<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XXVIII" id="CHAPTER_XXVIII"></SPAN>CHAPTER XXVIII</h2>
<h3>A COQUETTE</h3>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_270" id="Page_270"></SPAN></span>The timbers of the ship which was to carry the fortunes
of our hero were laid by the side of Middle Bay, and all
these romantic shores could hardly present a lovelier scene.
This beautiful sheet of water separates Harpswell from a
portion of Brunswick. Its shores are rocky and pine-crowned,
and display the most picturesque variety of outline.
Eagle Island, Shelter Island, and one or two smaller
ones, lie on the glassy surface like soft clouds of green
foliage pierced through by the steel-blue tops of arrowy
pine-trees.</p>
<p>There were a goodly number of shareholders in the projected
vessel; some among the most substantial men in the
vicinity. Zephaniah Pennel had invested there quite a
solid sum, as had also our friend Captain Kittridge. Moses
had placed therein the proceeds of his recent voyage, which
enabled him to buy a certain number of shares, and he
secretly revolved in his mind whether the sum of money
left by his father might not enable him to buy the whole
ship. Then a few prosperous voyages, and his fortune was
made!</p>
<p>He went into the business of building the new vessel
with all the enthusiasm with which he used, when a boy,
to plan ships and mould anchors. Every day he was off at
early dawn in his working-clothes, and labored steadily
among the men till evening. No matter how early he rose,
however, he always found that a good fairy had been before
him and prepared his dinner, daintily sometimes adding<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_271" id="Page_271"></SPAN></span>
thereto a fragrant little bunch of flowers. But when his
boat returned home at evening, he no longer saw her as
in the days of girlhood waiting far out on the farthest
point of rock for his return. Not that she did not watch
for it and run out many times toward sunset; but the moment
she had made out that it was surely he, she would
run back into the house, and very likely find an errand
in her own room, where she would be so deeply engaged
that it would be necessary for him to call her down before
she could make her appearance. Then she came smiling,
chatty, always gracious, and ready to go or to come as he
requested,—the very cheerfulest of household fairies,—but
yet for all that there was a cobweb invisible barrier
around her that for some reason or other he could not break
over. It vexed and perplexed him, and day after day he
determined to whistle it down,—ride over it rough-shod,—and
be as free as he chose with this apparently soft, unresistant,
airy being, who seemed so accessible. Why
shouldn't he kiss her when he chose, and sit with his arm
around her waist, and draw her familiarly upon his knee,—this
little child-woman, who was as a sister to him?
Why, to be sure? Had she ever frowned or scolded as
Sally Kittridge did when he attempted to pass the air-line
that divides man from womanhood? Not at all. She had
neither blushed nor laughed, nor ran away. If he kissed
her, she took it with the most matter-of-fact composure; if
he passed his arm around her, she let it remain with unmoved
calmness; and so somehow he did these things less
and less, and wondered why.</p>
<p>The fact is, our hero had begun an experiment with his
little friend that we would never advise a young man to
try on one of these intense, quiet, soft-seeming women,
whose whole life is inward. He had determined to find
out whether she loved him before he committed himself to
her; and the strength of a whole book of martyrs is in<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_272" id="Page_272"></SPAN></span>
women to endure and to bear without flinching before they
will surrender the gate of this citadel of silence. Moreover,
our hero had begun his siege with precisely the worst
weapons.</p>
<p>For on the night that he returned and found Mara conversing
with a stranger, the suspicion arose in his mind
that somehow Mara might be particularly interested in him,
and instead of asking her, which anybody might consider
the most feasible step in the case, he asked Sally Kittridge.</p>
<p>Sally's inborn, inherent love of teasing was up in a
moment. Did she know anything of that Mr. Adams?
Of course she did,—a young lawyer of one of the best
Boston families,—a splendid fellow; she wished any such
luck might happen to her! Was Mara engaged to him?
What would he give to know? Why didn't he ask
Mara? Did he expect her to reveal her friend's secrets?
Well, she shouldn't,—report said Mr. Adams was well-to-do
in the world, and had expectations from an uncle,—and
didn't Moses think he was interesting in conversation?
