<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XIX"></SPAN>CHAPTER XIX</h2>
<br/>
<p>Alan's first thought was of the monstrous incongruity of the
thing, the almost physical impossibility of a mésalliance of
the sort Mary Standish had revealed to him. He saw her, young and
beautiful, with face and eyes that from the beginning had made him
feel all that was good and sweet in life, and behind her he saw the
shadow-hulk of John Graham, the pitiless iron-man, without
conscience and without soul, coarsened by power, fiendish in his
iniquities, and old enough to be her father!</p>
<p>A slow smile twisted his lips, but he did not know he smiled. He
pulled himself together without letting her see the physical part
of the effort it was taking. And he tried to find something to say
that would help clear her eyes of the agony that was in them.</p>
<p>"That--is a most unreasonable thing--to be true," he said.</p>
<p>It seemed to him his lips were making words out of wood, and
that the words were fatuously inefficient compared with what he
should have said, or acted, under the circumstances.</p>
<p>She nodded. "It is. But the world doesn't look at it in that
way. Such things just happen."</p>
<p>She reached for a book which lay on the table where the tundra
daisies were heaped. It was a book written around the early phases
of pioneer life in Alaska, taken from his own library, a volume of
statistical worth, dryly but carefully written--and she had been
reading it. It struck him as a symbol of the fight she was making,
of her courage, and of her desire to triumph in the face of
tremendous odds that must have beset her. He still could not
associate her completely with John Graham. Yet his face was cold
and white.</p>
<p>Her hand trembled a little as she opened the book and took from
it a newspaper clipping. She did not speak as she unfolded it and
gave it to him.</p>
<p>At the top of two printed columns was the picture of a young and
beautiful girl; in an oval, covering a small space over the girl's
shoulder, was a picture of a man of fifty or so. Both were
strangers to him. He read their names, and then the headlines. "A
Hundred-Million-Dollar Love" was the caption, and after the word
love was a dollar sign. Youth and age, beauty and the other thing,
two great fortunes united. He caught the idea and looked at Mary
Standish. It was impossible for him to think of her as Mary
Graham.</p>
<p>"I tore that from a paper in Cordova," she said. "They have
nothing to do with me. The girl lives in Texas. But don't you see
something in her eyes? Can't you see it, even in the picture? She
has on her wedding things. But it seemed to me--when I saw her
face--that in her eyes were agony and despair and hopelessness, and
that she was bravely trying to hide them from the world. It's just
another proof, one of thousands, that such unreasonable things do
happen."</p>
<p>He was beginning to feel a dull and painless sort of calm, the
stoicism which came to possess him whenever he was confronted by
the inevitable. He sat down, and with his head bowed over it took
one of the limp, little hands that lay in Mary Standish's lap. The
warmth had gone out of it. It was cold and lifeless. He caressed it
gently and held it between his brown, muscular hands, staring at
it, and yet seeing nothing in particular. It was only the ticking
of Keok's clock that broke the silence for a time. Then he released
the hand, and it dropped in the girl's lap again. She had been
looking steadily at the streak of gray in his hair. And a light
came into her eyes, a light which he did not see, and a little
tremble of her lips, and an almost imperceptible inclination of her
head toward him.</p>
<p>"I'm sorry I didn't know," he said. "I realize now how you must
have felt back there in the cottonwoods."</p>
<p>"No, you don't realize--<i>you don't!</i>" she protested.</p>
<p>In an instant, it seemed to him, a vibrant, flaming life swept
over her again. It was as if his words had touched fire to some
secret thing, as if he had unlocked a door which grim hopelessness
had closed. He was amazed at the swiftness with which color came
into her cheeks.</p>
<p>"You don't understand, and I am determined that you
<i>shall</i>," she went on. "I would die before I let you go away
thinking what is now in your mind. You will despise me, but I would
rather be hated for the truth than because of the horrible thing
which you must believe if I remain silent." She forced a wan smile
to her lips. "You know, Belinda Mulrooneys were very well in their
day, but they don't fit in now, do they? If a woman makes a mistake
and tries to remedy it in a fighting sort of way, as Belinda
Mulrooney might have done back in the days when Alaska was
young--"</p>
<p>She finished with a little gesture of despair.</p>
<p>"I have committed a great folly," she said, hesitating an
instant in his silence. "I see very clearly now the course I should
have taken. You will advise me that it is still not too late when
you have heard what I am going to say. Your face is like--a
rock."</p>
<p>"It is because your tragedy is mine," he said.</p>
<p>She turned her eyes from him. The color in her cheeks deepened.
