<h2>CHAPTER XXI</h2>
<p>Came a beautiful fall day, warm and languid, palpitant with the hush
of the changing season, a California Indian summer day, with hazy sun
and wandering wisps of breeze that did not stir the slumber of the air.
Filmy purple mists, that were not vapors but fabrics woven of color,
hid in the recesses of the hills. San Francisco lay like a blur
of smoke upon her heights. The intervening bay was a dull sheen
of molten metal, whereon sailing craft lay motionless or drifted with
the lazy tide. Far Tamalpais, barely seen in the silver haze,
bulked hugely by the Golden Gate, the latter a pale gold pathway under
the westering sun. Beyond, the Pacific, dim and vast, was raising
on its sky-line tumbled cloud-masses that swept landward, giving warning
of the first blustering breath of winter.</p>
<p>The erasure of summer was at hand. Yet summer lingered, fading
and fainting among her hills, deepening the purple of her valleys, spinning
a shroud of haze from waning powers and sated raptures, dying with the
calm content of having lived and lived well. And among the hills,
on their favorite knoll, Martin and Ruth sat side by side, their heads
bent over the same pages, he reading aloud from the love-sonnets of
the woman who had loved Browning as it is given to few men to be loved.</p>
<p>But the reading languished. The spell of passing beauty all
about them was too strong. The golden year was dying as it had
lived, a beautiful and unrepentant voluptuary, and reminiscent rapture
and content freighted heavily the air. It entered into them, dreamy
and languorous, weakening the fibres of resolution, suffusing the face
of morality, or of judgment, with haze and purple mist. Martin
felt tender and melting, and from time to time warm glows passed over
him. His head was very near to hers, and when wandering phantoms
of breeze stirred her hair so that it touched his face, the printed
pages swam before his eyes.</p>
<p>“I don’t believe you know a word of what you are reading,”
she said once when he had lost his place.</p>
<p>He looked at her with burning eyes, and was on the verge of becoming
awkward, when a retort came to his lips.</p>
<p>“I don’t believe you know either. What was the
last sonnet about?”</p>
<p>“I don’t know,” she laughed frankly. “I’ve
already forgotten. Don’t let us read any more. The
day is too beautiful.”</p>
<p>“It will be our last in the hills for some time,” he
announced gravely. “There’s a storm gathering out
there on the sea-rim.”</p>
<p>The book slipped from his hands to the ground, and they sat idly
and silently, gazing out over the dreamy bay with eyes that dreamed
and did not see. Ruth glanced sidewise at his neck. She
did not lean toward him. She was drawn by some force outside of
herself and stronger than gravitation, strong as destiny. It was
only an inch to lean, and it was accomplished without volition on her
part. Her shoulder touched his as lightly as a butterfly touches
a flower, and just as lightly was the counter-pressure. She felt
his shoulder press hers, and a tremor run through him. Then was
the time for her to draw back. But she had become an automaton.
Her actions had passed beyond the control of her will—she never
thought of control or will in the delicious madness that was upon her.
His arm began to steal behind her and around her. She waited its
slow progress in a torment of delight. She waited, she knew not
for what, panting, with dry, burning lips, a leaping pulse, and a fever
of expectancy in all her blood. The girdling arm lifted higher
and drew her toward him, drew her slowly and caressingly. She
could wait no longer. With a tired sigh, and with an impulsive
movement all her own, unpremeditated, spasmodic, she rested her head
upon his breast. His head bent over swiftly, and, as his lips
approached, hers flew to meet them.</p>
<p>This must be love, she thought, in the one rational moment that was
vouchsafed her. If it was not love, it was too shameful.
It could be nothing else than love. She loved the man whose arms
were around her and whose lips were pressed to hers. She pressed
more, tightly to him, with a snuggling movement of her body. And
a moment later, tearing herself half out of his embrace, suddenly and
exultantly she reached up and placed both hands upon Martin Eden’s
sunburnt neck. So exquisite was the pang of love and desire fulfilled
that she uttered a low moan, relaxed her hands, and lay half-swooning
in his arms.</p>
<p>Not a word had been spoken, and not a word was spoken for a long
time. Twice he bent and kissed her, and each time her lips met
his shyly and her body made its happy, nestling movement. She
clung to him, unable to release herself, and he sat, half supporting
her in his arms, as he gazed with unseeing eyes at the blur of the great
city across the bay. For once there were no visions in his brain.
Only colors and lights and glows pulsed there, warm as the day and warm
as his love. He bent over her. She was speaking.</p>
<p>“When did you love me?” she whispered.</p>
<p>“From the first, the very first, the first moment I laid eye
on you. I was mad for love of you then, and in all the time that
has passed since then I have only grown the madder. I am maddest,
now, dear. I am almost a lunatic, my head is so turned with joy.”</p>
<p>“I am glad I am a woman, Martin—dear,” she said,
after a long sigh.</p>
<p>He crushed her in his arms again and again, and then asked:-</p>
<p>“And you? When did you first know?”</p>
<p>“Oh, I knew it all the time, almost, from the first.”</p>
<p>“And I have been as blind as a bat!” he cried, a ring
of vexation in his voice. “I never dreamed it until just
how, when I—when I kissed you.”</p>
<p>“I didn’t mean that.” She drew herself partly
away and looked at him. “I meant I knew you loved almost
from the first.”</p>
<p>“And you?” he demanded.</p>
<p>“It came to me suddenly.” She was speaking very
slowly, her eyes warm and fluttery and melting, a soft flush on her
cheeks that did not go away. “I never knew until just now
when—you put your arms around me. And I never expected to
marry you, Martin, not until just now. How did you make me love
you?”</p>
<p>“I don’t know,” he laughed, “unless just
by loving you, for I loved you hard enough to melt the heart of a stone,
much less the heart of the living, breathing woman you are.”</p>
<p>“This is so different from what I thought love would be,”
she announced irrelevantly.</p>
<p>“What did you think it would be like?”</p>
<p>“I didn’t think it would be like this.” She
was looking into his eyes at the moment, but her own dropped as she
continued, “You see, I didn’t know what this was like.”</p>
<p>He offered to draw her toward him again, but it was no more than
a tentative muscular movement of the girdling arm, for he feared that
he might be greedy. Then he felt her body yielding, and once again
she was close in his arms and lips were pressed on lips.</p>
<p>“What will my people say?” she queried, with sudden apprehension,
in one of the pauses.</p>
<p>“I don’t know. We can find out very easily any
time we are so minded.”</p>
<p>“But if mamma objects? I am sure I am afraid to tell
her.”</p>
<p>“Let me tell her,” he volunteered valiantly. “I
think your mother does not like me, but I can win her around.
