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<h2> CHAPTER XIII. THE TEST </h2>
<p>Some day the marriageable age for women will be advanced from twenty to
thirty, and the old maid line will be changed from thirty to forty. When
that time comes there will be surprisingly few divorces. The husband of
whom we dream at twenty is not at all the type of man who attracts us at
thirty. The man I married at twenty was a brilliant, morbid, handsome,
abnormal creature with magnificent eyes and very white teeth and no
particular appetite at mealtime. The man whom I could care for at thirty
would be the normal, safe and substantial sort who would come in at six
o'clock, kiss me once, sniff the air twice and say: "Mm! What's that
smells so good, old girl? I'm as hungry as a bear. Trot it out. Where are
the kids?"</p>
<p>These are dangerous things to think upon. So dangerous and disturbing to
the peace of mind that I have decided not to see Ernst von Gerhard for a
week or two. I find that seeing him is apt to make me forget Peter Orme;
to forget that my duty begins with a capital D; to forget that I am
dangerously near the thirty year old mark; to forget Norah, and Max, and
the Spalpeens, and the world, and everything but the happiness of being
near him, watching his eyes say one thing while his lips say another.</p>
<p>At such times I am apt to work myself up into rather a savage frame of
mind, and to shut myself in my room evenings, paying no heed to Frau
Nirlanger's timid knocking, or Bennie's good-night message. I uncover my
typewriter and set to work at the thing which may or may not be a book,
and am extremely wretched and gloomy and pessimistic, after this fashion:</p>
<p>"He probably wouldn't care anything about you if you were free. It is just
a case of the fruit that is out of reach being the most desirable. Men
don't marry frumpy, snuffy old things of thirty, or thereabouts. Men
aren't marrying now-a-days, anyway. Certainly not for love. They marry for
position, or power, or money, when they do marry. Think of all the
glorious creatures he meets every day—women whose hair, and
finger-nails and teeth and skin are a religion; women whose clothes are a
fine art; women who are free to care only for themselves; to rest, to
enjoy, to hear delightful music, and read charming books, and eat
delicious food. He doesn't really care about you, with your rumpled
blouses, and your shabby gloves and shoes, and your somewhat doubtful
linen collars. The last time you saw him you were just coming home from
the office after a dickens of a day, and there was a smudge on the end of
your nose, and he told you of it, laughing. But you didn't laugh. You
rubbed it off, furiously, and you wanted to cry. Cry! You, Dawn O'Hara!
Begorra! 'Tis losin' your sense av humor you're after doin'! Get to work."</p>
<p>After which I would fall upon the book in a furious, futile fashion,
writing many incoherent, irrelevant paragraphs which I knew would be cast
aside as worthless on the sane and reasoning to-morrow.</p>
<p>Oh, it had been easy enough to talk of love in a lofty, superior
impersonal way that New Year's day. Just the luxury of speaking of it at
all, after those weeks of repression, sufficed. But it is not so easy to
be impersonal and lofty when the touch of a coat sleeve against your arm
sends little prickling, tingling shivers racing madly through thousands of
too taut nerves. It is not so easy to force the mind and tongue into safe,
sane channels when they are forever threatening to rush together in an
overwhelming torrent that will carry misery and destruction in its wake.
Invariably we talk with feverish earnestness about the book; about my work
at the office; about Ernst's profession, with its wonderful growth; about
Norah, and Max and the Spalpeens, and the home; about the latest news;
about the weather; about Peter Orme—and then silence.</p>
<p>At our last meeting things took a new and startling turn. So startling, so
full of temptation and happiness-that-must-not-be, that I resolved to
forbid myself the pain and joy of being, near him until I could be quite
sure that my grip on Dawn O'Hara was firm, unshakable and lasting.</p>
<p>Von Gerhard sports a motor-car, a rakish little craft, built long and low,
with racing lines, and a green complexion, and a nose that cuts through
the air like the prow of a swift boat through water. Von Gerhard had
promised me a spin in it on the first mild day. Sunday turned out to be
unexpectedly lamblike, as only a March day can be, with real sunshine that
warmed the end of one's nose instead of laughing as it tweaked it, as the
lying February sunshine had done.</p>
<p>"But warmly you must dress yourself," Von Gerhard warned me, "with no
gauzy blouses or sleeveless gowns. The air cuts like a knife, but it feels
good against the face. And a little road-house I know, where one is served
great steaming plates of hot oyster stew. How will that be for a lark,
yes?"</p>
<p>And so I had swathed myself in wrappings until I could scarcely clamber
into the panting little car, and we had darted off along the smooth lake
drives, while the wind whipped the scarlet into our cheeks, even while it
brought the tears to our eyes. There was no chance for conversation, even
if Von Gerhard had been in talkative mood, which he was not. He seemed
more taciturn than usual, seated there at the wheel, looking straight
ahead at the ribbon of road, his eyes narrowed down to mere keen blue
slits. I realized, without alarm, that he was driving furiously and
lawlessly, and I did not care. Von Gerhard was that sort of man. One could
