<h2> <SPAN name="Thirty_four" id="Thirty_four"></SPAN><i>Thirty-four</i> </h2>
<h2> THE RETURN OF ALWYN </h2>
<p>Bles Alwyn stared at Mrs. Harry Cresswell in surprise. He had not
seen her since that moment at the ball, and he was startled at
the change. Her abundant hair was gone; her face was pale and
drawn, and there were little wrinkles below her sunken eyes. In
those eyes lurked the tired look of the bewildered and the
disappointed. It was in the lofty waiting-room of the Washington
station where Alwyn had come to meet a friend. Mrs. Cresswell
turned and recognized him with genuine pleasure. He seemed
somehow a part of the few things in the world—little and
unimportant perhaps—that counted and stood firm, and she
shook his hand cordially, not minding the staring of the people
about. He took her bag and carried it towards the gate, which
made the observers breathe easier, seeing him in servile duty.
Someway, she knew not just how, she found herself telling him of
the crisis in her life before she realized; not everything, of
course, but a great deal. It was much as though she were talking
to some one from another world—an outsider; but one she had
known long, one who understood. Both from what she recounted and
what she could not tell he gathered the substance of the story,
and it bewildered him. He had not thought that white people had
such troubles; yet, he reflected, why not? They, too, were human.</p>
<p>"I suppose you hear from the school?" he ventured after a pause.</p>
<p>"Why, yes—not directly—but Zora used to speak of it."</p>
<p>Bles looked up quickly.</p>
<p>"Zora?"</p>
<p>"Yes. Didn't you see her while she was here? She has gone back
now."</p>
<p>Then the gate opened, the crowd surged through, sweeping them
apart, and next moment he was alone.</p>
<p>Alwyn turned slowly away. He forgot the friend he was to meet. He
forgot everything but the field of the Silver Fleece. It rose
shadowy there in the pale concourse, swaying in ghostly breezes.
The purple of its flowers mingled with the silver radiance of
tendrils that trembled across the hurrying throng, like threads
of mists along low hills. In its midst rose a dark, slim, and
quivering form. She had been here—here in Washington! Why
had he not known? What was she doing? "She has gone back
now"—back to the Sun and the Swamp, back to the Burden.</p>
<p>Why should not he go back, too? He walked on thinking. He had
failed. His apparent success had been too sudden, too
overwhelming, and when he had faced the crisis his hand had
trembled. He had chosen the Right—but the Right was
ineffective, impotent, almost ludicrous. It left him shorn,
powerless, and in moral revolt. The world had suddenly left him,
as the vision of Carrie Wynn had left him, alone, a mere clerk,
an insignificant cog in the great grinding wheel of humdrum
drudgery. His chance to do and thereby to be had not come.</p>
<p>He thought of Zora again. Why not go back to the South where she
had gone? He shuddered as one who sees before him a cold black
pool whither his path leads. To face the proscription, the
insult, the lawless hate of the South again—never! And yet
he went home and sat down and wrote a long letter to Miss Smith.</p>
<p>The reply that came after some delay was almost curt. It answered
few of his questions, argued with none of his doubts, and made no
mention of Zora. Yes, there was need of a manager for the new
farm and settlement. She was not sure whether Alwyn could do the
work or not. The salary was meagre and the work hard. If he
wished it, he must decide immediately.</p>
<p>Two weeks later found Alwyn on the train facing Southward in the
Jim Crow car. How he had decided to go back South he did not
know. In fact, he had not decided. He had sat helpless and
inactive in the grip of great and shadowed hands, and the thing
was as yet incomprehensible. And so it was that the vision Zora
saw in the swamp had been real enough, and Alwyn felt strangely
disappointed that she had given no sign of greeting on
recognition.</p>
<p>In other ways, too, Zora, when he met her, was to him a new
creature. She came to him frankly and greeted him, her gladness
shining in her eyes, yet looking nothing more than gladness and
saying nothing more. Just what he had expected was hard to say;
but he had left her on her knees in the dirt with outstretched
hands, and somehow he had expected to return to some
corresponding mental attitude. The physical change of these three
years was marvellous. The girl was a woman, well-rounded and
poised, tall, straight, and quick. And with this went mental
change: a self-mastery; a veiling of the self even in intimate
talk; a subtle air as of one looking from great and unreachable
heights down on the dawn of the world. Perhaps no one who had not
known the child and the girl as he had would have noted all this;
but he saw and realized the transformation with a
pang—something had gone; the innocence and wonder of the
child, and in their place had grown up something to him
incomprehensible and occult.</p>
<p>Miss Smith was not to be easily questioned on the subject. She
took no hints and gave no information, and when once he hazarded
some pointed questions she turned on him abruptly, observing
acidly: "If I were you I'd think less of Zora and more of her
work."</p>
<p>Gradually, in his spiritual perplexity, Alwyn turned to Mary
Cresswell. She was staying with the Colonel at Cresswell Oaks.