A fellow who can win you can win anything. And if we don’t—”</p>
<p>“Yes?”</p>
<p>“Why, we’ll have each other. But there’s
no danger not winning your mother to our marriage. She loves you
too well.”</p>
<p>“I should not like to break her heart,” Ruth said pensively.</p>
<p>He felt like assuring her that mothers’ hearts were not so
easily broken, but instead he said, “And love is the greatest
thing in the world.”</p>
<p>“Do you know, Martin, you sometimes frighten me. I am
frightened now, when I think of you and of what you have been.
You must be very, very good to me. Remember, after all, that I
am only a child. I never loved before.”</p>
<p>“Nor I. We are both children together. And we are
fortunate above most, for we have found our first love in each other.”</p>
<p>“But that is impossible!” she cried, withdrawing herself
from his arms with a swift, passionate movement. “Impossible
for you. You have been a sailor, and sailors, I have heard, are—are—”</p>
<p>Her voice faltered and died away.</p>
<p>“Are addicted to having a wife in every port?” he suggested.
“Is that what you mean?”</p>
<p>“Yes,” she answered in a low voice.</p>
<p>“But that is not love.” He spoke authoritatively.
“I have been in many ports, but I never knew a passing touch of
love until I saw you that first night. Do you know, when I said
good night and went away, I was almost arrested.”</p>
<p>“Arrested?”</p>
<p>“Yes. The policeman thought I was drunk; and I was, too—with
love for you.”</p>
<p>“But you said we were children, and I said it was impossible,
for you, and we have strayed away from the point.”</p>
<p>“I said that I never loved anybody but you,” he replied.
“You are my first, my very first.”</p>
<p>“And yet you have been a sailor,” she objected.</p>
<p>“But that doesn’t prevent me from loving you the first.”</p>
<p>“And there have been women—other women—oh!”</p>
<p>And to Martin Eden’s supreme surprise, she burst into a storm
of tears that took more kisses than one and many caresses to drive away.
And all the while there was running through his head Kipling’s
line: “<i>And the Colonel’s lady and Judy O’Grady
are sisters under their skins</i>.” It was true, he decided;
though the novels he had read had led him to believe otherwise.
His idea, for which the novels were responsible, had been that only
formal proposals obtained in the upper classes. It was all right
enough, down whence he had come, for youths and maidens to win each
other by contact; but for the exalted personages up above on the heights
to make love in similar fashion had seemed unthinkable. Yet the
novels were wrong. Here was a proof of it. The same pressures
and caresses, unaccompanied by speech, that were efficacious with the
girls of the working-class, were equally efficacious with the girls
above the working-class. They were all of the same flesh, after
all, sisters under their skins; and he might have known as much himself
had he remembered his Spencer. As he held Ruth in his arms and
soothed her, he took great consolation in the thought that the Colonel’s
lady and Judy O’Grady were pretty much alike under their skins.
It brought Ruth closer to him, made her possible. Her dear flesh
was as anybody’s flesh, as his flesh. There was no bar to
their marriage. Class difference was the only difference, and
class was extrinsic. It could be shaken off. A slave, he
had read, had risen to the Roman purple. That being so, then he
could rise to Ruth. Under her purity, and saintliness, and culture,
and ethereal beauty of soul, she was, in things fundamentally human,
just like Lizzie Connolly and all Lizzie Connollys. All that was
possible of them was possible of her. She could love, and hate,
maybe have hysterics; and she could certainly be jealous, as she was
jealous now, uttering her last sobs in his arms.</p>
<p>“Besides, I am older than you,” she remarked suddenly,
opening her eyes and looking up at him, “three years older.”</p>
<p>“Hush, you are only a child, and I am forty years older than
you, in experience,” was his answer.</p>
<p>In truth, they were children together, so far as love was concerned,
and they were as naive and immature in the expression of their love
as a pair of children, and this despite the fact that she was crammed
with a university education and that his head was full of scientific
philosophy and the hard facts of life.</p>
<p>They sat on through the passing glory of the day, talking as lovers
are prone to talk, marvelling at the wonder of love and at destiny that
had flung them so strangely together, and dogmatically believing that
they loved to a degree never attained by lovers before. And they
returned insistently, again and again, to a rehearsal of their first
impressions of each other and to hopeless attempts to analyze just precisely
what they felt for each other and how much there was of it.</p>
<p>The cloud-masses on the western horizon received the descending sun,
and the circle of the sky turned to rose, while the zenith glowed with
the same warm color. The rosy light was all about them, flooding
over them, as she sang, “Good-by, Sweet Day.” She
sang softly, leaning in the cradle of his arm, her hands in his, their
hearts in each other’s hands.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />