<h2><SPAN name="VIII" id="VIII"></SPAN>VIII</h2>
<p><span class="smcap">Amherst's</span> dismissal was not to take effect for a
month; and in the interval he addressed himself
steadily to his task.</p>
<p>He went through the routine of the work numbly;
but his intercourse with the hands tugged at deep fibres
of feelings. He had always shared, as far as his duties
allowed, in the cares and interests of their few free
hours: the hours when the automatic appendages of
the giant machine became men and women again, with
desires and passions of their own. Under Amherst's
influence the mixed elements of the mill-community had
begun to crystallize into social groups: his books had
served as an improvised lending-library, he had organized
a club, a rudimentary orchestra, and various other
means of binding together the better spirits of the community.
With the older men, the attractions of the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_127" id="Page_127"></SPAN></span>
Eldorado, and kindred inducements, often worked
against him; but among the younger hands, and especially
the boys, he had gained a personal ascendency
that it was bitter to relinquish.</p>
<p>It was the severing of this tie that cost him most pain
in the final days at Westmore; and after he had done
what he could to console his mother, and to put himself
in the way of getting work elsewhere, he tried to see
what might be saved out of the ruins of the little polity
he had built up. He hoped his influence might at
least persist in the form of an awakened instinct of
fellowship; and he gave every spare hour to strengthening
the links he had tried to form. The boys, at any
rate, would be honestly sorry to have him go: not, indeed,
from the profounder reasons that affected him,
but because he had not only stood persistently between
the overseers and themselves, but had recognized their
right to fun after work-hours as well as their right to
protection while they worked.</p>
<p>In the glow of Mrs. Westmore's Christmas visitation
an athletic club had been formed, and leave obtained
to use the Hopewood grounds for Saturday afternoon
sports; and thither Amherst continued to conduct the
boys after the mills closed at the week-end. His last
Saturday had now come: a shining afternoon of late
February, with a red sunset bending above frozen river
and slopes of unruffled snow. For an hour or more he<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_128" id="Page_128"></SPAN></span>
had led the usual sports, coasting down the steep descent
from the house to the edge of the woods, and
skating and playing hockey on the rough river-ice which
eager hands kept clear after every snow-storm. He
always felt the contagion of these sports: the glow of
movement, the tumult of young voices, the sting of the
winter air, roused all the boyhood in his blood. But
today he had to force himself through his part in the
performance. To the very last, as he now saw, he had
hoped for a sign in the heavens: not the reversal of
his own sentence—for, merely on disciplinary grounds,
he perceived that to be impossible—but something
pointing to a change in the management of the mills,
some proof that Mrs. Westmore's intervention had betokened
more than a passing impulse of compassion.
Surely she would not accept without question the abandonment
of her favourite scheme; and if she came
back to put the question, the answer would lay bare
the whole situation.... So Amherst's hopes had persuaded
him; but the day before he had heard that she
was to sail for Europe. The report, first announced
in the papers, had been confirmed by his mother, who
brought back from a visit to Hanaford the news that
Mrs. Westmore was leaving at once for an indefinite
period, and that the Hanaford house was to be closed.
Irony would have been the readiest caustic for the
wound inflicted; but Amherst, for that very reason, dis<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_129" id="Page_129"></SPAN></span>dained
it. He would not taint his disappointment with
mockery, but would leave it among the unspoiled sadnesses
of life....</p>
<p>He flung himself into the boys' sports with his
usual energy, meaning that their last Saturday with
him should be their merriest; but he went through his
part mechanically, and was glad when the sun began
to dip toward the rim of the woods.</p>
<p>He was standing on the ice, where the river widened
just below the house, when a jingle of bells broke on
the still air, and he saw a sleigh driven rapidly up the
avenue. Amherst watched it in surprise. Who, at
that hour, could be invading the winter solitude of
Hopewood? The sleigh halted near the closed house,
and a muffled figure, alighting alone, began to move
down the snowy slope toward the skaters.</p>
<p>In an instant he had torn off his skates and was bounding
up the bank. He would have known the figure anywhere—known
that lovely poise of the head, the mixture
of hesitancy and quickness in the light tread which even
the snow could not impede. Half-way up the slope to the
house they met, and Mrs. Westmore held out her hand.
