<h1>Chapter XVII.</h1>
<p>John read Joe’s note many times over before
he quite realized what it contained. It seemed at
first a singular thing that she should have written
to him, and he did not understand it. He knew her as
an enthusiastic and capricious girl who had sometimes
laughed at him, and sometimes treated him coldly;
but who, again, had sometimes talked with him as though
he were an old friend. He called to mind the interest
she had taken in his doings of late, and how she had
denounced Vancouver as his enemy, and he thought of
the long conversation he had had with her on the ice
under the cold moonlight. He thought of many a sympathetic
glance she had given when he spoke of his aims and
intentions, of many a gentle word spoken in praise
of him, and which at the time he had taken merely as
so much small, good-natured flattery, such as agreeable
people deal out to each other in society without any
thought of evil nor any especial meaning of good.
All these things came back to him, and he read the
little note again. It was a kindly word, nothing more,
penned by a wild, good-hearted girl, in the scorn
of consequence or social propriety. It was nothing
but that.</p>
<p>And yet, there was something more in it all–something
not expressed in the abbreviated words and hurriedly-composed
sentences, but something that seemed to struggle for
expression. John’s experience of womankind was
limited, for he was no lady’s man, and had led
a life singularly lacking in woman’s love or
sentiment, though singularly dependent on the friendship
of some woman. Nevertheless he knew that Joe’s
note breathed the essence of a sympathy wider than
that of mere every-day acquaintance, and deeper, perhaps,
than that of any friendship he had known. He could
not have explained the feeling, nor reasoned upon it,
but he knew well enough that when he next met Joe
it would be on new terms. She had declared herself
his friend in a way no longer mistakable, for she must
have followed her first impulse in writing such a note,
and the impulse must have been a strong one.</p>
<p>For a while he debated whether to answer the note
or not, almost forgetting his troubles in the tumult
of new thoughts it had suggested to him. A note, thought
he, required an answer, on general principles–but
such a note as this would be better answered in person
than by any pen and paper. He would call and see Joe,
and thank her for it. But, again, he knew he could
not see her until the next day, and that seemed a long
time to wait. It would not have been long under ordinary
circumstances, but in this case it seemed to him an
unreasonable delay. He sat down and took a pen in
his fingers.</p>
<p>“Dear Miss Thorn”–he began, and stopped.
In America it is more formal to begin without the
preliminary “my;” in England the “my”
is indispensable, unless people are on familiar terms.
John knew this, and reflected that Joe was English.
While he was reflecting his eye fell upon a heap of
telegraph blanks, and he remembered that he had not
given notice of his defeat to the council. He pushed
aside the note paper and took a form for a cable dispatch.
In a moment Joe was forgotten in the sudden shock that
brought his thoughts back to his position. He wrote
out a simple message addressed to Z, who was the only
one of the three whom he officially knew.</p>
<p>But when he had done that, he fell to thinking about
Joe again, and resolved to write the note.</p>
<p>“MY DEAR MISS THORN,–I cannot allow your very
friendly words to remain unanswered until tomorrow.
It is kind of you to be sorry for the defeat I have
suffered, it is kinder still to express your sympathy
so directly and so soon. Concerning the circumstances
which brought the contest to such a result, I have
nothing to say. It is the privilege of elective bodies
to choose as they please, and indeed, that is the
object of their existence. No one has any right to
complain of not being elected, for a man who is a
candidate knows from the first what he is undertaking,
and what manner of men he has to deal with. Personally,
I am a man who has fought a fight and has lost it,
and however firmly I still believe in the cause which
led me to the struggle, I confess that I am disappointed
and disheartened at being vanquished. You are good
enough to say you believe I shall win in the end;
I can only answer that I thank you very heartily indeed
for saying so, though I do not think it is likely
that any efforts of mine will be attended with success
for a long time.</p>
<p>“Believe me, with great gratitude,</p>
<p>“Very sincerely yours,</p>
<p>“JOHN HARRINGTON.”</p>
<p>It was a longer note than he had meant to write, in
fact it was almost a letter; but he read it over and
was convinced he had said what he meant to say, which
was always the principal consideration in such matters.
Accordingly the missive was dispatched to its destination.
As for Mrs. Wyndham, John determined to accept her
invitation, and to answer it in person by appearing
at the dinner-hour. He would not let any one think
he was so broken-hearted as to be unable to show himself.