Her coming South was supposed to be solely for reasons of health,
and her appearance made this excuse plausible. She was lonely and
restless, and naturally drawn toward the school. Her intercourse
with Miss Smith was only formal, but her interest in Zora's work
grew. Down in the swamp, at the edge of the cleared space, had
risen a log cabin; long, low, spacious, overhung with oak and
pine. It was Zora's centre for her settlement-work. There she
lived, and with her a half-dozen orphan girls and children too
young for the boarding department of the school. Mrs. Cresswell
easily fell into the habit of walking by here each day, coming
down the avenue of oaks across the road and into the swamp. She
saw little of Zora personally but she saw her girls and learned
much of her plans.</p>
<p>The rooms of the cottage were clean and light, supplied with
books and pictures, simple toys, and a phonograph. The yard was
one wide green and golden play-ground, and all day the music of
children's glad crooning and the singing of girls went echoing
and trembling through the trees, as they played and sewed and
washed and worked.</p>
<p>From the Cresswells and the Maxwells and others came loads of
clothes for washing and mending. The Tolliver girls had simple
dresses made, embroidery was ordered from town, and soon there
would be the gardens and cotton fields. Mrs. Cresswell would
saunter down of mornings. Sometimes she would talk to the big
girls and play with the children; sometimes she would sit hidden
in the forest, listening and glimpsing and thinking, thinking,
till her head whirled and the world danced red before her eyes,
today she rose wearily, for it was near noon, and started home.
She saw Alwyn swing along the road to the school dining-room
where he had charge of the students at the noonday meal.</p>
<p>Alwyn wanted Mrs. Cresswell's judgment and advice. He was growing
doubtful of his own estimate of women. Evidently something about
his standards was wrong; consequently he made opportunities to
talk with Mrs. Cresswell when she was about, hoping she would
bring up the subject of Zora of her own accord. But she did not.
She was too full of her own cares and troubles, and she was only
too glad of willing and sympathetic ears into which to pour her
thoughts. Miss Smith soon began to look on these conversations
with some uneasiness. Black men and white women cannot talk
together casually in the South and she did not know how far the
North had put notions in Alwyn's head.</p>
<p>Today both met each other almost eagerly.</p>
<p>Mrs. Cresswell had just had a bit of news which only he would
fully appreciate.</p>
<p>"Have you heard of the Vanderpools?" she asked.</p>
<p>"No—except that he was appointed and confirmed at last."</p>
<p>"Well, they had only arrived in France when he died of apoplexy.
I do not know," added Mrs. Cresswell, "I may be wrong and—I
hope I'm not glad." Then there leapt to her mind a hypothetical
question which had to do with her own curious situation. It was
characteristic of her to brood and then restlessly to seek relief
in consulting the one person near who knew her story. She started
to open the subject again today.</p>
<p>But Alwyn, his own mind full, spoke first and rapidly. He, too,
had turned to her as he saw her come from Zora's home. He must
know more about the girl. He could no longer endure this silence.
Zora beneath her apparent frankness was impenetrable, and he felt
that she carefully avoided him, although she did it so deftly
that he felt rather than observed it. Miss Smith still
systematically snubbed him when he broached the subject of Zora.
With others he did not speak; the matter seemed too delicate and
sacred, and he always had an awful dread lest sometime,
somewhere, a chance and fatal word would be dropped, a breath of
evil gossip which would shatter all. He had hated to obtrude his
troubles on Mrs. Cresswell, who seemed so torn in soul. But today
he must speak, although time pressed.</p>
<p>"Mrs. Cresswell," he began hurriedly, "there's a matter—a
personal matter of which I have wanted to speak—a long
time—I—" The dinner-bell rang, and he stopped, vexed.</p>
<p>"Come up to the house this afternoon," she said; "Colonel
Cresswell will be away—" Then she paused abruptly. A
strange startling thought flashed through her brain. Alwyn
noticed nothing. He thanked her cordially and hurried toward the
dining-hall, meeting Colonel Cresswell on horseback just as he
turned into the school gate.</p>
<p>Mary Cresswell walked slowly on, flushing and paling by turns.
Could it be that this Negro had dared to misunderstand
her—had presumed? She reviewed her conduct. Perhaps she had
been indiscreet in thus making a confidant of him in her trouble.
She had thought of him as a boy—an old student, a sort of
confidential servant; but what had he thought? She remembered
Miss Smith's warning of years before—and he had been North
since and acquired Northern notions of freedom and equality. She
bit her lip cruelly.</p>
<p>Yet, she mused, she was herself to blame. She had unwittingly
made the intimacy and he was but a Negro, looking on every white
woman as a goddess and ready to fawn at the slightest
encouragement. There had been no one else here to confide in. She
could not tell Miss Smith her troubles, although she knew Miss
Smith must suspect. Harry Cresswell, apparently, had written
nothing home of their quarrel. All the neighbors behaved as if
her excuse of ill-health were sufficient to account for her
return South to escape the rigors of a Northern winter. Alwyn,
and Alwyn alone, really knew. Well, it was her blindness, and she
must right it quietly and quickly with hard ruthless plainness.