Everybody said what a conquest it was for an Orr's Island
girl, etc., etc. And Sally said the rest with many a malicious
toss and wink and sly twinkle of the dimples of her
cheek, which might mean more or less, as a young man of
imaginative temperament was disposed to view it. Now
this was all done in pure simple love of teasing. We incline
to think phrenologists have as yet been very incomplete
in their classification of faculties, or they would have
appointed a separate organ for this propensity of human
nature. Certain persons, often the most kind-hearted in
the world, and who would not give pain in any serious
matter, seem to have an insatiable appetite for those small
annoyances we commonly denominate teasing,—and Sally
was one of this number.</p>
<p>She diverted herself infinitely in playing upon the excitability
of Moses,—in awaking his curiosity, and baffling<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_273" id="Page_273"></SPAN></span>
it, and tormenting him with a whole phantasmagoria of
suggestions and assertions, which played along so near the
line of probability, that one could never tell which might
be fancy and which might be fact.</p>
<p>Moses therefore pursued the line of tactics for such cases
made and provided, and strove to awaken jealousy in Mara
by paying marked and violent attentions to Sally. He
went there evening after evening, leaving Mara to sit alone
at home. He made secrets with her, and alluded to them
before Mara. He proposed calling his new vessel the Sally
Kittridge; but whether all these things made Mara jealous
or not, he could never determine. Mara had no peculiar
gift for acting, except in this one point; but here all the
vitality of nature rallied to her support, and enabled her to
preserve an air of the most unperceiving serenity. If she
shed any tears when she spent a long, lonesome evening,
she was quite particular to be looking in a very placid
frame when Moses returned, and to give such an account of
the books, or the work, or paintings which had interested
her, that Moses was sure to be vexed. Never were her
inquiries for Sally more cordial,—never did she seem
inspired by a more ardent affection for her.</p>
<p>Whatever may have been the result of this state of
things in regard to Mara, it is certain that Moses succeeded
in convincing the common fame of that district that he and
Sally were destined for each other, and the thing was regularly
discussed at quilting frolics and tea-drinkings around,
much to Miss Emily's disgust and Aunt Roxy's grave satisfaction,
who declared that "Mara was altogether too good
for Moses Pennel, but Sally Kittridge would make him
stand round,"—by which expression she was understood
to intimate that Sally had in her the rudiments of the same
kind of domestic discipline which had operated so favorably
in the case of Captain Kittridge.</p>
<p>These things, of course, had come to Mara's ears. She<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_274" id="Page_274"></SPAN></span>
had overheard the discussions on Sunday noons as the people
between meetings sat over their doughnuts and cheese,
and analyzed their neighbors' affairs, and she seemed to
smile at them all. Sally only laughed, and declared that
it was no such thing; that she would no more marry Moses
Pennel, or any other fellow, than she would put her head
into the fire. What did she want of any of them? She
knew too much to get married,—that she did. She was
going to have her liberty for one while yet to come, etc.,
etc.; but all these assertions were of course supposed to
mean nothing but the usual declarations in such cases.
Mara among the rest thought it quite likely that this thing
was yet to be.</p>
<p>So she struggled and tried to reason down a pain which
constantly ached in her heart when she thought of this.
She ought to have foreseen that it must some time end in
this way. Of course she must have known that Moses
would some time choose a wife; and how fortunate that,
instead of a stranger, he had chosen her most intimate
friend. Sally was careless and thoughtless, to be sure, but
she had a good generous heart at the bottom, and she hoped
she would love Moses at least as well as <i>she</i> did, and then
she would always live with them, and think of any little
things that Sally might forget.</p>
<p>After all, Sally was so much more capable and efficient
a person than herself,—so much more bustling and energetic,
she would make altogether a better housekeeper, and
doubtless a better wife for Moses. But then it was so hard
that he did not tell her about it. Was she not his sister?—his
confidant for all his childhood?—and why should
he shut up his heart from her now? But then she must
guard herself from being jealous,—that would be mean
and wicked. So Mara, in her zeal of self-discipline, pushed
on matters; invited Sally to tea to meet Moses; and when
she came, left them alone together while she busied herself<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_275" id="Page_275"></SPAN></span>
in hospitable cares. She sent Moses with errands and
commissions to Sally, which he was sure to improve into
protracted visits; and in short, no young match-maker
ever showed more good-will to forward the union of two
chosen friends than Mara showed to unite Moses and Sally.</p>
<p>So the flirtation went on all summer, like a ship under
full sail, with prosperous breezes; and Mara, in the many
hours that her two best friends were together, tried heroically
to persuade herself that she was not unhappy. She
said to herself constantly that she never had loved Moses
other than as a brother, and repeated and dwelt upon the
fact to her own mind with a pertinacity which might have
led her to suspect the reality of the fact, had she had experience
enough to look closer. True, it was rather lonely,
she said, but that she was used to,—she always had been
and always should be. Nobody would ever love her in
return as she loved; which sentence she did not analyze
very closely, or she might have remembered Mr. Adams
and one or two others, who had professed more for her than
she had found herself able to return. That general proposition
about nobody is commonly found, if sifted to the
bottom, to have specific relation to somebody whose name
never appears in the record.</p>
<p>Nobody could have conjectured from Mara's calm, gentle
cheerfulness of demeanor, that any sorrow lay at the bottom
of her heart; she would not have owned it to herself.</p>
<p>There are griefs which grow with years, which have no