Face and lips, as she stood above him, glowed with her
swift passage through the evening air, and in the blaze
of the sunset she seemed saturated with heavenly fires.</p>
<p>"I drove out to find you—they told me you were
here—I arrived this morning, quite suddenly...."<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_130" id="Page_130"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>She broke off, as though the encounter had checked
her ardour instead of kindling it; but he drew no discouragement
from her tone.</p>
<p>"I hoped you would come before I left—I knew you
would!" he exclaimed; and at his last words her face
clouded anxiously.</p>
<p>"I didn't know you were leaving Westmore till yesterday—the
day before—I got a letter...." Again she
wavered, perceptibly trusting her difficulty to him, in
the sweet way he had been trying to forget; and he
answered with recovered energy: "The great thing is
that you should be here."</p>
<p>She shook her head at his optimism. "What can I
do if you go?"</p>
<p>"You can give me a chance, before I go, to tell you
a little about some of the loose ends I am leaving."</p>
<p>"But why are you leaving them? I don't understand.
Is it inevitable?"</p>
<p>"Inevitable," he returned, with an odd glow of satisfaction
in the word; and as her eyes besought him, he
added, smiling: "I've been dismissed, you see; and
from the manager's standpoint I think I deserved it.
But the best part of my work needn't go with me—and
that is what I should like to speak to you about. As
assistant manager I can easily be replaced—have
been, I understand, already; but among these boys
here I should like to think that a little of me stayed—and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_131" id="Page_131"></SPAN></span>
it will, if you'll let me tell you what I've been
doing."</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/illus-03.jpg" alt="Half-way up the slope to the house they met." title="Half-way up the slope to the house they met." /> <br/><span class="caption">Half-way up the slope to the house they met.</span> <br/><br/></div>
<p>She glanced away from him at the busy throng on
the ice and at the other black cluster above the coasting-slide.</p>
<p>"How they're enjoying it!" she murmured. "What
a pity it was never done before! And who will keep it
up when you're gone?"</p>
<p>"You," he answered, meeting her eyes again; and
as she coloured a little under his look he went on
quickly: "Will you come over and look at the coasting?
The time is almost up. One more slide and they'll be
packing off to supper."</p>
<p>She nodded "yes," and they walked in silence over
the white lawn, criss-crossed with tramplings of happy
feet, to the ridge from which the coasters started on
their run. Amherst's object in turning the talk had
been to gain a moment's respite. He could not bear
to waste his perfect hour in futile explanations: he
wanted to keep it undisturbed by any thought of the
future. And the same feeling seemed to possess his
companion, for she did not speak again till they reached
the knoll where the boys were gathered.</p>
<p>A sled packed with them hung on the brink: with a
last shout it was off, dipping down the incline with the
long curved flight of a swallow, flashing across the wide
meadow at the base of the hill, and tossed upward again<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_132" id="Page_132"></SPAN></span>
by its own impetus, till it vanished in the dark rim of
wood on the opposite height. The lads waiting on the
knoll sang out for joy, and Bessy clapped her hands
and joined with them.</p>
<p>"What fun! I wish I'd brought Cicely! I've not
coasted for years," she laughed out, as the second detachment
of boys heaped themselves on another sled
and shot down. Amherst looked at her with a smile.
He saw that every other feeling had vanished in the
exhilaration of watching the flight of the sleds. She
had forgotten why she had come—forgotten her distress
at his dismissal—forgotten everything but the
spell of the long white slope, and the tingle of cold
in her veins.</p>
<p>"Shall we go down? Should you like it?" he asked,
feeling no resentment under the heightened glow of his
pulses.</p>
<p>"Oh, do take me—I shall love it!" Her eyes shone
like a child's—she might have been a lovelier embodiment
of the shouting boyhood about them.</p>
<p>The first band of coasters, sled at heels, had by this
time already covered a third of the homeward stretch;
but Amherst was too impatient to wait. Plunging
down to the meadow he caught up the sled-rope, and
raced back with the pack of rejoicing youth in his wake.
