A Walk Up The Avenue
He came down the steps slowly, and pulling mechanically at his gloves.
He remembered afterwards that some woman's face had nodded brightly to
him from a passing brougham, and that he had lifted his hat through
force of habit, and without knowing who she was.
He stopped at the bottom of the steps, and stood for a moment
uncertainly, and then turned toward the north, not because he had any
definite goal in his mind, but because the other way led toward his
rooms, and he did not want to go there yet.
He was conscious of a strange feeling of elation, which he attributed
to his being free, and to the fact that he was his own master again in
everything. And with this he confessed to a distinct feeling of
littleness, of having acted meanly or unworthily of himself or of her.
And yet he had behaved well, even quixotically. He had tried to leave
the impression with her that it was her wish, and that she had broken
with him, not he with her.
He held a man who threw a girl over as something contemptible, and he
certainly did not want to appear to himself in that light; or, for her
sake, that people should think he had tired of her, or found her
wanting in any one particular. He knew only too well how people would
talk. How they would say he had never really cared for her; that he
didn't know his own mind when he had proposed to her; and that it was
a great deal better for her as it is than if he had grown out of humor
with her later. As to their saying she had jilted him, he didn't mind
that. He much preferred they should take that view of it, and he was
chivalrous enough to hope she would think so too.
He was walking slowly, and had reached Thirtieth Street. A great many
young girls and women had bowed to him or nodded from the passing
carriages, but it did not tend to disturb the measure of his thoughts.
He was used to having people put themselves out to speak to him;
everybody made a point of knowing him, not because he was so very
handsome and well-looking, and an over-popular youth, but because he
was as yet unspoiled by it.
But, in any event, he concluded, it was a miserable business. Still,
he had only done what was right. He had seen it coming on for a month
now, and how much better it was that they should separate now than
later, or that they should have had to live separated in all but
location for the rest of their lives! Yes, he had done the right
thing--decidedly the only thing to do.
He was still walking up the Avenue, and had reached Thirty-second
Street, at which point his thoughts received a sudden turn. A half-
dozen men in a club window nodded to him, and brought to him sharply
what he was going back to. He had dropped out of their lives as
entirely of late as though he had been living in a distant city. When
he had met them he had found their company uninteresting and
unprofitable. He had wondered how he had ever cared for that sort of
thing, and where had been the pleasure of it. Was he going back now to
the gossip of that window, to the heavy discussions of traps and
horses, to late breakfasts and early suppers? Must he listen to their
congratulations on his being one of them again, and must he guess at
their whispered conjectures as to how soon it would be before he again
took up the chains and harness of their fashion? He struck the
pavement sharply with his stick. No, he was not going back.
She had taught him to find amusement and occupation in many things
that were better and higher than any pleasures or pursuits he had
known before, and he could not give them up. He had her to thank for
that at least. And he would give her credit for it too, and
gratefully. He would always remember it, and he would show in his way
of living the influence and the good effects of these three months in
which they had been continually together.
He had reached Forty-second Street now. Well, it was over with, and he
would get to work at something or other. This experience had shown him
that he was not meant for marriage; that he was intended to live
alone. Because, if he found that a girl as lovely as she undeniably
was palled on him after three months, it was evident that he would
never live through life with any other one. Yes, he would always be a
bachelor. He had lived his life, had told his story at the age of
twenty-five, and would wait patiently for the end, a marked and gloomy
man. He would travel now and see the world. He would go to that hotel
in Cairo she was always talking about, where they were to have gone on
their honeymoon; or he might strike further into Africa, and come back
bronzed and worn with long marches and jungle fever, and with his hair
prematurely white. He even considered himself, with great self-pity,
returning and finding her married and happy, of course. And he
enjoyed, in anticipation, the secret doubts she would have of her
later choice when she heard on all sides praise of this distinguished
traveller.
And he pictured himself meeting her reproachful glances with fatherly
friendliness, and presenting her husband with tiger-skins, and buying
her children extravagant presents.
This was at Forty-fifth Street.
Yes, that was decidedly the best thing to do. To go away and improve
himself, and study up all those painters and cathedrals with which she
was so hopelessly conversant.
He remembered how out of it she had once made him feel, and how
secretly he had admired her when she had referred to a modern painting
as looking like those in the long gallery of the Louvre. He thought he
knew all about the Louvre, but he would go over again and locate that
long gallery, and become able to talk to her understandingly about it.
And then it came over him like a blast of icy air that he could never
talk over things with her again. He had reached Fifty-fifth Street
now, and the shock brought him to a standstill on the corner, where he
stood gazing blankly before him. He felt rather weak physically, and
decided to go back to his rooms, and then he pictured how cheerless
they would look, and how little of comfort they contained. He had used
them only to dress and sleep in of late, and the distaste with which
he regarded the idea that he must go back to them to read and sit and
live in them, showed him how utterly his life had become bound up with
the house on Twenty-seventh Street.