sit quite calmly beside him while he pulled at the reins of a pair of
runaway horses, knowing that he would conquer them in the end.</p>
<p>Just when my face began to feel as stiff and glazed as a mummy's, we swung
off the roadway and up to the entrance of the road-house that was to
revive us with things hot and soupy.</p>
<p>"Another minute," I said, through stiff lips, as I extricated myself from
my swathings, "and I should have been what Mr. Mantalini described as a
demnition body. For pity's sake, tell 'em the soup can't be too hot nor
too steaming for your lady friend. I've had enough fresh air to last me
the remainder of my life. May I timidly venture to suggest that a cheese
sandwich follow the oyster stew? I am famished, and this place looks as
though it might make a speciality of cheese sandwiches."</p>
<p>"By all means a cheese sandwich. Und was noch? That fresh air it has given
you an appetite, nicht wahr?" But there was no sign of a smile on his
face, nor was the kindly twinkle of amusement to be seen in his eyes—that
twinkle that I had learned to look for.</p>
<p>"Smile for the lady," I mockingly begged when we had been served. "You've
been owlish all the afternoon. Here, try a cheese sandwich. Now, why do
you suppose that this mustard tastes so much better than the kind one gets
at home?"</p>
<p>Von Gerhard had been smoking a cigarette, the first that I had ever seen
in his fingers. Now he tossed it into the fireplace that yawned black and
empty at one side of the room. He swept aside the plates and glasses that
stood before him, leaned his arms on the table and deliberately stared at
me.</p>
<p>"I sail for Europe in June, to be gone a year—probably more," he
said.</p>
<p>"Sail!" I echoed, idiotically; and began blindly to dab clots of mustard
on that ridiculous sandwich.</p>
<p>"I go to study and work with Gluck. It is the opportunity of a lifetime.
Gluck is to the world of medicine what Edison is to the world of
electricity. He is a wizard, a man inspired. You should see him—a
little, bent, grizzled, shabby old man who looks at you, and sees you not.
It is a wonderful opportunity, a—"</p>
<p>The mustard and the sandwich and the table and Von Gerhard's face were
very indistinct and uncertain to my eyes, but I managed to say: "So glad—congratulate
you—very happy—no doubt fortunate—"</p>
<p>Two strong hands grasped my wrists. "Drop that absurd mustard spoon and
sandwich. Na, I did not mean to frighten you, Dawn. How your hands
tremble. So, look at me. You would like Vienna, Kindchen. You would like
the gayety, and the brightness of it, and the music, and the pretty women,
and the incomparable gowns. Your sense of humor would discern the
hollowness beneath all the pomp and ceremony and rigid lines of caste, and
military glory; and your writer's instinct would revel in the splendor,
and color and romance and intrigue."</p>
<p>I shrugged my shoulders in assumed indifference. "Can't you convey all
this to me without grasping my wrists like a villain in a melodrama?
Besides, it isn't very generous or thoughtful of you to tell me all this,
knowing that it is not for me. Vienna for you, and Milwaukee and cheese
sandwiches for me. Please pass the mustard."</p>
<p>But the hold on my wrists grew firmer. Von Gerhard's eyes were steady as
they gazed into mine. "Dawn, Vienna, and the whole world is waiting for
you, if you will but take it. Vienna—and happiness—with me—"</p>
<p>I wrenched my wrists free with a dreadful effort and rose, sick,
bewildered, stunned. My world—my refuge of truth, and honor, and
safety and sanity that had lain in Ernst von Gerhard's great, steady
hands, was slipping away from me. I think the horror that I felt within
must have leaped to my eyes, for in an instant Von Gerhard was beside me,
steadying me with his clear blue eyes. He did not touch the tips of my
fingers as he stood there very near me. From the look of pain on his face
I knew that I had misunderstood, somehow.</p>
<p>"Kleine, I see that you know me not," he said, in German, and the saying
it was as tender as is a mother when she reproves a child that she loves.
"This fight against the world, those years of unhappiness and misery, they
have made you suspicious and lacking in trust, is it not so? You do not
yet know the perfect love that casts out all doubt. Dawn, I ask you in the
name of all that is reasoning, and for the sake of your happiness and
mine, to divorce this man Peter Orme—this man who for almost ten
years has not been your husband—who never can be your husband. I ask
you to do something which will bring suffering to no one, and which will
mean happiness to many. Let me make you happy—you were born to be
happy—you who can laugh like a girl in spite of your woman's sorrows—"</p>
<p>But I sank into a chair and hid my face in my hands so that I might be
spared the beauty and the tenderness of his eyes. I tried to think of all
the sane and commonplace things in life. Somewhere in my inner
consciousness a cool little voice was saying, over and over again:</p>
<p>"Now, Dawn, careful! You've come to the crossroads at last. Right or left?
Choose! Now, Dawn, careful!" and the rest of it all over again.</p>
<p>When I lifted my face from my hands at last it was to meet the tenderness
of Von Gerhard's gaze with scarcely a tremor.</p>
<p>"You ought to know," I said, very slowly and evenly, "that a divorce,
under these circumstances, is almost impossible, even if I wished to do
what you suggest. There are certain state laws—"</p>
<p>An exclamation of impatience broke from him. "Laws! In some states, yes.
