PAGE 2
Miriam’s Lover
by
“I had never seen Miriam before. Her arrival was unexpected, and I was absent from home when she came. I returned in the evening, and when I saw her first she was standing under the chandelier in the drawing room. Talk about spirits! For five seconds I thought I had seen one.
“Miriam was a beauty. I had known that before, though I think I hardly expected to see such wonderful loveliness. She was tall and extremely graceful, dark–at least her hair was dark, but her skin was wonderfully fair and clear. Her hair was gathered away from her face, and she had a high, pure, white forehead, and the straightest, finest, blackest brows. Her face was oval, with very large and dark eyes.
“I soon realized that Miriam was in some mysterious fashion different from other people. I think everyone who met her felt the same way. Yet it was a feeling hard to define. For my own part I simply felt as if she belonged to another world, and that part of the time she–her soul, you know–was back there again.
“You must not suppose that Miriam was a disagreeable person to have in the house. On the contrary, it was the very reverse. Everybody liked her. She was one of the sweetest, most winsome girls I ever knew, and I soon grew to love her dearly. As for what Dick called her ‘little queernesses’–well, we got used to them in time.
“Miriam was engaged, as I have told you, to a young Harvard man named Sidney Claxton. I knew she loved him very deeply. When she showed me his photograph, I liked his appearance and said so. Then I made some teasing remark about her love-letters–just for a joke, you know. Miriam looked at me with an odd little smile and said quickly:
“‘Sidney and I never write to each other.’
“‘Why, Miriam!’ I exclaimed in astonishment. ‘Do you mean to tell me you never hear from him at all?’
“‘No, I did not say that. I hear from him every day–every hour. We do not need to write letters. There are better means of communication between two souls that are in perfect accord with each other.’
“‘Miriam, you uncanny creature, what do you mean?’ I asked.
“But Miriam only gave another queer smile and made no answer at all. Whatever her beliefs or theories were, she would never discuss them.
“She had a habit of dropping into abstracted reveries at any time or place. No matter where she was, this, whatever it was, would come over her. She would sit there, perhaps in the centre of a gay crowd, and gaze right out into space, not hearing or seeing a single thing that went on around her.
“I remember one day in particular; we were sewing in my room. I looked up and saw that Miriam’s work had dropped on her knee and she was leaning forward, her lips apart, her eyes gazing upward with an unearthly expression.
“‘Don’t look like that, Miriam!’ I said, with a little shiver. ‘You seem to be looking at something a thousand miles away!’
“Miriam came out of her trance or reverie and said, with a little laugh:
“‘How do you know but that I was?’
“She bent her head for a minute or two. Then she lifted it again and looked at me with a sudden contraction of her level brows that betokened vexation.
“‘I wish you hadn’t spoken to me just then,’ she said. ‘You interrupted the message I was receiving. I shall not get it at all now.’
“‘Miriam,’ I implored. ‘I so wish my dear girl, that you wouldn’t talk so. It makes people think there is something queer about you. Who in the world was sending you a message, as you call it?’
“‘Sidney,’ said Miriam simply.
“‘Nonsense!’
“‘You think it is nonsense because you don’t understand it,’ was her calm response.
“I recall another event was when some caller dropped in and we had drifted into a discussion about ghosts and the like–and I’ve no doubt we all talked some delicious nonsense. Miriam said nothing at the time, but when we were alone I asked her what she thought of it.