She blushed again at the shame of it; then she began to excuse.</p>
<p>After all, which was worse—a Cresswell or an Alwyn? It was
no sin that Alwyn had done; it was simply ignorant presumption,
and she must correct him firmly, but gently, like a child. What a
crazy muddle the world was! She thought of Harry Cresswell and
the tale he told her in the swamp. She thought of the flitting
ghosts that awful night in Washington. She thought of Miss Wynn
who had jilted Alwyn and given her herself a very bad quarter of
an hour. What a world it was, and after all how far was this
black boy wrong? Just then Colonel Cresswell rode up behind and
greeted her.</p>
<p>She started almost guiltily, and again a sense of the awkwardness
of her position reddened her face and neck. The Colonel
dismounted, despite her protest, and walked beside her. They
chatted along indifferently, of the crops, her brother's new
baby, the proposed mill.</p>
<p>"Mary," his voice abruptly struck a new note. "I don't like the
way you talk with that Alwyn nigger."</p>
<p>She was silent.</p>
<p>"Of course," he continued, "you're Northern born and you have
been a teacher in this school and feel differently from us in
some ways; but mark what I say, a nigger will presume on the
slightest pretext, and you must keep them in their place. Then,
too, you are a Cresswell now—"</p>
<p>She smiled bitterly; he noticed it, but went on:</p>
<p>"You are a Cresswell, even if you have caught Harry up to some of
his deviltry,"—she started,—"and got miffed about it.
It'll all come out right. You're a Cresswell, and you must hold
yourself too high to 'Mister' a nigger or let him dream of any
sort of equality."</p>
<p>He spoke pleasantly, but with a certain sharp insistence that
struck a note of fear in Mary's heart. For a moment she thought
of writing Alwyn not to call. But, no; a note would be unwise.
She and Colonel Cresswell lunched rather silently.</p>
<p>"Well, I must get to town," he finally announced. "The mill
directors meet today. If Maxwell calls by about that lumber tell
him I'll see him in town." And away he went.</p>
<p>He had scarcely reached the highway and ridden a quarter of a
mile or so when he spied Bles Alwyn hurrying across the field
toward the Cresswell Oaks. He frowned and rode on. Then reining
in his horse, he stopped in the shadow of the trees and watched
Alwyn.</p>
<p>It was here that Zora saw him as she came up from her house. She,
too, stopped, and soon saw whom he was watching. She had been
planning to see Mr. Cresswell about the cut timber on her land.
By legal right it was hers but she knew he would claim half,
treating her like a mere tenant. Seeing him watching Alwyn she
paused in the shadow and waited, fearing trouble. She, too, had
felt that the continued conversations of Alwyn and Mrs. Cresswell
were indiscreet, but she hoped that they had attracted no one
else's attention. Now she feared the Colonel was suspicious and
her heart sank. Alwyn went straight toward the house and
disappeared in the oak avenue. Still Colonel Cresswell waited but
Zora waited no longer. Alwyn must be warned. She must reach
Cresswell's mansion before Cresswell did and without him seeing
her. This meant a long detour of the swamp to approach the Oaks
from the west. She silently gathered up her skirts and walked
quickly and carefully away.</p>
<p>She was a strong woman, lithe and vigorous, living in the open
air and used to walking. Once out of hearing she threw away her
hat and bending forward ran through the swamp. For a while she
ran easily and swiftly. Then for a moment she grew dizzy and it
seemed as though she was standing still and the swamp in solemn
grandeur marching past—in solemn mocking grandeur. She
loosened her dress at the neck and flew on.</p>
<p>She sped at last through the oaks, up the terraces, and slowing
down to an unsteady walk, staggered into the house. No one would
wonder at her being there. She came up now and then and sorted
the linen and piled the baskets for her girls. She entered a side
door and listened. The Colonel's voice sounded impatiently in the
front hall.</p>
<p>"Mary! Mary?"</p>
<p>A pause, then an answer:</p>
<p>"Yes, father!"</p>
<p>He started up the front stairway and Zora hurried up the narrow
back stairs, almost overturning a servant.</p>
<p>"I'm after the clothes," she explained. She reached the back
landing just in time to see Colonel Cresswell's head rising up
the front staircase. With a quick bound she almost fell into the
first room at the top of the stairs.</p>
<p>Bles Alwyn had hurried through his dinner duties and hastened to
the Oaks. The questions, the doubts, the uncertainty within him
were clamoring for utterance. How much had Mrs. Cresswell ever
known of Zora? What kind of a woman was Zora now? Mrs. Cresswell
had seen her and had talked to her and watched her. What did she
think? Thus he formulated his questions as he went, half timid,
and fearful in putting them and yet determined to know.</p>
<p>Mrs. Cresswell, waiting for him, was almost panic-stricken.
