THE medical man was
holding my wrist and talking, and I was not listening. In the first place, I
knew more about myself than he could tell me; in the second, I should scarcely
have understood what he was saying if I had listened; and in the third, I was
in so listless and indifferent a condition of mind that I did not care to
listen -- did not care to answer - - did not even care to look, as I was half
unconsciously looking at the dead brown leaves twisting in the eddying wind
that whirled them down the street.
How dull it all looked!
how dull the dragging days were! how I was beginning to hate the big, obtrusive
stone houses, and dread the long gray patch of November sky showing itself over
the roof, and alternately drifting leaden clouds and drizzling leaden rain that
made the wide flagged pavement wet and shining with the slop of passing feet! I
had always disliked the English winter, but I had never lost spirit in any
other winter as I had during this one. Three months of its slow, dull birth had
added a hundred-fold to the listless misery which had become almost a part of
myself, and more than once I had almost hoped that its ending would end my
life. If during that wretched autumn I had hoped for anything, I had hoped for
this, however vaguely; but the time had often been when I had been so utterly
indifferent to life or death that I had not even cared to wish for either.
I was in one of the
worst of these moods to-day, and when the doctor came it was at its strongest;
so, as he talked to me I scarcely listened, but looked out at the whirling
leaves and dust in silence. But, though I was not listening, I could not help
hearing his last words.
"And as I told Mr.
Leith," he was saying, "I cannot be responsible for the result if you
do not go."
I began to listen then,
though I scarcely knew why.
"Go?" I
repeated, "where am I to go, and why?"
"Anywhere,"
was his emphatic reply. "To the sea-side -- to some country place -- to
Yarmouth -- to Swansea -- to Switzerland -- anywhere away from London."
"But why?" I
asked again, beginning to wonder if the man did not, after all, know something
more than I had fancied.
"Because,"
looking at me steadily, "if you remain here you will die in two months,
and Mr. Leith will blame me."
"Will he?" I
muttered, half unconsciously -- "would he blame anybody?"
Doctor Branaird looked
at me again -- keenly this time -- but he said nothing.
"And I may go
anywhere out of London?" I said, after a short pause.
"Anywhere,"
he answered -- "though I should advise the sea- side."
"And you have
spoken to my husband about it?"
"Yes."
"What did he
say?" I asked this unwillingly.
"He said that he
hoped the change would improve your health."
I looked out at the
leaves in the street again. It was so like him. I knew what it meant. I must
decide for myself. He did not care. I might live if I cared for life -- die if
I chose.
"I have a friend
in Bamborough," I said after a while, "I will go there."
Dr. Branaird rose and
took his hat.
"Do," he
advised -- "Bamborough is just the place I should have chosen for you, had
I not thought it best to let you choose for yourself. There is plenty of strong
sea-breeze on the Cornish coast, and your friend will improve the tone of your
nervous system if she is anything of a woman."
So he left me, and so I
turned to the street again and stared blankly at the dead leaves and the patch
of gray November sky. But I could not watch it long. For the first time in many
long months a certain quiet excitement crept upon me, brought about by the
thoughts that drifted into my mind concerning my friend at Bamborough --
concerning Lisbeth Grant.
We had been girls
together and we had loved each other. We had been to each other what girls
seldom are -- we had been faithful, though for four years Lisbeth had been a
wife, and though she was the mother of three children. I knew she was faithful
to me still, notwithstanding that since her wedding-day we had never seen each
other.
"My hands are
full, Gervase," she had written to me once, -- "and my heart is full
too -- to the brim. Hugh and his children fill it as they fill the hands. They
give me no time to stagnate. They keep the hands at work and the heart at work
too -- loving, hoping, thinking for them -- and I am sure the beating is more
in time for the work the children bring. But they have not crowded you out,
Gervase, you may be sure of that. There is all the more room because they have
made it larger. The children have made me love you more than ever."
"Yes," I said
to myself as I got up from my chair -- "yes, I will go to Lisbeth. If I am
going to die, better die with Lisbeth than here."
I did not love my
husband -- I had never loved him, I told myself. It was not even love that had
made us happy in the first months of our marriage. It had only been a weak
mockery after all, and we had both learned the truth too late. Even the little
child that had scarcely drawn a breath could not soften our hearts towards each
other. And, worse than this, out of my wretchedness had grown a shadow of sin
and despair. I looked backwards sometimes to a fancy I had long left behind --
to a fancy that I thought my husband had long blotted out, and looking backward
so, I fell into a wonder at what now seemed my blindness. That man would have
loved me; there would have come no bitter words from him, -- that man would
have been true to me through life and death; his love would never have died,
burning out the more rapidly for the very strength of its first flame.
I did not often wait
for my husband, but I waited for him that night. I wanted to tell him of my
decision. Not that I fancied he would care for my absence or presence, -- he
was past that; we were both past it. Still I would show just so much grace as
to make a pretense of consulting him.
"I am going to
Bamborough," I said to him, "to visit Lisbeth Grant. Doctor Branaird
advises me to do so." And I glanced at him carelessly.
He had just come in,
and tossed his hat upon a sofa in his careless fashion, and now he was standing
upon the hearth looking silently into the fire. He did not raise his eyes.
"I hope you will
find your health improved," he said.
"I hope so,"
I returned briefly.
But he was not quite
easy, I could see, and I must confess to some slight surprise. The old black
lines came out on his forehead, but they were not angry lines; they were
something new to me in their changed expression. He was so fidgety too, and
even more taciturn than usual. But I took no notice of the change until after
we had supped and he had been reading for half an hour, when he suddenly broke
the silence by flinging his book upon the sofa after his hat and speaking to me
abruptly:
"You are not worse
than usual," he said, "are you?" I did not look up this time,
but went on working steadily. "I think not," I answered; "I am
sure not."
I would not tell him
the truth. He should have had sight clear enough to discover it for himself.
He got up, and coming
to the side of the hearth upon which I was seated, caught hold of my netting
silk, so stopping my work.
"That is not
true," he said -- "it is one of your fables."