It was a vivid, feverish glow. "I was born rich, enormously,
hatefully rich," she said in the low, unimpassioned voice of a
confessional. "I don't remember father or mother. I lived always
with my Grandfather Standish and my Uncle Peter Standish. Until I
was thirteen I had my Uncle Peter, who was grandfather's brother,
and lived with us. I worshiped Uncle Peter. He was a cripple. From
young manhood he had lived in a wheel-chair, and he was nearly
seventy-five when he died. As a baby that wheel-chair, and my rides
in it with him about the great house in which we lived, were my
delights. He was my father and mother, everything that was good and
sweet in life. I remember thinking, as a child, that if God was as
good as Uncle Peter, He was a wonderful God. It was Uncle Peter who
told me, year after year, the old stories and legends of the
Standishes. And he was always happy--always happy and glad and
seeing nothing but sunshine though he hadn't stood on his feet for
nearly sixty years. And my Uncle Peter died when I was thirteen,
five days before my birthday came. I think he must have been to me
what your father was to you."</p>
<p>He nodded. There was something that was not the hardness of rock
in his face now, and John Graham seemed to have faded away.</p>
<p>"I was left, then, alone with my Grandfather Standish," she went
on. "He didn't love me as my Uncle Peter loved me, and I don't
think I loved him. But I was proud of him. I thought the whole
world must have stood in awe of him, as I did. As I grew older I
learned the world <i>was</i> afraid of him--bankers, presidents,
even the strongest men in great financial interests; afraid of him,
and of his partners, the Grahams, and of Sharpleigh, who my Uncle
Peter had told me was the cleverest lawyer in the nation, and who
had grown up in the business of the two families. My grandfather
was sixty-eight when Uncle Peter died, so it was John Graham who
was the actual working force behind the combined fortunes of the
two families. Sometimes, as I now recall it, Uncle Peter was like a
little child. I remember how he tried to make me understand just
how big my grandfather's interests were by telling me that if two
dollars were taken from every man, woman, and child in the United
States, it would just about add up to what he and the Grahams
possessed, and my Grandfather Standish's interests were
three-quarters of the whole. I remember how a hunted look would
come into my Uncle Peter's face at times when I asked him how all
this money was used, and where it was. And he never answered me as
I wanted to be answered, and I never understood. I didn't know
<i>why</i> people feared my grandfather and John Graham. I didn't
know of the stupendous power my grandfather's money had rolled up
for them. I didn't know"--her voice sank to a shuddering
whisper--"I didn't know how they were using it in Alaska, for
instance. I didn't know it was feeding upon starvation and ruin and
death. I don't think even Uncle Peter knew <i>that</i>."</p>
<p>She looked at Alan steadily, and her gray eyes seemed burning up
with a slow fire.</p>
<p>"Why, even then, before Uncle Peter died, I had become one of
the biggest factors in all their schemes. It was impossible for me
to suspect that John Graham was <i>anticipating</i> a little girl
of thirteen, and I didn't guess that my Grandfather Standish, so
straight, so grandly white of beard and hair, so like a god of
power when he stood among men, was even then planning that I should
be given to him, so that a monumental combination of wealth might
increase itself still more in that juggernaut of financial
achievement for which he lived. And to bring about my sacrifice, to
make sure it would not fail, they set Sharpleigh to the task,
because Sharpleigh was sweet and good of face, and gentle like
Uncle Peter, so that I loved him and had confidence in him, without
a suspicion that under his white hair lay a brain which matched in
cunning and mercilessness that of John Graham himself. And he did
his work well, Alan."</p>
<p>A second time she had spoken his name, softly and without
embarrassment. With her nervous fingers tying and untying the two
corners of a little handkerchief in her lap, she went on, after a
moment of silence in which the ticking of Keok's clock seemed tense
and loud.</p>
<p>"When I was seventeen, Grandfather Standish died. I wish you
could understand all that followed without my telling you: how I
clung to Sharpleigh as a father, how I trusted him, and how
cleverly and gently he educated me to the thought that it was right
and just, and my greatest duty in life, to carry out the
stipulation of my grandfather's will and marry John Graham.
Otherwise, he told me--if that union was not brought about before I
was twenty-two--not a dollar of the great fortune would go to the
house of Standish; and because he was clever enough to know that
money alone would not urge me, he showed me a letter which he said
my Uncle Peter had written, and which I was to read on my
seventeenth birthday, and in that letter Uncle Peter urged me to
live up to the Standish name and join in that union of the two
great fortunes which he and Grandfather Standish had always
planned. I didn't dream the letter was a forgery. And in the end
they won--and I promised."</p>
<p>She sat with bowed head, crumpling the bit of cambric between
her fingers. "Do you despise me?" she asked.</p>
<p>"No," he replied in a tense, unimpassioned voice. "I love
you."</p>
<p>She tried to look at him calmly and bravely. In his face again
lay the immobility of rock, and in his eyes a sullen, slumbering
fire.</p>
<p>"I promised," she repeated quickly, as if regretting the impulse
that had made her ask him the question. "But it was to be business,
a cold, unsentimental business. I disliked John Graham. Yet I would
marry him. In the eyes of the law I would be his wife; in the eyes
of the world I would remain his wife--but never more than that.