The sharp climb up the hill seemed to fill his lungs
with flame: his whole body burned with a strange in<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_133" id="Page_133"></SPAN></span>tensity
of life. As he reached the top, a distant bell
rang across the fields from Westmore, and the boys
began to snatch up their coats and mufflers.</p>
<p>"Be off with you—I'll look after the sleds," Amherst
called to them as they dispersed; then he turned for a
moment to see that the skaters below were also heeding
the summons.</p>
<p>A cold pallor lay on the river-banks and on the low
meadow beneath the knoll; but the woodland opposite
stood black against scarlet vapours that ravelled off in
sheer light toward a sky hung with an icy moon.</p>
<p>Amherst drew up the sled and held it steady while
Bessy, seating herself, tucked her furs close with little
breaks of laughter; then he placed himself in front.</p>
<p>"Ready?" he cried over his shoulder, and "Ready!"
she called back.</p>
<p>Their craft quivered under them, hanging an instant
over the long stretch of whiteness below; the level
sun dazzled their eyes, and the first plunge seemed to
dash them down into darkness. Amherst heard a cry
of glee behind him; then all sounds were lost in the
whistle of air humming by like the flight of a million
arrows. They had dropped below the sunset and were
tearing through the clear nether twilight of the descent;
then, with a bound, the sled met the level, and shot
away across the meadow toward the opposite height.
It seemed to Amherst as though his body had been<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_134" id="Page_134"></SPAN></span>
left behind, and only the spirit in him rode the wild
blue currents of galloping air; but as the sled's rush
began to slacken with the strain of the last ascent he
was recalled to himself by the touch of the breathing
warmth at his back. Bessy had put out a hand to
steady herself, and as she leaned forward, gripping his
arm, a flying end of her furs swept his face. There was
a delicious pang in being thus caught back to life; and
as the sled stopped, and he sprang to his feet, he still
glowed with the sensation. Bessy too was under the
spell. In the dusk of the beech-grove where they had
landed, he could barely distinguish her features; but
her eyes shone on him, and he heard her quick breathing
as he stooped to help her to her feet.</p>
<p>"Oh, how beautiful—it's the only thing better than
a good gallop!"</p>
<p>She leaned against a tree-bole, panting a little, and
loosening her furs.</p>
<p>"What a pity it's too dark to begin again!" she
sighed, looking about her through the dim weaving of
leafless boughs.</p>
<p>"It's not so dark in the open—we might have one
more," he proposed; but she shook her head, seized
by a new whim.</p>
<p>"It's so still and delicious in here—did you hear the
snow fall when that squirrel jumped across to the pine?"
She tilted her head, narrowing her lids as she peered<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_135" id="Page_135"></SPAN></span>
upward. "There he is! One gets used to the light....
Look! See his little eyes shining down at us!"</p>
<p>As Amherst looked where she pointed, the squirrel
leapt to another tree, and they stole on after him through
the hushed wood, guided by his grey flashes in the dimness.
Here and there, in a break of the snow, they
trod on a bed of wet leaves that gave out a breath of
hidden life, or a hemlock twig dashed its spicy scent
into their faces. As they grew used to the twilight
their eyes began to distinguish countless delicate gradations
of tint: cold mottlings of grey-black boles
against the snow, wet russets of drifted beech-leaves, a
distant network of mauve twigs melting into the woodland
haze. And in the silence just such fine gradations
of sound became audible: the soft drop of loosened
snow-lumps, a stir of startled wings, the creak of a
dead branch, somewhere far off in darkness.</p>
<p>They walked on, still in silence, as though they had
entered the glade of an enchanted forest and were
powerless to turn back or to break the hush with a
word. They made no pretense of following the squirrel
any longer; he had flashed away to a high tree-top,
from which his ironical chatter pattered down on their
unheeding ears. Amherst's sensations were not of that
highest order of happiness where mind and heart mingle
their elements in the strong draught of life: it was a
languid fume that stole through him from the cup at<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_136" id="Page_136"></SPAN></span>
his lips. But after the sense of defeat and failure
which the last weeks had brought, the reaction was too
exquisite to be analyzed. All he asked of the moment
was its immediate sweetness....</p>
<p>They had reached the brink of a rocky glen where a
little brook still sent its thread of sound through mufflings
of ice and huddled branches. Bessy stood still a
moment, bending her head to the sweet cold tinkle; then