"One of my
fables?" I returned quietly.
He took hold of my hand
and held it up so that my loose sleeve fell back from my arm.
"Yes," he
said, "it is a fable. Look at your arm -- look at your wrist, see how your
bracelet fits it. It was as round as a baby's before" -- and here seeming
to recollect himself, he let my hand drop.
I looked at it myself
as I settled my sleeve again, and as I looked I smiled faintly. My beautiful
arms had been my pride once, and now the heavy gold bracelet slipped loosely up
and down over a white surface that was little more than delicate skin and
slender bone. Perhaps after all Doctor Branaird was right -- I had better leave
London.
So the next day I went
to Bamborough and Lisbeth. But early in the morning, as I stood before the
mirror in my dressing-room, my husband came to me. I was surprised again, for
of late there had been so little pretense at sentiment between us that I had scarcely
expected he would care to make any farewells. But I discovered in a very few
moments that this was what he had come for, and I felt myself excited and
nervous. This surprised me too. If we had loved each other I might have
understood the feeling; but since we did not love each other, what could it
mean? He stood by my toilet-table, looking pale and agitated for a few minutes
after his entrance, and then he broke the awkward silence:
"You will need
money," he began.
I interrupted him.
"No," I said,
"you mistake. I do not need any. Thank you."
"Very well,"
he answered, "if that is the case I suppose it is useless to offer you
any. But if you should require anything -- wish anything -- I hope you will
write to me about it."
"Thank you
again," I replied. "I will write to you once a week whether I wish
anything or not."
He lingered a few
minutes longer and then turned to go.
"Then as I shall
not see you again I will bid you good-bye," he said; "you will not
return until -- "
"I recover or
die," I interrupted. "If Bamborough agrees with me no better than
London has done, Doctor Branaird says I shall die in two months; so
good-bye."
I scarcely knew what
feeling of desperation prompted me to make a speech so reckless, but it was a
feeling desperate enough.
"Gervase!" he
exclaimed.
I would not look at
him, but in the mirror I saw reflected on his face a pallor as ashen as the
pallor of death. Sometimes in after months I wished that I had looked at him
more straightly.
But he said nothing
more -- only waited a moment and then came to my side.
"Good-bye,"
he said.
"Good-bye," I
answered. And the next moment he had touched my cheek lightly with his lips and
was gone.
It was late when I
reached Bamborough, and the tide was coming in under a red, fog-obscured sun. I
looked out of the carriage window as I drove from the station through the
narrow streets, and looking I saw little more than an immense expanse of sea,
and a dry and wet brown beach where fishermen were lounging, fishermen's
children shouting and playing, and fishermen's boats drawn up and fastened upon
the sand with chains. I had always felt drawn towards the sea with a curious
sense of fascination, and this evening the fresh salt air blew so coolly upon
my cheeks that I had a quiet, half-defined feeling that I was not sorry I had
come to Bamborough.
And at her open door
Lisbeth stood ready to welcome me, and my first glance showed me the same
handsome womanly face and handsome womanly figure, neither face nor figure a
whit unfamiliar or a whit less perfect for the crown of comely matronhood. Two
of her children clung to her flowing skirts, her handsome baby clasped her
neck, and as she stood there smiling, I thought of Cordelia, and my heart
warmed, - - Lisbeth's strength and beauty always warmed it.
She caught me in the
one arm her child left free, and drew me into the hall, pressing her warm red
lips to mine.
"My dear!"
she said, "my dearest!" and it seemed as though she had for the
moment no other words to utter. Her very voice warmed me and put life into my
veins. I clung to her, enjoying her tender caresses, but scarcely speaking a
word, for at least Lisbeth understood what my silence often meant and would not
reproach me with it. She did not ask me any questions. It seemed that in an instant
she comprehended everything, for she carried me to my room and took off my
wrappings as if I had been a child and she my mother. I could not help noticing
the mother touch in her strong, gentle hands, and the mother tone in her voice.
"I will show you
my children as soon as you are rested," she said, "but you must rest
first, Gervase. Your husband's telegram did not prepare me for seeing you look
so changed."
I felt a sudden
pulsation of the heart.
"My husband's
telegram!" I said -- "did he send one?"
"Yes," she
answered, "very early this morning, to say that you were coming."
I answered not a word.
Why had he done this? If we had loved each other, I should have known that it
was because he could not brook the thought of my meeting even the momentary
chill of an unexpected reception; but now the news only startled me.
But though she spoke no
word, Lisbeth's eyes lost nothing. I knew that she was searching me even when
she spoke of other things, and I knew that she was searching me when, after she
had called her children into the room, she stood near me in her royal mother
pride, with her little one in her fair, strong arms.
"This is Hugh's
boy," she said, touching the crumpled brown curls of her eldest.
"Look up, Lawrence. See, Gervase -- Hugh's eyes."
They were magnificent
children. Lisbeth's perfect, healthful nature had dowered them, and her
unwarped, fearless soul shone out of their childish eyes. A desolate aching
filled my breast as Lisbeth stood near me with them. Her life was so full --
mine so empty. I had never loved children very much -- had seen very little of
them -- and of my own baby I had seen nothing but the poor little cold body I
had for one moment caught a glimpse of as Roger bent over it, shaken with a
man's terrible weeping. I thought of this when I looked at Lisbeth's children,
but no tears came into my eyes. I was wondering vaguely if I were a wicked
woman, and if my faded, empty life were my punishment. I do not think I had
ever loved my baby or wept for it -- Roger had ceased to love me long before
its birth, and I had learned to know what a mistake I had made.
But I lived again that
day as I talked to Lisbeth. We sat by the fire after tea -- she with her child
on her breast, and I on a lounging chair near her, until the heavy fog had
crept over the sands and up into the little town, hiding even the red lights.
We had so much to say, and we were alone together for the first time since we
had parted four years ago. Hugh was absent on business, and the children had
gone to bed, so we went over the four years again -- but until the close of the
evening Lisbeth said nothing of my husband. At length, after a silence, she
lifted her eyes from the fire and looked at me tenderly -- searchingly --
sadly.
