Cabin Fever - Page 109/118

We all realize keenly, one time or another, the abject poverty of

language. To attempt putting some emotions into words is like trying

to play Ave Maria on a toy piano. There are heights and depths utterly

beyond the limitation of instrument and speech alike.

Marie's agonized experience in Alpine--and afterward--was of that kind.

She went there under the lure of her loneliness, her heart-hunger for

Bud. Drunk or sober, loving her still or turning away in anger, she had

to see him; had to hear him speak; had to tell him a little of what she

felt of penitence and longing, for that is what she believed she had to

do. Once she had started, she could not turn back. Come what might,

she would hunt until she found him. She had to, or go crazy, she told

herself over and over. She could not imagine any circumstance that would

turn her back from that quest.

Yet she did turn back--and with scarce a thought of Bud. She could not

imagine the thing happening that did happen, which is the way life

has of keeping us all on the anxious seat most of the time. She could

not--at least she did not--dream that Lovin Child, at once her comfort

and her strongest argument for a new chance at happiness, would in

ten minutes or so wipe out all thought of Bud and leave only a dumb,

dreadful agony that hounded her day and night.

She had reached Alpine early in the forenoon, and had gone to the one

little hotel, to rest and gather up her courage for the search which she

felt was only beginning. She had been too careful of her money to spend

any for a sleeper, foregoing even a berth in the tourist car. She could

make Lovin Child comfortable with a full seat in the day coach for

his little bed, and for herself it did not matter. She could not sleep

anyway. So she sat up all night and thought, and worried over the

future which was foolish, since the future held nothing at all that she

pictured in it.

She was tired when she reached the hotel, carrying Lovin Child and her

suit case too--porters being unheard of in small villages, and the one

hotel being too sure of its patronage to bother about getting guests

from depot to hall bedroom. A deaf old fellow with white whiskers and

poor eyesight fumbled two or three keys on a nail, chose one and led the

way down a little dark hall to a little, stuffy room with another

door opening directly on the sidewalk. Marie had not registered on her

arrival, because there was no ink in the inkwell, and the pen had only

half a point; but she was rather relieved to find that she was not

obliged to write her name down--for Bud, perhaps, to see before she had

a chance to see him.