He was too strong for that, and he had too much pride
in his strength.</p>
<p>He was right in going to Mrs. Wyndham’s, for
she and her husband were his oldest friends, and he
understood well enough what true hearts and what honest
loyalty lie sometimes concealed in the bosoms of those
brisk, peculiar people, who seem unable to speak seriously
for long about the most serious subjects, and whose
quaint turns of language seem often so unfit to express
any deep feeling. But while he talked with his hosts
his own thoughts strayed again and again to Joe, and
he wondered what kind of woman she really was. He
intended to visit her the next day.</p>
<p>The next day came, however, and yet John did not turn
his steps up the hill towards Miss Schenectady’s
house. It was a cloudless morning after the heavy
storm, and the great drifts of snow flashed like heaps
of diamonds in the sun. All the air was clear and
cold, and the red brick pavements were spotted here
and there with white patches left from the shovels
of the Irishmen. Sleighs of all sizes were ploughing
their way hither and thither, breaking out a track
in the heavy mass that encumbered the streets. Every
one was wrapped in furs, and every one’s face
was red with the smarting cold.</p>
<p>Joe stayed at home until mid-day, when she went to
a luncheon-party of young girls. As usual, they had
been sewing for the poor, but Joe thought that she
was not depriving the poor people of any very material
assistance by staying away from the more industrious
part of the entertainment. The sewing they all did
together in a morning did not produce results whereby
even the very smallest baby could have been clothed,
and the part effected by each separate damsel in this
whole was consequently somewhat insignificant. Joe
would have stayed at home outright had the weather
not been so magnificent, and possibly she thought
that she might meet John Harrington on her way to
the house of her friend in Dartmouth Street.</p>
<p>Fate, however, was against her, for she had not walked
thirty yards down the hill before she was overtaken
by Pocock Vancouver. He had been standing in one of
the semi-circular bay windows of the Somerset Club,
and seeing Joe coming down the steep incline, had
hurriedly taken his coat and hat and gone out in pursuit
of her. Had he suspected in the least how Joe felt
toward him, he would have fled to the end of the world
rather than meet her.</p>
<p>“Good morning, Miss Thorn,” he said, walking
rapidly by her side and taking off his hat, “how
very early you are to-day.”</p>
<p>“It is not early,” said Joe, looking at
him coldly, “it is nearly one o’clock.”</p>
<p>“It would be called early for most people,”
said Vancouver; “for Mrs. Wyndham, for instance.”</p>
<p>“I am not Mrs. Wyndham,” said Joe.</p>
<p>“I am going to see Harrington,” remarked
Vancouver, who perceived that Joe was not in a good
humor. “I am afraid he must be dreadfully cut
up about this business.”</p>
<p>“So you are going to condole with him? I do
not believe he is in the least disturbed. He has
far too much sense.”</p>
<p>“I fancy the most sensible man in the world
would be a trifle annoyed at being defeated in an
election, Miss Thorn,” said Vancouver blandly.
“I am afraid you are not very sorry for him.
He is an old friend of mine, and though I differ from
him in politics, very passively, I cannot do less
than go and see him, and tell him how much I regret,
personally, that he should be defeated.”</p>
<p>Joe’s lip curled in scorn, and she flushed angrily.
She could have struck Vancouver’s pale face
with infinite pleasure and satisfaction, but she said
nothing in immediate answer.</p>
<p>“Do you not think I am right?” asked Vancouver.
“I am sure you do; you have such a good heart.”
They passed Charles Street as he was speaking, and
yet he gave no sign of leaving her.</p>
<p>“I am not sure that I have a good heart, and
I am quite sure that you are utterly wrong, Mr. Vancouver,”
said Joe, in calm tones.</p>
<p>“Really? Why, you quite surprise me, Miss Thorn.
Any man in my place ought”–</p>
<p>“Most men in your place would avoid Mr. Harrington,”
interrupted Joe, turning her clear brown eyes full
upon him. Had she been less angry she would have been
more cautious. But her blood was up, and she took no
thought, but said what she meant, boldly.</p>
<p>“Indeed, Miss Thorn,” said Vancouver,
stiffly, “I do not understand you in the least.
I think what you say is very extraordinary. John Harrington
has always been a friend of mine.”</p>
<p>“That may be, Mr. Vancouver, but you are certainly
no friend of his,” said Joe, with a scornful
laugh.</p>
<p>“You astonish me beyond measure,” rejoined
Pocock, maintaining his air of injured virtue, although
he inwardly felt that he was in some imminent danger.