"And you are
happy, Gervase?" she said. I could not answer her at first, but after a
silent struggle the words came. I could not tell a lie to Lisbeth.
"Happy! no, I am
wretched."
She looked at me for a
moment longer and then spoke again.
"Gervase,"
she said, "if your little child had lived -- " I broke in upon her,
losing all self-control in a wild, sudden passion of uncontrollable weeping.
"No -- no!" I
cried out. "Better as it is -- far, far better as it is."
She moved her seat
nearer to me and drew my head down upon her lap with that tender mother touch.
"Gervase,"
she said softly, "you think you do not love your husband."
"How did she know?
for she seemed to understand me in an instant. I cried out again in the midst
of my passionate sobs.
"I have never
loved him," I said -- "he has never loved me. It was a mistake -- it
was all wrong from first to last, and he is wretched too."
It was all told then --
the miserable secret that had grown to its full strength in my own heart alone.
It was all told in one brief rash speech -- no, not quite all. The rest would
be a secret forever even from Lisbeth.
But I had wept myself
into calmness at last, and we had been talking together again, though with
longer silence between our words than there had been before, when in one of
these silences I heard the front door open, and felt a great rioting rush of
the boisterous sea wind, and there were sounds of a man's footsteps in the
hall, and a man's voice flung out a scrap of song: --
"I am come, its
deeps are learned --
Come, but there is
naught to say:
Married eyes with mine
have met,
Silence! Oh! I had my
day,
Margaret,
Margaret?"
I was trembling from
head to foot.
"The rush of night
wind has made you shiver," Lisbeth said.
But I scarcely heard
her.
"Who is it?"
I asked breathlessly, though I knew so well --
"It is Hugh's
cousin," was her answer. "I forgot to tell you. It is Ralph
Gwynne."
I HAD been nearly a
month at Bamborough and my health was improving slowly. As Doctor Branaird had
prophesied, Lisbeth had strengthened my nerves. Her perfect health and spirits
roused me as nothing else would have done, and I found myself growing stronger
from their force of example. It might be, too, that since I was relieved from
my husband's presence a pressure was removed that had been too heavy for me.
But, though I was so much better, I was creeping towards the goal of health
very slowly, and it seemed that a breath of renewed pain would undo all.
"You do not gain
color fast enough," Lisbeth said to me one morning. "You do not get
enough of the sea breeze. You must go out with Ralph again to-day,
Gervase."
I had often been out
with Ralph.
He looked up first at
Lisbeth and then at me.
"I am entirely at
Mrs. Leith's service," he said, "and I think you are right, Lisbeth;
she needs more air." I got up and walked to the window, so that my back
was turned to both of them, but Ralph Gwynne followed me and looked out over my
shoulder.
Bamborough looked
better than usual this morning. An adventurous ghost of sunshine was casting a
clear bright light over the brown sands and gray waves, and over the huts and
boats and sturdy brown-legged children. It gave to Bamborough in November a
pretense of fresh animation that three times as much sunshine could not have
been able to give to London. So I carelessly remarked to Ralph Gwynne.
"Is it bright
enough to tempt you out -- with me?" he said in a low voice.
He knew I was not
strong enough to refuse. He had not changed. He was the very Ralph Gwynne who
had led me, years before, into a girlish romance that was like a dream of
heaven, and had only ended when Fate separated us and put between us and our
untold love a whole world. But now it was different. There was more than a
whole world between us; there was the past, the present, and the future. I at
least had suffered since we bade each other an indefinite farewell -- I at
least could not love as I had once loved. Sometimes before the very thought of
love my whole nature rose up and battled fiercely. At first I think that I was
only indifferent; but in the end I fancied that this man understood me a
little, and sorrowed a little over the woman's blunder I had made.
"Let us ask no
questions of each other," he had said to me once. "We have both
suffered. Let us trust each other."
It was just what I
needed. I should never have told him what I felt, but I was not sorry that one
human soul understood the misery the dragging days held for me. So this morning
as we walked along the beach we were both silent. It was our custom to be
oftener silent than inclined to speak. We both listened to the moan of the
breakers and watched the long line of foam out at sea; and at last both by one
accord stopped where a cluster of rocks sheltered us from the wind. I sat down,
but Ralph Gwynne remained standing, with his back against a rock and his arms
folded. At length he spoke to me.
"It is three years
to-day," he said, "since you were married."
The sudden, hurried
beating of my heart almost suffocated me. I had forgotten until this moment,
and the rush of old memories overpowered me. I remembered the very day -- just
such a day as this, with sunshine warming even the leaden November sky, and
whitening the piled edges of the clouds. I had thought it bright then. I
remembered too how the day had closed in as I stood at the window of my new
home with Roger's arms folded about me and his heart beating against mine. I
could scarcely speak steadily, but I managed to do so at length.
"So long?" I
said coldly; "yes, I believe you are right. Where were you? How did you
learn it?"
He did not look at me;
his eyes were fixed steadily on the far-away white line of foam.
"I was in
Calcutta," he answered. "The news had been a long time on its way and
reached me on this very day -- the day that was to be your wedding-day. I shall
not forget it easily."
I dropped my glove, and
as I stooped to pick it up a sudden recollection flashed across my brain. One
day, three months after our marriage, Roger had come home with a budget of news
from Calcutta, and among other things had referred to the intense heat and the
prevalence of sunstroke among the foreign inhabitants.
"My informant is
one of the travelers for Amboyse & Derig," he said, "and he tells
me that the very day he left -- the day we were married, Gervase -- one of the
salesmen was struck down with it. He was talking to one of our clerks who had
just arrived from England- -talking about our wedding too, Hegblase says -- and
he saw the young fellow change color and stagger, and in a minute more he fell
like a shot. Gwynne his name was, I believe -- Ralph Gwynne."
So one man had suffered
for me at least -- one man's love had not died a natural death in a few brief
months.
Ralph put his hand into
his pocket and drew forth a letter.
"This was handed
to me last night," he said. "It bears a London post-mark."