They agreed, and I in my ignorance believed.</p>
<p>"I didn't see the trap. I didn't see the wicked triumph in John
Graham's heart. No power could have made me believe then that he
wanted to possess only <i>me</i>; that he was horrible enough to
want me even without love; that he was a great monster of a spider,
and I the fly lured into his web. And the agony of it was that in
all the years since Uncle Peter died I had dreamed strange and
beautiful dreams. I lived in a make-believe world of my own, and I
read, read, read; and the thought grew stronger and stronger in me
that I had lived another life somewhere, and that I belonged back
in the years when the world was clean, and there was love, and vast
reaches of land wherein money and power were little guessed of, and
where romance and the glory of manhood and womanhood rose above all
other things. Oh, I wanted these things, and yet because others had
molded me, and because of my misguided Standish sense of pride and
honor, I was shackling myself to John Graham.</p>
<p>"In the last months preceding my twenty-second birthday I
learned more of the man than I had ever known before; rumors came
to me; I investigated a little, and I began to find the hatred, and
the reason for it, which has come to me so conclusively here in
Alaska. I almost knew, at the last, that he was a monster, but the
world had been told I was to marry him, and Sharpleigh with his
fatherly hypocrisy was behind me, and John Graham treated me so
courteously and so coolly that I did not suspect the terrible
things in his heart and mind--and I went on with the bargain. <i>I
married him.</i>"</p>
<p>She drew a sudden, deep breath, as if she had passed through the
ordeal of what she had most dreaded to say, and now, meeting the
changeless expression of Alan's face with a fierce, little cry that
leaped from her like a flash of gun-fire, she sprang to her feet
and stood with her back crushed against the tundra flowers, her
voice trembling as she continued, while he stood up and faced
her.</p>
<p>"You needn't go on," he interrupted in a voice so low and
terribly hard that she felt the menacing thrill of it. "You
needn't. I will settle with John Graham, if God gives me the
chance."</p>
<p>"You would have me stop <i>now</i>--before I have told you of
the only shred of triumph to which I may lay claim!" she protested.
"Oh, you may be sure that I realize the sickening folly and
wickedness of it all, but I swear before my God that I didn't
realize it then, until it was too late. To you, Alan, clean as the
great mountains and plains that have been a part of you, I know how
impossible this must seem--that I should marry a man I at first
feared, then loathed, then came to hate with a deadly hatred; that
I should sacrifice myself because I thought it was a duty; that I
should be so weak, so ignorant, so like soft clay in the hands of
those I trusted. Yet I tell you that at no time did I think or
suspect that I was sacrificing <i>myself</i>; at no time, blind
though you may call me, did I see a hint of that sickening danger
into which I was voluntarily going. No, not even an hour before the
wedding did I suspect that, for it had all been so coldly planned,
like a great deal in finance--so carefully adjudged by us all as a
business affair, that I felt no fear except that sickness of soul
which comes of giving up one's life. And no hint of it came until
the last of the few words were spoken which made us man and wife,
and then I saw in John Graham's eyes something which I had never
seen there before. And Sharpleigh--"</p>
<p>Her hands caught at her breast. Her gray eyes were pools of
flame.</p>
<p>"I went to my room. I didn't lock my door, because never had it
been necessary to do that. I didn't cry. No, I didn't cry. But
something strange was happening to me which tears might have
prevented. It seemed to me there were many walls to my room; I was
faint; the windows seemed to appear and disappear, and in that
sickness I reached my bed. Then I saw the door open, and John
Graham came in, and closed the door behind him, and locked it. My
room. He had come into <i>my room!</i> The unexpectedness of
it--the horror--the insult roused me from my stupor. I sprang up to
face him, and there he stood, within arm's reach of me, a look in
his face which told me at last the truth which I had failed to
suspect--or fear. His arms were reaching out--</p>
<p>"'You are my wife,' he said.</p>
<p>"Oh, I knew, then. '<i>You are my wife</i>,' he repeated. I
wanted to scream, but I couldn't; and then--then--his arms reached
me; I felt them crushing around me like the coils of a great snake;
the poison of his lips was at my face--and I believed that I was
lost, and that no power could save me in this hour from the man who
had come to my room--the man who was my husband. I think it was
Uncle Peter who gave me voice, who put the right words in my brain,
who made me laugh--yes, laugh, and almost caress him with my hands.
