The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Blue Man, by Mary Hartwell Catherwood

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Title: The Blue Man
       From "Mackinac And Lake Stories", 1899

Author: Mary Hartwell Catherwood

Release Date: October 30, 2007 [EBook #23249]
Last Updated: December 18, 2016

Language: English

Character set encoding: UTF-8

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Produced by David Widger





 










THE BLUE MAN  

From Mackinac And Lake Stories, 1899  

By Mary Hartwell Catherwood 


The lake was like a meadow full of running streams. Far off indeed it  seemed frozen with countless wind-paths traversing the ice, so level and  motionless was the surface under a gray sky. But summer rioted in verdure  over the cliffs to the very beaches. From the high greenery of the island  could be heard the tink-tank of a bell where some cow sighed amid the  delicious gloom.  

East of the Giants Stairway in a cove are two round rocks with young  cedars springing from them. It is easy to scramble to the flat top of the  first one and sit in open ambush undetected by passers. The worlds  majority is unobservant. Children with their nurses, lovers, bicyclists  who have left their wheels behind, excursionistsfortunately headed  towards this spot in their one available houran endless procession,  tramp by on the rough, wave-lapped margin, never wearing it smooth.  

Amused by the unconsciousness of the reviewed, I found myself unexpectedly  classed with the worlds majority. For on the east round rock, a few yards  from my seat on the west round rock, behold a man had arranged himself,  his back against the cedars, without attracting notice. While the gray  weather lightened and wine-red streaks on the lake began to alternate with  translucent greens, and I was watching mauve plumes spring from a distant  steamer before her whistles could be heard, this nimble stranger must have  found his own amusement in the blindness of people with eyes.  

He was not quite a stranger. I had seen him the day before; and he was a  man to be remembered on account of a peculiar blueness of the skin, in  which, perhaps, some drug or chemical had left an unearthly haze over the  natural flush of blood. It might have appeared the effect of sky lights  and cliff shadows, if I had not seen the same blue face distinctly in  Madame Clementines house. He was standing in the middle of a room at the  foot of the stairway as we passed his open door.  

So unusual a personality was not out of place in a transplanted Parisian  tenement. Madame Clementine was a Parisian; and her house, set around  three sides of a quadrangle in which flowers overflowed their beds, was a  bit of artisan Paris. The ground-floor consisted of various levels joined  by steps and wide-jambed doors. The chambers, to which a box staircase  led, wanted nothing except canopies over the beds.  

Alors I give de convenable beds, said Madame Clementine, in mixed French  and English, as she poked her mattresses. Des bons lits! Tree dollar one  chambre, four dollar one chambre she suddenly spread her hands to  include bothseven dollar de tout ensemble!  

It was delightful to go with any friend who might be forced by crowded  hotels to seek rooms in Madame Clementines alley. The active, tiny,  Frenchwoman, who wore a black mob-cap every-where except to mass, had  reached present prosperity through past tribulation. Many years before she  had followed a runaway husband across the sea. As she stepped upon the  dock almost destitute the first person her eyes rested on was her husband  standing well forward in the crowd, with a ham under his arm which he was  carrying home to his family. He saw Clementine and dropped the ham to run.  The same hour he took his new wife and disappeared from the island. The  doubly deserted French-speaking woman found employment and friends; and by  her thrift was now in the way of piling up what she considered a fortune.  

The man on the rock near me was no doubt one of Madame Clementines  permanent lodgers. Tourists ranting over the island in a single day had  not his repose. He met my discovering start with a dim smile and a bend of  his head, which was bare. His features were large, and his mouth corners  had the sweet, strong expression of a noble patience. What first impressed  me seemed to be his blueness, and the blurredness of his eyes struggling  to sight as Bartimeus eyes might have struggled the instant before the  Lord touched them.  

Only Asiatics realize the power of odors. The sense of smell is lightly  appreciated in the Western world. A fragrance might be compounded which  would have absolute power over a human being. We get wafts of scent to  which something in us irresistibly answers. A satisfying sweetness,  fleeting as last years wild flowers, filled the whole cove. I thought of  dead Indian pipes, standing erect in pathetic dignity, the delicate scales  on their stems unfurled, refusing to crumble and pass away; the ghosts of  Indians.  

The blue man parted his large lips and moved them several instants; then  his voice followed, like the tardy note of a distant steamer that  addresses the eye with its plume of steam before the whistle is heard. I  felt a creepy thrill down my shouldersthat sound should break so  slowly across the few yards separating us! Are you also waiting, madame?  