I did not offer to take
it for a moment. I knew he had searched me to the core, that he had seen every
fruitless pang and bitter humiliation of the past two years. My letters to my
husband had been regularly sent, but his answers had been few and far between,
and my pride had forced a fresh sting upon me even while I was otherwise
indifferent to the neglect. So I hesitated now, and the next moment Ralph
Gwynne came to my side as if drawn there by an uncontrollable impulse. A gleam
of light shot over his dark face.
"You do not care
to take it," he said. "The very sight of it is a new torture. Let me
throw it into the sea, Gervase."
His vehemence actually
startled me into self-control. "That would be a new reading of old
laws," I said. "No, give it to me."
He submitted without a
word. But I did not read the letter. It had come too late for perusal, I said
to myself. So I held it in my hand carelessly, making a show of an ease I could
not feel.
It was in my hand when
we returned and I sat down before the fire in Lisbeth's room. The sea breeze
had done me no good this morning. I was tired and worn out, and drooping into a
chair before I removed my wrappings, sat silent, resting my chin upon my hand
and holding the letter loosely.
Lisbeth came in to find
me sitting thus, and at her first glance at me I saw a strange shadow cross her
face.
"Tired,
Gervase?" she asked.
"Yes," I
answered briefly.
She crossed the room to
the fire and knelt down, on pretense of brightening the hearth a little with
the brush she held in her hand. The next minute she turned her fair, gracious
face full upon me.
"And you have not
read your husband's letter?" she said. "Why, Gervase?"
"Because I am not
going to read it," I replied, and then, ruled by some sudden wretched
impulse, I flung it into the fire.
But Lisbeth said
nothing. I wondered at the time whether it was possible for her calm, healthful
nature to comprehend the morbid misery that possessed me. I fancied not. The
broad, even current of her life's affection had swept on undisturbed, bearing
on its smooth surface many flowers. She could not understand me and my weak
miseries and weaker regrets.
I hid my face in my hands
when she left the room, and abandoned myself to thought. I could not explain
why it was that during this month at Bamborough I had scarcely once thought of
returning to London and my husband. If ever my mind had recurred to the
thought, I had shrunk from it with a misery almost intense. I felt that I could
not go back now unless, as I had hoped, in a coffin, shut out forever from his
sight.
As I sat by the fire I
was wondering vaguely how he would meet me if treated thus -- whether he would
be touched for a moment with some remembrance of those first days of our
marriage, when we had at least fancied we loved each other.
Two hot tears falling
upon my hand startled me from my reverie just in time to hear Lisbeth coming
down stairs with her child in her arms, and singing to it softly. Should we
have loved each other better - - Roger and I -- if my baby had not died, -- I
asked myself with a pang.
Lisbeth came in and sat
down near me again, still singing softly, still holding her baby upon her
shoulder as she rocked her chair. O how I envied her her strength and
happiness! She was so strong and happy; her handsome baby was so light a burden
in her arms; her quietly busy ways so womanly gracious. I looked at her lovely,
clear-browed face, and at the coronal of thick light-brown braids across her
stately head; I looked at her peaceful eyes, and the soft mouth that seemed
made for children's kisses, and, remembering her girlhood, gave the palm to the
beauty of her mother life.
Her calm, radiant face
struck me to the heart's core. Often during the last year I had told myself
that I was only one of the many, that my mistake was only the mistake all women
suffer from -- the mistake of hoping for a happiness the world cannot hold. But
Lisbeth broke down my theory.
I did not write to
London again. The correspondence had only been a matter of courtesy at first,
and a shadow of neglect could end it.
Ralph Gwynne did not go
away, as Lisbeth had told me he intended doing. He had changed his mind, he
said. Bamborough agreed with him, and the India house had prolonged his
furlough in consideration of his past services and present ill health. He did
not look ill, I thought, and I told him so. But he stayed at Bamborough from
day to day, and the longer he stayed the more strongly his old power reasserted
itself. Not that I loved him. I was past that. Love could not come back to me,
but I had loved him once with all the fervor of a girl's romance, and at least
he loved me and had not forgotten the past. One tithe of such love as he poured
at my feet, in actions that were unspoken words, might have won me back to my
husband and peace.
I did not repulse him.
The listless wretchedness that ruled me would have prevented that, even if
there had not been a faint fascination in the miserable aggrandizement of
feeling that at least one man had been true to me, and was true to me yet. I
used sometimes to wonder that Lisbeth never guessed at the truth. She rarely
spoke to me of my husband -- never of Ralph Gwynne -- and yet I was always
conscious of a restraining influence in her simple presence. A glance from her
would check my recklessness. She held me back by a thread when nothing else on
earth could have controlled me.
And so the days drifted
by, and I strolled upon the sands with my old lover, and sat in the shelter of
the rocks with him, and let him say what he would, scarcely listening, as I
watched the waves and the incoming and outgoing boats and dipping sea-gulls.
After my husband's
letters ceased coming I did not grow better, even slowly. I grew nervous and
restless -- even more nervous and restless than I had been in London. The old
red spot came back upon each cheek, I did not sleep well, and when night came
on I often spent hours at my window watching the driving clouds, and listening
to the chanting of the fishermen in the late- returning Bamborough boat.
I was sitting thus one
night when I heard a low knock at my door, and opened it to find Lisbeth
standing there, shawl-wrapped and without a light.
"May I come in,
Gervase?" she asked.
I opened the door wider
that she might pass.
"Of course,"
I said; "you know that. What is it, Lisbeth?"
"It is
nothing," she answered -- "only that I heard you moving and thought I
would come and sit with you. Hugh is out."
We both went back to
the window, and she knelt down in a girlish fashion of hers, resting an arm
upon the window-ledge and turning her fair face up to the night sky and the
starlight.
"I hope you are
wrapped up well, Gervase," she said after a while.
"I am quite warm
enough, thank you."
"You must take
care of yourself, you know," she said in her sweet, even voice, "for
your husband's sake."
I smiled.
"For my husband's
sake," I said, "yes."