marked beginnings,—no especial dates; they are not
events, but slow perceptions of disappointment, which bear
down on the heart with a constant and equable pressure
like the weight of the atmosphere, and these things are
never named or counted in words among life's sorrows;
yet through them, as through an unsuspected inward
wound, life, energy, and vigor slowly bleed away, and the
persons, never owning even to themselves the weight of<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_276" id="Page_276"></SPAN></span>
the pressure,—standing, to all appearance, fair and cheerful,
are still undermined with a secret wear of this inner
current, and ready to fall with the first external pressure.</p>
<p>There are persons often brought into near contact by the
relations of life, and bound to each other by a love so close,
that they are perfectly indispensable to each other, who yet
act upon each other as a file upon a diamond, by a slow
and gradual friction, the pain of which is so equable, so
constantly diffused through life, as scarcely ever at any
time to force itself upon the mind as a reality.</p>
<p>Such had been the history of the affection of Mara for
Moses. It had been a deep, inward, concentrated passion
that had almost absorbed self-consciousness, and made her
keenly alive to all the moody, restless, passionate changes
of his nature; it had brought with it that craving for sympathy
and return which such love ever will, and yet it was
fixed upon a nature so different and so uncomprehending
that the action had for years been one of pain more than
pleasure. Even now, when she had him at home with her
and busied herself with constant cares for him, there was
a sort of disturbing, unquiet element in the history of
every day. The longing for him to come home at night,—the
wish that he would stay with her,—the uncertainty
whether he would or would not go and spend the evening
with Sally,—the musing during the day over all that he
had done and said the day before, were a constant interior
excitement. For Moses, besides being in his moods quite
variable and changeable, had also a good deal of the dramatic
element in him, and put on sundry appearances in
the way of experiment.</p>
<p>He would feign to have quarreled with Sally, that he
might detect whether Mara would betray some gladness;
but she only evinced concern and a desire to make up the
difficulty. He would discuss her character and her fitness
to make a man happy in matrimony in the style that young<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_277" id="Page_277"></SPAN></span>
gentlemen use who think their happiness a point of great
consequence in the creation; and Mara, always cool, and
firm, and sensible, would talk with him in the most maternal
style possible, and caution him against trifling with
her affections. Then again he would be lavish in his praise
of Sally's beauty, vivacity, and energy, and Mara would
join with the most apparently unaffected delight. Sometimes
he ventured, on the other side, to rally her on some
future husband, and predict the days when all the attentions
which she was daily bestowing on him would be for
another; and here, as everywhere else, he found his little
Sphinx perfectly inscrutable. Instinct teaches the grass-bird,
who hides her eggs under long meadow grass, to
creep timidly yards from the nest, and then fly up boldly
in the wrong place; and a like instinct teaches shy girls all
kinds of unconscious stratagems when the one secret of
their life is approached. They may be as truthful in all
other things as the strictest Puritan, but here they deceive
by an infallible necessity. And meanwhile, where was
Sally Kittridge in all this matter? Was her heart in the
least touched by the black eyes and long lashes? Who
can say? Had she a heart? Well, Sally was a good girl.
When one got sufficiently far down through the foam and
froth of the surface to find what was in the depths of her
nature, there was abundance there of good womanly feeling,
generous and strong, if one could but get at it.</p>
<p>She was the best and brightest of daughters to the old
Captain, whose accounts she kept, whose clothes she
mended, whose dinner she often dressed and carried to him,
from loving choice; and Mrs. Kittridge regarded her housewifely
accomplishments with pride, though she never spoke
to her otherwise than in words of criticism and rebuke, as
in her view an honest mother should who means to keep
a flourishing sprig of a daughter within limits of a proper
humility.<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_278" id="Page_278"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>But as for any sentiment or love toward any person of
the other sex, Sally, as yet, had it not. Her numerous
admirers were only so many subjects for the exercise of her
dear delight of teasing, and Moses Pennel, the last and
most considerable, differed from the rest only in the fact
that he was a match for her in this redoubtable art and
science, and this made the game she was playing with him
altogether more stimulating than that she had carried on
with any other of her admirers. For Moses could sulk
and storm for effect, and clear off as bright as Harpswell
Bay after a thunder-storm—for effect also. Moses could
play jealous, and make believe all those thousand-and-one
shadowy nothings that coquettes, male and female, get up
to carry their points with; and so their quarrels and their
makings-up were as manifold as the sea-breezes that ruffled
the ocean before the Captain's door.</p>
<p>There is but one danger in play of this kind, and that
is, that deep down in the breast of every slippery, frothy,
elfish Undine sleeps the germ of an unawakened soul,
which suddenly, in the course of some such trafficking with
the outward shows and seemings of affection, may wake up
and make of the teasing, tricksy elf a sad and earnest woman—a
creature of loves and self-denials and faithfulness
unto death—in short, something altogether too good, too
sacred to be trifled with; and when a man enters the game
protected by a previous attachment which absorbs all his
nature, and the woman awakes in all her depth and
strength to feel the real meaning of love and life, she finds
that she has played with one stronger than she, at a terrible
disadvantage.</p>
<p>Is this mine lying dark and evil under the saucy little
feet of our Sally? Well, we should not of course be surprised
some day to find it so.</p>
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