-blue
eyes darkened.</p>
<p>She heard the sigh that wasted itself on his lips.</p>
<p>"I am glad you can say that,—I wish you would look up!" he
said wistfully.</p>
<p>"Are you going to-night?" she questioned.</p>
<p>"Yes, but I am coming back. I shan't find that you have
forgotten me when I come, shall I, Elizabeth?"</p>
<p>She looked up quickly into his troubled face, and it was not the
warm firelight that brought the rich color in a sudden flame to her
cheeks.</p>
<p>"I shall not forget you."</p>
<p>There was a determined gentleness in her speech and manner that
gave him courage.</p>
<p>"I haven't any right to talk to you in this way; I know I
haven't, but—Oh, I want you, Elizabeth!" And all at once he
was on his knees beside her, his arms about her. "Don't forget me,
dear! I love you, I Love you—I want you—Oh, I want you
for my wife!"</p>
<p>The girl looked into the passionate face upturned to hers, and
then her head drooped. And so they remained long; his dark head
resting in her arms; her fair face against it.</p>
<p>"Why do you go, John?" she asked at length, out of the rich
content of their silence.</p>
<p>"I haven't any choice, dear heart; there isn't any place for me
here. I have thought it all over, and I know I am doing the wise
thing,—I am quite sure of this! I shall write you of
everything that concerns me!" he added hastily, as he heard the
tread of the general's slippered feet in the hall.</p>
<p>North released her hands as the general entered the room.
Elizabeth sank back in her chair. Her father glanced sharply at
them, and North turned toward him frankly.</p>
<p>"I am leaving on the midnight train, General, and I must say
good-by; I have to get a few things together for my trip!"</p>
<p>General Herbert glanced again at Elizabeth, but her face was
averted and he learned nothing from its expression.</p>
<p>"So you are going away! Well, North, I hope you will have a
pleasant trip,—better let me send you into town?"</p>
<p>And he reached for the bell-rope. North shook his head.</p>
<p>"I'll walk, thank you," he said briefly.</p>
<p>In silence he turned to Elizabeth and held out his hand. For an
instant she rested hers in it, a cold little hand that trembled;
their eyes met in a brief glance of perfect understanding, and then
North turned from her. The general followed him into the hall.</p>
<p>"It's stopped snowing, and you will have clear starlight for
your walk home,—the wind's gone down, too!" he said, as he
opened the hall door.</p>
<p>"Don't come any farther, General Herbert!" said North.</p>
<p>But the general followed him into the stone arched
vestibule.</p>
<p>"It's a fine night for your walk,—but you're quite sure
you don't want to be driven into town?"</p>
<p>"No, no,—good night." And North held out his hand.</p>
<p>"Good night."</p>
<p>North went down the carriageway, and Herbert reëntered the
house.</p>
<p>North kept to the beaten path for a little while, then left it
and tramped out across the fields until he came to a strip of
woodland that grew along a stony hillside. He followed this ridge
back a short distance and presently emerged upon a sloping meadow
that overhung a narrow ravine. Not two hundred yards distant loomed
Idle Hour, somber and dark and massive. He found a stump on the
edge of the woods and brushed the snow from it, then drawing his
overcoat closely about him, he sat down and lit his pipe.</p>
<p>The windows of Idle Hour still showed their many lights. At his
feet a thread-like stream, swollen by the recent rains, splashed
and murmured ceaselessly. He sat there a long time silent and
absorbed, watching the lights, until at last they vanished from the
drawing-room and the library. Then other lights appeared behind
curtained windows on the second floor. These in their turn were
extinguished, and Idle Hour sank deeper into the shadows as the
crescent moon slipped behind the horizon.</p>
<p>"God bless her!" North said aloud.</p>
<p>He knocked the ashes from his pipe, and retraced his steps to
the drive. He had but turned from this into the public road when he
heard the clatter of wheels and the beat of hoofs, and a rapidly
driven team swung around a bend in the road in front of him. He
stepped aside to let it pass, but the driver pulled up abreast of
him with a loud command to his horses.</p>
<p>"Heard the news?" he asked, leaning out over the dash-board of
his buggy.</p>
<p>"What news?" asked North.</p>
<p>"Oh, I guess you haven't heard!" said the stranger. "Well, old
man McBride, the hardware merchant, is dead! Murdered!"</p>
<p>"Murdered!" cried North.</p>
<p>"Yes, sir,—murdered! They found him in his store this
evening a little after six. No one knows who did it. Well, good
night, I thought maybe you'd like to know. Awful, ain't it?"</p>
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