"When he wrote to
me last," she began, taking no notice of my words.
I started a little.
"When he wrote to
you!" I exclaimed. "When did he write to you?"
"Yesterday,"
she said; "last week, the week before -- every week since you have been
here. He was afraid you would not speak quite freely of your wants, and he was
anxious to hear all about your illness, and to be quite sure that no wish was
left ungratified."
I leaned back in my
chair, and held to the cushioned arms for support. My breath was coming quickly
and a sudden heat had flashed to my face. I could not understand this, but a
strange feeling of joy took possession of me -- though I told myself that I did
not love this man and had never loved him.
"Your illness has
been a great anxiety to him, Gervase." Lisbeth went on still, with her
face turned upward in the twilight- -"and it has troubled him more since
you came here. He has felt your absence deeply.
I did not speak in
answer, but I was weak woman enough to feel another thrill of mingled pain and
pleasure. Lost as the past irrevocably was, it had yet a strong power over me.
As there never was a husband colder than mine, so there had never been a
bridegroom more impassioned in affection; and, even in this winter of
indifference, I could remember days in the dead summer when his untiring love
had wakened me to a happiness almost divine, ephemeral as it had proved.
Glancing at Lisbeth, the thought struck me that under her quiet speeches and
quiet manner there lay a deeper thought for me than I had fancied, and then
there flashed across my mind a remembrance of times when she had silently stood
between me and the man who was my evil genius.
At this moment I
recognized the man's power for evil over me as I had never done before, and a
curious sense of repugnance came upon me with my recollection of something I
had sometimes seen sleeping in his quiet persistence. I could not understand
the influence that stung me to anger and roused my pride, but I never failed to
succumb to it, nevertheless, and it invariably roused me to some fresh rashness
of speech or action. But though I said little to Lisbeth, the pang of
remembrance softened my heart, and before she left me I had made up my mind to
write a few words to my husband, at least; and when she was gone I drew my desk
towards me and wrote them -- only a few words.
"Your wife
Gervase."
I had not ended a
letter thus for two years, and I hesitated a moment before I wrote the
signature. But despite the lingering of pen over paper they were written at
last, and as I looked at them I felt the warm blood beat into my cheeks, and my
head drooped upon my clasped hands. Should I send them or not? I thought of
Ralph Gwynne, and of what I had suffered, and my letter's fate was almost
sealed. But even as I paused, a soft little cry from Lisbeth's room broke upon
my ear. It was hushed the next moment, but the tiny voice had turned the scale.
I put the letter into
its envelope and sealed it with a new resolution. I would try to retrieve
something of the past, at least. I would do no new wrong. I would cherish no
bitterness against my dead child's father. If I could not be happy I would
endeavor to be patient. It might not be for long -- it could not be for long, I
knew.
"I will give it to
Ralph Gwynne to post in the morning," I said aloud -- "it will show
him that -- "
I did not finish my
sentence, because I dared not, even in the silence of my room. Even to the
readers of this record I have not told all that my reckless misery drove me to.
I could not justify my weakness, and otherwise had better be silent.
The sun was shining
bright and warm into the breakfast-room when I went down with my letter in the
morning, and the salt sea wind blew fresh through the open window up from the
beach. As I had lain awake in the night a change seemed to have come over me,
and under its influence I forgot the dull November days and pitiless November
skies in this one rare chance of morning warmth and sunlight.
Ralph Gwynne was alone
in the room, his stubborn persistency showing itself as it always did in his
waiting for my coming.
I went to him at once,
holding my letter in my hand.
"I have a letter
here I am anxious shall reach London to- night," I said, looking straight
into his face. "I thought I would give it into your charge at once, as you
generally go into Bamborough earlier than any one else. Will you post it for
me?"
He held out his hand
and took it from me, slipping it into his vest pocket with scarcely a glance,
but I knew that he had seen the superscription by the instantaneous change in
his face. It was a very slight change, almost an imperceptible one in fact, but
I saw it notwithstanding and caught its meaning.
"I envy your
husband," he had said to me once -- "I pity him -- I hate him."
And just at the moment
this abrupt, passionate speech, which was only one of many such, was embodied
in the faint change that passed over his dark face, as he leaned upon the
window ledge and looked out calmly enough at the fishermen working upon the
beach.
He did not even refer
to the letter in the commonplace conversation we drifted into. The momentary
shadow left him so entirely that I found myself wondering if he had altogether
forgotten it. But though he did not refer to the letter, before Lisbeth came in
he spoke of my husband.
"I did not
know," he said, after an interval of silence -- "until yesterday I
did not know that your husband had ever visited Bamborough."
The words were so
unexpected that I glanced up quickly to see what they might signify, but to
judge from his careless, averted face, they might have held no significance at
all.
"I did not
know," I said coldly, "that my husband had visited Bamborough at all.
If he has been here I have been kept in ignorance of the fact."
"He has been
here," he said indifferently, "often."
I did not make any
reply. I knew well enough that he intended to force me to questioning him, but
I was not in the mood to question, and so was silent. If my husband had been to
Bamborough in secret, whatever his motive might be, he had hidden it from me,
and the mystery was only a new thread in the web of his distrust, so it might
pass. It was only a fresh sting, but I felt it at the time all the more deeply
because of my last night's resolve and the three words with which I had ended
my letter. I made no comment, I did not even speak of it to Lisbeth when she
came. I buried it in my own heart, as I was prone to bury my miseries.
When breakfast was over
I wandered out on the beach alone. I did not often walk alone, but this morning
even Lisbeth herself would have been unwelcome.
Down upon the sands
where the rocks clustered together, and where the boats oftenest came up to the
little cove, was my favorite resting-place, and there I took my seat as usual
upon a large flat stone. The brawny fishermen knew me, and the barelegged,
shouting children knew me too, and as I sat there there were few who passed me
without a good-natured greeting. I had amused myself with watching them often,
but they did not amuse me now. I was dull and wretched again. It was a trivial
thing to be wretched about, this slight concealment, which might have had no
motive, but it had dampened my spirit and made me indifferent and miserable
once more. The brown, bare-legged fishermen passed to and fro, mending their
nets in the sun, and wading in and out of the water, but I scarcely saw them;
the children shouted and chased each other like happy, uncouth young savages,
but I did not notice their play. I saw nothing but the sea and sky, and a boat
whose tiny sail seemed growing larger as it neared the shore, until a shadow
fell before me, and I glanced up half impatiently and saw Ralph Gwynne. He took
a seat at my side, and then spoke to me carelessly.