I felt compelled to answer him as I would have answered no other person.  Yes; but for one who never comes.  

If he had spoken in the pure French of the Touraine country, which is said  to be the best in France, free from Parisianisms, it would not have  surprised me. But he spoke English, with the halting though clear  enunciation of a Nova Scotian.  

Youyou must have patience. I havehave seen you only seven  summers on the island.  

You have seen me these seven years past? But I never met you before!  

His mouth labored voicelessly before he declared, I have been here  thirty-five years.  

How could that be possible!and never a hint drifting through the  hotels of any blue man! Yet the intimate life of old inhabitants is not  paraded before the overrunning army of a season. I felt vaguely flattered  that this exclusive resident had hitherto noticed me and condescended at  last to reveal himself.  

The blue man had been here thirty-five years! He knew the childish joy of  bruising the flesh of orange-colored toadstools and wading amid long  pine-cones which strew the ground like fairy corncobs. The white birches  were dear to him, and he trembled with eagerness at the first pipe sign,  or at the discovery of blue gentians where the eastern forest stoops to  the strand. And he knew the echo, shaking like gigantic organ music from  one side of the world to the other.  

In solitary trysts with wilderness depths and caves which transient  sight-seers know nothing about I had often pleased myself thinking the  Mishi-ne-macki-naw-go were somewhere around me. If twigs crackled or a  sudden awe fell causelessly, I laughedThat family of Indian ghosts  is near. I wish they would show themselves! For if they ever show  themselves, they bring you the gift of prophecy. The Chippewas left  tobacco and gunpowder about for them. My offering was to cover with moss  the picnic papers, tins, and broken bottles, with which man who is vile  defiles every prospect. Discovering such a queer islander as the blue man  was almost equal to seeing the Mishi-ne-macki-naw-go.  

Voices approached; and I watched his eyes come into his face as he leaned  forward! From a blurr of lids they turned to beautiful clear balls shot  through with yearning. Around the jut of rook appeared a bicycle girl, a  golf girl, and a youth in knickers having his stockings laid in correct  folds below the knee. They passed without noticing us. To see his looks  dim and his eagerness relax was too painful. I watched the water ridging  against the horizon like goldstone and changing swiftly to the blackest of  greens. Distance folded into distance so that the remote drew near. He was  certainly waiting for somebody, but it could not be that he had waited  thirty-five years: thirty-five winters, whitening the ice-bound island;  thirty-five summers, bringing all paradise except what he waited for.  

Just as I glanced at the blue man again his lips began to move, and the  peculiar tingle ran down my back, though I felt ashamed of it in his sweet  presence.  

Madame, it willit will comfort me if you permit me to talk to  you.  

I shall be very glad, sir, to hear whatever you have to tell.  

I havehave waited here thirty-five years, and in all that time I  have not spoken to any one!  

He said this quite candidly, closing his lips before his voice ceased to  sound. The cedar sapling against which his head rested was not more real  than the sincerity of that blue mans face. Some hermit soul, who had  proved me by watching me seven years, was opening himself, and I felt the  tears come in my eyes.  

Have you never heard of me, madame?  

You forget, sir, that I do not even know your name.  

My name is probably forgotten on the island now. I stopped here between  steamers during your American Civil War. A passing boat put in to leave a  young girl who had cholera. I saw her hair floating out of the litter.  

Oh! I exclaimed; that is an island story. The blue man was actually  presenting credentials when he spoke of the cholera story. She was taken  care of on the island until she recovered; and she was the beautiful  daughter of a wealthy Southern family trying to get home from her convent  in France, but unable to run the blockade. The nun who brought her died on  shipboard before she landed at Montreal, and she hoped to get through the  lines by venturing down the lakes. Yes, indeed! Madame Clementine has told  me that story.  

He listened, turning his head attentively and keeping his eyes half  closed, and again worked his lips.  

Yes, yes. You know where she was taken care of?  

It was at Madame Clementines.  

I myself took her there. And have you been there ever since? He passed  over the trivial question, and when his voice arrived it gushed without a  stammer.  