"Where was he to go in the evening?" he asked himself, with pathetic
hopelessness, "or in the morning or afternoon for that matter?" Were
there to be no more of those journeys to picture-galleries and to the
big publishing houses, where they used to hover over the new book
counter and pull the books about, and make each other innumerable
presents of daintily bound volumes, until the clerks grew to know them
so well that they never went through the form of asking where the
books were to be sent? And those tete-a-tete luncheons at her house
when her mother was upstairs with a headache or a dressmaker, and the
long rides and walks in the Park in the afternoon, and the rush down
town to dress, only to return to dine with them, ten minutes late
always, and always with some new excuse, which was allowed if it was
clever, and frowned at if it was common-place--was all this really
over?
Why, the town had only run on because she was in it, and as he walked
the streets the very shop windows had suggested her to him--florists
only existed that he might send her flowers, and gowns and bonnets in
the milliners' windows were only pretty as they would become her; and
as for the theatres and the newspapers, they were only worth while as
they gave her pleasure. And he had given all this up, and for what, he
asked himself, and why?
He could not answer that now. It was simply because he had been
surfeited with too much content, he replied, passionately. He had not
appreciated how happy he had been. She had been too kind, too
gracious. He had never known until he had quarrelled with her and lost
her how precious and dear she had been to him.
He was at the entrance to the Park now, and he strode on along the
walk, bitterly upbraiding himself for being worse than a criminal--a
fool, a common blind mortal to whom a goddess had stooped.
He remembered with bitter regret a turn off the drive into which they
had wandered one day, a secluded, pretty spot with a circle of box
around it, and into the turf of which he had driven his stick, and
claimed it for them both by the right of discovery. And he recalled
how they had used to go there, just out of sight of their friends in
the ride, and sit and chatter on a green bench beneath a bush of box,
like any nursery maid and her young man, while her groom stood at the
brougham door in the bridle-path beyond. He had broken off a sprig of
the box one day and given it to her, and she had kissed it foolishly,
and laughed, and hidden it in the folds of her riding-skirt, in
burlesque fear lest the guards should arrest them for breaking the
much-advertised ordinance.
And he remembered with a miserable smile how she had delighted him
with her account of her adventure to her mother, and described them as
fleeing down the Avenue with their treasure, pursued by a squadron of
mounted policemen.
This and a hundred other of the foolish, happy fancies they had shared
in common came back to him, and he remembered how she had stopped one
cold afternoon just outside of this favorite spot, beside an open iron
grating sunk in the path, into which the rain had washed the autumn
leaves, and pretended it was a steam radiator, and held her slim
gloved hands out over it as if to warm them.
How absurdly happy she used to make him, and how light-hearted she had
been! He determined suddenly and sentimentally to go to that secret
place now, and bury the engagement ring she had handed back to him
under that bush as he had buried his hopes of happiness, and he
pictured how some day when he was dead she would read of this in his
will, and go and dig up the ring, and remember and forgive him. He
struck off from the walk across the turf straight toward this dell,
taking the ring from his waistcoat pocket and clinching it in his
hand. He was walking quickly with rapt interest in this idea of
abnegation when he noticed, unconsciously at first and then with a
start, the familiar outlines and colors of her brougham drawn up in
the drive not twenty yards from their old meeting-place. He could not
be mistaken; he knew the horses well enough, and there was old Wallis
on the box and young Wallis on the path.
He stopped breathlessly, and then tipped on cautiously, keeping the
encircling line of bushes between him and the carriage. And then he
saw through the leaves that there was some one in the place, and that
it was she. He stopped, confused and amazed. He could not comprehend
it. She must have driven to the place immediately on his departure.
But why? And why to that place of all others?
He parted the bushes with his hands, and saw her lovely and sweet-
looking as she had always been, standing under the box bush beside the
bench, and breaking off one of the green branches. The branch parted
and the stem flew back to its place again, leaving a green sprig in
her hand. She turned at that moment directly toward him, and he could
see from his hiding-place how she lifted the leaves to her lips, and
that a tear was creeping down her cheek.
Then he dashed the bushes aside with both arms, and with a cry that no
one but she heard sprang toward her.
Young Van Bibber stopped his mail phaeton in front of the club, and
went inside to recuperate, and told how he had seen them driving home
through the Park in her brougham and unchaperoned.
"Which I call very bad form," said the punctilious Van Bibber, "even
though they are engaged."
-THE END-
Richard Harding Davis' short story: A Walk Up The Avenue
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