"I thought I
should find you here," he said.
"You did not go to
Bamborough, then," was my cold comment.
"No,"
hesitatingly and slowly; "I thought I would see you first."
I looked out at the
boat again absently; it was coming nearer to the land, and I felt a faint sort
of interest in it, because I saw a woman at the prow, and the woman had a child
thrown over her shoulder.
"Why?" I
asked.
He did not answer me at
first, but turned on his elbow, and spoke to one of the net-mending fishermen
who sat not far from us.
"Who is coming in,
Gunnle?" he asked; "your women don't fish, do they?"
The man touched his hat
good-naturedly.
"Some on 'em
does," he said; "this un doent though, this un 'ats comin [sic] in.
She's bin o'er to Banbro' fur work. It's Janey -- Janey an' th child, little
Roger."
I moved impatiently,
though I scarcely knew why. The boat was almost upon the beach, and the next
minute the man who was in it jumped out and waded up, dragging it in by its
chain with a great splash of the sea water, and then the woman turned her head,
and as she got up I saw her distinctly. She was a handsome young creature, tall
and straight and shapely, and very unlike the rest of the Bamborough women,
with her long violet eyes, and thick curling red brown hair.
"Look at her,
Gervase," Ralph Gwynne whispered, "and look at the child."
He had no need to tell
me to do so, for I was looking at them both. There was a certain proud,
steadfast sadness which attracted my attention in the girl's face, and I could
not help noticing that she did not look at any of the bystanders when she
replied to their friendly greetings. But as she passed the place where I sat my
eye caught hers, perhaps because I had looked at her so steadily, and I
observed that the instant she saw me a hot deep color ran up to her forehead,
and she walked on hurriedly, holding her child more tightly.
As soon as she was gone
Ralph Gwynne turned again to the old fisherman, and spoke to him just as he had
spoken before.
"She's a handsome
creature," he said, "and the child is handsome too. Who is her
husband?"
The old fellow glanced
up at me.
"Savin' the lady's
presence," he said in a low voice, "she haint got none -- Janey
haint. We're all sorry for her here. There haint one of us but is sorry for
Janey. She never was a bad 'un, but she was handsome an' unfortnit, and she's
seen a sight o' trouble. She doent say much to none on us, because she doent
like to face us, but she knows we feel friendly to'rds her, Janey does, and she
knows we feel friendly to'rds little Roger."
"Roger?" I
broke out abruptly, scarcely knowing what I said.
The old man looked up
at me, rubbing his weather-beaten forehead as if I puzzled him by my vehemence.
"Yes'm," he
said, "his name it's Roger Leith, and its named for - - "
I did not stop to hear
the rest. For a moment the whole horrible truth flashed upon me, and I
staggered to my feet blindly, clinging to Ralph Gwynne, who had risen too.
"Come away," I said; "take me away somewhere -- farther down the
beach -- anywhere out of sight."
He did not speak to me,
nor I to him, until he had half carried, half dragged me to the very rock
shelter where we had sat the day he handed me my husband's letter, and there I
dropped upon the sands, hiding my wretched face in my hands.
"Tell me the
truth," I panted; "tell me -- You knew this!"
He looked down at me
with some vague pity in his eyes, and though I knew that he would have forged a
lie to suit his purpose, I knew that this was no lie, and that he believed it
even more steadfastly than I did.
"Yes," he
answered, "I knew it."
"And came to prove
it to me?"
"Yes."
I knew then what I had
never known before. I knew that even in my misery I had mocked myself with a
delusion. I knew that I had never loved this man, even as I fancied I did,
through the contrast of his warmth with my husband's coldness; I knew that
through all I had been weaker than the weakest of women, for I had loved my
husband and I loved him still.
I broke into a low,
wretched, hysterical laugh.
"You might have
spared me this much," I said. "If my ignorance was not bliss, it was
folly to be wiser than I was -- to know more of my humiliation than I
did."
"It would have
been folly to let you add to the humiliation by relenting towards the man who
has trampled you in the dust," he said passionately. "I swore that
you should not send this letter -- am I to keep my oath?"
I held out my hand for
it.
"No!" I cried
out sharply, "give it to me."
He handed it to me, and
as I touched it the remembrance of what it contained and how I had been duped
rushed upon me with the force of a whirlwind. I tore it into a hundred pieces
and scattered it on the sand.
"There," I
said, "it is gone -- forever."
He came and bent over
me, a little later, as I sat with my face buried in my hands, and he touched my
shoulder, for I did not look up at him.
"And you will
listen to me, Gervase!" he said.
I shook his hand off
quickly, for his touch angered me -- but I had made up my mind.
"Yes," I
answered him, "I will listen."
. . . . . . .
I sat crouched before
my window, feeling cold and sick and weak, but still with my mind full of my
desperate resolve. I had written my farewell letter to my husband, and it lay
upon the table. I had written my farewell letter to Lisbeth and told her all,
in the faint hope that Lisbeth would believe what no one else on earth would
believe -- in the faint hope that Lisbeth would believe my solemn word, when I
told her that even at the worst I should not be so utterly lost as the world
would deem me. I had laid my things all back into my trunks, even to the merest
trifle. The very dress I wore was one I had myself purchased. I had not
retained in my possession a single thing my husband had ever given to me -- not
even the sapphire ring that had been the pledge of our betrothal. And now that
all my preparations were made, I was waiting at my opened window for the signal
that was to come to me from the beach below. I had thrown myself adrift on the
broad ocean of chance, and the waves might fling me upon what shore they would,
for the momentary passion of misery had settled into passive despair.