In others, no. It is a mere technicality—a trifle! There is about it
a bit of that which you call red tape. It amounts to nothing—to
that!" He snapped his fingers. "A few months' residence in another state,
perhaps. These American laws, they are made to break."</p>
<p>"Yes; you are quite right," I said, and I knew in my heart that the cool,
insistent little voice within had not spoken in vain. "But there are other
laws—laws of honor and decency, and right living and conscience—that
cannot be broken with such ease. I cannot marry you. I have a husband."</p>
<p>"You can call that unfortunate wretch your husband! He does not know that
he has a wife. He will not know that he has lost a wife. Come, Dawn—small
one—be not so foolish. You do not know how happy I will make you.
You have never seen me except when I was tortured with doubts and fears.
You do not know what our life will be together. There shall be everything
to make you forget—everything that thought and love and money can
give you. The man there in the barred room—"</p>
<p>At that I took his dear hands in mine and held them close as I miserably
tried to make him hear what that small, still voice had told me.</p>
<p>"There! That is it! If he were free, if he were able to stand before men
that his actions might be judged fairly and justly, I should not hesitate
for one single, precious moment. If he could fight for his rights, or
relinquish them, as he saw fit, then this thing would not be so monstrous.
But, Ernst, can't you see? He is there, alone, in that dreadful place,
quite helpless, quite incapable, quite at our mercy. I should as soon
think of hurting a little child, or snatching the pennies from a blind
man's cup. The thing is inhuman! It is monstrous! No state laws, no red
tape can dissolve such a union."</p>
<p>"You still care for him!"</p>
<p>"Ernst!"</p>
<p>His face was very white with the pallor of repressed emotion, and his eyes
were like the blue flame that one sees flashing above a bed of white-hot
coals.</p>
<p>"You do care for him still. But yes! You can stand there, quite cool—but
quite—and tell me that you would not hurt him, not for your
happiness, not for mine. But me you can hurt again and again, without one
twinge of regret."</p>
<p>There was silence for a moment in the little bare dining-room—a
miserable silence on my part, a bitter one for Ernst. Then Von Gerhard
seated himself again at the table opposite and smiled one of the rare
smiles that illumined his face with such sweetness.</p>
<p>"Come, Dawn, almost we are quarreling—we who were to have been so
matter-of-fact and sensible. Let us make an end of this question. You will
think of what I have said, will you not? Perhaps I was too abrupt, too
brutal. Ach, Dawn, you know not how I—Very well, I will not."</p>
<p>With both hands I was clinging to my courage and praying for strength to
endure this until I should be alone in my room again.</p>
<p>"As for that poor creature who is bereft of reason, he shall lack no care,
no attention. The burden you have borne so long I shall take now upon my
shoulders."</p>
<p>He seemed so confident, so sure. I could bear it no longer. "Ernst, if you
have any pity, any love for me, stop! I tell you I can never do this. Why
do you make it so terribly hard for me! So pitilessly hard! You always
have been so strong, so sure, such a staff of courage."</p>
<p>"I say again, and again, and again, you do not care."</p>
<p>It was then that I took my last vestige of strength and courage together
and going over to him, put my two hands on his great shoulders, looking up
into his drawn face as I spoke.</p>
<p>"Ernst, look at me! You never can know how much I care. I care so much
that I could not bear to have the shadow of wrong fall upon our happiness.
There can be no lasting happiness upon a foundation of shameful deceit. I
should hate myself, and you would grow to hate me. It always is so. Dear
one, I care so much that I have the strength to do as I would do if I had
to face my mother, and Norah tonight. I don't ask you to understand. Men
are not made to understand these things; not even a man such as you, who
are so beautifully understanding. I only ask that you believe in me—and
think of me sometimes—I shall feel it, and be helped. Will you take
me home now, Dr. von Gerhard?"</p>
<p>The ride home was made in silence. The wind was colder, sharper. I was
chilled, miserable, sick. Von Gerhard's face was quite expressionless as
he guided the little car over the smooth road. When we had stopped before
my door, still without a word, I thought that he was going to leave me
with that barrier of silence unbroken. But as I stepped stiffly to the
curbing his hands closed about mine with the old steady grip. I looked up
quickly, to find a smile in the corners of the tired eyes.</p>
<p>"You—you will let me see you—sometimes?"</p>
<p>But wisdom came to my aid. "Not now. It is better that we go our separate
ways for a few weeks, until our work has served to adjust the balance that
has been disturbed. At the end of that time I shall write you, and from
that time until you sail in June we shall be just good comrades again. And
once in Vienna—who knows?—you may meet the plump blond
Fraulein, of excellent family—"</p>
<p>"And no particular imagination—"</p>
<p>And then we both laughed, a bit hysterically, because laughter is, after
all, akin to tears. And the little green car shot off with a whir as I
turned to enter my new world of loneliness.</p>
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