I had a month of happiness. I have had thirty-five years of waiting. When  this island binds you to any one you remain bound. Since that month with  her I can do nothing but wait until she comes. I lost her, I dont know  how. We were in this cove together. She sat on this rock and waited while  I went up-the cliff to gather ferns for her. When I returned she was gone.  I searched the island for her. It kept on smiling as if there never had  been such a person! Something happened which I do not understand, for she  did not want to leave me. She disappeared as if the earth had swallowed  her! I felt a rill of cold down my back like the jetting of the spring  that spouted from its ferny tunnel farther eastward. Had he been  thirty-five years on the island without ever hearing the Old Mission story  about bones found in the cliff above us? Those who reached them by  venturing down a pit as deep as a well, uncovered by winter storms,  declared they were the remains of a womans skeleton. I never saw the  people who found them. It was an oft-repeated Mission story which had come  down to me. An Indian girl was missed from the Mission school and never  traced. It was believed she met her fate in this rock crevasse. The bones  were blue, tinged by a clay in which they had lain. I tried to remember  what became of the Southern girl who was put ashore, her hair flying from  a litter. Distinct as her tradition remained, it ended abruptly. Even  Madame Clementine forgot when and how she left the island after she ceased  to be an object of solicitude, for many comers and goers trample the  memory as well as the island.  

Had his love followed him up the green tangled height and sunk so swiftly  to her death that it was accomplished without noise or outcry? To this  hour only a few inhabitants locate the treacherous spot. He could not  hide, even at Madame Clementines, from all the talk of a community. This  unreasonable tryst of thirty-five years raised for the first time doubts  of his sanity. A woman might have kept such a tryst; but a man consoles  himself.  

Passers had been less frequent than usual, but again there was a crunch of  approaching feet. Again he leaned forward, and the sparks in his eyes  enlarged, and faded, as two fat women wobbled over the unsteady stones,  exclaiming and balancing themselves, oblivious to the blue man and me.  

It is four oclock, said one, pausing to look at her watch. This air  gives one such an appetite I shall never be able to wait for dinner.  

When the girls come in from golf at five we will have some tea, said the  other.  

Retarding beach gadders passed us. Some of them noticed me with a start,  but the blue man, wrapped in rigid privacy, with his head sunk on his  breast, still evaded curious eyes.  

I began to see that his clothes were by no means new, though they suited  the wearer with a kind of masculine elegance. The blue mans head had so  entirely dominated my attention that the cut of his coat and his pointed  collar and neckerchief seemed to appear for the first time.  

He turned his face to me once more, but before our brief talk could be  resumed another woman came around the jut of cliff, so light-footed that  she did not make as much noise on the stones as the fat women could still  be heard making while they floundered eastward, their backs towards us.  The blue man had impressed me as being of middle age. But I felt mistaken;  he changed so completely. Springing from the rock like a boy, his eyes  glorified, his lips quivering, he met with open arms the woman who had  come around the jut of the Giants Stairway. At first glance I thought her  a slim old woman with the kind of hair which looks either blond or gray.  But the maturity glided into sinuous girlishness, yielding to her lover,  and her hair shook loose, floating over his shoulder.  

I dropped my eyes. I heard a pebble stir under their feet. The tinkle of  water falling down its ferny tunnel could be guessed at; and the beauty of  the world stabbed one with such keenness that the stab brought tears.  

We have all had our dreams of flying; or floating high or low, lying  extended on the air at will. By what process of association I do not know,  the perfect naturalness and satisfaction of flying recurred to me. I was  cleansed from all doubt of ultimate good. The meeting of the blue man and  the woman with floating hair seemed to be what the island had awaited for  thirty-five years.  

The miracle of impossible happiness had been worked for him. It confused  me like a dazzle of fireworks. I turned my back and bowed my head, waiting  for him to speak again or to leave me out, as he saw fit.  

Extreme joy may be very silent in those who have waited long, for I did  not hear a cry or a spoken word. Presently I dared to look, and was not  surprised to find myself alone. The evergreen-clothed amphitheatre behind  had many paths which would instantly hide climbers from view. The blue man  and the woman with floating hair knew these heights well. I thought of the  pitfall, and sat watching with back-tilted head, anxious to warn them if  they stirred foliage near where that fatal trap was said to lurk. But the  steep forest gave no sign or sound from its mossy depths.  

I sat still a long time in a trance of the senses, like that which follows  a drama whose spell you would not break. Masts and cross-trees of ships,  were banded by ribbons of smoke blowing back from the steamers which towed  them in lines up or down the straits.  

Towards sunset there was a faint blush above the steel-blue waters, which  at their edge reflected the blush. Then mist closed in. The sky became  ribbed with horizontal bars, so that the earth was pent like a heart  within the hollow of some vast skeleton.  