Probably he would beat round the bush seeking further
encouragement; but at the slightest indication she must crush him
ruthlessly and at the same time point the path of duty. He ought
to marry some good girl—not Zora, but some one. Somehow
Zora seemed too unusual and strange for him—too inhuman, as
Mary Cresswell judged humanity. She glanced out from her seat on
the upper verandah over the front porch and saw Alwyn coming.
Where should she receive him? On the porch and have Mr. Maxwell
ride up? In the parlor and have the servants astounded and
talking? If she took him up to her own sitting-room the servants
would think he was doing some work or fetching something for the
school. She greeted him briefly and asked him in.</p>
<p>"Good-afternoon, Bles"—using his first name to show him his
place, and then inwardly recoiling at its note of familiarity.
She preceded him up-stairs to the sitting-room, where, leaving
the door ajar, she seated herself on the opposite side of the
room and waited.</p>
<p>He fidgeted, then spoke rapidly.</p>
<p>"Mrs. Cresswell—this is a personal affair." She reddened
angrily. "A love affair"—she paled with something like
fear—"and I"—she started to speak, but could
not—"I want to know what you think about Zora?"</p>
<p>"About Zora!" she gasped weakly. The sudden reaction, the
revulsion of her agitated feelings, left her breathless.</p>
<p>"About Zora. You know I loved her dearly as a boy—how
dearly I have only just begun to realize: I've been wondering if
I understood—if I wasn't—"</p>
<p>Mrs. Cresswell got angrily to her feet.</p>
<p>"You have come here to speak to me of that—that—" she
choked, and Bles thought his worst fears realized.</p>
<p>"Mary, Mary!" Colonel Cresswell's voice broke suddenly in upon
them. With a start of fear Mrs. Cresswell rushed out into the
hall and closed the door.</p>
<p>"Mary, has that Alwyn nigger been here this afternoon?" Mr.
Cresswell was coming up-stairs, carrying his riding whip.</p>
<p>"Why, no!" she answered, lying instinctively before she quite
realized what her lie meant. She hesitated. "That is, I haven't
seen him. I must have nodded over my book,"—looking toward
the little verandah at the front of the upper hall, where her
easy chair stood with her book. Then with an awful flash of
enlightenment she realized what her lie might mean, and her heart
paused.</p>
<p>Cresswell strode up.</p>
<p>"I saw him come up—he must have entered. He's nowhere
downstairs," he wavered and scowled. "Have you been in your
sitting-room?" And then, not waiting for a reply, he strode to
the door.</p>
<p>"But the damned scoundrel wouldn't dare!"</p>
<p>He deliberately placed his hand in his right-hand hip-pocket and
threw open the door.</p>
<p>Mary Cresswell stood frozen. The full horror of the thing burst
upon her. Her own silly misapprehension, the infatuation of Alwyn
for Zora, her thoughtless—no, vindictive—betrayal of
him to something worse than death. She listened for the crack of
doom. She heard a bird singing far down in the swamp; she heard
the soft raising of a window and the closing of a door. And
then—great God in heaven! must she live forever in this
agony?—and then, she heard the door bang and Mr.
Cresswell's gruff voice—</p>
<p>"Well, where is he?—he isn't in there!"</p>
<p>Mary Cresswell felt that something was giving way within. She
swayed and would have crashed to the bottom of the staircase if
just then she had not seen at the opposite end of the hall, near
the back stairs, Zora and Alwyn emerge calmly from a room,
carrying a basket full of clothes. Colonel Cresswell stared at
them, and Zora instinctively put up her hand and fastened her
dress at the throat. The Colonel scowled, for it was all clear to
him now.</p>
<p>"Look here," he angrily opened upon them, "if you niggers want to
meet around keep out of this house; hereafter I'll send the
clothes down. By God, if you want to make love go to the swamp!"
He stamped down the stairs while an ashy paleness stole beneath
the dark-red bronze of Zora's face.</p>
<p>They walked silently down the road together—the old
familiar road. Alwyn was staring moodily ahead.</p>
<p>"We must get married—before Christmas, Zora," he presently
avowed, not looking at her. He felt the basket pause and he
glanced up. Her dark eyes were full upon him and he saw something
in their depths that brought him to himself and made him realize
his blunder.</p>
<p>"Zora!" he stammered, "forgive me! Will you marry me?"</p>
<p>She looked at him calmly with infinite compassion. But her reply
was uttered unhesitantly; distinct, direct.</p>
<p>"No, Bles."</p>
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