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<h2> CHAPTER XXV. THE LOVE STORY OF THE AWKWARD MAN </h2>
<h3> (Written by the Story Girl) </h3>
<p>Jasper Dale lived alone in the old homestead which he had named Golden
Milestone. In Carlisle this giving one's farm a name was looked upon as a
piece of affectation; but if a place must be named why not give it a
sensible name with some meaning to it? Why Golden Milestone, when Pinewood
or Hillslope or, if you wanted to be very fanciful, Ivy Lodge, might be
had for the taking?</p>
<p>He had lived alone at Golden Milestone since his mother's death; he had
been twenty then and he was close upon forty now, though he did not look
it. But neither could it be said that he looked young; he had never at any
time looked young with common youth; there had always been something in
his appearance that stamped him as different from the ordinary run of men,
and, apart from his shyness, built up an intangible, invisible barrier
between him and his kind. He had lived all his life in Carlisle; and all
the Carlisle people knew of or about him—although they thought they
knew everything—was that he was painfully, abnormally shy. He never
went anywhere except to church; he never took part in Carlisle's simple
social life; even with most men he was distant and reserved; as for women,
he never spoke to or looked at them; if one spoke to him, even if she were
a matronly old mother in Israel, he was at once in an agony of painful
blushes. He had no friends in the sense of companions; to all outward
appearance his life was solitary and devoid of any human interest.</p>
<p>He had no housekeeper; but his old house, furnished as it had been in his
mother's lifetime, was cleanly and daintily kept. The quaint rooms were as
free from dust and disorder as a woman could have had them. This was
known, because Jasper Dale occasionally had his hired man's wife, Mrs.
Griggs, in to scrub for him. On the morning she was expected he betook
himself to woods and fields, returning only at night-fall. During his
absence Mrs. Griggs was frankly wont to explore the house from cellar to
attic, and her report of its condition was always the same—"neat as
wax." To be sure, there was one room that was always locked against her,
the west gable, looking out on the garden and the hill of pines beyond.
But Mrs. Griggs knew that in the lifetime of Jasper Dale's mother it had
been unfurnished. She supposed it still remained so, and felt no especial
curiosity concerning it, though she always tried the door.</p>
<p>Jasper Dale had a good farm, well cultivated; he had a large garden where
he worked most of his spare time in summer; it was supposed that he read a
great deal, since the postmistress declared that he was always getting
books and magazines by mail. He seemed well contented with his existence
and people let him alone, since that was the greatest kindness they could
do him. It was unsupposable that he would ever marry; nobody ever had
supposed it.</p>
<p>"Jasper Dale never so much as THOUGHT about a woman," Carlisle oracles
declared. Oracles, however, are not always to be trusted.</p>
<p>One day Mrs. Griggs went away from the Dale place with a very curious
story, which she diligently spread far and wide. It made a good deal of
talk, but people, although they listened eagerly, and wondered and
questioned, were rather incredulous about it. They thought Mrs. Griggs
must be drawing considerably upon her imagination; there were not lacking
those who declared that she had invented the whole account, since her
reputation for strict veracity was not wholly unquestioned.</p>
<p>Mrs. Griggs's story was as follows:—</p>
<p>One day she found the door of the west gable unlocked. She went in,
expecting to see bare walls and a collection of odds and ends. Instead she
found herself in a finely furnished room. Delicate lace curtains hung
before the small, square, broad-silled windows. The walls were adorned
with pictures in much finer taste than Mrs. Griggs could appreciate. There
was a bookcase between the windows filled with choicely bound books.
Beside it stood a little table with a very dainty work-basket on it. By
the basket Mrs. Griggs saw a pair of tiny scissors and a silver thimble. A
wicker rocker, comfortable with silk cushions, was near it. Above the
bookcase a woman's picture hung—a water-colour, if Mrs. Griggs had
but known it—representing a pale, very sweet face, with large, dark
eyes and a wistful expression under loose masses of black, lustrous hair.