“How can you possibly say such a thing?”</p>
<p>Joe could bear it no longer. She was very imprudent,
but her honest anger boiled over. She stopped in her
walk, her back against the iron railings, and she
faced Vancouver with a look that frightened him. He
was forced to stop also, and he could not do less
than return her glance.</p>
<p>“Do you dare to stand there and tell me that
you are Mr. Harrington’s friend?” she
asked in low distinct tones. “You, the writer
of articles in the ‘Daily Standard,’ calling
him a fool and a charlatan? You, who have done your
very best to defeat him in this election? Indeed, it
is too absurd!” She laughed aloud in utter scorn,
and then turned to continue her way.</p>
<p>Vancouver turned a shade paler than was natural with
him, and looked down. He was very much frightened,
for he was a coward.</p>
<p>“Miss Thorn,” he said, “I am sorry
you should believe such calumnies. I give you my word
of honor that I have never either written or spoken
against Mr. Harrington. He is one of my best friends.”</p>
<p>Joe did not answer; she did not even look at him,
but walked on in silence. He did not dare to speak
again, and as they reached the corner of the Public
Garden he lifted his hat.</p>
<p>“I am quite sure that you will find you have
misjudged me, Miss Thorn,” he said, with a grieved
look. “In the mean while I wish you a very good
morning.”</p>
<p>“Good-morning,” said Joe, without looking
at him; and she passed on, full of indignation and
wrath.</p>
<p>To tell the truth, she was so much delighted at having
spoken her mind for once, that she had not a thought
of any possible consequences. The delight of having
dealt Vancouver such a buffet was very great, and she
felt her heart beat fast with a triumphant pleasure.</p>
<p>But Vancouver turned and went away with a very unpleasant
sensation in, him. He wished with all his might that
he had not left the comfortable bay window of the
Somerset Club that morning, and more than all he wished
he could ascertain how Joe had come to know of his
journalistic doings. As a matter of fact, what she
had said concerning Pocock’s efforts against
John in the election had been meant in a most general
way. But Vancouver thought she was referring to his
interview with Ballymolloy, and that she understood
the whole matter. Of course, there was nothing to be
done but to deny the accusations from beginning to
end; but they nevertheless had struck deep, and he
was thoroughly alarmed. When he left the club he had
had no intention of going to see Harrington; the idea
had formed itself while talking with her. But now,
again, he felt that he could not go. He had not the
courage to face the man he had injured, principally
because he strongly suspected that if Joe knew what
he had done, John Harrington most likely knew it too.</p>
<p>He was doubly hit. He would have been less completely
confused and frightened if the attack had come from
Sybil Brandon; but he had had vague ideas of trying
to marry Joe, and he guessed that any such plan was
now hopelessly out of the question. He turned his
steps homeward, uncertain what to do, and hoping to
find counsel in solitude.</p>
<p>He took up the letters and papers that lay on his
study table, brought by the mid-day post. One letter
in particular attracted his attention, and he singled
it out and opened it. It was dated from London, and
had been twelve days on its way.</p>
<p>“MY DEAR VANCOUVER,</p>
<p>“Enclosed please find Bank of England Post Note
for your usual quarterly honorarium, £1250. My firm
will address you upon the use to be made of the Proxies
lately sent you for the ensuing election of officers
of the Pocahontas and Dead Man’s Valley R. R.,
touching your possession of which I beg to reiterate
the importance of a more than Masonic discretion. I
apprehend that unless the scattered shares should have
been quickly absorbed for the purpose of obtaining
a majority, these Proxies will enable you to control
the election of the proper ticket. If not, and if
the Leviathan should decline the overtures that will
be made to him during his summer visit to London,
I should like your estimate of five thousand shares
more, to be picked up in the next three months, which
will assure our friends the control. Should the prospective
figure be too high, we may elect to sell out, after
rigging the market for a boom.</p>
<p>“In either event there will be lots of pickings
in the rise and fall of the shares for the old joint
account, which has been so profitable because you
have so skillfully covered up your tracks.</p>
<p>“Yours faithfully,”</p>
<p>“SAUNDEKS GRABBLES.”</p>
<p>“P. S. The expectations of the young lady about
whom you inquire are involved in such a tangle of
conditions as could only have occurred to the excited
fancy of an old Anglo-Indian. He left about twenty
lacs of rupees in various bonds–G. I. P. and others–to
his nephew, Ronald Surbiton, and to his niece jointly,
provided that they marry each other. If they do not,
one quarter of the estate is to go to the one who marries
first, and the remaining three quarters to the other.
The estate is in the hands of trustees, who pay an
allowance to the heirs. In case they marry each other,
the said heirs have power to dispose by will of the
inheritance. Otherwise the whole of it reverts to
the last survivor, and at his or her death it is to
be devoted to founding a home for superannuated governesses.”</p>
<p>Vancouver read the letter through with care, and held
it a moment in his hand. Then he crushed it angrily
together and tossed it into the fire. It seemed as
though everything went wrong with him to-day. Not only
was no information concerning Joe of any use now.
It would be a hard thing to disabuse her of the idea
that he had written those articles. After all, though,
as he thought the matter over, it could be only guess-work.