The change in me amazed him, stunned him, and he freed me--while I
told him that in these first few hours of wifehood I wanted to be
alone, and that he should come to me that evening, and that I would
be waiting for him. And I smiled at him as I said these things,
smiled while I wanted to kill him, and he went, a great, gloating,
triumphant beast, believing that the obedience of wifehood was
about to give him what he had expected to find through
dishonor--and I was left alone.</p>
<p>"I thought of only one thing then--escape. I saw the truth. It
swept over me, inundated me, roared in my ears. All that I had ever
lived with Uncle Peter came back to me. This was not his world; it
had never been--and it was not mine. It was, all at once, a world
of monsters. I wanted never to face it again, never to look into
the eyes of those I had known. And even as these thoughts and
desires swept upon me, I was filling a traveling bag in a fever of
madness, and Uncle Peter was at my side, urging me to hurry,
telling me I had no minutes to lose, for the man who had left me
was clever and might guess the truth that lay hid behind my smiles
and cajolery.</p>
<p>"I stole out through the back of the house, and as I went I
heard Sharpleigh's low laughter in the library. It was a new kind
of laughter, and with it I heard John Graham's voice. I was
thinking only of the sea--to get away on the sea. A taxi took me to
my bank, and I drew money. I went to the wharves, intent only on
boarding a ship, any ship, and it seemed to me that Uncle Peter was
leading me; and we came to a great ship that was leaving for
Alaska--and you know--what happened then--Alan Holt."</p>
<p>With a sob she bowed her face in her hands, but only an instant
it was there, and when she looked at Alan again, there were no
tears in her eyes, but a soft glory of pride and exultation.</p>
<p>"I am clean of John Graham," she cried. "<i>Clean!</i>"</p>
<p>He stood twisting his hands, twisting them in a helpless, futile
sort of way, and it was he, and not the girl, who felt like bowing
his head that the tears might come unseen. For her eyes were bright
and shining and clear as stars.</p>
<p>"Do you despise me now?"</p>
<p>"I love you," he said again, and made no movement toward
her.</p>
<p>"I am glad," she whispered, and she did not look at him, but at
the sunlit plain which lay beyond the window.</p>
<p>"And Rossland was on the <i>Nome</i>, and saw you, and sent word
back to Graham," he said, fighting to keep himself from going
nearer to her.</p>
<p>She nodded. "Yes; and so I came to you, and failing there, I
leaped into the sea, for I wanted them to think I was dead."</p>
<p>"And Rossland was hurt."</p>
<p>"Yes. Strangely. I heard of it in Cordova. Men like Rossland
frequently come to unexpected ends."</p>
<p>He went to the door which she had closed, and opened it, and
stood looking toward the blue billows of the foothills with the
white crests of the mountains behind them. She came, after a
moment, and stood beside him.</p>
<p>"I understand," she said softly, and her hand lay in a gentle
touch upon his arm. "You are trying to see some way out, and you
can see only one. That is to go back, face the creatures I hate,
regain my freedom in the old way. And I, too, can see no other way.
I came on impulse; I must return with impulse and madness burned
out of me. And I am sorry. I dread it. I--would rather die."</p>
<p>"And I--" he began, then caught himself and pointed to the
distant hills and mountains. "The herds are there," he said. "I am
going to them. I may be gone a week or more. Will you promise me to
be here when I return?"</p>
<p>"Yes, if that is your desire."</p>
<p>"It is."</p>
<p>She was so near that his lips might have touched her shining
hair.</p>
<p>"And when you return, I must go. That will be the only way."</p>
<p>"I think so."</p>
<p>"It will be hard. It may be, after all, that I am a coward. But
to face all that--alone--"</p>
<p>"You won't be alone," he said quietly, still looking at the
far-away hills. "If you go, I am going with you."</p>
<p>It seemed as if she had stopped breathing for a moment at his
side, and then, with a little, sobbing cry she drew away from him
and stood at the half-opened door of Nawadlook's room, and the
glory in her eyes was the glory of his dreams as he had wandered
with her hand in hand over the tundras in those days of grief and
half-madness when he had thought she was dead.</p>
<p>"I am glad I was in Ellen McCormick's cabin the day you came,"
she was saying. "And I thank God for giving me the madness and
courage to come to <i>you</i>. I am not afraid of anything in the
world now--because--<i>I love you, Alan</i>!"</p>
<p>And as Nawadlook's door closed behind her, Alan stumbled out
into the sunlight, a great drumming in his heart, and a tumult in
his brain that twisted the world about him until for a little it
held neither vision nor space nor sound.</p>
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