The Hidden Places eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 286 pages of information about The Hidden Places.

The Hidden Places eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 286 pages of information about The Hidden Places.

Yet here in a brief span, amid these silent hills and dusky forests where he had begun to perceive that life might still have compensations for him, this passivity had been overthrown, swept away, destroyed.  He could not look out over the brow of that cliff without thinking of the woman in the valley below.  He could not think of her without the floodgates of his recollection loosing their torrents.  He had slept with her head pillowed in the crook of his arm.  He had been wakened by the warm pressure of her lips on his.  All the tender intimacies of their life together had lurked in his subconsciousness, to rise and torture him now.

And it was torture.  He would tramp far along those slopes and when he looked too long at some distant peak he would think of Myra.  He would sit beside his fireplace with one of Doris Cleveland’s books in his hand and the print would grow blurred and meaningless.  In the glow of the coals Myra’s face would take form and mock him with a seductive smile.  Out of the gallery of his mind pictures would come trooping, and in each the chief figure was that fair-haired woman who had been his wife.  At night while he slept, he was hounded by dreams in which the conscious repression of his waking hours went by the board and he was delivered over to the fantastic deviltries of the subconscious.

Hollister had never been a sentimental fool, nor a sensualist whose unrestrained passions muddied the streams of his thought.  But he was a man, aware of both mind and body.  Neither functioned mechanically.  Both were complex.  By no effort of his will could he command the blood in his veins to course less hotly.  By no exercise of any power he possessed could he force his mind always to do his bidding.  He did not love this woman whose nearness so profoundly disturbed him.  Sometimes he hated her consciously, with a volcanic intensity that made his fingers itch for a strangling grip upon her white throat.  She had ripped up by the roots his faith in life and love at a time when he sorely needed that faith, when the sustaining power of some such faith was his only shield against the daily impact of bloodshed and suffering and death, of all the nerve-shattering accompaniments of war.

Yet he suffered from the spur of her nearness, those haunting pictures of her which he could not bar out of his mind, those revived memories of alluring tenderness, of her clinging to him with soft arms and laughter on her lips.

He would stand on the rim of the cliff, looking down at the house by the river, thinking the unthinkable, attracted and repulsed, a victim to his imagination and the fever of his flesh, until it seemed to him sometimes that in the loaded chamber of his rifle lay the only sure avenue of escape from these vain longings, from unattainable desire.

Slowly a desperate resolution formed within his seething brain, shadowy at first, recurring again and again with insistent persuasion, until it no longer frightened him as it did at first, no longer made him shrink and feel a loathing of himself.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Hidden Places from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.