"When women lose
all, as I am doing," I had said to Ralph Gwynne that night, "they
generally have something at stake, some love or hope, but I have none; I had
risked all I had to risk, and lost all I had to lose. You are clinging to a mad
hope if you think to win me even in the course of time. I tell you I shall
never love you. I will leave England with you, not because I love you, but
because I love my husband and cannot bear to see his face again. I will be
honest with you. I take all to give nothing. If you love me enough to help me,
well and good; if not, leave me here and I will go out into the world
alone."
And he had held to his
purpose and agreed. Of course he did not believe me strong enough to battle
against his stubborn persistence, and of course he was false in professing to
be honest; but I knew my own steady strength of obstinate endurance, and he did
not. And here, in the dim moonlight that streamed through the curtain of sea
fog into my window, I was waiting for his signal, and Lisbeth was sleeping in
the next room with her baby on her breast and her little children near her. I
thought of the abasement I had seen in the handsome girl-face a few hours
before, and I thought of the child who had looked at me over his mother's
shoulder in his fearless baby way.
"Roger's baby --
Roger's!"
I hid my face in my
hands, stifling the low cry that burst from me. I remembered the one moment, on
the night of my baby's birth, when the delirious mists had cleared away from my
brain, and I had seen my husband bending over the tiny form that lay upon the
white pillow.
"If my baby had
lived," I said aloud, "if my baby had lived I might have been like
Lisbeth."
I got up after this and
walked across the floor and back again a dozen times. I was wondering what he
would say when Lisbeth gave him the letter, and whether there would be a shadow
of self- reproach in his memory of the past. I did not ask myself how my life
was to be spent. I had a vague feeling that it could not last long, but I asked
myself a hundred times how my husband would spend his. He would not mourn for
me, I told myself, and some better woman might make him happy; but even in this
my worst and most reckless mood, my heart cried out aloud at the thought. I had
ceased pacing the floor and gone back to the window again. I had even waited in
the chill moonlight an hour when the signal came, and I rose with a fierce
pulsation of the heart to obey its summons. I took up my shawl from the bed and
folded it around me; I went to the table where my husband's letter lay and I
bent over and kissed it -- my last farewell. I caught a glimpse of my face in
the glass as I did so, and saw that there was a great hollow purple ring about
my eyes and a deathly pallor on my cheeks. I laid my husband's letter back and
crossed the room to the door; as I laid my hand upon the key I heard a light
footstep in the corridors, and as I turned the handle and stepped out I started
backward with a low cry, for I stood face to face with -- Lisbeth.
We looked at each other
breathlessly for an instant in dead silence -- I at her with a wild intense,
unreasonable longing for some hope that might rescue me even at this late hour
-- she at me with nothing in her tender, dilated eyes but pity and wonder and
love. Then she broke the strange stillness in a hurried, terrified voice.
"Gervase,"
she said, "Gervase, what does this mean?"
I met her gaze
steadily. I do not think I was in my right senses.
"I am going
away," I said, and my voice sounded strange and unnatural even to myself.
Another moment and she
caught me in her arms as if I had been a child, and so drew me into the room
and closed the door.
Her face was white as
death. She was woman enough to read at a glance how matters stood, but her
purely healthful nature could not at once comprehend a recklessness so
desperate.
"What do you
mean?" she demanded -- "I cannot believe -- where are you
going?"
I answered her as
steadily as before.
"I am going
away," I said, "where I do not know -- I do not even care. I am going
away from England with Ralph Gwynne. I am going away with him that I may be
lost to my husband forever. You think I am a wicked woman, Lisbeth, and so I
am, but God has laid his hand upon me and I am under a curse."
She gazed at me as if
she believed I had gone mad indeed.
"You are going
away?" she cried out -- "You! Gervase! Gervase!"
Nothing more; but the
fullness of divine pity and passionate appeal in her voice, in her face, even
in her clasped hands, overpowered me. I sank into a chair, holding to its arms
to steady myself.
"Lisbeth," I
said, feeling as though I had turned to ice, "I saw a woman upon the beach
to day [sic] -- a woman with a little child in her arms -- and the child's name
is Roger Leith. You cannot save me, Lisbeth -- let me go."
She caught me in her
arms and held me. She thought that I was dying -- I thought I was, myself, and
it was only the sudden flush of comprehension in her face that helped me to
retain my consciousness.
"Who told you that
the child's name was Roger Leith?" she cried out -- "Who could be so
cruel as to lead you astray with that? My poor Gervase, tell me!"
I rested my face upon
her bosom, panting for breath in the darkness.
"It is true,"
I gasped; "Ralph Gwynne was with me and he knew. One of the fishermen upon
the beach told us the child's name and its mother's history."
"Listen," she
said, and her voice rang out like a command, "listen to me. Some one has
told you a lie. I can tell you the girl's history -- no one knows it better
than I, Gervase, as no one knows better that the truth should prove to you the
wrong you have done your husband. It was not through him that this girl was
lost -- it was through him that she was saved. He found her in London,
wandering in the streets with her child in her arms, and he saved her from
despair and death. He brought her here -- back to her home -- and helped her in
her wretchedness so mercifully that she prayed from him upon her knees that her
child might bear his name, since it could claim no other. He has guarded her
ever since: he has saved two human souls -- one for the sake of the little
child who died, Gervase -- his little child and yours."
In an instant it
flashed upon me that I had not waited to hear the end of the fisherman's
explanation. And he would doubtless have cleared away my misery with the next
word, for they must all know the story, even the roughest of them -- the story
of my husband's generous deed. And then the thought that I had not been deemed
worthy to hear it struck me to the heart.
"I did not dream
of this," I said; "how could I? he has told me nothing. He has never
loved me even well enough to trust me so far."
He has loved you
always," Lisbeth said, "though you have both been wrong; he has loved
you better than you have loved him, and he has been wretched through your
distrust and coldness. It was his despair that made him seek me when he brought
Janey to Bamborough. He knew that you had loved me, and so came to me for
comfort and help. And you would go away -- you, with the past all unredeemed,
and your husband's love unsought, -- you, with your little child's white soul
to hold you to purity and faith! Gervase! Gervase!"