I was about to climb down from my rock when two young men passed by, the  first strollers I had noticed since the blue mans exit. They rapped  stones out of the way with their canes, and pushed the caps back from  their youthful faces, talking rapidly in excitement.  

When did it happen?  

About four oclock. You were off at the golf links.  

Was she killed instantly?  

I think so. I think she never knew what hurt her after seeing the horses  plunge and the carriage go over. I was walking my wheel down-hill just  behind and I didnt hear her scream. The driver said he lost the brake;  and hes a pretty spectacle now, for he landed on his head. It was that  beautiful old lady with the fly-away hair that we saw arrive from this  mornings boat while we were sitting out smoking, you remember.  

Not that one!  

That was the woman. Had a black maid with her. Shes a Southerner. I  looked on the register.  

The other young fellow whistled.  

Im glad I was at the links and didnt see it. She was a stunning woman.  

Dusk stalked grimly down from eastern heights and blurred the water  earlier than on rose-colored evenings, making the home-returning walker  shiver through evergreen glooms along shore. The lights of the sleepy Old  Mission had never seemed so pleasant, though the house was full of talk  about that days accident at the other side of the island.  

I slipped out before the early boat left next morning, driven by undefined  anxieties towards Madame Clementines alley. There is a childish credulity  which clings to imaginative people through life. I had accepted the blue  man and the woman with floating hair in the way which they chose to  present themselves. But I began to feel like one who sees a distinctly  focused picture shimmering to a dissolving view. The intrusion of an  accident to a stranger at another hotel continued this morning, for as I  took the long way around the bay before turning back to Clementines alley  I met the open island hearse, looking like a relic of provincial France,  and in it was a coffin, and behind it moved a carriage in which a black  maid sat weeping.  

Madame Clementine came out to her palings and picked some of her  nasturtiums for me. In her mixed language she talked excitedly about the  accident; nothing equals the islanders zest for sensation after his  winter trance when the summer world comes to him.  

When I heard it, I confessed, I thought of the friend of your blue  gentleman. The description was so like her. But I saw her myself on the  beach by the Giants Stairway after four oclock yesterday.  

Madame Clementine contracted her short face in puzzled wrinkles.  

There is one gentleman of red head, she responded, but none of bluepas  du tout.  

You must know whom I meanthe lodger who has been with you  thirty-five years.  

She looked at me as at one who has either been tricked or is attempting  trickery.  

I dont know his namebut you certainly understand! The man I saw  in that room at the foot of the stairs when you were showing my friend and  me the chambers day before yesterday.  

There was nobody. De room at de foot of de stair is empty all season.  Tout de suite I put in some young lady that arrive this night.  

Madame Clementine, I saw a man with a blue skin on the beach yesterday  I stopped. He had not told me he lodged with her. That was my own  deduction. I saw him the day before in this house. Dont you know any  such person? He has been on the island since that young lady was brought  to your house with the cholera so long ago. He brought her to you.  

A flicker of recollection appeared on Clementines face.  

That man is gone, madame; it is many years. And he was not blue at all.  He was English Jersey man, of Halifax.  

Did you never hear of any blue man on the island, Clementine?  

I hear of blue bones found beyond Point de Mission.  

But that skeleton found in the hole near the Giants Stairway was a  womans skeleton.  

Me loes! exclaimed Madame Clementine, miscalling her English as she  always did in excitement. Me handle de big bones, moi-même! Me loes what  de doctor who found him say!  

I was told it was an Indian girl.  

You have hear lies, madame. Me loes there was a blue man found beyond  Point de Mission.  

But who was it that I saw in your house?  

He is not in my house! declared Madame Clementine. No blue man is ever  in my house! She crossed herself.  

There is a sensation like having a slide pulled from ones head; the shock  passes in the fraction of a second. Sunshine, and rioting nasturtiums, the  whole natural world, including Clementines puzzled brown face, were no  more distinct to-day than the blue man and the woman with floating hair  had been yesterday.  

I had seen a man who shot down to instant death in the pit under the  Giants Stairway thirty-five years ago. I had seen a woman, who, perhaps,  once thought herself intentionally and strangely deserted, seek and meet  him after she had been killed at four oclock!  

This experience, set down in my note-book and repeated to no one, remains  associated with the Old World scent of ginger. For I remember hearing  Clementine say through a buzzing, You come in, madameyou must have  de hot wine and jahjah!  













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