she moved away and said slowly: "We must go back."</p>
<p>As they turned to retrace their steps a yellow line of
light through the tree-trunks showed them that they
had not, after all, gone very deep into the wood. A few
minutes' walk would restore them to the lingering daylight,
and on the farther side of the meadow stood the
sleigh which was to carry Bessy back to Hanaford. A
sudden sense of the evanescence of the moment roused
Amherst from his absorption. Before the next change
in the fading light he would be back again among the
ugly realities of life. Did she, too, hate to return to
them? Or why else did she walk so slowly—why did
she seem as much afraid as himself to break the silence
that held them in its magic circle?</p>
<p>A dead pine-branch caught in the edge of her skirt,
and she stood still while Amherst bent down to release
her. As she turned to help him he looked up with a
smile.</p>
<p>"The wood doesn't want to let you go," he said.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_137" id="Page_137"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>She made no reply, and he added, rising: "But you'll
come back to it—you'll come back often, I hope."</p>
<p>He could not see her face in the dimness, but her
voice trembled a little as she answered: "I will do
what you tell me—but I shall be alone—against all the
others: they don't understand."</p>
<p>The simplicity, the helplessness, of the avowal, appealed
to him not as a weakness but as a grace. He
understood what she was really saying: "How can you
desert me? How can you put this great responsibility
on me, and then leave me to bear it alone?" and in the
light of her unuttered appeal his action seemed almost
like cruelty. Why had he opened her eyes to wrongs
she had no strength to redress without his aid?</p>
<p>He could only answer, as he walked beside her toward
the edge of the wood: "You will not be alone—in time
you will make the others understand; in time they will
be with you."</p>
<p>"Ah, you don't believe that!" she exclaimed, pausing
suddenly, and speaking with an intensity of reproach
that amazed him.</p>
<p>"I hope it, at any rate," he rejoined, pausing also.
"And I'm sure that if you will come here oftener—if
you'll really live among your people——"</p>
<p>"How can you say that, when you're deserting them?"
she broke in, with a feminine excess of inconsequence
that fairly dashed the words from his lips.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_138" id="Page_138"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Deserting them? Don't you understand——?"</p>
<p>"I understand that you've made Mr. Gaines and
Truscomb angry—yes; but if I should insist on your
staying——"</p>
<p>Amherst felt the blood rush to his forehead. "No—no,
it's not possible!" he exclaimed, with a vehemence
addressed more to himself than to her.</p>
<p>"Then what will happen at the mills?"</p>
<p>"Oh, some one else will be found—the new ideas are
stirring everywhere. And if you'll only come back here,
and help my successor——"</p>
<p>"Do you think they are likely to choose any one else
with your ideas?" she interposed with unexpected
acuteness; and after a short silence he answered: "Not
immediately, perhaps; but in time—in time there will
be improvements."</p>
<p>"As if the poor people could wait! Oh, it's cruel,
cruel of you to go!"</p>
<p>Her voice broke in a throb of entreaty that went to
his inmost fibres.</p>
<p>"You don't understand. It's impossible in the present
state of things that I should do any good by staying."</p>
<p>"Then you refuse? Even if I were to insist on
their asking you to stay, you would still refuse?" she
persisted.</p>
<p>"Yes—I should still refuse."</p>
<p>She made no answer, but moved a few steps nearer<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_139" id="Page_139"></SPAN></span>
to the edge of the wood. The meadow was just below
them now, and the sleigh in plain sight on the height
beyond. Their steps made no sound on the sodden
drifts underfoot, and in the silence he thought he heard
a catch in her breathing. It was enough to make the
brimming moment overflow. He stood still before her
and bent his head to hers.</p>
<p>"Bessy!" he said, with sudden vehemence.</p>
<p>She did not speak or move, but in the quickened
state of his perceptions he became aware that she was
silently weeping. The gathering darkness under the
trees enveloped them. It absorbed her outline into the
shadowy background of the wood, from which her face
emerged in a faint spot of pallor; and the same obscurity
seemed to envelop his faculties, merging the
hard facts of life in a blur of feeling in which the distinctest
impression was the sweet sense of her tears.</p>
<p>"Bessy!" he exclaimed again; and as he drew a step
nearer he felt her yield to him, and bury her sobs
against his arm.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_140" id="Page_140"></SPAN></span></p>
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