There was a moment's
silence in which I crouched shuddering in my chair, my face buried in my hands!
And then there came beneath the window the sound of a man's footsteps, and the
sound of a man speaking in a low voice. His words might have been an echo of
Lisbeth's but that the one voice was the voice of the tempter, and the other
the voice of the rescuer.
"Gervase!
Gervase!"
It was Ralph Gwynne.
My strength was ebbing
away fast. I could not have spoken to him if I would; but Lisbeth rose and went
to the window, as calm in her womanly strength of purity as ever she had been
in her calm woman's life.
"Ralph!" she
said, her grave, pure-toned voice dropping upon the still night air like the
voice of a spirit, "Ralph, Gervase is here -- with me."
He did not reply, and
not another word was uttered between them. She came back to me as his footsteps
died away in the distance, and found me shivering from head to foot, yet
burning with sudden fever.
"Better to have
let me go, Lisbeth," I said weakly, "better to have let me go away
and die, for I should have died, Lisbeth -- I am dying now." And as she
caught me in her arms again the dark room seemed to blaze up into sudden light and
then fade out, and as the shadows closed around me I felt that the end of life
had come.
. . . . . . . .
Weeks of interminable
wanderings in some mysterious, barren land of misery, -- weeks of interminable
watching hideous panoramas that seemed to pass and repass and pass again, --
weeks, nay, it appeared ages, of suffering through old wrongs, and loves and
hates, -- and weeks of waiting restlessly with frantic impatience for something
which never came and never would come -- for some stopping- place or shutting
out of the crowding faces I did not know and was constantly scanning and
striving to remember -- weeks of such suffering, with now and then a blank or a
dim sense of struggling consciousness, and then one day a long blank ended by
my opening my eyes heavily, and dimly seeing Lisbeth bending over the bed upon
which I lay.
I did not speak to her
-- I could not. My weakness was so great, my power over my languid limbs so
utterly lost, that I gazed up at her without even trying to address her, only
thinking half unconsciously of stories I had heard of people who had fallen
into trances and retained the spirit of life without the power of motion. Was I
in such a trance? No, for Lisbeth was speaking to me and I could hear her quite
distinctly, though I could not reply.
"You must not try
to speak, Gervase," she was saying -- "you must not try to think,
even. You are getting better and you must sleep."
I heard her first words
plainly enough, but as she ended her voice seemed to die away into the
distance, and as my eyes drooped she was lost to me.
This was my first
awakening after the night I had fallen into her arms, and after this first
awakening there were no more of the interminable wanderings, though I seldom
was strong enough to open my eyes. But as I lay there with my eyes shut I grew
strong enough in a day or two to listen to the hushed voices of the people who
were in my room, and in the end to distinguish them one from another. I heard
Lisbeth's voice often, calm and low and sweet. I heard Hugh's softened until it
was like a woman's. I heard a voice I knew to be the doctor's. I heard other
voices strange to me, but first of all and before all I heard my husband's. I
did not hear it once or twice, or at stated intervals: day and night without an
hour of absence. I felt Lisbeth's touch often: I felt Hugh's. I felt hands that
were kindly and tender enough, but there was one hand that never touched me
without drawing me farther from the grave and nearer to life, and this hand was
my husband's.
And at length I found
myself awake again, far into the night, and this time my eyes fell first upon
my husband seated at my bedside, and when I made an effort to speak I found
strength enough to utter a single word:
"Lisbeth."
He brought her to my
side with a gesture, and as he turned towards the light his haggard face was a
wonder to me; but I had only power, when Lisbeth bent over me, to say to her
one thing, in a whisper so weak that I scarcely could hear it myself.
"If I live,"
I said, "he must know. If -- I die, it -- cannot matter. Let him love --
me -- if he will."
The weak tears began to
roll down my cheeks, and I could not stop their flow, and I saw that Lisbeth's
tears were falling too.
"You will not
die," she said; "you will live to retrieve the past. He knows all --
he read your letter. Roger, speak to her."
He laid his haggard
face near mine upon the pillow, and the old glow of our bridal days was in his
eyes.
"You shall not
die," he said, "you cannot die -- you are mine -- I love you. I have
followed you down to the valley of death, and brought you back, and I claim
you, as God is merciful. I have loved you through all our misery, but I was not
fit to understand your woman's heart. The blame was mine, not yours. God
forgive me for the wrong I did your tenderness. You love me -- yes, you love
me. You must love me -- you cannot help it. Do not try to speak. This shall be
my first sacrifice, that I will deny myself the bliss of hearing your voice,
since to speak might fatigue you. Do not try to speak, but if you love me and
would give me hope, lay your hand upon my cheek."
Not a word of the wrong
I had done, not a word of the misery I had wrought for him, not a word of
distrust or reproach: I had come up from the grave and the gates of Heaven
seemed opening to me. I tried to speak, but could not, for my soul was full and
overflowing with the passion of a joy too divine for human words to express.
But I found strength at last to move, and stirring a little in the very
faintness of happiness, I laid my hand upon my husband's cheek, my head upon
his arm, and so was clasped to his breast.
He loved me -- he had
loved me always, though he had tortured himself with the belief that my love
for him had died. He was unlike most men, as I was unlike most women; he could
not speak in common words of what lay so deeply locked in his heart. But
tortured as he was, he had hoped as I never hoped. He had come to Lisbeth for
comfort because she loved me, and she had given it to him. Lisbeth knew what I
did not know myself, that it was my distrust and love that was wearing my life
away, and in her silent woman fashion, she watched and restrained me when I was
unconscious of her power.
I did not see Ralph
Gwynne again until three happy years had passed, and in passing had made my
life like Lisbeth's. Then, as I stood one night in the brightly-lighted hall of
our home, holding my child in my strong arms, as I greeted my husband a man
passed by upon the pavement and looked in at me. As the light from the hall
lamp fell upon his face I saw it was Ralph Gwynne, and that he knew me.