T. S. Arthur

After the Storm


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drawing an arm tenderly around the neck of her friend; "don't trust such sentences on your lips. I can't bear to hear you talk so. It isn't my sweet friend speaking."

      "You are a dear, good girl, Rose," replied Irene, smiling faintly, "and I only wish that I had a portion of your calm, gentle spirit. But I am as I am, and must act out if I act at all. I must be myself or nothing."

      "You can be as considerate of others as of yourself?" said Rose.

      Irene looked at her companion inquiringly.

      "I mean," added Rose, "that you can exercise the virtue of self-denial in order to give pleasure to another—especially if that other one be an object very dear to you. As in the present case, seeing that your husband wants to join this riding party, you can, for his sake, lay aside your indifference, and enter, with a hearty good-will, into the proposed pastime."

      "And why cannot he, seeing that I do not care to ride, deny himself a little for my sake, and not drag me out against my will? Is all the yielding and concession to be on my side? Must his will rule in everything? I can tell you what it is, Rose, this will never suit me. There will be open war between us before the honeymoon has waxed and waned, if he goes on as he has begun."

      "Hush! hush, Irene!" said her friend, in a tone of deprecation. "The lightest sense of wrong gains undue magnitude the moment we begin to complain. We see almost anything to be of greater importance when from the obscurity of thought we bring it out into the daylight of speech."

      "It will be just as I say, and saying it will not make it any more so," was Irene's almost sullen response to this. "I have my own ideas of things and my own individuality, and neither of these do I mean to abandon. If Hartley hasn't the good sense to let me have my own way in what concerns myself, I will take my own way. As to the troubles that may come afterward, I do not give them any weight in the argument. I would die a martyr's deaths rather than become the passive creature of another."

      "My dear friend, why will you talk so?" Rose spoke in a tone of grief.

      "Simply because I am in earnest. From the hour of our marriage I have seen a disposition on the part of my husband to assume control—to make his will the general law of our actions. It has not exhibited itself in things of moment, but in trifles, showing that the spirit was there. I say this to you, Rose, because we have been like sisters, and I can tell you of my inmost thoughts. There is a cloud already in the sky, and it threatens an approaching storm."

      "Oh, my friend, why are you so blind, so weak, so self-deceived? You are putting forth your hands to drag down the temple of happiness. If it fall, it will crush you beneath a mass of ruins; and not you only, but the one you have so lately pledged yourself before God and his angels to love."

      "And I do love him as deeply as ever man was loved. Oh that he knew my heart! He would not then shatter his image there. He would not trifle with a spirit formed for intense, yielding, passionate love, but rigid as steel and cold as ice when its freedom is touched. He should have known me better before linking his fate with mine."

      One of her darker moods had come upon Irene, and she was beating about in the blind obscurity of passion. As she began to give utterance to complaining thoughts, new thoughts formed themselves, and what was only vague feelings grew into ideas of wrong; and these, when once spoken, assumed a magnitude unimagined before. In vain did her friend strive with her. Argument, remonstrance, persuasion, only seemed to bring greater obscurity and to excite a more bitter feeling in her mind. And so, despairing of any good result, Rose withdrew, and left her with her own unhappy thoughts.

      Not long after Miss Carman retired, Emerson came in. At the sound of his approaching footsteps, Irene had, with a strong effort, composed herself and swept back the deeper shadows from her face.

      "Not ready yet?" he said, in a pleasant, half-chiding way. "The carriages will be at the door in ten minutes."

      "I am not going to ride out," returned Irene, in a quiet, seemingly indifferent tone of voice. Hartley mistook her manner for sport, and answered pleasantly—

      "Oh yes you are, my little lady."

      "No, I am not." There was no misapprehension now.

      "Not going to ride out?" Hartley's brows contracted.

      "No; I am not going to ride out to-day." Each word was distinctly spoken.

      "I don't understand you, Irene."

      "Are not my words plain enough?"

      "Yes, they are too plain—so plain as to make them involve a mystery. What do you mean by this sudden change of purpose?"

      "I don't wish to ride out," said Irene, with assumed calmness of manner; "and that being so, may I not have my will in the case?"

      "No—"

      A red spot burned on Irene's cheeks and her eyes flashed.

      "No," repeated her husband; "not after you have given up that will to another."

      "To you!" Irene started to her feet in instant passion. "And so I am to be nobody, and you the lord and master. My will is to be nothing, and yours the law of my life." Her lip curled in contemptuous anger.

      "You misunderstand me," said Hartley Emerson, speaking as calmly as was possible in this sudden emergency. "I did not refer specially to myself, but to all of our party, to whom you had given up your will in a promise to ride out with them, and to whom, therefore, you were bound."

      "An easy evasion," retorted the excited bride, who had lost her mental equipoise.

      "Irene," the young man spoke sternly, "are those the right words for your husband? An easy evasion!"

      "I have said them."

      "And you must unsay them."

      Both had passed under the cloud which pride and passion had raised.

      "Must! I thought you knew me better, Hartley." Irene grew suddenly calm.

      "If there is to be love between us, all barriers must be removed."

      "Don't say must to me, sir! I will not endure the word."

      Hartley turned from her and walked the floor with rapid steps, angry, grieved and in doubt as to what it were best for him to do. The storm had broken on him without a sign of warning, and he was wholly unprepared to meet it.

      "Irene," he said, at length, pausing before her, "this conduct on your part is wholly inexplicable. I cannot understand its meaning. Will you explain yourself?"

      "Certainly. I am always ready to give a reason for my conduct," she replied, with cold dignity.

      "Say on, then." Emerson spoke with equal coldness of manner.

      "I did not wish to ride out, and said so in the beginning. That ought to have been enough for you. But no—my wishes were nothing; your will must be law."

      "And that is all! the head and front of my offending!" said Emerson, in a tone of surprise.

      "It isn't so much the thing itself that I object to, as the spirit in which it is done," said Irene.

      "A spirit of overbearing self-will!' said Emerson.

      "Yes, if you choose. That is what my soul revolts against. I gave you my heart and my hand—my love and my confidence—not my freedom. The last is a part of my being, and I will maintain it while I have life."

      "Perverse girl! What insane spirit has got possession of your mind?" exclaimed Emerson, chafed beyond endurance.

      "Say on," retorted Irene; "I am prepared for this. I have seen, from the hour of our marriage, that a time of strife would come; that your will would seek to make itself ruler, and that I would not submit. I did not expect the issue to come so soon. I trusted in your love to spare me, at least, until I could be bidden from general observation when I turned myself upon you and said, Thus far thou mayest go, but no farther. But, come the struggle early or late—now or in twenty years—I am prepared."