Just beneath the picture, on the top shelf of the bookcase, was a vaseful
of flowers. Another vaseful stood on the table beside the basket.</p>
<p>All this was astonishing enough. But what puzzled Mrs. Griggs completely
was the fact that a woman's dress was hanging over a chair before the
mirror—a pale blue, silken affair. And on the floor beside it were
two little blue satin slippers!</p>
<p>Good Mrs. Griggs did not leave the room until she had thoroughly explored
it, even to shaking out the blue dress and discovering it to be a tea-gown—wrapper,
she called it. But she found nothing to throw any light on the mystery.
The fact that the simple name "Alice" was written on the fly-leaves of all
the books only deepened it, for it was a name unknown in the Dale family.
In this puzzled state she was obliged to depart, nor did she ever find the
door unlocked again; and, discovering that people thought she was
romancing when she talked about the mysterious west gable at Golden
Milestone, she indignantly held her peace concerning the whole affair.</p>
<p>But Mrs. Griggs had told no more than the simple truth. Jasper Dale, under
all his shyness and aloofness, possessed a nature full of delicate romance
and poesy, which, denied expression in the common ways of life, bloomed
out in the realm of fancy and imagination. Left alone, just when the boy's
nature was deepening into the man's, he turned to this ideal kingdom for
all he believed the real world could never give him. Love—a strange,
almost mystical love—played its part here for him. He shadowed forth
to himself the vision of a woman, loving and beloved; he cherished it
until it became almost as real to him as his own personality and he gave
this dream woman the name he liked best—Alice. In fancy he walked
and talked with her, spoke words of love to her, and heard words of love
in return. When he came from work at the close of day she met him at his
threshold in the twilight—a strange, fair, starry shape, as elusive
and spiritual as a blossom reflected in a pool by moonlight—with
welcome on her lips and in her eyes.</p>
<p>One day, when he was in Charlottetown on business, he had been struck by a
picture in the window of a store. It was strangely like the woman of his
dream love. He went in, awkward and embarrassed, and bought it. When he
took it home he did not know where to put it. It was out of place among
the dim old engravings of bewigged portraits and conventional landscapes
on the walls of Golden Milestone. As he pondered the matter in his garden
that evening he had an inspiration. The sunset, flaming on the windows of
the west gable, kindled them into burning rose. Amid the splendour he
fancied Alice's fair face peeping archly down at him from the room. The
inspiration came then. It should be her room; he would fit it up for her;
and her picture should hang there.</p>
<p>He was all summer carrying out his plan. Nobody must know or suspect, so
he must go slowly and secretly. One by one the furnishings were purchased
and brought home under cover of darkness. He arranged them with his own
hands. He bought the books he thought she would like best and wrote her
name in them; he got the little feminine knick-knacks of basket and
thimble. Finally he saw in a store a pale blue tea-gown and the satin
slippers. He had always fancied her as dressed in blue. He bought them and
took them home to her room. Thereafter it was sacred to her; he always
knocked on its door before he entered; he kept it sweet with fresh
flowers; he sat there in the purple summer evenings and talked aloud to
her or read his favourite books to her. In his fancy she sat opposite to
him in her rocker, clad in the trailing blue gown, with her head leaning
on one slender hand, as white as a twilight star.</p>
<p>But Carlisle people knew nothing of this—would have thought him
tinged with mild lunacy if they had known. To them, he was just the shy,
simple farmer he appeared. They never knew or guessed at the real Jasper
Dale.</p>
<p>One spring Alice Reade came to teach music in Carlisle. Her pupils
worshipped her, but the grown people thought she was rather too distant
and reserved. They had been used to merry, jolly girls who joined eagerly
in the social life of the place. Alice Reade held herself aloof from it—not
disdainfully, but as one to whom these things were of small importance.
She was very fond of books and solitary rambles; she was not at all shy
but she was as sensitive as a flower; and after a time Carlisle people
were content to let her live her own life and no longer resented her
unlikeness to themselves.</p>
<p>She boarded with the Armstrongs, who lived beyond Golden Milestone around
the hill of pines. Until the snow disappeared she went out to the main
road by the long Armstrong lane; but when spring came she was wont to take
a shorter way, down the pine hill, across the brook, past Jasper Dale's
garden, and out through his lane. And one day, as she went by, Jasper Dale
was working in his garden.</p>
<p>He was on his knees in a corner, setting out a bunch of roots—an
unsightly little tangle of rainbow possibilities. It was a still spring
morning; the world was green with young leaves; a little wind blew down
from the pines and lost itself willingly among the budding delights of the
garden. The grass opened eyes of blue violets. The sky was high and
cloudless, turquoise-blue, shading off into milkiness on the far horizons.
Birds were singing along the brook valley. Rollicking robins were
whistling joyously in the pines. Jasper Dale's heart was filled to
over-flowing with a realization of all the virgin loveliness around him;
the feeling in his soul had the sacredness of a prayer. At this moment he
looked up and saw Alice Reade.</p>
<p>She was standing outside the garden fence, in the shadow of a great pine
tree, looking not at him, for she was unaware of his presence, but at the
virginal bloom of the plum trees in a far corner, with all her delight in
it outblossoming freely in her face. For a moment Jasper Dale believed
that his dream love had taken visible form before him. She was like—so
like; not in feature, perhaps, but in grace and colouring—the grace
of a slender, lissome form and the colouring of cloudy hair and wistful,
dark gray eyes, and curving red mouth; and more than all, she was like her
in expression—in the subtle revelation of personality exhaling from
her like perfume from a flower. It was as if his own had come to him at
last and his whole soul suddenly leaped out to meet and welcome her.</p>
<p>Then her eyes fell upon him and the spell was broken. Jasper remained
kneeling mutely there, shy man once more, crimson with blushes, a strange,
almost pitiful creature in his abject confusion. A little smile flickered
about the delicate corners of her mouth, but she turned and walked swiftly
away down the lane.</p>
<p>Jasper looked after her with a new, painful sense of loss and loveliness.
It had been agony to feel her conscious eyes upon him, but he realized now
that there had been a strange sweetness in it, too. It was still greater
pain to watch her going from him.</p>
<p>He thought she must be the new music teacher but he did not even know her
name. She had been dressed in blue, too—a pale, dainty blue; but
that was of course; he had known she must wear it; and he was sure her
name must be Alice. When, later on, he discovered that it was, he felt no
surprise.</p>
<p>He carried some mayflowers up to the west gable and put them under the
picture. But the charm had gone out of the tribute; and looking at the
picture, he thought how scant was the justice it did her. Her face was so
much sweeter, her eyes so much softer, her hair so much more lustrous. The
soul of his love had gone from the room and from the picture and from his
dreams. When he tried to think of the Alice he loved he saw, not the
shadowy spirit occupant of the west gable, but the young girl who had
stood under the pine, beautiful with the beauty of moonlight, of starshine
on still water, of white, wind-swayed flowers growing in silent, shadowy
places. He did not then realize what this meant: had he realized it he
would have suffered bitterly; as it was he felt only a vague discomfort—a
curious sense of loss and gain commingled.</p>
<p>He saw her again that afternoon on her way home. She did not pause by the
garden but walked swiftly past. Thereafter, every day for a week he
watched unseen to see her pass his home. Once a little child was with her,
clinging to her hand. No child had ever before had any part in the shy
man's dream life. But that night in the twilight the vision of the
rocking-chair was a girl in a blue print dress, with a little,
golden-haired shape at her knee—a shape that lisped and prattled and
called her "mother;" and both of them were his.</p>
<p>It was the next day that he failed for the first time to put flowers in
the west gable. Instead, he cut a loose handful of daffodils and, looking
furtively about him as if committing a crime, he laid them across the
footpath under the pine. She must pass that way; her feet would crush them
if she failed to see them. Then he slipped back into his garden, half
exultant, half repentant. From a safe retreat he saw her pass by and stoop
to lift his flowers. Thereafter he put some in the same place every day.</p>
<p>When Alice Reade saw the flowers she knew at once who had put them there,
and divined that they were for her. She lifted them tenderly in much
surprise and pleasure. She had heard all about Jasper Dale and his
shyness; but before she had heard about him she had seen him in church and
liked him. She thought his face and his dark blue eyes beautiful; she even
liked the long brown hair that Carlisle people laughed at. That he was
quite different from other people she had understood at once, but she
thought the difference in his favour. Perhaps her sensitive nature divined
and responded to the beauty in his. At least, in her eyes Jasper Dale was
never a ridiculous figure.</p>
<p>When she heard the story of the west gable, which most people disbelieved,
she believed it, although she did not understand it. It invested the shy
man with interest and romance. She felt that she would have liked, out of
no impertinent curiosity, to solve the mystery; she believed that it
contained the key to his character.</p>
<p>Thereafter, every day she found flowers under the pine tree; she wished to
see Jasper to thank him, unaware that he watched her daily from the screen
of shrubbery in his garden; but it was some time before she found the
opportunity. One evening she passed when he, not expecting her, was
leaning against his garden fence with a book in his hand. She stopped
under the pine.</p>
<p>"Mr. Dale," she said softly, "I want to thank you for your flowers."</p>
<p>Jasper, startled, wished that he might sink into the ground. His anguish
of embarrassment made her smile a little. He could not speak, so she went
on gently.</p>
<p>"It has been so good of you. They have given me so much pleasure—I
wish you could know how much."</p>
<p>"It was nothing—nothing," stammered Jasper. His book had fallen on
the ground at her feet, and she picked it up and held it out to him.</p>
<p>"So you like Ruskin," she said. "I do, too. But I haven't read this."</p>
<p>"If you—would care—to read it—you may have it," Jasper
contrived to say.</p>
<p>She carried the book away with her. He did not again hide when she passed,
and when she brought the book back they talked a little about it over the
fence. He lent her others, and got some from her in return; they fell into
the habit of discussing them. Jasper did not find it hard to talk to her
now; it seemed as if he were talking to his dream Alice, and it came
strangely natural to him. He did not talk volubly, but Alice thought what
he did say was worth while. His words lingered in her memory and made
music. She always found his flowers under the pine, and she always wore
some of them, but she did not know if he noticed this or not.</p>
<p>One evening Jasper walked shyly with her from his gate up the pine hill.
After that he always walked that far with her. She would have missed him
much if he had failed to do so; yet it did not occur to her that she was
learning to love him. She would have laughed with girlish scorn at the
idea. She liked him very much; she thought his nature beautiful in its
simplicity and purity; in spite of his shyness she felt more delightfully
at home in his society than in that of any other person she had ever met.
He was one of those rare souls whose friendship is at once a pleasure and
a benediction, showering light from their own crystal clearness into all
the dark corners in the souls of others, until, for the time being at
least, they reflected his own nobility. But she never thought of love.
Like other girls she had her dreams of a possible Prince Charming, young
and handsome and debonair. It never occurred to her that he might be found
in the shy, dreamy recluse of Golden Milestone.</p>
<p>In August came a day of gold and blue. Alice Reade, coming through the
trees, with the wind blowing her little dark love-locks tricksily about
under her wide blue hat, found a fragrant heap of mignonette under the
pine. She lifted it and buried her face in it, drinking in the wholesome,
modest perfume.</p>
<p>She had hoped Jasper would be in his garden, since she wished to ask him
for a book she greatly desired to read. But she saw him sitting on the
rustic seat at the further side. His back was towards her, and he was
partially screened by a copse of lilacs.</p>
<p>Alice, blushing slightly, unlatched the garden gate, and went down the
path. She had never been in the garden before, and she found her heart
beating in a strange fashion.</p>
<p>He did not hear her footsteps, and she was close behind him when she heard
his voice, and realized that he was talking to himself, in a low, dreamy
tone. As the meaning of his words dawned on her consciousness she started
and grew crimson. She could not move or speak; as one in a dream she stood
and listened to the shy man's reverie, guiltless of any thought of
eavesdropping.</p>
<p>"How much I love you, Alice," Jasper Dale was saying, unafraid, with no
shyness in voice or manner. "I wonder what you would say if you knew. You
would laugh at me—sweet as you are, you would laugh in mockery. I
can never tell you. I can only dream of telling you. In my dream you are
standing here by me, dear. I can see you very plainly, my sweet lady, so
tall and gracious, with your dark hair and your maiden eyes. I can dream
that I tell you my love; that—maddest, sweetest dream of all—that
you love me in return. Everything is possible in dreams, you know, dear.
My dreams are all I have, so I go far in them, even to dreaming that you
are my wife. I dream how I shall fix up my dull old house for you. One
room will need nothing more—it is your room, dear, and has been
ready for you a long time—long before that day I saw you under the
pine. Your books and your chair and your picture are there, dear—only
the picture is not half lovely enough. But the other rooms of the house
must be made to bloom out freshly for you. What a delight it is thus to
dream of what I would do for you! Then I would bring you home, dear, and
lead you through my garden and into my house as its mistress. I would see
you standing beside me in the old mirror at the end of the hall—a
bride, in your pale blue dress, with a blush on your face. I would lead
you through all the rooms made ready for your coming, and then to your
own. I would see you sitting in your own chair and all my dreams would
find rich fulfilment in that royal moment. Oh, Alice, we would have a
beautiful life together! It's sweet to make believe about it. You will
sing to me in the twilight, and we will gather early flowers together in
the spring days. When I come home from work, tired, you will put your arms
about me and lay your head on my shoulder. I will stroke it—so—that
bonny, glossy head of yours. Alice, my Alice—all mine in my dream—never
to be mine in real life—how I love you!"</p>
<p>The Alice behind him could bear no more. She gave a little choking cry
that betrayed her presence. Jasper Dale sprang up and gazed upon her. He
saw her standing there, amid the languorous shadows of August, pale with
feeling, wide-eyed, trembling.</p>
<p>For a moment shyness wrung him. Then every trace of it was banished by a
sudden, strange, fierce anger that swept over him. He felt outraged and
hurt to the death; he felt as if he had been cheated out of something
incalculably precious—as if sacrilege had been done to his most holy
sanctuary of emotion. White, tense with his anger, he looked at her and
spoke, his lips as pale as if his fiery words scathed them.</p>
<p>"How dare you? You have spied on me—you have crept in and listened!
How dare you? Do you know what you have done, girl? You have destroyed all
that made life worth while to me. My dream is dead. It could not live when
it was betrayed. And it was all I had. Oh, laugh at me—mock me! I
know that I am ridiculous! What of it? It never could have hurt you! Why
must you creep in like this to hear me and put me to shame? Oh, I love you—I
will say it, laugh as you will. Is it such a strange thing that I should
have a heart like other men? This will make sport for you! I, who love you
better than my life, better than any other man in the world can love you,
will be a jest to you all your life. I love you—and yet I think I
could hate you—you have destroyed my dream—you have done me
deadly wrong."</p>
<p>"Jasper! Jasper!" cried Alice, finding her voice. His anger hurt her with
a pain she could not endure. It was unbearable that Jasper should be angry
with her. In that moment she realized that she loved him—that the
words he had spoken when unconscious of her presence were the sweetest she
had ever heard, or ever could hear. Nothing mattered at all, save that he
loved her and was angry with her.</p>
<p>"Don't say such dreadful things to me," she stammered, "I did not mean to
listen. I could not help it. I shall never laugh at you. Oh, Jasper"—she
looked bravely at him and the fine soul of her shone through the flesh
like an illuminating lamp—"I am glad that you love me! and I am glad
I chanced to overhear you, since you would never have had the courage to
tell me otherwise. Glad—glad! Do you understand, Jasper?"</p>
<p>Jasper looked at her with the eyes of one who, looking through pain, sees
rapture beyond.</p>
<p>"Is it possible?" he said, wonderingly. "Alice—I am so much older
than you—and they call me the Awkward Man—they say I am unlike
other people"—</p>
<p>"You ARE unlike other people," she said softly, "and that is why I love
you. I know now that I must have loved you ever since I saw you."</p>
<p>"I loved you long before I saw you," said Jasper.</p>
<p>He came close to her and drew her into his arms, tenderly and reverently,
all his shyness and awkwardness swallowed up in the grace of his great
happiness. In the old garden he kissed her lips and Alice entered into her
own.</p>
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