The manuscripts had always gone through the post,
signed with a feigned name, and it was utterly impossible
that the editor himself could know who had written
them. It would be still more impossible, therefore,
for any one else to do more than make a guess. It
is easy to deny any statement, however correct, when
founded on such a basis. But there was the other thing:
Joe had accused him of having opposed John’s
election to the best of his ability. No one could
prove that either. He had even advised Ballymolloy
to vote for John, in so many words. On the whole, his
conscience was clear enough. Vancouver’s conscience
was represented by all those things which could by
any possibility be found out; the things that no one
could ever know gave him no anxiety. In the present
case the first thing to be done was plainly to put
the whole blame of the articles on the shoulders of
some one else, a person of violent political views
and very great vanity, who would be greatly flattered
at being thought the author of anything so clever.
That would not be a difficult task. He would broach
the subject to Mrs. Wyndham, telling her that the man,
whoever he should be, had told him in strictest confidence
that he was the writer. Vancouver would of course
tell it to Mrs. Wyndham as a state secret, and she
would tell some one else–it would soon be public
property, and Joe would hear of it. It would be easy
enough to pitch upon some individual who would not
deny the imputation, or who would deny it in such a
way as to leave the impression on the public mind
unchanged, more especially as the articles had accomplished
the desired result.</p>
<p>The prime cause of all this, John Harrington himself,
sat in his room, unconscious, for the time, of Vancouver’s
existence. He was in a state of great depression and
uncertainty, for he had not yet rallied from the blow
of the defeat. Moreover he was thinking of Joe, and
her letter lay open on the table beside him. His whole
heart went out to her in thanks for her ready sympathy,
and he had almost made up his mind to go and see her,
as he had at first determined to do.</p>
<p>He would have laughed very heartily at the idea of
being in love, for he had never thought of himself
in such a position. But he realized that he was fond
of Josephine Thorn, that he was thinking of her a great
deal, and that the thought was a comfort to him in
his distress. He knew very well that he would find
a great rest and refreshment in talking to her at
present, and yet he could not decide to go to her.
John was a man of calm manner and with plenty of hard,
practical sense, in spite of the great enthusiasm
that burned like a fire within him, and that was the
mainspring of his existence. But like all orators
and men much accustomed to dealing with the passions
of others, he was full of quick intuitions and instincts
which rarely betrayed him. Something warned him not
to seek her society, and though he said to himself
that he was very far from being in love, the thought
that he might some day find that he wished to marry
her presented itself continually to his mind; and
since John had elected to devote himself to celibacy
and politics, there was nothing more repugnant to his
whole life than the idea of marriage.</p>
<p>At this juncture, while he was revolving in his mind
what was best to be done, a telegram was brought to
him. It was from Z, and in briefest terms of authority
commanded John to hold himself ready to start for London
at a moment’s notice. It must have been dispatched
within a few hours after receiving his own message
of the night before, and considering the difference
of time, must have been sent from London early in the
afternoon. It was clearly an urgent case, and the supreme
three had work for John to do, even though he had
not been made senator.</p>
<p>The order was a great relief. It solved all his uncertainty
and scattered all his doubts to the wind. It gave
him new courage and stimulated his curiosity. Z had
only sent for him twice before, and then only to call
him from Boston or New York to Washington. It was
clear that something of very great importance was
likely to occur. His energy returned in full, with
the anticipation of work to do and of a journey to
be made, and before night he was fully prepared to
leave on receipt of his orders. His box was packed,
and he had drawn the money necessary to take him to
London.</p>
<p>As for Joe, he could go and see her now if he pleased.
In twenty-four hours he might be gone, never to see
her again. But it was too late on that day–he would
go on the following morning.</p>
<p>It was still the height of the Boston season, which
is short, but merry while it lasts. John had a dinner-party,
a musical evening, and a ball on his list for the
evening, and he resolved that he would go to all three,
and show himself bravely to the world. He was full
of new courage and strength since he had received
Z’s message, and he was determined that no one
should know what he had suffered.</p>
<p>The dinner passed pleasantly enough, and by ten o’clock
he was at the musical party. There he found the Wyndhams
and many other friends, but he looked in vain for
Joe; she was not there. Before midnight he was at the
dance, pushing his way through crowds of acquaintances,
stumbling over loving couples ensconced on the landings
of the stairs, and running against forlorn old ladies,
whose mouths were full of ice-cream and their hearts
of bitterness against the younger generation; and so,
at last, he reached the ball-room, where everything
that was youngest and most fresh was assembled, swaying
and gliding, and backing and turning in the easy,
graceful half-walk, half-slide of the Boston step.</p>
<p>As John stood looking on, Joe passed him, leaving
the room on Mr. Topeka’s arm. There was a little
open space before her in the crowd, and Pocock Vancouver
darted out with the evident intention of speaking to
her. But as she caught sight of him she turned suddenly
away, pulling Mr. Topeka round by his arm. It was
an extremely “marked thing to do.” As she
turned she unexpectedly came face to face with John,
who had watched the maneuver. The color came quickly
to her face, and she was slightly embarrassed; nevertheless
she held out her hand and greeted John cordially.</p>
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